Belief

Popular Sovereignty

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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.

Power Collectivity Autonomy

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

Sources

  1. n.d..
  2. 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.