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First published online May 1, 2020

Responsive versus responsible? Party democracy in times of crisis

Abstract

This essay introduces a collection of papers dealing with the responsive–responsible dilemma of party government. The political developments surrounding the Eurozone crisis attest that the duties of government and the demands of political representation may at times be in sharp contrast with one another. In such contexts, it becomes hard for parties in government to combine responsiveness with responsible policy-making. Late Peter Mair theorized this phenomenon as the increasing bifurcation between the growing complexity of governing in a world of interdependence and the need to respond to often polarizing electoral demands. The key question is whether and how in such contexts parties find the balance between their representative and governing duties. The papers included in this special issue deal with this question in the context of the Eurozone crisis and present evidence about parties’ behavior, rhetoric, and policy outputs. In introducing the contributions here, we illustrate how this collective endeavor helps advance the debate on the major challenges to contemporary representative democracy. More specifically, we first discuss how the framework of the responsive–responsible dilemma helps understanding contemporary political developments. We then critically reflect on the distinction between responsiveness and responsibility. Finally, we present how each individual contribution approaches the question of how parties manage the tension between electoral incentives and governmental duties.

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Biographies

Johannes Karremans is postdoctoral Lise Meitner Fellow (FWF), at the University of Salzburg. Jan earned his PhD degree at the Political and Social Sciences Department of the European University Institute. His research interest resides mainly in the responsive–responsible dilemma of party government, which he addressed in his PhD dissertation with a comparative study of the arguments with which governments justify their national budgets. His research has appeared also in West European Politics, and Journal of European Public Policy.
Zoe Lefkofridi is professor of Politics and Gender, Diversity and Equality at the University of Salzburg. Prior to Salzburg, Zoe taught and/or conducted research at the European University Institute in Florence (2013–2015), Stanford University (2011), EUROLAB GESIS (2013), and the University of Vienna (2008–2011; 2012–2013). Her research interests lie in transnational democracy, party politics, and representation in Europe. Her work appears in European Union Politics, West European Politics, and European Political Science Review, among others.

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Article first published online: May 1, 2020
Issue published: May 2020

Keywords

  1. Eurozone crisis
  2. party-democracy
  3. public policy
  4. representation
  5. responsiveness

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Authors

Affiliations

Johannes Karremans
European University Institute, Italy
Zoe Lefkofridi
Universität Salzburg, Austria

Notes

Johannes Karremans, Lise Meitner Fellow, Department of Political Science, University of Salzburg, Salzburg, Austria; Research Assistant, Robert Schuman Centre of Advanced Studies, European University Institute, Florence, Italy. Emails: [email protected]; [email protected]

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