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Groups, representation and democracy

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Can groups effectively link citizens to political institutions and policy processes? Are groups an antidote to emerging democratic deficits? This book will prompt senior students, researchers and s...
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  • 01 July 2010
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Whether called pressure groups, NGOs, social movement organisations or organised civil society, the value of ‘groups’ to the policy process, to economic growth, to governance, to political representation and to democracy has always been contested. However, there seems to be a contemporary resurgence in this debate largely centred on their democratising potential: can groups effectively link citizens to political institutions and policy processes? Are groups an antidote to emerging democratic deficits? Or do groups themselves face challenges in demonstrating their legitimacy and representativeness?

This book debates the democratic potential and practice of groups; focussing on the vibrancy of internal democracies, and modes of accountability with those who join such groups and to the constituencies they advocate for. It draws on literatures covering national, European and global levels, and presents new empirical material from the UK and Australia

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Price: £80.00
Pages: 328
Publisher: Manchester University Press
Imprint: Manchester University Press
Series: Perspectives on Democratic Practice
Publication Date: 01 July 2010
ISBN: 9780719076527
Format: Hardcover
BISACs:

POLITICAL SCIENCE / Political Ideologies / Democracy, International relations, POLITICAL SCIENCE / History & Theory, Political structures: democracy, Political science and theory

REVIEWS Icon

1. Groups as agents of democracy?
2. Interest group aliases: towards definitional commensurability?
3. Democratic expectations: the representation account
4. Between representation and solidarity: (re)calibrating democratic expectations
5. Democratic promises and practices: some empirical evidence
6. The orthodox case: the drift from representation towards solidarity
7. Making Olson work: rejuvenating ‘supply-side’ explanations
8. Are ‘protest businesses’ contemporary phenomenon?
9. Democratic transformation: fulfilling the promise of representation
10. Between promise and practice
References
Index