Inclusive Representation
Document type :
Article dans une revue scientifique
DOI :
Permalink :
Title :
Inclusive Representation
Author(s) :
Journal title :
Raisons politiques
Volume number :
50
Publisher :
Presses de Science Po
Publication date :
2013
ISSN :
1291-1941
Keyword(s) :
Representation
Inclusion
Political theory
Bourdieu
Inclusion
Political theory
Bourdieu
HAL domain(s) :
Sciences de l'Homme et Société/Science politique
English abstract : [en]
The standard opposition between political representation and participation is based on an exclusive conception of representation (excluding those represented). But a concept of representation that is inclusive can be ...
Show more >The standard opposition between political representation and participation is based on an exclusive conception of representation (excluding those represented). But a concept of representation that is inclusive can be understood, most notably through the history of representation before representative government succeeded in nineteenth-century France. Instead of preventing the direct participation of those represented, inclusive representation stimulates it. Inclusion through representation may first appear through the politicization of citizens, by their judging the action of representatives inside the institutions of representative government, or through the constructing of alternative representative devices outside these institutions. Inclusive representation may also specifically include dominated groups, inside or outside representative government institutions. Finally, inclusive representation may rest on processes of subjectivation, through which excluded social groups become political subjects.Show less >
Show more >The standard opposition between political representation and participation is based on an exclusive conception of representation (excluding those represented). But a concept of representation that is inclusive can be understood, most notably through the history of representation before representative government succeeded in nineteenth-century France. Instead of preventing the direct participation of those represented, inclusive representation stimulates it. Inclusion through representation may first appear through the politicization of citizens, by their judging the action of representatives inside the institutions of representative government, or through the constructing of alternative representative devices outside these institutions. Inclusive representation may also specifically include dominated groups, inside or outside representative government institutions. Finally, inclusive representation may rest on processes of subjectivation, through which excluded social groups become political subjects.Show less >
Language :
Anglais
Audience :
Internationale
Popular science :
Non
Administrative institution(s) :
CNRS
Université de Lille
Université de Lille
Collections :
Submission date :
2019-10-29T11:29:09Z
2019-10-29T13:41:15Z
2022-01-03T16:21:22Z
2022-06-17T11:55:37Z
2019-10-29T13:41:15Z
2022-01-03T16:21:22Z
2022-06-17T11:55:37Z
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