Crisis of Democracy?

Recognizing the Democratic Potential of Alternative Forms of Political Participation

in Democratic Theory
Author:
Brendan McCaffrie University of Canberra Brendan.McCaffrie@canberra.edu.au

Search for other papers by Brendan McCaffrie in
Current site
Google Scholar
PubMed
Close
and
Sadiya Akram Queen Mary University of London s.akram@qmul.ac.uk

Search for other papers by Sadiya Akram in
Current site
Google Scholar
PubMed
Close
Restricted access

According to the mainstream literature on political participation, declining rates of voting and party and interest group membership reflect a crisis of democracy in Western democracies. In this article, we challenge this view by highlighting the rise of alternative forms of political participation that operate outside formal arenas. We suggest that the mainstream approach ignores such forms of political participation for two reasons: First, it operates with a narrow arena definition of politics; second, it is based on the assumption that non-participation in arena politics results from political apathy. We suggest that there is not a crisis of political participation, but there is a growing crisis in engagement resulting from an uncoupling between citizens and the state. Halting this form of democratic decline through a recoupling process will require changes on the part of governments and citizens.

  • Collapse
  • Expand