Herrenvolk democracy (h aspiré)\e.ʁɛn.vɔlk de.mɔ.kʁa.si\ féminin
En Algérie, la IIIe République a pris la forme locale d’une Herrenvolk democracy. Les « Européens » y ressemblaient beaucoup, du point de vue sociopolitique, aux Blancs d’Afrique du Sud.— (Emmanuel Todd, Après la démocratie, 2008, ISBN 9782070786831, p. 125)
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Herrenvolk democracy \ˈhɛɹ.ən.fɔlk dɪ.ˌmɑk.ɹə.si\ ou \ˈhɛə.ɹən.fɒlk dɪ.ˌmɒk.ɹə.si\ |
Herrenvolk democracies \ˈhɛɹ.ən.fɔlk dɪ.ˌmɑk.ɹə.siz\ ou \ˈhɛə.ɹən.fɒlk dɪ.ˌmɒk.ɹə.siz\ |
Herrenvolk democracy \ˈhɛɹ.ən.fɔlk dɪ.ˌmɑk.ɹə.si\ (États-Unis), \ˈhɛə.ɹən.fɒlk dɪ.ˌmɒk.ɹə.si\ (Royaume-Uni)
This attachment to democracy and the universalist principles of the American Creed has in turn played a central role in America’s ability to transcend its racist past and transform itself from a Herrenvolk democracy, based on rigid and savagely oppressive rules of racial exclusion and superiority, into a great “civilizational empire.”— (Anatol Lieven, America Right or Wrong: An Anatomy of American Nationalism, 2004, ISBN 9780198037675, p. 41)