This white paper proposes a framework for structural democratization rooted in constitutionalcontinuity and institutional evolution. It begins with the recognition that representativedemocracy remains the foundation of American governance, yet its current structure including the long-standing concentration of political competition within two dominant partycoalitions and the aggregation of influence within established institutional channels increasingly reflects historical inertia rather than contemporary social complexity. Rather than rejecting existing institutions, this framework argues for their modernization toenhance stability, legitimacy, and resilience. Democratic systems throughout American historyhave expanded through structural reform when institutional design no longer aligned with livedrealities and public expectations. That adaptive tradition remains essential today. Structural democratization is defined here as strengthening representative systems byexpanding competitive balance, reducing excessive concentration of influence, and ensuringbroader institutional accessibility for diverse communities. It advances four core objectives:stability improvement, legitimacy safeguarding, future-proofing governance against systemicdrift, and upgrading institutional resilience in a rapidly changing society. This paper does not prescribe fixed policy solutions. Instead, it establishes principles andanalytical direction to guide further research and institutional experimentation. It invitespolicymakers, scholars, and civic leaders to evaluate how representative democracy can evolveto better reflect the nation’s cultural complexity while preserving constitutional foundations.
Joshua Mack (Tue,) studied this question.