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Mind the Gap - Political Participation and Representation in Belgium (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R2,187
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Mind the Gap - Political Participation and Representation in Belgium (Hardcover)
Series: Studies in European Political Science
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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Mind the Gap is a book on the difficult times of modern
representative democracy, and on the way in which political science
is trying to make sense of it. Forecasting election results has
become a very risky business, and explaining the often-surprising
results must increasingly rely on case-by-case ad hoc
interpretations. Old and formerly stable political parties now
appear to be very vulnerable, because many of their traditional
voters seem willing to desert them. If voters turn out to vote at
all, they tend to be very volatile and send out complex messages,
to decide later than ever what to do in the polling booth, to react
to short-term factors and to follow candidates rather than parties.
Low levels of trust in political actors and institutions reveal a
gap between the elites and the people. Belgium is one of the
countries where one can witness these debates. Yet Belgium is also
a special case. Not only a gap between elites and citizens but also
a gap between north and south animates the political debates. The
territorial division of the country in two language groups has led
to the complete split of the parties and the party system and to
the transformation of the unitary state into a complex federal
system. With on top of all that the European level the lines of
representation and accountability in Belgium are extremely opaque.
Decision making requires subtle compromises between party leaders
and sometimes take a very long time to come about. Voting in
Belgium is however compulsory, which means that exiting the scene
of democratic representation is not an obvious option. Citizens do
turn out to vote and do express their views and their discontent.
Some political parties however do suggest that leaving Belgium
behind altogether might be better than just muddling through. This
book is based on ten years of research on political participation
and representation in Belgium by the interuniversity research team
PartiRep. Using several surveys among the population and
politicians, voting aid applications, focus groups and experiments
it draws a picture of a parliamentary and representative democracy
that faces multiple tensions and multiple gaps. It discusses a wide
range of political processes and actors, placing them in a
comparative perspective, and exploring to what extent the Belgian
case fits into the general picture. The chapters of the book deal
with political socialization, political parties, representation,
economic voting, preference voting and personalized voting,
democratic preferences, identity politics and campaign effects and
on the way in which elites and citizens try to find their way and
make sense of this complex multi-level and linguistically divided
country in the heart of the European Union.
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