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Full Description
This book addresses a persistent gap in the political ethics literature: the disconnect between political ethics as a theoretical discipline and the ethical dilemmas that politicians face in political practice. It highlights how elected officials navigate ethical challenges in their representative roles, providing readers with an accessible view of the ethical landscape that underpins political decision-making.
The book features a novel integration of ethical theory and political practice. Through extensive interviews with Swedish parliamentarians, the book captures how politicians reason about key aspects of political ethics, including transparency, honesty, and compromise, as well as their views on virtues, vices, and the most challenging political dilemmas. By examining ethical challenges from parliamentarian's own perspectives, the book reveals under-theorized aspects of political ethics and introduces new analytical categories, such as perceived powerlessness, dual ethical spheres, and the role of judgment in everyday decisions. In doing so, it tackles foundational challenges in political ethics and opens pathways for normative analysis, primarily in offering an empirical basis for discussions on whether this is indeed how politicians' ought to reason about politics, ethics, and democracy.
The Everyday Ethics of Politics will appeal to researchers and graduate students working in ethics, political philosophy, and political theory.
Contents
1. Introduction Part 1: From Theory to Practice 2. Toward a Theory of Everyday Political Dilemmas 3. A New Method for Studying Everyday Political Dilemmas Part 2: Dilemmas, Virtues and Vices in the Swedish Parliament 4. Virtues in the Swedish Parliament 5. Vices in the Swedish Parliament 6. The Transparency Dilemma, or the Role and Limits of Transparency 7. The Honest Dilemma, or How to Avoid Lying 8.The Compromise Dilemma, or the Spirit of Compromise and Its Challenges 9. The Most Challenging Dilemma, or Dilemmas of Powerlessness Part 3: From Theory to Practice, and Back Again 10. Political Ethics from a Political View 11. Political Ethics from a Democratic View 12. Conclusion



