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Tables of Contents for Liberalism, Constitutionalism, and Democracy
Chapter/Section Title
Page #
Page Count
Mutual Advantage
1
41
Three Mutual-Advantage Theories
1
8
Social Order
9
3
Coordination
12
6
Political Obligation
18
5
Unintended Consequences
23
2
The Governors
25
2
The Argument of the Book
27
4
The Normative Status of Sociological Mutual Advantage
31
3
A Summary of the Chapters
34
4
The Central Controversies
38
3
Liberalism: Political and Economic
41
41
Two Liberalisms
41
4
The Grounds of Liberalism
45
8
The Welfarist Core
47
2
Deontological Additions
49
4
Strategic Structures
53
12
Hobbes
54
4
Locke
58
1
Smith
59
1
Madison
60
1
Mill
61
2
The Complex View
63
2
Collective Resolution
65
3
Causal and Conceptual Links
68
5
One Unified Liberalism?
73
5
Religious Toleration Again
74
2
Historical Changes
76
2
Centralized Intelligence
78
2
Concluding Remarks
80
2
Constitutionalism: Contract or Coordination?
82
59
Institutions and Choice
82
3
Contract or Coordination?
85
5
The Strategic Structure of a Constitution
90
13
Coordination on and under a Constitution
103
4
Agreement and a Constitution
107
6
Incentives to Abide by a Constitution
113
1
Contracts Not Like Contracts Either
114
5
Bargains in Philadelphia
119
10
Large versus Small States
120
2
Anti-Federalists versus Federalists
122
5
Slavery
127
2
Plantation Agrarian versus Commercial Interests
129
1
Ex Ante Justification
129
4
Why a Written Constitution?
133
8
Democracy: Agreement or Acquiescence?
141
43
Consent
141
4
Contractarianism
145
7
Popular Sovereignty
152
5
Constitutionalism and Democracy
157
2
Justice as Order and Democracy
159
2
Government as Grown
161
4
The Logic of Democracy
165
10
Limits on Citizen Responsibility
166
4
Individual Autonomy
170
2
The Right Result
172
3
Alternative Visions
175
3
Virtual Representation
178
3
Concluding Remarks
181
3
Liberalization and its Discontents
184
44
Transition to the Two Liberalisms
184
3
Constitutional Liberalism
187
3
Ethnic Conflicts
190
5
Economic Conflicts
195
7
Egalitarianism
202
13
Equality versus Efficiency
204
6
Egalitarianism in One Society
210
2
Egalitarianism Without Socialism
212
3
The Dual Task of 1989
215
4
Irreversibility of Liberalization?
219
4
Political Liberalization
220
2
Economic Liberalization
222
1
Concluding Remarks
223
5
Constitutional Economic Transition
228
48
A Neutral Constitution
228
5
Expectations and Constitutional Stability
233
3
Economic and Political Visions in the Early United States
236
5
The Commerce Clause
241
7
Economic Growth, Economic Transition
248
7
Hammer and Sickle
255
2
Economic Trasition in a Consititutional Democracy
257
7
Economic Transition and Demographic Growth
264
5
American and Eastern Comparisons
269
5
Concluding Remarks
274
2
Democracy on the Margin
276
35
Divided Society
276
1
Democracy as Group Census
277
3
Interest and Democracy
280
3
Constitutional Pre-commitment
283
2
American Extremes
285
6
Democracy and Economic Development
291
3
Communal Good
294
6
Group Justice and Democracy
300
5
Unequal Coordination
305
4
Concluding Remarks
309
2
Afterword: Whether Agreed to or Not
311
11
Justifying the Whole
311
3
Collective and Individual Values
314
2
Acquiescence and Mutual Advantage
316
3
Concluding Remarks
319
3
Appendix: Other Liberalisms
322
11
Social Liberalism
323
1
Institutional Liberalism
324
1
Welfare Liberalism
325
1
Group Liberalism
326
2
The Civil Rights Movement
328
1
Strategic Differences
329
4
References
333
16
Index
349