hannah arendt, the meaning of political equality and...
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Hannah Arendt, the Meaning of Political Equality
and Participatory Democracy
Shmuel Lederman
Abstract:
Scholars of participatory democracy do not usually turn to Hannah Arendt's work as a
resource, despite her advocacy of a citizen council system to replace the representative
party system. At the same time, scholars of Arendt seem not be aware of the explosion in
experiments in participatory democracy in the last two decades. In this paper, I argue that
Arendt's work should serve as an important addition to theories of participatory democracy,
particularly in light of recent experiments in participatory democracy. More specifically, I
show that Arendt views modern democracy as deeply unequal in political terms, since
equality for her means active participation of citizens in government. Arendt traces the
common identification of forms of government with certain relations of rule (of the one,
the few or the many) back to Plato's opposition to political equality as it was understood
and experienced in the Greek polis. Equality for the Greeks meant precisely that no one
ruled and no one was being ruled, since everyone was equal in their ability to participate
in decision-making. For Arendt, the challenge of contemporary democracy is to resist the
legacy of Western political thought and practice, by reviving a form of government where
relations of rule are replaced with relations of equality. This vision of radical political
equality, I argue, is the root of Arendt's support for a new form of participatory democracy,
in the form of citizen councils.
Introduction:
There is a crucial point in understanding Hannah Arendt's political thought, which is not
often recognized: in her view, we all share the capacity for speech, action and judgment in
politics. This is actually part of what defines "the political" for Arendt, and it is a recurring
theme in her work, although it is not often articulated clearly. In her 1954 essay "Concern
with Politics in Recent European Philosophical Thought," for example, Arendt presents
Kant's moral philosophy in quite different terms than the ones she uses in her later works,
where she describes it as "inhuman."1 In this early essay, she perceives Kant's moral
philosophy as a mark of his unique sensitiveness to human plurality. The reason is that it
is based on capacities we all share in common: "Kant's so-called moral philosophy is in
essence political, insofar as he attributes to all men those capacities of legislating and
judging that, according to the tradition, had been the prerogative of the statesman."2
1 Hannah Arendt, "On Humanity in Dark Times: Thoughts about Lessing," in Men in Dark Times (New York,
1968), p. 34. 2 Hannah Arendt, "Concern with Politics in Recent European Philosophical Thought," in Essays in
Understanding, ed. Jerome Kohn (New York: Schocken Books, 1994), p. 441.
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In a posthumously published essay from the same year, "Philosophy and Politics,"3
Arendt presents a similar view, in different terms. One passage in particular is crucial for
understanding much of what Arendt attempts to achieve, and worth quoting at some length:
The political element in friendship is that in the truthful dialogue each of the
friends can understand the truth inherent in the other's opinion. More than
his friend as a person, one friend understands how and in what specific
articulateness the common world appears to the other, who as a person is
forever unequal or different. This kind of understanding—seeing the
world… from the other fellow's point of view—is the political kind of insight
par excellence. If we wanted to define, traditionally, the one outstanding
virtue the statesman, we could say that it consists in understanding the
greatest possible number and variety of realities… as those realities open
themselves up to the various opinions of the citizens and, at the same time,
in being able to communicate between the citizens and their opinions so that
the common-ness of this world becomes apparent. If such an
understanding—and action inspired by it—were to take place without the
help of the statesman, then the prerequisite would be for each citizen to be
articulate enough to show his opinion in its truthfulness and therefore to
understand his fellow citizens. Socrates seems to have believed that the
political function of the philosopher was to help establish this kind of
common world, built on the understanding of friendship, in which no
rulership is needed.4
Let us examine carefully what Arendt is saying here. The political capacity she
describes here she calls phronesis elsewhere.5 This is, of course, an Aristotelian concept,
but it should be noted that Arendt presents it as expressing a more general, Greek
understanding of the distinguishing mark of the statesman. Elsewhere Arendt argues that
Aristotle articulates in his explication of phronesis the public opinion of the Athenians.6 In
other places, she suggests that the Greeks came to appreciate this capacity through their
constant exchanges in the agora; the influence of the Sophist way of argumentation; as well
as through the example of Homeric impartiality, echoed by Thucydides.7 In other words,
Arendt does not simply follow Aristotle, as much of the commentary on her use of
phronesis assumes, but rather reinterprets the meaning of phronesis. One indication of her
departure from Aristotle is that—as can be gathered from the above quote—Arendt is
interested not so much in the statesman's capacity for phronesis, but rather in "ordinary"
citizens and their capacity for phronesis. According to Arendt, in order to develop this
capacity, citizens have to learn to see the world from others' points of view, acknowledging
that each of them has a unique position, which is worth looking from, in the shared world.
