Political scandal, online participation and the rebuilding of institutional legitimacy: The case of the Estonian Citizens’ Assembly
(2018) Internet, Policy & Politics Conference- Abstract
- The Estonian Citizens’ Assembly (ECA) was initiated in late 2012 as a direct consequence of a legitimacy crisis of Estonian political parties and representative institutions. The spark igniting this crisis was the unravelling of a scheme of illegal party financing. The response from the governmental institutions took the form of a democratic innovation drawing on public crowd-sourcing and deliberative mini-publics. This study is conducted on the basis of a broad survey among the participants in the culminating deliberative process of the ECA (n=847). The focus of this paper is on the relationship between citizen participation and political trust. Two main research questions guides this paper: (1) How has participants vertical and social... (More)
- The Estonian Citizens’ Assembly (ECA) was initiated in late 2012 as a direct consequence of a legitimacy crisis of Estonian political parties and representative institutions. The spark igniting this crisis was the unravelling of a scheme of illegal party financing. The response from the governmental institutions took the form of a democratic innovation drawing on public crowd-sourcing and deliberative mini-publics. This study is conducted on the basis of a broad survey among the participants in the culminating deliberative process of the ECA (n=847). The focus of this paper is on the relationship between citizen participation and political trust. Two main research questions guides this paper: (1) How has participants vertical and social trust developed in relation to their participation in the ECA?, and (2) What factors explain variations of change in trust among participants? While existing research questions whether citizens
engagement in political participation functions as a source of trust, participatory processes alike the ECA are continually being initiated with the explicit aim of impeding developments of growing public distrust and fostering a greater trust in governmental institutions. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
https://lup.lub.lu.se/record/bf897960-dc4e-4839-9290-1dd3ccf28df6
- author
- Adenskog, Magnus LU ; Karlsson, Martin and Åström, Joachim
- publishing date
- 2018-09-21
- type
- Contribution to conference
- publication status
- published
- subject
- keywords
- democratic innovations, political trust
- conference name
- Internet, Policy & Politics Conference
- conference location
- Oxford, United Kingdom
- conference dates
- 2018-09-20 - 2018-09-21
- project
- Citizen-centric e-participation: A trilateral collaboration for democratic innovation
- language
- English
- LU publication?
- no
- id
- bf897960-dc4e-4839-9290-1dd3ccf28df6
- alternative location
- http://blogs.oii.ox.ac.uk/policy/wp-content/uploads/sites/77/2018/08/IPP2018-Karlsson.pdf
- date added to LUP
- 2018-10-30 14:07:12
- date last changed
- 2021-03-22 18:58:17
@misc{bf897960-dc4e-4839-9290-1dd3ccf28df6, abstract = {{The Estonian Citizens’ Assembly (ECA) was initiated in late 2012 as a direct consequence of a legitimacy crisis of Estonian political parties and representative institutions. The spark igniting this crisis was the unravelling of a scheme of illegal party financing. The response from the governmental institutions took the form of a democratic innovation drawing on public crowd-sourcing and deliberative mini-publics. This study is conducted on the basis of a broad survey among the participants in the culminating deliberative process of the ECA (n=847). The focus of this paper is on the relationship between citizen participation and political trust. Two main research questions guides this paper: (1) How has participants vertical and social trust developed in relation to their participation in the ECA?, and (2) What factors explain variations of change in trust among participants? While existing research questions whether citizens<br/>engagement in political participation functions as a source of trust, participatory processes alike the ECA are continually being initiated with the explicit aim of impeding developments of growing public distrust and fostering a greater trust in governmental institutions.}}, author = {{Adenskog, Magnus and Karlsson, Martin and Åström, Joachim}}, keywords = {{democratic innovations; political trust}}, language = {{eng}}, month = {{09}}, title = {{Political scandal, online participation and the rebuilding of institutional legitimacy: The case of the Estonian Citizens’ Assembly}}, url = {{http://blogs.oii.ox.ac.uk/policy/wp-content/uploads/sites/77/2018/08/IPP2018-Karlsson.pdf}}, year = {{2018}}, }