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dc.contributor.authorPérez y Soto Domínguez, Alejandro-
dc.contributor.authorSorzano Rodríguez, Daisy Milena-
dc.contributor.authorCarballido Cordero, Manuel-
dc.date.accessioned2026-06-24T17:09:16Z-
dc.date.available2026-06-24T17:09:16Z-
dc.date.created2026-03-
dc.date.issued2026-04-
dc.identifier.urihttps://repositorio.cetys.mx/handle/60000/2041-
dc.description.abstractSomething has shifted in the grammar of democratic authority, and so far political theory has been notably reluctant to plainly address the issue. This article takes the position that the Western state has run up against the limits of rational contractualism —not because Hobbes was wrong about fear, or Rawls about procedure, but because neither framework was built to receive the specific kind of claim that late modern political subjects are demanding: the claim to be seen in their suffering, to be acknowledged as victims before the remedy is proposed. What is emerging in response is what this article calls a sentimental grammar of legitimacy —a mode of political authority that grounds itself in affective recognition, in the institutional performance of care, and in the symbolic repair of historical harm. Axel Honneth's theory of recognition provides the primary theoretical lens, placed in debate with the contractualist tradition that it both extends and contests. Three domains —feminist care politics, ecological constitutionalism, and biopolitical-algorithmic governance— serve as the analytical terrain. In each, the article tracks both the genuine democratic potential of the affective turn and its equally genuine risks: the conversion of political wounds into administrative categories, the selective distribution of empathy along lines that reproduce prior hierarchies, and the substitution of performed care for the structural transformation that recognition, taken seriously, would demand. The article concludes with what it calls a criterion of sufficiency: the conditions under which affective legitimacy accomplishes its real democratic task.es_ES
dc.description.sponsorshipScientific Culturees_ES
dc.language.isoen_USes_ES
dc.relation.ispartofseries12;2.1-
dc.rightsAtribución-NoComercial-CompartirIgual 2.5 México*
dc.rights.urihttp://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/2.5/mx/*
dc.subjectDemocratic Legitimacyes_ES
dc.subjectMoral Injuryes_ES
dc.subjectAffective Recognitiones_ES
dc.subjectSentimental Statees_ES
dc.subjectRecognition Theory.es_ES
dc.titleWHEN THE STATE LEARNS TO CARE: MORAL INJURY, AFFECTIVE RECOGNITION, AND THE CRISIS OF DEMOCRATIC LEGITIMACY IN LATE MODERNITYes_ES
dc.title.alternativeSCientific Cultureses_ES
dc.typeArticlees_ES
dc.description.urlhttps://sci-cult.net/index.php/cult/article/view/4317/3104es_ES
dc.format.page7344-7359es_ES
dc.identifier.doiDOI: 10.5281/zenodo.19671699-
dc.identifier.indexacionScopuses_ES
dc.subject.sedeCampus Tijuanaes_ES
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