"A New Yorker Best Book We've Read This Year" "Longlisted for the Runciman Award, Anglo-Hellenic League" "Praising the people who agree with you is the easy part of democratic government. The hard part is building a superintending architecture that wins the consent even of those you hate. [ Manville and Ober] recognize this truth, and, indeed, build a whole theory of democracy around it. . . . Persuasive."---Adam Gopnik, New Yorker "Manville and Ober urge defenders of liberal democracy to take the long view. The book provides fascinating portraits of four great breakthroughs in citizen self-rule. . . . [ They] argue, the great democracies survived because they forged and maintained a 'civic bargain,' a political pact about who is a citizen, how decisions are made, and the distribution of responsibilities and entitlements."---G. John Ikenberry, Foreign Affairs "Well-written and insightful. . . a veritable treasure trove for anyone who wants to understand the events leading up to our experiment in self-government, the challenges encountered along the way (human nature being what it is), and the patterns that are most likely to be repeated in the future."---J. Bradford Delong, Project Syndicate "Even with all that seems discouraging in our own time, Americans should take heart that we the people can make a difference and maintain the continuity of our experiment. . . . Manville and Ober] offer a useful and accessible framework for talking about democracyin a time when we are all too accustomed to speaking past one another on fundamental matters of civic life."---Hans Zeiger, American Purpose