Install this application on your home screen for quick and easy access when you’re on the go.
Just tap then “Add to Home Screen”
Install this application on your home screen for quick and easy access when you’re on the go.
Just tap then “Add to Home Screen”
Building: VMP 8, Floor: 2, Room: 208
Friday 11:00 - 12:40 CEST (24/08/2018)
The current constructivist turn in the theory of representation, epitomised by Michael Saward’s notion of representative claims, sheds new light on the history of political representation. Instead of the common narrative describing political modernity as the triumph of political representation, implicitly considered synonymous with representative government, we can use a constructivist framework to study the history of the diverse and competing forms of representative claim-making, both in Europe and in countries in which representative government did not become hegemonic. In particular, it can help reassessing the role of elections in the historical development of political representation and lead us to reconsider the history of non-electoral, embodiment-based representation. Are these forms of representation “pre-modern”? When did mandate-based representation appear, and how did it become hegemonic in Western representative governments? What other forms of representation may be uncovered by a genealogy of both electoral and non-electoral representation? This panel welcomes papers addressing these questions, and more generally papers discussing the history of (claims of) representation.
Title | Details |
---|---|
Representation Through Sortition in the French Army. The Curious Case of the High Council of the Military Function (1969-2018) | View Paper Details |
Common Suffering as a Resource? Worker's Descriptive Representative Claims in 1848, France | View Paper Details |
Contested Workers & Peasants’ Representations. The Labour Movement - Industrial and Agrarian - In Bengal, 1905-1947 | View Paper Details |
Explaining the Emergence of International Parliamentary Institutions: The Case of the Benelux Interparliamentary Consultative Council. | View Paper Details |
Indirect Influence? Women’s Representation in Switzerland Before and After Enfranchisement (1940-1980s) | View Paper Details |