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Hovedinnhold

Political Inequality, and How Representative Democracy Functions

Harvard Kennedy School, the Ash Center for Democratic Governance and Innovation

June 7-8, 2018

Workshop organized by Yvette Peters and the team of the Politics of Inequality project in collaboration with Quinton Mayne 

Workshop overview:

Democracy and its defining characteristics have long been a subject of study among social scientists. There is good reason for this: democratic systems bring with them a number ofadvantages, not least an improvement in overall human wellbeing (Warren, 2002). Indeed, thebasic principles of democracy suggest that all or almost all citizens are to be—more or less—equally included in the decisions that govern them. Dahl (1971, 1998) argues that democracyimplies that governments are representative of citizens and policies are responsive to them.Moreover, and perhaps more crucial for the concept of democracy even, citizens should bepolitical equals, i.e., they should have equal chances and opportunities to have a say in thedecisions that govern them.

Over several decades, political science has made important contributions to ourunderstanding of how democratic representation—the mechanism through which many of ourdemocracies functions—works. Spanning empirical research and political theory, this everexpandingbody of work has critically examined whether contemporary democracies live upto the Dahlian standards of democracy, why this is so, and how the situation could beimproved if deemed necessary. Some of these studies have been more optimistic (e.g.,policies seem generally to follow the public’s political ‘mood’), while others express moreconcern (e.g., there are groups in society that are more likely to be responded to than others).

Scholars working in this area have adopted different approaches to studying thesequestions of representation and political equality. One approach has been to focus mostly oncongruence – namely, the match between citizens’ preferences and representatives’preferences; another has been to focus more on responsiveness by examining how accuratelypolicies or representatives change according to a change in public opinion. Another difference of approach is the focus on policies or other forms of output versus legislators’ attitudes andbehavior. Furthermore, some research deals more generally with representation in terms of political ‘mood’ or a super-issue, while other research deals with (multiple) specific issues or policies. Besides these differences in substantive focus, studies also vary in terms of their methodological approach.

This workshop deals with two issues fundamental to the nature and functioning of democracy: representation and political equality. In the past half-century, high-income, established democracies have seen numerous changes relevant to representation and political equality. These include decreasing electoral participation and increasing distrust in political institutions and anti-immigrant (and anti-EU) sentiments. Moreover, international commitments and the recent economic crisis have imposed constraints on governments that affect the kinds of policies they can pursue. Economic inequality has also increased in many established democracies. Against this backdrop, this workshop brings together scholars who aim to analyze two elements vital to democracy: on the one hand, representation (citizen-to-representative congruence/responsiveness; policy congruence/responsiveness; and perhaps even ‘responsibility’); and on the other hand, political equality (equality in representation).

This workshop is financed by the Bergen Research Foundation and the University of Bergen

 

List of participants:

Dan Butler

 

Dmbutler@ucsd.edu

University Of California San Diego

Troy Broderstad

Troy.Broderstad@uib.no

University of Bergen

Amanda Clayton

amanda.clayton@vanderbilt.edu

Vanderbilt University

Mark Franklin

mark.franklin@trincoll.edu

Harvard Center for European Studies (affiliate)

Andrea Fumarola

Andrea.Fumarola@uib.no

University of Bergen

Martin Gilens

mgilens@Princeton.EDU

Princeton University

Michael Johannesson

Mikael.Johannesson@uib.no

University of Bergen

Noam Lupu

Noam.lupu@vanderbilt.edu

Vanderbilt University

Jane Mansbridge

Jane_mansbridge@hks.harvard.edu

Harvard University

Quinton Mayne

Quinton_mayne@hks.harvard.edu

Harvard University

Trajche Panov

Trajche.Panov@uib.no

University of Bergen

Yvette Peters

Yvette.peters@uib.no

University of Bergen

Anne Rasmussen

ar@ifs.ku.dk

University of Copenhagen

Till Weber

Till.Weber@baruch.cuny.edu

City University of New York

 

Workshop venue:

Ash Center for Democratic Governance and InnovationConference Room (Room 226)124 Mount Auburn Street,Suite 200N

These are directions once you’re in the building at 124 Mt. Auburn:

– In the lobby of the building, take the north elevators next to the Fooda sign to the 2nd floor and suite 200N.

– On the left when you exit the elevators, there are glass doors that lead into the lobby of the Ash Center.

– In the lobby of Ash, take a right down a long hallway towards a group of cubicles.

– As you walk down the hallway, Ash 226 is on the left (if you make it to the cubicles, you’ve gone too far).

