Bruno Leipold, Karma Nabulsi, and Stuart White: Introduction:
Radical Republicanism and Popular Sovereignty
I. DOMINATION: SOCIAL AND STRUCTURAL
1: Dorothea Gãdeke: From Neorepublicanism to Critical
Republicanism
2: Alan Coffee: A Radical Revolution in Thought: Frederick Douglass
on the Slave's Perspective on Republican Freedom
II. POPULAR CONSTITUTIONALISM
3: John P. McCormick: Republicanism, Virtuous and Corrupt: Social
Conflict, Political Leadership and Constitutional Reform in
Machiavelli's Florentine Histories
4: Stuart White: Citizens' Assemblies and Republican Democracy
III. MOVEMENT AND RESISTANCE
5: Guy Aitchison: Popular Resistance and the Idea of Rights
6: Karma Nabulsi: Two Traditions of Radical Democracy from the 1830
Revolution
IV. SOCIALISM AND LABOUR
7: Alex Gourevitch: Solidarity and Civic Virtue: Labour
Republicanism and the Politics of Emancipation in Nineteenth
Century America
8: Bruno Leipold: Marx's Social Republic: Radical Republicanism and
the Political Institutions of Socialism
V. HISTORIAL TRAJECTORIES
9: Banu Turnaoglu: The Intellectual Origins of Turkish Radical
Republicanism
10: Sudhir Hazareesingh: The Utopian Imagination: Radical
Republican Traditions in France, from the Enlightenment to the
French Communists
Bruno Leipold is a Fellow in Political Theory at the London School
of Economics and Political Science. He completed his DPhil at the
University of Oxford and has held postdoctoral positions at the
European University Institute and the Justitia Amplificata Centre
for Advanced Studies at the Goethe University of Frankfurt and the
Free University of Berlin. Karma Nabulsi is Fellow and Tutor in
Politics at St Edmund Hall, University of Oxford. She writes and
lectures
on 18th and 19th century republicanism, revolutions, and democracy,
as well as on Palestine, especially Palestinian refugees. Stuart
White is Fellow in Politics at Jesus College, Oxford, having
formerly
taught in the Department of Political Science, M.I.T. His research
is focused on democracy, republican values, and the economy, with
related interests in both social policy and the political process.
He is the author of The Civic Minimum (2003). He blogs occasionally
at openDemocracy.
![]() |
Ask a Question About this Product More... |
![]() |