"Does the democratic nation state remain a legitimate regime form in the current age of globalization? Sceptical assessments of the nation state's legitimacy and outright crisis diagnoses prevail in the academic literature, especially in the contributions of public-opinion researchers. Democracy's Deep Roots uses a novel, text-analytical approach to probe this topical question. Drawing on a comparative study of legitimation discourses in the quality press of four Western democracies (Switzerland, Germany, Britain and the United States), it shows that the levels and democratic foundations of public support for the nation state and its core institutions are surprisingly robust. There is little evidence for the fully-fledged erosion of legitimacy or for a transformation of its foundations in the public spheres of Western democracies. The book also identifies a number of discursive mechanisms that explain this finding and suggests an analytical framework for future research into the communicative dimension of legitimation processes."--Jacket.
Introduction: A legitimacy crisis of the democratic nation state? -- The communicative dimension of legitimacy : a text analytical perspective -- How stable is the legitimacy of the democratic nation state? -- How democratic is the legitimacy of the democratic nation state? -- Relegitimation strategies : countering threats to the legitimacy of political systems -- Conclusion: Broadening the agenda of legitimacy research -- Methodological appendix.