Considerations on Representative Government | |
Author: | John Stuart Mill |
Country: | United Kingdom |
Publisher: | Parker, Son and Bourn |
Language: | English |
Release Date: | 1861 |
Media Type: | |
Pages: | viii, 340 pp. |
Considerations on Representative Government is a book by John Stuart Mill published in 1861.[1] [2]
Mill argues for representative government, the ideal form of government in his opinion. One of the more notable ideas Mill puts forth in the book is that the business of government representatives is not to make legislation. Instead, Mill suggests that representative bodies such as parliaments and senates are best suited to be places of public debate on the various opinions held by the population and to act as watchdogs of the professionals who create and administer laws and policy. In his words:[3]