Democracy distorted : wealth, influence and democratic politics / Jacob Rowbottom.
By: Rowbottom, Jacob.
Publisher: Cambridge ; New York : Cambridge University Press, 2010Description: x, 257 p.ISBN: 9780521700177 (pbk.).Subject(s): Campaign funds -- Great Britain | Political parties -- Great Britain | Mass media -- Ownership -- Great Britain | Political participation -- Great BritainDDC classification: 324.241 Online resources: Click here to access onlineItem type | Current location | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Books | NASSDOC Library | 324.241 ROW-D (Browse shelf) | Available | 54313 | |
Books | NASSDOC Library | 324.241 ROW-D (Browse shelf) | Available | 53024 |
Browsing NASSDOC Library Shelves Close shelf browser
No cover image available | ||||||||
324.230952 PEN-G Green politics in Japan | 324.2354082 RAJ-; Sikh identity and national integration | 324.24083954 DAS-; Congress at the Helm: Bihar 1937-1939 | 324.241 ROW-D Democracy distorted : | 324.241 ROW-D Democracy distorted : | 324.24107 STR- Struggle for labour's soul | 324.247 UPA-E Emergence of the multi-party system in the Russian federation : problems and prospects |
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Political equality, wealth and democracy -- Freedom to speak and freedom to spend -- Strategies and reforms -- Access, influence and lobbying -- Beyond equal votes : election campaigns and political parties -- Public spaces, property and participation -- The mass media : democratic dreams and private propagandists -- Participation in the digital era : a new distribution?
"High-profile controversies surrounding the funding of political parties have shown how inequalities in wealth can enter the political process. The growth of the professional lobbying of MPs and the executive raises similar questions about money in politics. More broadly, inequalities emerge in terms of the opportunities the public have to participate in political debate. This analysis of the ways wealth can be used to influence politics in Britain explores the threat posed to the principle of political equality. As well as examining lobbying and party funding, the discussion also focuses on the ownership and control of the media, the chance to be heard on the internet and the impact of the privatisation of public spaces on rights to assemble and protest. Looking at this range of political activities, the author proposes various strategies designed to protect the integrity of British democracy and stop inequalities in wealth becoming inequalities in politics"--
English
There are no comments for this item.