Popular sovereignty requires that citizens perceive themselves as being able to act and implement decisions, and that they are de facto causally connected to mechanisms of decision making. I argue that the two most common understandings of the exercise of popular sovereignty—which center on direct decision making by the people as a whole and the indirect exercise of democratic agency by elected representatives, respectively—are inadequate in this respect, and go on to suggest a complementary account that stresses the central role of internally democratic and participatory political parties in actualising popular sovereignty, drawing on the democratic theory of Hans Kelsen.
CITATION STYLE
Wolkenstein, F. (2019). Agents of popular sovereignty. Political Theory, 47(3), 338–362. https://doi.org/10.1177/0090591718786232
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.