BEYOND THE DEMOCRATIC STATE:
ANTI-AUTHORITARIAN INTERVENTIONS IN DEMOCRATIC THEORY
by
BRIAN CARL BERNHARDT
B.A., James Madison University, 2005
M.A., University of Colorado at Boulder, 2010
A thesis submitted to
the Faculty of the Graduate School of the
University of Colorado in partial fulfillment
of the requirement
for the degree of
Doctor of Philosophy
Department of Political Science
2014
This thesis entitled:
Beyond the Democratic State: Anti-Authoritarian Interventions in Democratic Theory
written by Brian Carl Bernhardt
has been approved for the Department of Political Science
Steven Vanderheiden,
Chair
Michaele Ferguson
David Mapel
James Martel
Alison Jaggar
Date
The final copy of this thesis has been examined by the signatories, and we
Find that both the content and the form meet acceptable presentation
standards
Of scholarly work in the above mentioned discipline.
iii
Bernhardt, Brian Carl (Ph.D., Political Science)
Beyond the Democratic State:
Anti-Authoritarian Interventions in Democratic Theory
Thesis directed by Associate Professor Steven Vanderheiden
Though democracy has achieved widespread global popularity, its meaning has become
increasingly vacuous and citizen confidence in democratic governments continues to erode. I
respond to this tension by articulating a vision of democracy inspired by anti-authoritarian theory
and social movement practice.
By anti-authoritarian, I mean a commitment to individual liberty,
a skepticism toward centralized power, and a belief in the capacity of self-organization. This
dissertation fosters a conversation between an anti-authoritarian perspective and democratic
theory: What would an account of democracy that begins from these three commitments look
like? In the first two chapters, I develop an anti-authoritarian account of freedom and power. In
Chapter I, mobilizing insights from libertarians and republicans, I offer
an account of freedom
that is divorced from self-sovereignty and committed to non-domination. In Chapter II, utilizing
work in anarchist anthropology, I show why freedom as non-domination is incompatible with the
state, and that an alternative to the statist organization of power is possible. While a centripetal
logic unifies society’s
power in a Leviathan, a centrifugal logic disperses power across many
non-sovereign nodes. In the second half of the dissertation, in order to elaborate what centrifugal
power may look like in our contemporary context, I focus on two core anti-authoritarian social
movement practices: direct action and networked organization.
In Chapter III, I argue that direct
action, a practice that enacts collective power, is democratic to the extent that it upsets power
inequalities and domination, and creates spaces for others to exercise political power. In Chapter
IV, I argue that networks enable two ends that are often thought to be in tension: coordination,
and self-governance, on
the one hand, and diversity and pluralism, on the other. In contrast to
representative elections and directly democratic assemblies, however, networks do not require a
well-defined people, a centralized decision-making body, or even a single, unifying decision.
Throughout the dissertation, I argue against the platitude of the “democratic state” in
favor of a
democracy against the state. I conclude by re-imagining democracy as the dispersion of power.