They would have, further, to be able to distinguish what is a prejudice, a "windegg," and
3 Republished as "Socrates," in Hannah Arendt, The Promise of Politics, ed. Jerome Kohn (New York:
Schocken Books, 2005). References below are to this version. 4 Ibid., p. 18. 5 Hannah Arendt, "Introduction into Politics," in The Promise of Politics, p. 168. 6 Hannah Arendt, "The Crisis in Culture,' in Between Past and Future: Eight Exercises in Political Thought
(New York, 2006), p. 289, note 14. 7 Hannah Arendt, "The Concept of History," in Between Past and Future, p. 51.
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what is truthful in their own opinions; and to be articulate enough to communicate the
truths they arrive at to their fellow citizens.
Socrates, in Arendt's story, believed it could be done. He attempts to encourage this
capacity among Athens' citizens, by engaging with them in dialogues, making them
acknowledge that many of the truths they believe they hold are nothing but "windeggs."
He attempts, in other words, to show them that the only way to discover which of their
opinions is truthful and which is not is to discuss them with their fellow citizens in a critical
manner. Socrates, it should be further noted, does not do this as a philosopher, in the sense
of someone who holds some wisdom and tries to convince others of its truth. As Arendt
often stresses, Socrates knows nothing, and has nothing to teach. But he believes that
thinking critically is crucial to a life worth living, and, moreover, that helping his fellow
citizens to think critically is the greatest good he can do for the polis. Finally, and crucially,
in contrast to Plato after him, Socrates does not reject opinions. To speak one’s opinion is
to formulate one's dokei moi: what appears to me, the way the world is opened before me.
Different persons have different doxai because the world appears differently to each one
of them. Since we all share the same world, doxa is not merely arbitrary or subjective.
Every opinion holds something of the truth, something of the world. Socrates attempts to
help the Athenians "improve" their doxai, so that the truth in them would come to light:
Socrates wanted to bring out this truth which everyone potentially possesses… [he]
wanted to make the city more truthful by delivering each of the citizens of their
truths. The method of doing this is dialegesthai, talking something through, but this
dialectic brings forth truth not by destroying doxa or opinion, but on the contrary
by revealing doxa in its own truthfulness.8
Socrates, in other words, understands what philosophy is in a different way than
the tradition of political thought since Plato has perceived it: philosophy is for him the
never-ending search for truth, a constant philosophizing. He believes that human truths can
emerge only through critical exchange of opinions. Furthermore, Socrates believes that
philosophy is for everyone, and in this sense, by philosophizing in the agora he actually
engages in politics: "To Socrates, maieutic was a political activity, a give and take,
fundamentally on a basis of strict equality, the fruits of which could not be measured by
the result of arriving at this or that general truth."9 It could perhaps be partly measured by
a different result: whether it generates friendship among the citizens, and thereby advances
a form of government where no one rules and no one is being ruled; where the statesman
is no longer needed, since the citizens themselves are capable of phronesis.
This is a highly democratic vision, in fact a radical one. It constitutes a major
challenge to the tradition of political thought, starting from Plato, in which the existence
of relations of rule, namely political inequality, has always been a pre-supposition. To
appreciate the extent of this challenge, one need only think about the way we still
distinguish between forms of government according to the question who rules: the one, the
few or the many. In Arendt's narrative, this is Plato's legacy, which originated in the
animosity of the philosopher to the essence of politics itself, which is speech and action
8 Arendt, "Socrates," 15. 9 Ibid. On the way Arendt makes Socrates a political person, see also E. Saccarelli, "Alone in the World: The
Existential Socrates in the Apology and Crito," Political Studies 55 (2007): 522-545.
