Raube / Sattler | Difference and Democracy | Buch | 978-3-593-39502-9 | sack.de

Buch, Englisch, 397 Seiten, Format (B × H): 141 mm x 214 mm, Gewicht: 497 g

Raube / Sattler

Difference and Democracy

Exploring Potentials in Europe and Beyond
1. Auflage 2011
ISBN: 978-3-593-39502-9
Verlag: Campus

Exploring Potentials in Europe and Beyond

Buch, Englisch, 397 Seiten, Format (B × H): 141 mm x 214 mm, Gewicht: 497 g

ISBN: 978-3-593-39502-9
Verlag: Campus


'Differenz' ist eine noch häufig vernachlässigte Dimension sozialer Interaktion, die jedoch als Forschungsfeld an Bedeutung gewinnt. Der Band untersucht das positive Potenzial von Differenz – der Ideen, Interessen oder Institutionen – und zeigt, unter welchen Bedingungen sie einen Gewinn für effektives und legitimes Handeln in demokratischen Systemen darstellt. Die Beiträger sind Politikwissenschaftler, Soziologen, Kommunikationswissenschaftler, Rechtswissenschaftler und Kunsthistoriker.
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Contents

Introduction
Kolja Raube and Annika Sattler.9

1. Analytical Model

The Concept of Difference
Christine Landfried.15

2. Difference and Democracy

The Future of Democracy
Manfred G. Schmidt.49

Comment: An Alternative View on Democratic Governance
Beyond the Nation-State
Jonathan P. Aus.67

Comment: Difference and Democracy from the
Constitutional Law Perspective
Alexander von Brünneck.77

Comment: The Sustainability of Democracy-
An Examination on the Basis of Leading Differences
Tine Stein.83

3. Difference and Europe

Towards a Reflexive External Governance of the European Union
Kolja Raube.101

Comment: The Concept of Difference and its Potential for
Research in Political Science
Ingrid Schneider.127

Comment: Small States and Differences in the European Union-
Putting Forward or Paralyzing the Integration?
Meinhard Hilf.141

Comment: Reflections on the Concept of a Reflexive
European Union External Governance
Chiara Formenti-Ujlaki.147

4. Difference and Globalization

Thinking Islamic Difference in Pluralistic Democracies
Nilüfer Göle.159

Comment: The New Cosmopolitanism. The (Right) Way
to Cope with Difference in a Globalizing Society
Edgar Grande.183

Comment: The Troubles with Standardization of
Cultural Differences
Rainer Tetzlaff.197

Comment: Different Potentials of Difference in the Balkans-
A Paradigmatic Analysis
Fran Kauzlaric.211

5. Difference and Law

Managing Difference: Constitutional Pluralism and
Transnational Rights Protection
Alec Stone Sweet.227

Comment: Contesting the Management of Difference-
Transnational Human Rights, Religion and the European
Court of Human Rights' Lautsi Decision
Mattias Kumm.245

Comment: Global Constitutionalism and
the Concept of Difference
Antje Wiener.261

Comment: Law, Difference and Transnational Norm Building
Under a Shared Watercourse Treaty-The International Court
of Justice and Environmental Impact Statements
Jennifer McKay.277

6. Difference and Public Sphere

Difference as Basic Component of Mediated Communication
in (European) Public Spheres
Irene Neverla.291

Comment: Public Spheres in Europe
Hartmut Kaelble.307

Comment: Difference as Structural Characteristic
and Catalyst of European Public Spheres
Annika Sattler.315

Comment: Belonging and Engagement-Benefits of Difference on
European Union Issues in Europe's Public Spheres
Pieter de Wilde.327

7. Difference and Art

Difference and Democracy: Art
Martin Warnke.341

Comment: Difference Between Democracy and Art
Beyond Visual Arts
Udo Bermbach.355

Comment: Art is Difference…
Even if this is no Longer Readily Perceptible
Petra Kipphoff von Huene.361

Comment: Difference and Indifference Between Art
Avant-Gardes and Democratic Politics
Klaus von Beyme.369

8. Conclusion

Exploring Potentials of Difference in Europe and Beyond
Kolja Raube and Annika Sattler.379

Contributing Authors.389

Index.395


Almost everyone likes diversity. Who wants to wear the same outfit all the time or never try a new recipe? We travel to far-off countries to enjoy the diversity of cultures and landscapes. Difference, by contrast, is suspect. It evokes conflict and the destruction of harmony and unity.

