Polarities+Democracy

Polarities + Democracy

The Polarities of Democracy Institute believes that democracy is the solution to oppression.

Incorporating Polarity Thinking as its conceptual framework, the Polarities of Democracy approach can be used to plan, guide, and evaluate social change efforts to address the social, economic, and environmental threats to our human survival and support building healthy, sustainable, and just communities. The theory includes ten overarching democratic values required to fully attain democracy and posits that each of these values are essential, yet none are sufficient alone.


The ten values are arranged in five interrelated polarity pairs:

The Polarities of Democracy theory successfully integrates the Polarity Thinking, civic education, and organizational development, as well as the concepts from Western, Eastern, African, and Indigenous wisdom, providing a theoretical framework for the democratization of workplaces and society in order to address the socio-economic and environmental challenges faced on a local, national, and global level.

The approach promotes participatory practices that allow citizens, workers, students, organizations, and communities to unleash their creativity and strengthen their capacity for social change initiatives that promote social, economic, racial, and environmental justice and responsibility. It is a unifying theory with practical applications for advancing democratic workplaces and society.


What are Polarities? They are interdependent pairs like inhale and exhale that are ongoing and can’t be “solved” by choosing one of the “poles” as a solution.  The poles may seem to be at cross purposes with one another, but choosing one of the poles as a “solution” will lead to problems if you apply “either/or” thinking to the tension. Polarities depend on both poles over time — they are interdependent and each pole has positive and negative aspects. We can leverage interdependencies when we can supplement “either/or” thinking with “both/and” thinking and work to leverage the positive aspects of both poles in a polarity pair.



Additional key elements that support the Polarities of Democracy approach include:

  • The concepts of democracy arose from our emerging consciousness as part of our evolutionary development and the fundamental purpose of these is to overcome oppression,
  • The principles of democracy have universal applicability to all cultures and time periods,
  • The predominant Western philosophy of utility ignores the role that human altruism plays in our evolutionary and democratic development,
  • Our societal origins provided a more democratic relationship between men and women than the patriarchal societies that have dominated modern history,
  • Patriarchal societies have prevented us from attaining a full expression of democracy on a national or global level, and
  • If true democracy is to be attained, then these ten non-partisan democratic values must be leveraged effectively in order to maximize the positive aspects of each while minimizing the negative aspects of each.


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