“…Whatever the type of justification considered, when it comes to conceptualizing democracy in the workplace, the classical conception of democracy appears to be simultaneously too broad and too narrow, and this is revealed in the way workplace democracy is theorized. Indeed, whether one looks at theories based on republican insights (González‐Ricoy ; Anderson ; Breen ; Jakob and Neuhäuser ), the state–firm analogy (Dahl ; McMahon ; Landemore ), the normative primacy of justice (Hsieh ; Thomas ), the idea of meaningful work (Schwartz ; Roessler ; Yeoman ; Veltman ), relational equality (Néron ; Anderson ), or the supposed spillover effect of workplace democracy (Pateman ), in all these cases the demand for democratization remains constrained within the limits of a political conception of democracy, that is, the idea of self‐government. As a consequence, the scope of democratization remains limited to mechanisms aimed at enabling employee's voice, either through direct ownership of the firm such as in cooperatives, the establishment of representative institutions such as joint or separated supervisory boards, or the creation of participatory bodies such as workers councils.…”