Agency in Democratic Innovations: Roles, Powers, and Appropriation (Part II)

Thursday, 10 July 2025: 19:00-20:30
Location: SJES018 (Faculty of Legal, Economic, and Social Sciences (JES))
RC18 Political Sociology (host committee)

Language: English

Humanity is facing deep and complex challenges, namely anthropogenic disasters and extreme events, that significantly strain political decision-making. These have ignited debates on the role that citizens can play in co-producing effective solutions within policy and decision-making processes.

Acknowledging this opportunity, we invite research that explores the diverse roles and degrees of power that social actors, policymakers, as well as a wide array of stakeholders can have within the so-called “democratic innovations”. With this concept, scholars refer to institutions and processes employing deliberative and/or participatory means to enhance inclusive citizen participation and address democratic deficits. Therefore, this session will examine and discuss the intricate webs of multiple agencies that shape the relations within democratic innovations, such as citizens, activists, donors, experts/consultants, private sector, academia, facilitators and civil servants.

We encourage submissions that delve into:

  1. Attribution of Meanings and Roles: How different actors self-define their roles and ascribe meanings to participation through democratic innovations as well as how they relate to the institutional definition of roles and meanings.
  1. Power Imbalances and Inclusion: Analysis of power dynamics, representation of marginalised groups, and challenges of inclusion in participatory processes.
  1. Tensions and Appropriation: Exploring the tensions emerging between participants’ agendas and expectations and the potential appropriation of civic repertoires through political co-option and tokenism.

In sum, this session seeks to critically assess how democratic innovations articulate agency with a focus on fostering democratic participation, improving the quality of representative democracy, and dissent’s potential across different regimes.

Session Organizers:
Roberto FALANGA, Instituto de Ciências Sociais, Portugal, José Duarte Medeiros RIBEIRO, Universidade de Lisboa, Portugal and João MONIZ, Institute of Social Sciences, University of Lisboa, Portugal
Oral Presentations
Distributed Papers
India's Punjab Farmer Unions and Democratic Engagement: In between Mobilisation and Electoral Politics
Ritika KHATRI, Indian Institute of Technology Guwahati, Guwahati, Assam, India
Linking Process with Outcome in Democratic Innovation: The Role of Street-Level in Participatory Governance
Byeongsun AHN, University of Vienna, Austria; Yuri KAZEPOV, University of Vienna, Austria
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