Publication | Closed Access
A Defense of Participatory Democracy
41
Citations
52
References
1985
Year
DemocracyPublic PolicyE-democracyCollective Action ProblemCitizen ParticipationSociologyCollective ActionParticipatory DemocracyPublic ParticipationDeliberative DemocracyPolitical BehaviorPopular ControlPolitical SystemMass ParticipationPolitical ScienceSocial SciencesCivic Engagement
In order to defend participatory democracy in large-member voluntary organizations, Michels's challenge to traditional democratic theory must be answered. By arguing that the technical, sociological, and psychological processes of modern organizations invariably result in leaders dominating members, Michels questioned democratic theorists' assertions that participation is self-reinforcing and that participation produces popular control. Defending participatory democracy, then, involves showing how the problems of participation and popular control can be overcome in formally representative organizations. The answer proposed is that collective solidarity or community formed by those reacting to injustice and committed to egalitarian social relations provides the motivation for mass participation and the basis for popular control in modern union and party organizations.
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