
Contents
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2.1 The Ordinary Notion of Power 2.1 The Ordinary Notion of Power
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2.2 Favouring Action: Authority Underpinning Power 2.2 Favouring Action: Authority Underpinning Power
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2.3 Explanation and Justification 2.3 Explanation and Justification
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2.4 Living as One Person Among Others 2.4 Living as One Person Among Others
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2.5 Authority and Self-Relativization 2.5 Authority and Self-Relativization
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2.6 Conceptions of Citizenship and Counterfactual Second-Order Explanations 2.6 Conceptions of Citizenship and Counterfactual Second-Order Explanations
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2.7 Citizenship and the Pouvoir Constituant 2.7 Citizenship and the Pouvoir Constituant
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2.8 The Constituent Power: Normative and Institutional 2.8 The Constituent Power: Normative and Institutional
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2.9 Conclusion 2.9 Conclusion
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Cite
Abstract
This chapter explicates the meaning of legal powers in terms of political authority, and then turns to the venerable French doctrine of pouvoir constituant. It claims that, ideally, political authority derives from the mutual realization that inasmuch as one lives communally, that is, together with others, one has to conceive of oneself from the perspective of all others and, indeed, as a stranger to oneself. Being a citizen, hence, involves self-relativization in the face of difference. Any justification of authority presupposes a conception of citizenship. The latter encompasses a normative perspective with regard to where self-relativization may legitimately come to an end and the types of processes necessary for citizens to live together despite their disagreements. The limits of constituted authority are established by the constituent power. The authority of the latter, in normative terms, can be drawn out by reconstructing the conception of citizenship that would make it legitimate.
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