New Books in Politics and Polemics

Stephen Skowronek, "The Adaptability Paradox: Political Inclusion and Constitutional Resilience" (U Chicago Press, 2025)

55 snips
Jan 12, 2026
Stephen Skowronek, Pelatiah Perit Professor of Political Science at Yale and author of The Adaptability Paradox, explores how American democracy’s long history of adaptation may now be straining the Constitution. He discusses the shift after the Rights Revolution, the role of parties and administration as auxiliaries, the loss of federalism’s social foundation, and why full inclusion has intensified constitutional conflict.
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INSIGHT

Adaptations Reset Not Overthrow

  • Adaptability is a specific kind of change that stabilizes institutions by securing buy-in from participants.
  • Stephen Skowronek argues adaptations reset and stabilize the system rather than producing wholesale revolutions.
INSIGHT

Inclusion Can Undermine Stability

  • The Adaptability Paradox: expanding democratic inclusion eventually undermines the Constitution's capacity to stabilize.
  • Full inclusion makes it harder for the Constitution to reestablish firm foundations and consensus, Skowronek warns.
INSIGHT

Auxiliaries Managed Democratic Expansion

  • Auxiliaries like parties and the administrative state historically managed conflicts created by expanding suffrage.
  • These extra-constitutional devices compensated for relaxed formal constraints and enabled broader inclusion.
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