Part I. Concept and theories of political representation
1: Jane Mansbridge: The Evolution of Political Representation in
Liberal Democracies: Concepts and Practices
2: Carles Boix, WillHorn and Alex Kerchner: The Formation and
Development of Liberal Democracies
3: Christian Welzel: The cultural Pre-Requisites of Democracy.
4: Rudy B. Andeweg and Tom Louwerse: The institutional framework of
representative democracy: Comparing the Populist-Majoritarian and
the Liberal/Consensual Model
5: Carolien van Ham: Electoral Integrity.
Part II. Elite Orientations and Behavior
6: Simon Hug: Roll-call voting behavior in legislatures
7: Thomas Zittel: Constituency Candidates and Political
Representation
Part III. Descriptive representation
8: Anne Philips: Descriptive Representation Revisited
9: Karen Celis and Silvia Erzeel: Gender equality
10: Didier Ruedin: Regional and Ethnic Minorities
11: David Farrell and Peter Stone: Sortition and Mini-Publics: A
Different Kind of Representation
Part IV. Party Government and Representation
12: Richard S. Katz: The Model of Party Government
13: Russell Dalton: Party Competition and Representation
14: Wouter van der Brug, Eelco Harteveld and Jaap van Slageren:
Party government and Voters
15: Reuven Hazan and Reut Itzkovich-Malka: Parliamentarians and
Party Groups: the Role of Intra-party Unity
16: Thomas Poguntke and Susan Scarrow: Intra-party Democracy and
Representation: Necessity, Complement, or Challenge?
17: Robert Thompson: Parties' Election Manifestos and Public
Policies
18: Zoe Lefkofridi: Opinion-Policy congruence
19: Bingham Powell: Mandate vs Accountability
20: André Blais, Ruth Dassonneville and Filip Kostelka: Political
equality and Turnout
21: Sören Holmberg: Feeling represented
Part V. Beyond Elections as Instruments of Representative
Democracy
22: Céline Colombo and Hanspeter Kriesi: Referendums and Direct
Democracy
23: Jeremy Richardson: Interest Groups and the Market for
Representation
24: Jan van Deth: Non-electoral Participation
25: Christopher Wlezien: Dynamic Representation
Part VI. Challenges to representative democracy: domestic
origins
26: Mark Bovens and Thomas Schillemans: Non-majoritarian
institutions
27: Mark Peffley, Alexander Denison and Travis N. Taylor: Print,
Electronic and Social Media and the Transformation of Democratic
Representation
Part VII: Challenges to Representative Democracies: Populism
28: Pippa Norris: The Populist Challenge to Liberal Democracies
29: Thomas M. Meyer and Markus Wagner: The Rise of Populism in
Modern Democracies
30: Zsolt Enyedi and Stephen Whitefield: Populists in Power:
Populism and Representation in Illiberal Democracies
Part VIII. Challenges to Representative Democracy: International
Aspects
31: Timothy Hellwig: Globalization, Electoral Change and
Representation
32: Sara B. Hobolt: Representation and the European Union
33: Jorge M. Fernandes and Pedro Magalhães: Does Economic and
Political Integration Undermine Representative Democracy? Lessons
from the 2008 Economic Crisis in the European Union
34: Richard Bellamy: Globalisation and Representative Democracy:
Normative Challenges
Robert Rohrschneider is Sir Robert Worcester Distinguished
Professor of International Public Opinion and Survey Research at
the University of Kansas. He teaches Comparative Politics and his
research focuses on Comparative Public Opinion, Political Parties,
Democratic Representation in Western and Central-Eastern Europe.
Jacques Thomassen is an emeritus professor of political science at
the University of Twente in the Netherlands. He is member and
former secretary
general of the Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences. He
has held visiting positions at the universities of Michigan,
Harvard, Mannheim, the Australian National University, and the
European
University Institute. He published widely on issues of political
representation, electoral behaviour, democracy, and legitimacy. He
was a founding member of the Comparative Study of Electoral Systems
(CSES) and participated in many other projects of comparative
political research. Among his publications are Elections and
Democracy: Representation and Accountability OUP 2014; Myth and
Reality of the Legitimacy Crisis: Explaining trends and
cross-national differences in established
democracies OUP 2017.
This work provides a comprehensive foundation for understanding
current conceptualizations of representation in liberal
democracies. Highly recommended. Lower- and upper-division
undergraduates. Graduate students, faculty, and professionals.
*R. V. Labaree, University of Southern California, CHOICE*
Thirty-four papers analyze how well the interests and preferences
of mass publics become represented by the institutions of liberal
democracies, evaluating the extent to which the various links of
the "chain of representation" work effectively.
*Journal of Economic Literature (Volume 59, no. 1)*
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