Reforming democracy, democratic legitimacy and majority bonuses with Dr Camille Bedock
In this episode, I’m talking with Dr Camille Bedock about her book Reforming Democracy: Institutional engineering in Western Europe, 1990 - 2010 and also about her more recent research with Sophie Panel on citizen conceptions of how democratic their democracy is and with Nicolas Sauger on how electoral systems with majority bonuses affect electoral competition. Camille's book is based on her thesis and looks at electoral and other reforms in Italy and France [1.35] with a focus on the determinants and processes of institutional reform. For her research, Camille focused on formal institutions [3.50] which regulate the functioning of democracy. In particular, she looked at bundles of reforms [5.25] building on Lijphart’s work in Patterns of Democracy, finding that often institutional components 'move together.’ She proves examples of such bundles of reforms [8.05] such as changes to the length of the Presidential term and the electoral calendar term in France. Her research concludes that bundles of reforms are the norm rather than the exception. Camille identifies three key findings of her research [10.15]
- Institutional reforms are not exceptional or rare
- Political elites make reforms in reaction to events rather than in a proactive way
- To understand change and stability we need to look at the processes of reform which are either consensual or conflictual.
Information
- Show
- Published15 April 2019 at 23:00 UTC
- Length23 min
- Season3
- Episode6
- RatingClean