Contention and Democracy in Europe, 1650–2000. By
Charles Tilly. New York: Cambridge University Press, 2004. 320p. $60.00
cloth, $22.00 paper.
Charles Tilly's study of democracy and contention is itself
highly contentious and deservedly so. After reading and writing social
and political history for over five decades, its author is well
positioned to judge which social scientific understandings of democracy
hold up to historical scrutiny and which do not. In his search for the
“mechanisms and processes that promote, inhibit or reverse
democratization” (p. ix), Tilly identifies a number of false
leads. One of his most contentious points is that the quest for
democracy's “necessary and sufficient conditions” is
futile (p. 39). Democracy, he insists, “does not have a single
history … repeated in more or less the same conditions and
sequences by each democratizing country” (p. 35). Searching for
either uniform conditions or repeated sequences is, thus, a waste of
time. In an equally contentious mode, he cautions “culturalists,
phenomenologists, behaviorists and methodological individualists”
not to “treat individual dispositions as the fundamental causes
of social processes.” Democratization and de-democratization
cannot be understood through the “reconstruction” and
“aggregation” of individual dispositions just before their
point of action (p. xi). Nor, he argues, can democratization be
understood as a “product of age-old character traits or of
short-term constitutional innovations” (p. 9).