 

Workshop program: Thursday June 7

09.00

Breakfast

09.00-09.25

Yvette Peters

Introduction: The Politics of Inequality

09.30-10.10

Jane Mansbridge

Recursive representation

Discussant: Yvette Peters

10.15-10.55

Troy Broderstad

Democracy and Redistribution

Discussant: Quinton Mayne

10.55-11.15

Break

11.15-11.55

Andrea Fumarola

Disentangling The ‘Sanction-Policy’ Linkage: Public Perceptions And The Influence Of The Party System

Discussant: Amanda Clayton

12.00-12.40

Till Weber

Issue Yield, Party Systems, and Political Inequality

Discussant: Andrea Fumarola

12.40-13.45

Lunch at the Ash Center

13.45-14.25

Martin Gilens

Doing Well and Doing Good? How Concern for Others Shapes Policy Preferences and Partisanship Among Affluent Americans

Discussant: Troy Broderstad

14.30-15.10

Anne Rasmussen

Organized Interests and Policy Representation

Discussant: Noam Lupu

15.10-15.30

Break

15.30-16.10

Quinton Mayne & Yvette Peters

Higher Education and Democracy: Elite Views on Education-Based Descriptive Representation

Discussant: Daniel Butler

19.00

Dinner

 

 

Friday June 8

09.00

Breakfast

09.00-09.40

Noam Lupu

Affluence and Congruence: Unequal Representation Around the World

Discussant: Trajche Panov

09.45-10.25

Amanda Clayton

All Male Panels? Representation and Democratic Legitimacy

Discussant: Martin Gilens

10.25-10.45

Break

10.45-11.25

Daniel Butler

Lobbying Influences What Laws are Enacted

Discussant: Anne Rasmussen

11.30-12.10

Trajche Panov

Digitally Connected and Unequal – The Relationship between Digital Inequality and Political Participation

Discussant: Till Weber

12.10-12.15

Concluding remarks

12.15-13.15

Lunch at the Ash Center

 

Paper abstracts and authors:

Lobbying Influences What Laws are Enacted

Dan Butler

Does lobbying influence legislative outcomes? One explanation for why the affluent get their way more often in policy battles is that the affluent are better represented among interest groups. However this rests on the assumption that lobbying by interest groups changes outcomes. We test this question by using data from Wisconsin that provides the full universe of interest groups’ position-taking on legislative proposals. We find that legislative proposals on which interest groups lobby are enacted at different rates than proposals on which no interest groups lobby. When groups lobby for a proposal, it is more likely to pass. Likewise, when groups lobby against a proposal, it is less likely to pass. Interest groups are influencing outcomes. These results raise concerns about the influence of interwst groups in a world where the groups are skewed towards the interests of the affluent.

Democracy and Redistribution

Troy Broderstad

The median voter model for democratic redistribution, known as the Meltzer-Richard theorem, tells us that the demand for redistribution increases if the median voter earns less than the average income, i.e. when income inequality within a country reaches a certain threshold. However, government does not necessary follow citizen preferences. As Acemoglu et al. (2013) show, democracy has no clear effect on income inequality. The question then remains whether governments are able to produce policy that is in favour of those who demand more redistribution, specifically when this group consists of a majority of the citizens. By analysing data from European countries from 2002 to 2016, biennial, using Bayesian multi-level analysis, this paper sets out to investigate whether a systematic bias towards the more affluent in terms of redistirubtional policy-output affects the voters satisfaction with the way democracy works (, and also the perceived legitimacy of the regime). It is hypothesised that high demand for redistribution from the low- and middle-income groups and low responsiveness from the government to said groups, their satisfaction with the way democracy works declines.

All Male Panels? Representation and Democratic Legitimacy

Amanda Clayton, Diana O'Brien and Jennifer Piscopo

What does women's presence in political institutions signal to citizens? Are signals different based on the representative body's decision? And do women and men respond to women's presence similarly? Though scholars have demonstrated the substantive and symbolic benefits of women's representation, little work has examined how women's presence affects citizens' perceptions of democratic legitimacy. We test the relationship between representation and perceived legitimacy through survey experiments on a nationally representative sample of U.S. citizens. First, we find that women's equal presence legitimizes decisions that go against women's interests. This effect is particularly pronounced among men, who tend to hold less certain views on women's rights. Second, across decision outcomes and issue areas, women's equal presence legitimizes decision-making processes and confers institutional trust and acquiescence. These findings add new theoretical insights into how, when, and for whom inclusive representation increases citizens' perceptions of democratic legitimacy.

