O3 Published presentation
Representative Democracy as a Contested Concept : Parliaments after the French, Russian and Digital Revolutions (2023)


Ihalainen, P. (2023). Representative Democracy as a Contested Concept : Parliaments after the French, Russian and Digital Revolutions. In 14th Gerald Stourzh Lecture on the History of Human Rights and Democracy. University of Vienna. https://gerald-stourzh-vorlesungen.univie.ac.at/en/lectures/2023-pasi-ihalainen/


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Publication details

All authors or editorsIhalainen, Pasi

Parent publication14th Gerald Stourzh Lecture on the History of Human Rights and Democracy

Publication year2023

Publication date17/05/2023

PublisherUniversity of Vienna

Place of PublicationVienna

Publication countryAustria

Publication languageEnglish

Persistent website addresshttps://gerald-stourzh-vorlesungen.univie.ac.at/en/lectures/2023-pasi-ihalainen/

Publication open accessOpenly available

Publication channel open accessOpen Access channel

Publication is parallel published (JYX)https://jyx.jyu.fi/handle/123456789/88840

Additional informationThe published paper of the lecture is available at https://phaidra.univie.ac.at/o:2039846.


Abstract

Democracy is a highly contested and historically elastic concept. The analysis of its changing meanings benefits from comparisons over time and beyond national histories, nowadays supported by digital history. In this lecture, I analyse conceptual struggles over representative democracy in parliamentary contexts after three revolutions: the French, the Russian, and the digital. From the 1790s, we can find not only persistence of the classical, pejorative, conception of democracy but also gradual re-evaluations towards representative democracy in both British and French parliaments. From the late 1910s, we can observe transnational links, common features and national peculiarities in redefinitions of representative democracy in Britain, Germany, Sweden and Finland. In our time, theorists suggest that democracy is changing, but how could we catch this change empirically? Taking parliaments as analytical nexuses, our research group has compared British, French and German debates. For most MPs in the 2000s, parliamentary or representative democracy had to be reformed to include more participation to reflect societal changes, new media structures and deepening European integration. Yet such consensus crumbled by the end of the 2010s, with a polarisation over direct democratic instruments and a stronger defence of the representative model.


Keywordsdemocracyrepresentative democracyparliamentsEuropean identitypoliticsrevolutionssocietal changehistorypolitical historylecturespresentations (lectures)

Free keywordsEurope


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Last updated on 2024-03-07 at 01:05