Richard Fralin, “The evolution of Rousseau’s view of representative government”, Political Theory, Vol. 6, No. 4, (1978), pp. 517-36.
Excerpt:
Rousseau’s intense opposition to representative government in the Contrat social is one of the most distinctive features of his political thought. None of the leading political thinkers among his contemporaries, neither his fellow Encyclopedists nor Montesquieu nor advocates of what has been called enlightened depotism, shared his peculiar view of representation. During the nearly two centuries since his death in 1778 his unique stance on this issue has often been taken as evidence of a radically democratic concept of popular sovereignty; a number of recent commentaries, on the other hand, have cited it as evidence of Rousseau’s fundamental conservatism, as one more indication of his reluctance to accept modern political, social and economic institutions. My contention is that Rousseau was far more ambivalent about representation than either of these interpretations suggests, and that his ambivalence in turn stemmed from a profoundly ambivalent view of the political capacities of ordinary citizen
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