11 décembre 2018
de 12h45 à 14h
Louvain-la-Neuve
Place Montesquieu 3 D305
Andrea Felicetti (KU Leuven),
It is widely acknowledged that democracy is an essentially contested concept: disputes over the different meanings democracy can take are actually essential to this idea. It being an essentially contested concept, it should not be surprising that there are many ways of practicing democracy. However, in discussing democracy, conceptual contestation has received significantly more attention than difference in practices. I try to redress this problem by engaging with an unduly neglected question: What does the difference in democratic practices tell us about democracy? Taking diversity of practices as the starting point to think about democracy allows us to refrain from seeking some fixed core to democracy (such as elections, deliberation or participation) around which a political system should be organized. Rather, I argue, democracy is an open-ended project whose strength consists in the ability to accommodate contestation around its multiple meanings and practices. This perspective sheds new light on the way we think about democratic systems.