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performed by equal participants, between whom there are no relations of rule. Let us
examine further the way Arendt reconstructs Plato's legacy.
Plato's Legacy and the Meaning of Political Equality
According to Arendt, in his attempt to theorize politics in terms of relations of rule, Plato
drew on two basic experiences. The first was the household, where the master rules over
his slaves and the rest of the dwellers of the house.10 The advantages of this model are first,
that relations of rule are inherent in it. Second, that they are justified on a rational basis—
the superior knowledge the master has over his slaves: "The master… knows what should
be done and gives his orders, while the slave executes them and obeys, so that knowing
what to do and actual doing become separate and mutually exclusive functions."11 The
other model Plato drew on was the experience of fabrication, where a product is created
according to the preconceived model the artist has in mind. This is the meaning of Plato's
replacement of praxis with poesis, namely—acting with making:
[T]he division between knowing and doing, so alien to the realm of action, whose
validity and meaningfulness are destroyed the moment thought and action part
company, is an everyday experience in fabrication, whose processes obviously fall
into two parts: first, perceiving the image or shape (eidos) of the product-to-be, and
then organizing the means and starting the execution.12
Here too, the presupposition of superior knowledge is crucial, because it allows Plato to
justify rationally why the polis should be divided into rulers and subjects:
[T]he analogy relating to fabrication and the arts and crafts offers a welcome
opportunity to justify the otherwise very dubious use of examples and instances
taken from activities in which some expert knowledge and specialization are
required. Here the concept of expert knowledge enters the realm of political action
for the first time, and the statesman is understood to be competent to deal with
human affairs in the same sense as the carpenter is competent to make furniture or
the physician to heal the sick.13
A fundamental presupposition of the concept of rule, then, is a clear separation between
those who know, and therefore are entitled to command, and those who do not know—the
ignorant masses—whose role is therefore to obey. As far as the public realm was
concerned, this was a distinctively Platonic invention: "Plato was the first to introduce the
division between those who know and do not act and those who act and do not know,
instead of the old articulation of action into beginning and achieving, so that knowing what
to do and doing it became two altogether different performances."14
10 Hannah Arendt, The Human Condition (Chicago and London: The University of Chicago Press, 1998), p. 223. 11 Arendt, "What is Authority," in Between Past and Future, p. 108. 12 Arendt, The Human Condition, 225. 13 Arendt, "What is Authority," p. 111. 14 Arendt, The Human Condition, p. 223.
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Much of Plato's efforts at this transformation of the meaning of politics emanated
from the death of Socrates. However, the reason it proved so influential throughout the
tradition of political thought is related to the nature of action itself. It is inherent to political
action that it takes place between human beings who have different opinions, interests and
goals. This means that one can never know in advance what would be the consequences of
one's action, because one cannot know how others would react to it, influence it, etc. Plato
seemed to have found a solution precisely to this problem: how to make sure that the
beginner would remain the master of what he had begun. This can be achieved only if the
role of the others is to execute orders, rather than to be independent participants.15
Introducing the concept of rule into the body politic was Plato's way to escape from the
fact of human plurality and the insecurities of political action, and this is a major reason
why it remained has relevant to political thinkers throughout Western history, and not only
to the specific situation of the polis:
Escape from the frailty of human affairs into the solidity of quiet and order has in
fact so much to recommend it that the greater part of political philosophy since
Plato could easily be interpreted as various attempts to find theoretical foundations
and practical ways for an escape from politics altogether. The hallmark of all such
escapes is the concept of rule, that is, the notion that men can lawfully and
politically live together only when some are entitled to command and the others
forced to obey.16
This transformation of politics into relations of rule was not only precisely what
"Socrates had feared and tried to prevent in the polis"17; it was also foreign to the Athenians
themselves:
[T]he whole concept of rule and being ruled, of government and power in the sense
in which we understand them as well as the regulated order attending them, was
felt to be pre-political and to belong in the private rather than the public sphere.
