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Crisis of Representative Democracy and the Emergence of Participatory Democracy

This article explores the crisis of representative democracy and the rise of participatory democracy. It examines the role of corruption, lack of trust in institutions, and the importance of citizen participation in shaping a new democratic model. The article also discusses the impact of social inequalities on democracy and the need for political equality and social justice.

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Crisis of Representative Democracy and the Emergence of Participatory Democracy

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  1. Democrazie. La crisi della democrazia rappresentativa e l’emergere della democrazia partecipativabyDonatella della PortaEuropean University Institute

  2. Crisi di cosa? 4 modelli di democrazia

  3. Fiducia di chi: Mario Monti, agosto 2012 “questo tipo di affermazioni fanno crescere lo spread””. Mario Monti,, Novembre 2012 “Io rispondo ai mercati

  4. Fiducia nelle istituzioni: 2011

  5. Type of social group involved in protest events in Italy in 2011

  6. democrazia liberale: corruzione di sistema the Indignados “We know very well that whoever has or will in the future be in government will never be on the people’s side, nobody has ever listened to our needs, and in this system nobody ever will.” Corruption pollutes the processes of politics, threatens the standing and the credibility of institutions, pollutes and seriously distorts the economy, sucks resources destined for the good of the community, corrodes civic responsibility and democratic culture itself” (Libera)”

  7. Per i diritti e la partecipazione There are fundamental rights that should be protected in these societies: the right to housing, work, culture, health, education, political participation, free personal development and consumers’ rights to access to those goods necessary for a healthy and happy life (Real democracy now) “And only participation can restore dignity and value to a new politics, capable of carrying the country out of the disaster. All this is possible” (Forum dell’acqua)

  8. Che livello di governo andrebbe rafforzato per raggiungere gli obiettivi della protesta

  9. “perchè la piaza ci appartiene ed è un luogo di una nuova democrazia, comunitaria e partecipativa”: • Participation: inclusion, equality, horizontality… • Deliberation: search for the public good, dialogue, preference transformation, diversity… • In free spaces

  10. Contingent consent “contingent consent entails unwillingness to offer rulers, however well elected, blank checks. It implies the threat that if they do not perform in accordance with citizens’ expressed collective will, citizens will not only turn them out but also withdraw compliance from such risky government-run activities as military service, jury duty, and tax collection” (Tilly 2007, 94).

  11. Rosanvallon’s counter-democracy: Organizing distrust If mistrust is the disease, it might be part of the cure as well as “a complex assortment of practical measures, checks and balances, and informal as well as institutional social counter-powers has evolved in order to compensate for the erosion of confidence, and to do so by organizing distrust” (Rosanvallon, p. 4).

  12. Conclusion1: a search for politics and social justice The explosion of social inequalities even in advanced democracy is not only a cause of economic crisis, given reduced consumption and saving, but also a challenge for the image of political equality—the 1% against the 99% a request of politics as capable to reduce economic inequalities and their inefficiencies together with un-fairness.

  13. Conclusion/2: inequality, trust and democracy As Tilly notes (2007, 110), “social inequality impedes democratization and undermines democracy under two conditions: first, the crystallization of continuous differences … into everyday categorical differences by race, gender, class, ethnicity, religion and similar broad groupings, second, the direct translation of those categorical difference into public policies”.

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