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3 - Rights and the Populist Claim for Recognition

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  16 March 2023

Christian F. Rostbøll
Affiliation:
University of Copenhagen
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Summary

Populism entails a unique claim for recognition, which sets it at odds with the democratic ideal of respect for the equal standing of every citizen. This claim arises from a totalizing framing of political conflict, according to which one can and should understand one uniform group in society as the worst-off group for all political purposes. The populist claim for recognition is an exclusionary claim: We are something that you are not, “the people.” In contrast, this chapter argues that in order to show equal respect for everyone, as well as solidaristic concern for diverse marginalized groups, it is imperative to focus on particular struggles for recognition and discuss who actually suffers the greatest injustice in each case separately. The chapter goes on to contrast the populist claim for recognition and its illiberalism with the kind of respect, which Joel Feinberg argues is expressed in and through “the activity of claim-making” characteristic of a society with rights. Adopting a participant attitude and seeing rights claims as an intersubjective activity, we can better appreciate how rights contribute to democratic respect.

Type
Chapter
Information
Democratic Respect
Populism, Resentment, and the Struggle for Recognition
, pp. 87 - 115
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2023

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