The polis was distinguished from the household in that it knew only 'equals',
whereas the household was the center of the strictest inequality. To be free meant
both not to be subject to the necessity of life or to the command of another and not
be in command oneself.18
The polis was an isonomy: a form of government where no one rules and no one is being
ruled. It did not distinguish between "the few" and "the many." Introducing relations of
rule into the body politic meant, then, not only an attack on human plurality, but also on
15 Ibid., pp. 222-223. 16 Ibid., p. 222. 17 Arendt, "What is Authority," pp. 115-116.
18 Arendt, The Human Condition, p. 32.
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human equality, in the sense in which it was understood in the polis, namely in the sense
that "all have the same claim to political activity."19
Finally, Plato's transformation of political equality into relations of rule also
constituted an attack on human freedom, since for the polis, "to be free meant to be free
from the inequality in rulership and to move in a sphere where neither rule nor being ruled
existed."20 In this sense equality, for Arendt, is nothing other than political freedom, and
both are possible only in a form of isonomy. Arendt makes it perfectly clear elsewhere:
"Freedom as a political phenomenon was coeval with the rise of the Greek city-states. Since
Herodotus, it was understood as a form of political organization in which citizens lived
together under conditions of no-rule, without a division between rulers and ruled. "21
Indeed, as Arendt would later write succinctly in On Revolution: "freedom means the right
‘to be a participator in government,’ or it means nothing.’22 Equality and freedom are non-
sovereign in nature, and they are possible only in a form of government where the concepts
of sovereignty and rule are renounced.
Through the polis, Arendt tells us that equality, freedom, appearance in the public
sphere—are all conditioned on a form of government where citizens have the opportunity
and the spaces to actively participate in government. In order to consider seriously such
form of government, one has to reject Plato's legacy, and assume that "ordinary" citizens
are perfectly capable of acting, thinking and making considered judgments. Arendt not only
rejects basic assumptions of the tradition of political thought, but also advocates an
institution which could embody this rejection; that would constitute a new form of
government that would reflect genuine political equality.
Citizen Councils
The council system appears in various places in Arendt's writings, from her responses to
the Jewish-Arab conflict in Palestine in the 1940s, through her celebration of the 1956
Hungarian Revolution and her book On Revolution, to interviews she gave late in her life.
However, it remains a relatively neglected topic in the ever-expanding scholarly literature
on Arendt, in two main senses. First, in the simple sense that, while it is often mentioned
by commentators, there are only a few studies dedicated to the role of the councils in
Arendt's thought.23 This neglect expresses a common tendency among commentators to
19 Arendt, "Introduction into Politics," p. 118. 20 Arendt, The Human Condition, p. 33. 21 Arendt, On Revolution (New York: Penguin Books, 1965), p. 20. 22 Ibid., p. 221. 23 See Mike McConkey, "On Arendt's Vision of the European Council Phenomenon: Critique from an
Historical Perspective," Dialectical Anthropology 16 (1991): 15-31; Jeffrey C. Isaac, "Oases in the Desert:
Hannah Arendt on Democratic Politics," American Political Science Review 88(1) (1994): 156-168; John F.
Sitton, "Hannah Arendt’s Argument for Council Democracy," in Hannah Arendt: Critical Essays, eds. Lewis
Hinchman and Sandra K. Hinchman (New York: State University of New York Press, 1994); Richard J. Bernstein, Hannah Arendt and the Jewish Question (Massachusetts, Cambridge: The MIT Press, 1996), chap.
