The State as a Clearing House: Interest Organizations, the Common Good, and the Arduous Rise of Pluralist Democracy in Postwar Germany

dc.contributor.authorPankakoski, Timo
dc.contributor.organizationfi=Turun ihmistieteiden tutkijakollegium (TIAS)|en=Turku Institute for Advanced Studies (TIAS)|
dc.contributor.organization-code1.2.246.10.2458963.20.78639161450
dc.converis.publication-id515516833
dc.converis.urlhttps://research.utu.fi/converis/portal/Publication/515516833
dc.date.accessioned2026-04-24T15:53:27Z
dc.description.abstract<p>This article retells the German intellectual history of political pluralism from a novel perspective: that of the state as a clearing house. In regular business transactions, clearing houses settle debts and mediate between buyers and sellers, bearing risks on both parties’ behalf for a fee. In politics, the clearing house image describes political pluralism, interest groups, and the common good metaphorically—and, in Germany, pejoratively at first. The clearing house topos emerged in Carl Schmitt’s interwar criticism of pluralism, parliamentarianism, and the League of Nations. Alongside Otto Kirchheimer, particularly the post-1945 Schmittian antipluralists Werner Weber and Winfried Martini adopted the term to criticize the “occupation” of the state by private interests. However, the clearing house metaphor was also reappropriated by defenders of the republic like Dolf Sternberger, Ernst Friesenhahn, Horst Ehmke, Günter Dürig, Ernst Fraenkel, and Otto Stammer. In their creative reinterpretations, the state as a mediator between rival interests and viewpoints became a moderately positive image—one not only compatible with the common good but, in fact, serving it. The analysis reminds us that the economic framing of pluralistic interests by no means automatically excludes considerations of the common good. Correspondingly, “clearing house” gradually turned from a word of abuse into an affirmative metaphor with prodemocratic pluralistic implications, thus capturing, in a microcosmic fashion, much of Germany’s postwar democratization. This was a collective process, and the discursive continuities with prewar antipluralism highlight how pluralist democracy lives off the linguistic resources at its disposal, occasionally by creative reinterpretation<br></p>
dc.identifier.eissn1552-7476
dc.identifier.jour-issn0090-5917
dc.identifier.urihttps://www.utupub.fi/handle/11111/58588
dc.identifier.urlhttps://doi.org/10.1177/00905917251412884
dc.identifier.urnURN:NBN:fi-fe2026022315408
dc.language.isoen
dc.okm.affiliatedauthorPankakoski, Timo
dc.okm.discipline517 Political scienceen_GB
dc.okm.discipline517 Valtio-oppi, hallintotiedefi_FI
dc.okm.internationalcopublicationnot an international co-publication
dc.okm.internationalityInternational publication
dc.okm.typeA1 ScientificArticle
dc.publisherSAGE Publications
dc.publisher.countryUnited Kingdomen_GB
dc.publisher.countryBritanniafi_FI
dc.publisher.country-codeGB
dc.relation.articlenumber905917251412884
dc.relation.doi10.1177/00905917251412884
dc.relation.ispartofjournalPolitical Theory
dc.titleThe State as a Clearing House: Interest Organizations, the Common Good, and the Arduous Rise of Pluralist Democracy in Postwar Germany
dc.year.issued2026

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