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Building: (Building C) Faculty of Law, Administration & Economics , Floor: 1st floor, Room: Amf A
Friday 09:00 - 10:40 CEST (06/09/2019)
During the past decades, we have seen an increasing popularity and success of (radical) populist leaders and parties all over the world. These leaders and parties are often seen as posing a threat to the values of liberal democracy. One of the reasons, amongst others, is their ideology and rhetoric of exclusion of certain groups in society. At the same time, the past decades have also been characterized by a broad diversity of democratic innovations being theorized and implemented all over the world in order to strengthen democracy. Normative thinking about how to improve democracy has been at the heart of deliberative democratic theory. While there are plenty of successful examples deepening engagement with democracy, the current trend towards the rise of extreme left- and right-wing populism does raise some questions about what these democratic innovations can achieve. Against this backdrop, the panel stimulates a discussion about the relationship between deliberative democratic theory – but also other forms of democratic innovations - and populism. Is there a link between these two, and if so, what does this link look like? Do they only oppose each other, or do they share some common elements or goals? And what kind of potential do the normative principles of deliberative democracy have in order to deal with radical forms of populism? These are only a couple of general questions that fit into the panel’s main objective: presenting a set of theoretical or empirical contributions that combines deliberative democratic theory with theory or research on populism. Consistently, this panel warmly invites papers that offer insights into the seeming paradox between the rise of democratic innovations on the one hand, and the rise of populism on the other.
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Democratic Innovations and Populism in Latin America: Participation, Contestation, and Latinos In-Between | View Paper Details |
Let’s Talk About It: Reconciling Deliberative and Populist Analyses of Democratic Discourses | View Paper Details |
Sortition and Direct Democracy – Mitigating Populist Rhetoric? Insights from a Case Study in Switzerland | View Paper Details |
Are Populists Sore Losers? Explaining Populists’ Preferences for and Reactions to Referendums | View Paper Details |