6; Mark Reinhardt, The Art of Being Free: Taking Liberties with Tocqueville, Marx, and Arendt (Ithaca and
London: Cornell University Press, 1997), chap. 5; John Medearis, "Lost or Obscured? How V. I. Lenin,
Joseph Schumpeter and Hannah Arendt Misunderstood the Council Movement," Polity 36(3) (2004): 447-
476 Andreas Kalyvas, Democracy and the Politics of the Extraordinary: Max Weber, Carl Schmitt and
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regard Arendt's support for the council system as a romantic utopia Arendt herself did not
take seriously24; presented in her "darkest moments"25; invoked as a kind of a metaphor for
the need for moderate democratic reforms and a more vibrant civil society26; or backed
away from after On Revolution.27
The second sense in which the council system is a neglected theme in Arendt
scholarship, is that even commentators who do take it seriously, tend to focus on specific
places and historical episodes where Arendt discusses the councils directly. They do not
pay sufficient attention, I would argue, to the way Arendt's support for the councils relates
to her political philosophy as a whole. The scope of this paper does not allow for much
elaboration on the links between Arendt's support for the councils and her broader political
philosophy. Part of the aim of my discussion above, however, was to show how even when
discussing subjects that are seemingly unrelated to the councils at all, such as the relations
between philosophy, politics and judgment (which her discussion of phronesis anticipates),
Arendt actually lays the normative, theoretical groundwork for a much more participatory
form of government. In this sense, the discussion above is meant to be just one
demonstration of John Sitton's suggestion, more than twenty years ago, that Arendt "clearly
believed that council democracy is the only possible modern embodiment of her political
principles. Far from merely revealing a perverse delight in historical rarities, Arendt's
argument for council democracy is the concentrated expression of her political
philosophy."28
Let me attempt to demonstrate further the importance of this theme in Arendt.
Arendt's late writings very much focus on the question of judgment, in which she draws
heavily on Kant. Kant appeals to Arendt precisely because he, like Socrates, thought that
philosophy, in the sense of critical reflection, is an activity everybody could and should
engage in: "Kant—in this respect almost alone among the philosophers—was much
bothered by the common opinion that philosophy is only for the few, precisely because of
its moral implications."29 Arendt points out the difference between Plato and Kant
regarding the problem of man’s epistemic relation to the world. Plato regarded every
external stimulus as a distraction from the most genuine human activity—philosophizing.30
Kant, in contrast, saw the interaction between the senses and the intellect as crucial for
Hannah Arendt, Cambridge University Press 2008, chap. 9; James Muldoon, "The Lost Treasure of Arendt's Council System," Critical Horizons 12(3) (2011): 396-417. 24 Bhikhu C. Parekh, Hannah Arendt and the Search for a New Political Philosophy (London and
Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 1981), 170; Leah Bradshaw, Acting and Thinking: The Political Thought
of Hannah Arendt (Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1989), p. 54. 25 Jeremy Waldron, "Arendt's Constitutional Politics," in The Cambridge Companion to Hannah Arendt, ed.
Dana R. Villa (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2000, pp. 202-203 26 Albrecht Wellmer, "Arendt on Revolution," in The Cambridge Companion to Hannah Arendt, ed. Dana R.
Villa (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2000), 224; Steve Buckler, Hannah Arendt and Political
Theory: Challenging the Tradition (Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 2011), 123. 27 J.M. Bernstein, “Political Modernism: The New, Revolution, and Civil Disobedience in Arendt and
Adorno,” in Arendt and Adorno: Political and Philosophical Investigations, eds. Lars Rensmann and Samir
Gandesha (Stanford: Stanford Univrsity Press, 2012). 28 Sitton, "Hannah Arendt's Argument," 325. 29 Hannah Arendt, The Life of the Mind [part I-Thinking] (San Diego, New York and London: Harcourt, Inc.,
1978), p. 13. 30 Hannah Arendt, Lectures on Kant's Political Philosophy, ed. Ronald Beiner (Chicago: The University of
Chicago Press, 1992), p. 27.
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cognition. Practically, this means that the philosopher begins from experiences common to
everybody, and not from those that distinguish him from others. The Kantian philosopher,
writes Arendt, "clarifies the experiences we all have; he does not claim that the philosopher
can leave the Platonic cave or join in Parmenides’ journey to the heavens, nor does he think
he should become a member of a sect."31 Consequently, this kind of philosopher, "remains
a man like you and me, living among his fellow men, not among his fellow philosophers."32
Kant’s philosopher also has a higher regard for "ordinary" persons and their judgments,
since "the task of evaluating life with respect to pleasure and displeasure—which Plato and
the others claimed for the philosophers alone… Kant claims can be expected from every
ordinary man of good sense who ever reflected on life at all."33 Arendt points out that these
two aspects of Kant’s way of thinking are but two sides of the same coin: equality.
