
Participation Without Democracy
Description
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Over the past quarter century new ideologies of participation and representation have proliferated across democratic and non-democratic regimes. In Participation without Democracy, Garry Rodan breaks new conceptual ground in examining the social forces that underpin the emergence of these innovations in Southeast Asia. Rodan explains that there is, however, a central paradox in this recalibration of politics: expanded political participation is serving to constrain contestation more than to enhance it.
Participation without Democracy uses Rodan's long-term fieldwork in Singapore, the Philippines, and Malaysia to develop a modes of participation (MOP) framework that has general application across different regime types among both early-developing and late-developing capitalist societies. His MOP framework is a sophisticated, original, and universally relevant way of analyzing this phenomenon. Rodan uses MOP and his case studies to highlight important differences among social and political forces over the roles and forms of collective organization in political representation. In addition, he identifies and distinguishes hitherto neglected non-democratic ideologies of representation and their influence within both democratic and authoritarian regimes. Participation without Democracy suggests that to address the new politics that both provokes these institutional experiments and is affected by them we need to know who can participate, how, and on what issues, and we need to take the non-democratic institutions and ideologies as seriously as the democratic ones.
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Person
Garry Rodan is Professor of Politics and International Studies and Director of the Asia Research Centre, Murdoch University. He is a fellow of the Academy of the Social Sciences in Australia and is, most recently, coauthor of The Politics of Accountability in Southeast Asia.
Content
Introduction
1. Theorizing Institutions of Political Participation and Representation
2. Ideologies of Political Representation and the Mode of Participation Framework
3. History, Capitalism, and Conflict
4. Nominated Members of Parliament in Singapore
5. Public Feedback in Singapore's Consultative Authoritarianism
6. The Philippines' Party-List System, Reformers,and Oligarchs
7. Participatory Budgeting in the Philippines
8. Malaysia's Failed Consultative Representation Experiments
9. Civil Society and Electoral Reform in Malaysia
Conclusion
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