In a global world we experience a complex diversity of difference. In an age of worldwide migration, moreover, we get to know the manifold differences between cultures, for example in how people see religion and the freedom of opinion, on our doorstep. "The comfort of geographical distance and segregation is lost and the cultural avoidance cannot be maintained any longer within the boundaries of a protected community" (Göle, this volume, 166). But this means that we have to address the fundamental difference of ideas, interests, and institutions between cultures. What do we really know about immigrants, people who have come, for example, to Germany from a wide variety of countries,1 and what do immigrants know of us? Only if cultures get to know each other and meet in openness can difference unfold its positive potential.

Unlike diversity, difference therefore does not have pleasant, horizon- broadening sides to it from the outset. Conflicts develop on the construction of mosques in Germany (Leggewie 2009, 117f.) and we take note of the Swiss referendum against minarets and the reactions to the outcome of this poll (Göle 2010, 125). Some conflicts about difference turn into confrontations. Such confrontations need to be understood, explained, and constructively translated (Apel 1981, 127) to enable cultures to live together.

In a global world, democratic governments have not only to pay greater attention to cultural, religious, and linguistic difference and to ensure equality among citizens on the basis of concrete differences. They also face the challenge of institutional difference in national, European, and international systems of governance. Political regulation in the sense of the state intentionally intervening in the structures and processes of society is becoming more complex. New actors are taking the stage. In cooperation with nation-states, institutions such as the European Union, the World Trade Organization, and the United Nations influence the political design of life in the community. More and more frequently, civil-society actors are playing a part in shaping and implementing political regulation (Jakobeit et al. 2010). These new forms of governance (Mayntz 2009, 43) differ depending on the policy area and the level to which a given arrangement applies (Raube, this volume, 116). Globalization leads to the "multiplication of different normative orders" (Sassen 2008, 11) and to collisions between these orders (Fischer-Lescano and Teubner 2006, 36). Nation-states, again, change in quite different ways in this process by which people take increasingly comprehensive, intensive, and far-reaching action across national borders (Beck and Grande 2010, 429; Held et al. 1999, 15).

This manifold difference can have both negative and positive consequences for democratic governance. Therefore, the fundamental question of this concept is how actors deal with difference. This means that politics is called upon to judge difference not prematurely as problematic but to consider in each case how the positive aspects of difference can be brought to fruition. The cognitive interest of the concept is directed towards the capacity of democratic politics "to manage difference […] in ways that upgrade the collective interest" (Stone Sweet, this volume, 227). Where the negative potential of difference is apparent, countermeasures have to be taken (Putnam 2007, 137-174)2.

Even in language it is evident that the negative meaning of difference is to be attributed to human action. The historian Reinhart Koselleck has been able to show that when groups apply general terms only to themselves, thus asserting an "exclusive claim to generality" (1985, 156) those excluded suffer discrimination. The counterconcept of "Hellenes and Barbarians" offers one example. Barbarians were not only strangers but also strangers with negative characteristics. History knows many counterconcepts designed to exclude mutual recognition. Such counterconcepts-being one form of difference-are asymmetrical (Koselleck 1985, 156).

Thus, it is up to humanities and social sciences to gain empirical knowledge about the concrete conditions that either lead to differences being abused for exclusion, for constructing enemy stereotypes and for negative definitions of others, or that enable the positive potential of difference to be used to "fuel" the freedom and equality of citizens in democratic systems. Political scientists must investigate in which way difference becomes a point of reference for political action (Riedmüller and Vinz 2007, 154). Heuristic access to explaining the negative or positive potential of difference for governance in the nation- state and beyond national borders lies in the assumed link between difference and democracy. This connection is underestimated by both politicians and scholars. Similarities between structures and processes are considered desirable. In European studies, for example, commonalities between European Union member states are particularly sought. Differences, in contrast, are regarded as a problem and much more rarely addressed.3 It is not by chance that difference often falls by the wayside and the democratic meaning of difference remains hidden. This sense lies in the strengthening of democratic procedures by including difference (Göle 2008, 148). Democratic discourses and negotiations in which difference is taken seriously are most likely to produce reasonable results in a global world (Habermas 1992, 368). "The sovereignty of the familiar impoverishes everyone." (Geertz 1986, 119) This statement by the ethnologist Clifford Geertz can also be expressed in positive terms: the productivity of difference makes everyone richer. Finding the conditions of this productivity for legitimate and effective governance in a global world is the aim of this book. From the perspective of various disciplines, countries, and generations we hope to make a small contribution to research into the effects of difference.

In my reflections I first define "difference" and propose a typology of difference. I go on to explain the theoretical assumptions and analytical categories of the difference concept. In the final section I discuss research questions that arise from this concept.


Kolja Raube, Dr. phil., ist Programmkoordinator des Studiengangs 'European Studies' und Mitglied des 'Leuven Centre for Global Governance Studies', Katholieke Universiteit Leuven. Annika Sattler, M. A., ist Mitarbeiterin der Deutschen Bundesbank in Frankfurt.



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