"This is a hard-hitting, thoughtful and also, for the most part, a hopeful book...argues that progress towards real freedom and real democracy can still be achieved."--Andrew Gamble, Times Literary Supplement "[ B]rings to bear the fruits of a lifetime of hard intellectual work, exploring the social and economic realities of contemporary welfare states--not through their fond self-imaginings or effusive advertisements for themselves, but through their far more erratic capacity to aid their many citizens who still stand in acute need."--John Dunn, Times Higher Education Supplement "[ A] reworking, in accessible and convincing detail, of the insight that the person demanding freedom to indulge unexamined impulses is a slave...a strong and thoughtful argument for putting positive flesh on the skeleton of negative liberty."--John Lloyd, Financial Times "Ringen compiles an impressive range of data designed to evaluate various dimensions of the political, economic and social life of a number of contemporary democracies."--Martin Leet, Australian Review of Public Affairs "Political symbols often lose value through their very success, and much work must be done to recapture the engendering experiences to which they point. Ringen ... is dedicated to doing this work for 'democracy.' ... [ C]learly destined to be a classic."--M. Berheide, Choice "This is a brilliant book...You may disagree with his arguments, but they have the beauty of transparency."--The Guardian "[ W]ith a tocquevillian inspiration...will easily reach the status of a classic in the literature deepening the great liberal tradition."--Raymond Boudon, Commentaire, France "[ )]ne of Europe's leading social scientists...The book is a model of social science research, analytical, rigorous and full of interesting insights."--Vernon Bogdanor, The Spectator "[ P]rovokes the reader without being provocative, thereby fostering further thoughts and reasoned disagreement."--John Samples, Cato Journal "[ O]ne need not agree with Ringen on the relationship between poverty and freedom, or even on the obligation of the state to eradicate the former in order to guarantee the latter, in order to find his ideas for policy reform quite worthwhile."--Adam Fleisher, International Affairs "Even if many of the ideas in this book are controversial and provocative, that is precisely why it is worth reading. I think this book can be of great interest for everyone interested in social justice, democratic theory and the institutional implication of democracy and social justice."--Harald Borgebund, Political Studies Review "What Democracy Is For offers a bold defense of democratic ideals, grounded in real reforms."--World Book Industry