Startseite Altertumswissenschaften & Ägyptologie Enabling Laws, Rule of Law, and the Transformation of the Roman Republic
Kapitel Open Access

Enabling Laws, Rule of Law, and the Transformation of the Roman Republic

  • Kit Morrell
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How Republics Die
Ein Kapitel aus dem Buch How Republics Die
© 2025 Walter de Gruyter GmbH, Berlin/Boston

© 2025 Walter de Gruyter GmbH, Berlin/Boston

Kapitel in diesem Buch

  1. Frontmatter I
  2. Editorial Statement V
  3. Preface and Acknowledgements VII
  4. Contents IX
  5. Contributors XIII
  6. Part 1: The Death of the Roman Republic – Concepts
  7. New Perspectives on Old Problems/Old Perspectives on New Problems 1
  8. How Did Ancient Greek Democracies Die? Not (Normally) by Demagoguery 25
  9. Consensus Breakdown: Or, How Cicero Was Wrong About Rome, and We Might Be Wrong About America 39
  10. Part 2: The Death of the Roman Republic – Causation
  11. Reform Unwillingness and the Death of the Roman Republic 71
  12. The Role of the Economy in the Fall of the Roman Republic 123
  13. Alternative Visions and Fractured Allegiances: The Role of Disillusion, Alienation and Disengagement in the Late Roman Republic 151
  14. Enabling Laws, Rule of Law, and the Transformation of the Roman Republic 195
  15. Dominari illi volunt, vos liberi esse – Populist Reason and Rhetoric in Sallust 227
  16. Part 3: The Death of the Roman Republic – Effect
  17. The View from the Periphery: Local Elites, Roman Elites, and the Western Provinces during Rome’s Crisis of the 80s BCE 249
  18. In the Wake of Autocrats: The Plight of Matronae in the Late Republic 269
  19. Just Another Word? The Lure of Libertas in the Seventies 289
  20. Competitive Authoritarianism on the Eve of Empire: Pompeius’s New Republic of 52 BCE 307
  21. Caesar and the Tribunes of the Plebs: Process and Events 331
  22. Who Counts as the Roman People? Caesar’s recensus and Discriminatory Populism 363
  23. Part 4: From the End of the Roman Republic to the Modern World
  24. Augustus’ Res Gestae as a Revolutionary’s Manual 389
  25. With a Bang or a Whimper? Reflections on the Fall of the Venetian Republic 409
  26. A New Catilina or a New Cromwell? Napoleon Bonaparte and the Death of the First French Republic, 1794–1804 423
  27. Part 5: The Roman Republic and the Modern World
  28. From Caesarism to Populism: An Intellectual History 441
  29. Dealing with Uncertainty: Cicero, Victor Klemperer and How to Cope with the Present in Moments of Crisis 457
  30. The Civil War in Spain (1936–1939) and the Civil Wars in Late-republican Rome as Cases of Political and Ideological Polarisation 475
  31. The Death of Democratic Republics in the 1930s: Germany, Austria, Spain 493
  32. How Republics Die: The Corrosive Effects of Election ‘Conspiracism’ 511
  33. Afterword: Lessons from the Graveyard 529
  34. Index 535
Heruntergeladen am 3.10.2025 von https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/doi/10.1515/9783111705446-007/html
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