Disentangling The ‘Sanction-Policy’ Linkage: Public Perceptions And The Influence Of The Party System

Andrea Fumarola

In its dynamic conception democratic responsiveness is described as the correspondence between the actions undertaken by governments and the preferences expressed by the majority of citizens. This declination of representation also implicates the existence of a bottom-up process that under certain conditions allows citizens to influence government’s preferences and shape the policy-making process.

Moving from the conceptualization of representation as a ‘chain’ that through connected stages links citizens’ preferences to policy outcomes, the present article aims to analyze the ‘sanction-policy’ linkage connecting electoral accountability and responsiveness. It empirically tests the anticipatory effect of electoral accountability on government responsiveness from the perspective of citizens and investigates if the perceived existence of an effective mechanism of sanction makes governments more likely to adopt policies in line with voters’ preferences. Finally, the article also examines the potential moderating effect exerted by specific configurations of the party system – namely fragmentation, volatility and polarization – on the main relationship.

The study is conducted on individual-level data from 25 European countries included in the sixth round of the European Social Survey integrated by country-level data that capture specific characteristics of the party system. Results of multilevel analysis supports the statements about the influence of electoral accountability on responsiveness and the conditional effect of the party system.

Doing Well and Doing Good? How Concern for Others Shapes Policy Preferences and Partisanship Among Affluent Americans

Martin Gilens & Adam Thal

Previous research has identified non-material considerations as especially important in shaping the political views of affluent Americans. While other scholars have focused on social issues like abortion or gay rights, or on collective goods like environmental protection, we explore the role of altruism in shaping the economic policy preferences and partisan identification of high-income Americans. We argue that altruistic concern for the well-being of the less well-off leads many affluent Americans to support anti-poverty policies and the Democratic party. Using measures based on actual giving behavior, we document that altruism matters little for low-income Americans' preferences and partisanship, but has substantively large effects on the affluent, leading altruistic high-income Americans to be substantially more supportive of anti-poverty policy and the Democratic party than their less altruistically-inclined high-income peers. Our findings help to explain why a government that responds primarily to the wishes of the well-off may still pursue policies designed to help the poor.

Affluence and Congruence: Unequal Representation Around the World

Noam Lupu

Do elected representatives reflect the preferences of the citizens they represent? Recent studies from the U.S. have found that elected representatives tend to be more responsive to the preferences of affluent citizens. But we still know little about why this bias exists. We examine whether a similar affluence bias exists outside the U.S. and why. We gathered every available survey of national legislators in the world and matched it with mass survey data. Using a variety of methods, we identify how closely the distribution of legislators matches that of citizens. Around the world, legislators' preferences are consistently more congruent with those of affluent citizens. But we find no comparative evidence for any of the mechanisms proposed by studies in the U.S. There seems to be something general about modern electoral democracies that makes representatives disproportionately more congruent with the rich-but we still do not know what that something is.

Recursive representation

Jane Mansbridge

Higher Education and Democracy: Elite Views on Education-Based Descriptive Representation

Quinton Mayne and Yvette Peters

Digitally Connected and Unequal – The Relationship between Digital Inequality and Political Participation

Trajche Panov

The global expansion of the Internet population across the world is considered as an important asset which enables new deliberative spaces for political participation and provides citizens with direct access to government. However, there is a growing research that shows increasing levels of digital inequality. While the gap between the ones who have and have not access internet is decreasing, many observers noted that there is a socio-economic difference between the online and offline population. In this paper, I will analyze the relationship between digital inequality and political participation. In order to better understand the individual level relation between digital access and political participation, I will rely on comparative electoral survey data to analyze how internet is related with the political inequality. I hypothesize that there is strong relationship between partisan identification and online political participation and there is an ideological gap between politically involved individuals online.

Organized Interests and Policy Representation

Anne Rasmussen, Anne Binderkrantz & Heike Klüver

While a multitude of studies have investigated the link between opinion and policy, we have little knowledge how organized interests affect this linkage. We argue that the alignment of organized interests affects policy representation by influencing the weight decision-makers attach to citizen preferences. We test our theoretical claim drawing on a comprehensive media content analysis of 160 policy issues in Germany and Denmark between 1998 and 2010. Our results show that public opinion only affects the likelihood of policy change on issues that enjoy considerable support among the organized interests on an issue. Moreover, policy is generally more likely to be aligned with public majorities whose view is supported by the bulk of the active organized interests. The findings underline the importance of considering the role of organized interests in the study of policy representation and have implications for democratic governance.

Issue Yield, Party Systems, and Political Inequality

Till Weber & Lorenzo De Sio