Legitimacy and Politics: A Contribution to the Study of Political Right and Political Responsibility

For the past few years, the increase in cases of political corruption, the loss of politicians’ credibility, the development of social and political forms of pathology (notably the rise of the extreme right along with exclusionist ideologies), and the role of the State have been at the center of political debates. In one way or another, these problems raise the question of the legitimacy of the established powers. The result is that legitimacy, a key notion of political thought in general, has today become a burning issue. Coicaud examines all these issues and proffers insightful answers to questions such as the connections between morality and politics, how rulers acquire or lose the right to govern, and how one can become the advocate of a theory of political justice that, while establishing limits, respects and even ensures the promotion of plurality within societies.

• Legitimacy is a topical subject in the study of contemporary politics • Argues that the greater power a leader has, the more his/her obligations • Offers a theory of political legitimacy, distinct from traditional scholarly commentaries and accounts of the issue of legitimacy

Contents

1. What is political legitimacy?; 2. Controversies around political legitimacy; 3. Modernity, rationality of the social sciences and legitimacy; 4. Social sciences, historicity and truth; 5. Study of politics, relation to history and de jure judgment; 6. Community experience, dynamic of possibilities and political legitimacy.