â<i>Uncommon Sense</i> is a major statement about the contemporary position of the politics of the worldâs residual democracies. No one else in political science, and certainly no one at all in political philosophy, combines Shapiroâs analytic ability, his astonishing range of political knowledge, and his gritty intensity of political purpose.ââJohn Dunn, Emeritus Professor of Political Theory, University of Cambridge<br /><br />âIan Shapiroâs work has always stood out for his careful argument and insistence on anchoring considerations of democratic theory in important concrete issues in political life. <i>Uncommon Sense</i> continues that high standard.ââAdolph Reed, Jr., author of <i>The South: Jim Crow and Its Afterlives</i><br /><br />âKnowledge is possible and helpful; domination is bad; democracy remains central to resisting domination. It seems astonishing that we need a new book from an eminent and insightful scholar to defend those statementsâand yet we do. Luckily, Ian Shapiro has stepped up with compelling evidence, analysis, and advocacy. Democratic citizens and would-be citizens are in his debt.ââJennifer Hochschild, author of <i>Genomic Politics: How the Revolution in Genomic Science Is Shaping American Society</i><br /><br />âIan Shapiro defends a âchastenedâ version of the Enlightenment Project, but the defense itself is by no means chastened. It is a wonderfully robust argument for majoritarian democracy, strong parties, and a vigorously partisan politicsâand a brilliant polemic against every opposing view. Shapiroâs intellectual partisanship is a model for the political arguments that, he believes, sustain our freedom.ââMichael Walzer, author of <i>The Struggle for a Decent Politics</i><br /><br />