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Can Local Participation Disrupt Neoliberalism? : The Politics and Ethics of Caring for Democracy

Holdo, Markus LU orcid (2023) p.51-66
Abstract
What difference can local participation make in a world where inequality increases everywhere, where segregation pulls communities apart and where policymakers marginalise the needs and interests of the people whose lives their decisions affect the most? This question was central two decades ago when research on participatory institutions took off. Leftist scholars described participatory budgeting, in particular, as a rebellion against neoliberal capitalism, and liberal democracy scholars proclaimed enthusiastically that this new invention would refuel citizens’ energies and solve democracy’s crisis (eg, Harvey 2012; Fung 2004). Not all these proclamations were grounded in careful analysis of the constraints and obstacles of local... (More)
What difference can local participation make in a world where inequality increases everywhere, where segregation pulls communities apart and where policymakers marginalise the needs and interests of the people whose lives their decisions affect the most? This question was central two decades ago when research on participatory institutions took off. Leftist scholars described participatory budgeting, in particular, as a rebellion against neoliberal capitalism, and liberal democracy scholars proclaimed enthusiastically that this new invention would refuel citizens’ energies and solve democracy’s crisis (eg, Harvey 2012; Fung 2004). Not all these proclamations were grounded in careful analysis of the constraints and obstacles of local politics. But while some scholars were idealistic about what small spaces democratic activism could achieve, critics seemed to dismiss it all too easily. They claimed that participatory practices were too soft, too small and too submissive to make any real difference. Few of them seemed to consider that these spaces might offer something distinct from protests or party politics, something valuable, even disruptive, in its own right. (Less)
Abstract (Swedish)
What difference can local participation make in a world where inequality increases everywhere, where segregation pulls communities apart and where policymakers marginalise the needs and interests of the people whose lives their decisions affect the most? This question was central two decades ago when research on participatory institutions took off. Leftist scholars described participatory budgeting, in particular, as a rebellion against neoliberal capitalism, and liberal democracy scholars proclaimed enthusiastically that this new invention would refuel citizens’ energies and solve democracy’s crisis (eg, Harvey 2012; Fung 2004). Not all these proclamations were grounded in careful analysis of the constraints and obstacles of local... (More)
What difference can local participation make in a world where inequality increases everywhere, where segregation pulls communities apart and where policymakers marginalise the needs and interests of the people whose lives their decisions affect the most? This question was central two decades ago when research on participatory institutions took off. Leftist scholars described participatory budgeting, in particular, as a rebellion against neoliberal capitalism, and liberal democracy scholars proclaimed enthusiastically that this new invention would refuel citizens’ energies and solve democracy’s crisis (eg, Harvey 2012; Fung 2004). Not all these proclamations were grounded in careful analysis of the constraints and obstacles of local politics. But while some scholars were idealistic about what small spaces democratic activism could achieve, critics seemed to dismiss it all too easily. They claimed that participatory practices were too soft, too small and too submissive to make any real difference. Few of them seemed to consider that these spaces might offer something distinct from protests or party politics, something valuable, even disruptive, in its own right. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
organization
publishing date
type
Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding
publication status
published
subject
host publication
Reclaiming Participatory Governance: Social Movements and the Reinvention of Democratic Innovation
editor
Bua, Adrian and Bussu, Sonia
pages
51 - 66
publisher
Routledge
external identifiers
  • scopus:85173111215
ISBN
978-103211121-6
978-100321851-7
DOI
10.4324/9781003218517-5
language
Swedish
LU publication?
yes
id
ebb8f688-fc32-4ad1-8684-6074922cf7e4
date added to LUP
2023-11-18 11:20:03
date last changed
2024-04-30 12:43:05
@inbook{ebb8f688-fc32-4ad1-8684-6074922cf7e4,
  abstract     = {{What difference can local participation make in a world where inequality increases everywhere, where segregation pulls communities apart and where policymakers marginalise the needs and interests of the people whose lives their decisions affect the most? This question was central two decades ago when research on participatory institutions took off. Leftist scholars described participatory budgeting, in particular, as a rebellion against neoliberal capitalism, and liberal democracy scholars proclaimed enthusiastically that this new invention would refuel citizens’ energies and solve democracy’s crisis (eg, Harvey 2012; Fung 2004). Not all these proclamations were grounded in careful analysis of the constraints and obstacles of local politics. But while some scholars were idealistic about what small spaces democratic activism could achieve, critics seemed to dismiss it all too easily. They claimed that participatory practices were too soft, too small and too submissive to make any real difference. Few of them seemed to consider that these spaces might offer something distinct from protests or party politics, something valuable, even disruptive, in its own right.}},
  author       = {{Holdo, Markus}},
  booktitle    = {{Reclaiming Participatory Governance: Social Movements and the Reinvention of Democratic Innovation}},
  editor       = {{Bua, Adrian and Bussu, Sonia}},
  isbn         = {{978-103211121-6}},
  language     = {{swe}},
  pages        = {{51--66}},
  publisher    = {{Routledge}},
  title        = {{Can Local Participation Disrupt Neoliberalism? : The Politics and Ethics of Caring for Democracy}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003218517-5}},
  doi          = {{10.4324/9781003218517-5}},
  year         = {{2023}},
}