Philosophical knowledge, according to Kant, is indeed relevant to everyone, and every
person should be able to understand it—a position Arendt sums up as follows:
"Philosophizing, or the thinking of reason… is for Kant a general human ‘need'. It does not
oppose the few to the many."34
Arendt goes on to explain, that the disappearance of this distinction between "the
few" and "the many" in Kant, opens up the way for overcoming the rift between philosophy
and politics:
With the disappearance of this age-old distinction, however, something curious
happens. The philosopher’s preoccupation with politics disappears; he no longer
has any special interest in politics; there is no self-interest and hence no claim to
either power or to a constitution that would protect the philosopher against the many
… With the abandonment of this hierarchy, which is the abandonment of all
hierarchical structures, the old tension between politics and philosophy disappears
altogether.35
Interestingly enough, in an earlier version of Arendt's lectures on Kant's political
philosophy, she suggests the following formulation of what she has in mind in turning to
Kantian judgment: "We deal with a form of being together … where no one rules and no
one obeys. Where people persuade each other."36 The link Arendt draws in this statement,
between Kantian judgment and the challenge of establishing an isonomy, might seem
inexplicable. That is, until we realize that this is an underlying theme that runs through the
entirety of Arendt's oeuvre: laying out the theoretical foundations for a political community
where politics is conducted in the manner of speech and action between equals.
From this perspective, Arendt's support for the council system is of major
importance to understanding her political philosophy. To reiterate, they should be seen as
the modern institutional embodiment of Arendt's rejection of Plato's legacy, namely the
separation between "the few" and "the many"; and the relations of rule upon which the
body politic must be based as a natural consequence. Arendt's descriptions of the councils
31 Ibid., p. 28. 32 Ibid, emphasis in the original. 33 Ibid. 34 Ibid., p. 29 35 Ibid., emphasis added. 36 Cited in Ronald Beiner, "Interpretive Essay," in Arendt, Lectures, p. 141.
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provide further evidence for this interpretation. The councils were "spaces of freedom… It
was nothing more or less than this hope for a transformation of the state, for a new form of
government that would permit every member of the modern egalitarian society to become
a 'participator' in public affairs, that was buried in the disasters of twentieth-century
revolutions."37 Most famously in Russia, the Bolshevik party destroyed the councils that
had spread all over the country. In their popularity and the kind of government they strived
for, they posed a crucial challenge to this revolutionary party. It is suggestive how Arendt
describes this challenge:
It was the party programs more than anything else that separated the councils
from the parties… the councils were bound to rebel against any such policy
since the very cleavage between the party experts who ‘knew’ and the mass of
the people who were supposed to apply this knowledge left out of account the
average citizen’s capacity to act and to form his own opinion. The councils, in
other words, were bound to become superfluous if the spirit of the
revolutionary party prevailed. Wherever knowing and doing part company, the
space of freedom is lost.38
The professional revolutionaries, as Arendt describes them, were a clear example
of small elite who theorized and sought to penetrate into the hidden, inner logic of reality
while forcing the many to carry out what this inner logic "demands." In Arendt's
description, these revolutionaries had done little other than watching and analyzing the
disintegration of society around them, but were still surprised by the outbreak of the
revolutions. They were, however, the ones who took power, and once they did, they did
their best to shape the revolution in light of their preconceived theories, and their analysis
of past revolutions.39 This, and of course the struggle for power, led them to suspect
anything that did not fit their theories and models of how to "make" the revolution, and
anyone who did not obey and acted accordingly. They treated the councils as "mere
executive organs of revolutionary activity,"40 and when the councils resisted, they moved
on to crush them.
