De Wilde, Pieter; Vik, Andrea; Aarøe, Lene; Treib, Oliver
Research article (journal) | Peer reviewedWhen activists act as unelected representatives by voicing political demands on behalf of various constituencies, does this affect citizens’ satisfaction with democracy? We theorize that this may be the case if and when such individuals constitute an effective channel of representation, meaning that (1) activists substantively represent individuals and (2) they are included in politics. Furthermore, we theorize that marginalized individuals become more satisfied with the way democracy works when they witness activists with whom they agree. We test this through a preregistered vignette experiment in Sweden, Germany, Italy, and Romania (N = 8196). Our findings are mixed. Unelected representatives can sway citizens’ satisfaction with democracy in some instances. Specifically, the electoral winner–loser gap can be narrowed through substantive representation from unelected representatives. This presents an invitation for further research on the role activists play in shaping the legitimacy of liberal representative democracies.
| Treib, Oliver | Professur für Vergleichende Policy-Forschung und Methoden empirischer Sozialforschung (Prof. Treib) |
Duration: 01/01/2020 - 30/09/2023 Funded by: Norwegian University of Science and Technology Type of project: Individual project |