Popular Sovereignty
Explore in the Atlas →The belief that legitimate political authority derives from the people rather than from a monarch or divine right — one of the three foundational forms of Taylor's modern moral order alongside the market and the public sphere. As a shared value it underwrites democratic institutions and is monumentalised in the architecture of parliaments, assembly halls and public squares where 'the people' are imagined to gather and rule.
Details
- Register
- Instituted
Classifications
- Holder
- Communal intergenerational
- Source of authority
- Reason
- Subject
- Human centred
- Political position
- Hegemonic
- Degree of codification
- Highly codified
- Mode of transmission
- Text drawing
- Knowledge type
- Propositional
- Epistemic cluster
- Western philosophical
Connections
- legitimates The Nation-State
Sources
- n.d..
- n.d..
Cite this entry
First published May 2026Last revised Jul 2026
CLAD. "Popular Sovereignty." Atlas of Architectural Thought. CLAD, 2026. https://www.cl-ad.com.au/research/atlas/belief/popular-sovereignty/. Accessed July 17, 2026.