The councils, on their part, "were not content to discuss and 'enlighten themselves'
about measures that were taken by parties or assemblies."41 Having their own notions about
what the revolution means and what it should aim for, they refused to simply take orders
from those who supposedly "know," and attempted to form their own institutions as organs
of a new form of government, where this, and any other kind of relations of rule between
the few and the many would be abolished. The workers' movements; the people in the
Hungarian Revolution; as well in Russia in 1905 and 1917, Germany in 1918, etc.— they
all discovered they had "their own ideas" about how their political community should be
transformed in order to guarantee their freedom, and provide them spaces to practice it on
a permanent basis. They had not to succumb to the party and its theoreticians' presumption
37 Arendt, On Revolution, p. 268. 38 Ibid., emphasis added. 39 Ibid., pp. 263-265. 40 Ibid., p. 266. 41 Ibid., pp. 266-267.
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of superior knowledge, to trust their own capacity to form their opinions, and to act on
them.
Of course, the councils are just one form, although a privileged one for Arendt, of
participatory democracy, a form of government where no one rules and no one is being
ruled, a kind of a modern polis, in Arendt's (idealized) conception of it. Arendt refers also
to other possible forms, along the lines of Jefferson's wards, the Paris Commune and others.
This might be one reason, among others, why Arendt does not elaborate much on how a
council system would work. This, in turn, is one reason why commentators tend to treat
Arendt's council system as sheer utopia. This might be so, but it is still worth noting that
in the last two decades there is an explosion of experiments with local participatory
democracy, many of them follow the tradition of the councils. These experiments, I would
argue, shed interesting light on Arendt's support for a council system.
Participatory Democracy Today
It is estimated that over the last two decades, 1500 cities around the world have
experimented with participatory budgeting (PB), a form of local resources allocation where
the citizens actively participate in the decision-making process. The first and most famous
experiment took place in the Brazilian city Porto Alegre. A large metropolis in southern
Brazil, Porto Alegre is home to some 1.5 million residents. In 1989, the Brazilian labor
party rose to power, and, starting in 1990, led a broad public decision-making process on
the city budget. Two models of participatory democracy served as inspiration for this
experiment. The first was the de-centralized structure of the local Catholic Church, which
had always stressed the importance of its members’ participation and initiative. The second
was the tradition of workers' councils, which was preserved as a vision within the party.42
The process was based on a participatory pyramid on three levels: neighborhood
assemblies, councils of delegates in the districts, and a general council at the city level. In
addition, a complementary process took place, in which citizens' assemblies met on the
basis of thematic topics (housing, healthcare, education, etc.) to set priorities, and similarly
sent delegates to higher-level assemblies. Following such a grassroots process, the
municipal assembly, while in principle entitled to reject the budget proposal that was
suggested by the delegates from lower councils, had in fact a marginal role in this process,
as it was tightly controlled by the delegates. The city-level council had more leeway, but
it, too, could hardly risk defying the expressed will of the citizens, so that the budget usually
reflected the budgeting process.43
It is estimated that in subsequent years around a hundred thousand residents (8
percent of the city population) took part in a process of prioritizing public works, such as
street paving, the laying of water and sewage lines, building new schools and hospitals,
etc.44 More than half of them reported in surveys they have benefited from work and
42 Rebecca Abers, Inventing local democracy: Grassroots politics in Brazil (Boulder, Colorado: Lynne
Rienner. 2000), pp. 49-50. 43 Yves Sintomer et al., "Transnational Models of Citizen Participation: The Case of Participatory Budgeting," Journal of Public Deliberation 8(2) (2012): 1-32, at 5; Gianpaolo Baiocchi and Ernesto Ganuza,
"Participatory Budgeting as if Emancipation Mattered," Politics and Society 42(1) (2014): 29-50, at p. 36. 44 Boaventura de Sousa Santos, "Participatory Budgeting in Porto Alegre: Toward a Redistributive
Democracy," in Democratizing Democracy: Beyond the Liberal Democratic Canon, ed. Boaventura de Sousa
Santos (London and New York: Verso 2005), p. 337.
