This article clarifies the democratic problems of multilevel governance, with a focus on the Regional Energy Strategy decision-making process. First, the risks that these democratic problems entail for democratic support and for the quality and speed of decision-making are discussed. Next, these problems – and their possible solutions – are discussed by means of three approaches to democracy: representative democracy, pluralist democracy and participatory democracy. A tailor-made mix of these three approaches is recommended as most useful for a solid democratic anchorage of multilevel governance. |
Zoekresultaat: 5 artikelen
Dossier |
Energie en democratie: democratische invloed op regionale energiestrategieën en andere complexe besluitvormingsprocessen |
Tijdschrift | Beleid en Maatschappij, Aflevering 2 2020 |
Trefwoorden | multilevel governance, Democracy, sustainability |
Auteurs | Prof. dr. Marcel Boogers |
SamenvattingAuteursinformatie |
Thema-artikel ‘Uitgesproken Bestuurskunde’ |
Globalisering, consensusbestuur en de regio: naar een nieuwe maatschappelijke en bestuurlijke ordening? |
Tijdschrift | Bestuurskunde, Aflevering 2 2019 |
Trefwoorden | globalisation, consensus governance, regionalism, representation, decision-making |
Auteurs | Prof. dr. Caspar van den Berg |
Samenvatting |
In his inaugural lecture entitled ‘From Pillars to Bubbles: The future of consensus governance in a globalized society’, Caspar van den Berg examines the consequences of economic and cultural globalization for the model of consensus governance that defined Dutch public administration for most of the 20th century. In doing so he presents an expansion and refinement of the Lijphartian model of consociationalism, and indicates which four factors supported consensus governance in the pillarized period, and how each of them has suffered erosion as globalization proceeded. It has become increasingly visible that globalization has differentiated effects for different groups in society, but also for different types of regions: booming regions benefit greatly from globalization, shrinking regions face major challenges. By combining recent insights from public administration, sociology, political science, economics and social geography, a new social order emerges, consisting of bubbles that are distinguished along socio-economic and territorial lines. These developments cause friction with regard to representation and decision-making at national, regional and local level. These are the themes on which the research within the Chair of Global and Local Governance will focus in the coming years. |
Essay |
De vierde D revisited. Afscheidscollege Thorbecke-leerstoel |
Tijdschrift | Bestuurs­wetenschappen, Aflevering 1 2019 |
Auteurs | Prof. mr. dr. Job Cohen |
SamenvattingAuteursinformatie |
On January 9 2015, Job Cohen held his inaugural speech at the University of Leiden as extraordinary professor at the prestigious Thorbecke chair. His study field was the theory of the municipality as an administrative, political and legal system. The title of his inaugural speech was ‘The fourth D’, in which the first three Ds stand for three different decentralizations of tasks to Dutch municipalities and the fourth D for democracy. In his speech Job Cohen advocated a deliberative form of democracy, because it doesn’t emphasize differences and the exaggeration of differences, but emphasizes what the members of a community have in common. This essay contains the farewell lecture that he held on November 30 2018. In it Cohen says that we are still in the transition of a gigantic operation, the three decentralizations of youth care, social services and labor participation. In many areas, therefore, cooperation at a higher level than the original municipalities is necessary and indeed established. Due to the increased regional cooperation, the House of Thorbecke no longer has such a strong foundation, which has long been the case. It is therefore inevitable, according to Cohen, that the House of Thorbecke receives more than just a new coat of paint. In his farewell lecture he furthermore discusses two kinds of citizen participation. The first kind concerns policy-influencing participation, the second involves self-reliant participation, or do-democracy or civil administration, in which the Right to Challenge is currently in the center of attention. This requires a delicate coordination between those who have and exercise government powers and citizens who want to exert influence on it. |
Artikel |
Van cijfers naar effectenEen reactie op het Rob-rapport In gesprek of verkeerd verbonden? |
Tijdschrift | Beleid en Maatschappij, Aflevering 3 2012 |
Auteurs | Dr. Rens Vliegenthart |
SamenvattingAuteursinformatie |
In this feature authors discuss recent research findings that are of interest to readers of Beleid en Maatschappij. |
Artikel |
‘U verveelt zich…’ berichten uit het politiek-publicitaire complex |
Tijdschrift | Bestuurskunde, Aflevering 1 2010 |
Auteurs | Jan Schinkelshoek |
Auteursinformatie |