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services of the PB.45 Contrary to common concerns about more participatory forms of
democracy, in Porto Alegre traditionally marginalized groups participated in large
numbers. "PB not only attracted existing neighborhood organizations," writes Baierle, "it
stimulated participation amongst those who had never previously been organized… the
general profile of participants is that they are from lower income households, are older and
have low to medium levels of education."46 The presence of women similarly increased
gradually until they became from an underrepresented group to the majority in many of the
PB forums.47 As a result of this inclusive process,
From 1990 to 2000, if one takes five major social indicators—access to treated
water, access to sewage systems, incidence of infant mortality, access to day care,
and housing—and analyzes their evolution in Porto Alegre, an important evolution
is revealed… Participatory budgeting concentrated in the areas with the largest
deficits in housing and public goods; in ten years, it managed to strongly diminish
this deficit."48
The success of the Porto Alegre participatory budget was not only the mere fact of
wide participation, nor even the improvement of living conditions in the neighborhoods.
On top of this, the dynamics of deliberation and the need to make joint decisions also
brought about the strengthening of social solidarity within and between neighborhoods. At
times, this was the result of the common interests of two or more neighborhoods; other
times, of the relationships that were formed during meetings between neighborhood
representatives: “Through the budget process, neighborhood groups learned to trust one
another, engaging in long-term relations of reciprocity.”49
The success of Porto Alegre, which the UN declared to be one the 40 best practices
of urban management in the world,50 led to the implementation of PB, first across Brazil,
then Latin America, and in the last 15 years throughout the world. Of course, many of these
experiments diverge significantly from the one in Porto Alegre in their aims, processes and
outcomes. They often leave little actual decision-making power to the citizens, so that
participation becomes a means to gain more legitimacy for the local government, or to
make for a more efficient management, rather than to promote political equality in Arendt's
sense of the term. In Porto Alegre itself, PB lost much of its meaning over the years, due
to changes in the governing party and other factors. My aim is, then, not to idealize these
experiments, but rather to treat them as they are: a series of experiments, at least some of
which point to the possibility that radical participatory democracy might not be as utopian
as most political theorists make it to be.
45 Ibid., p. 346. 46 Sergio Gregorio Baierle, "Porto Alegre: Popular Sovereignty or Dependent Citizens?," in Participation
and Democracy in the Twenty-First Century City, ed. Jenny Pearce (New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2010),
p. 56. 47 Marion Gret and Yves Sintomer, The Porto Alegre Experiment: Learning Lessons for Better Democracy, trans. Stephen Wright (London and New York: Zed Books, 2005), p. 79. 48 Leonardo Avritzer, "Living Under a Democracy: Participation and its Impact on the Living Conditions of
the Poor," Latin American Research Review 45 (2010): 166-185, at p. 174. 49 Abers, Inventing Local Democracy, p. 168. 50 Santos, "Participatory Budgeting," p. 307.
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Ironically, as this explosion of empirical experiments with participatory democracy
was taking place, the theory of participatory democracy was increasingly being "supplanted
by liberal minimalist, deliberative, and agonistic theories of democracy."51 One prominent
scholar of participatory democracy has summed up the current situation as follows: “a new
way of doing politics is being practiced, but remains theoretically unaccounted for.”52
Arendt's thought, I would suggest, has still much to offer in terms of theoretical account
for this new way of doing politics, once the extent to which her political philosophy is
grounded in a deep commitment to radical, participatory democracy is recognized.
Conclusion
The role Arendt's commitment to participatory democracy plays in her political thought is
far from being properly explored. A deeper investigation of this theme in Arendt might
shed new light on various aspects of her work. It may also show that Arendt's political
thought has still much to offer to the theory of participatory democracy, by providing a
strikingly original understanding of the potential of such form of government, as well as of
the problematic premises ingrained in our political thought and practice, that incline us to
dismiss them as utopian or even dangerous. Experiments in local participatory democracy
in the last two decades suggest, at the very least, that some of these assumptions should be
re-examined. Democratizing democracy is still a major challenge we face, and at least on
Arendt's terms, it is nothing but the challenge of political equality, indeed of "the political"
as such.
51 Jeffrey D. Hilmer, "The State of Participatory Democracy Today," paper presented at the 66th annual
meeting of the Midwest Political Science Association, Chicago, IL, April 3-6, 2008, p. 6. 52 Leonardo Avritzer, Participatory institutions in democratic Brazil (Washington, D.C., Baltimore:
Woodrow Wilson Center Press; Johns Hopkins University Press, 2009), p. 4.