The uses and abuses of referendums

<p>Referendums, especially referendums with constitutional content, are often treated as exceptional acts. They are treated as exceptional in a democratic sense, because they are thought to go beyond the usual democratic processes and institutions. Since referendums are thought to be exception...

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Main Author: Trueblood, L
Other Authors: Green, L
Format: Thesis
Published: 2018
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author Trueblood, L
author2 Green, L
author_facet Green, L
Trueblood, L
author_sort Trueblood, L
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description <p>Referendums, especially referendums with constitutional content, are often treated as exceptional acts. They are treated as exceptional in a democratic sense, because they are thought to go beyond the usual democratic processes and institutions. Since referendums are thought to be exceptional in a democratic sense they are treated as exceptional in a constitutional sense too. The political and legal significance attributed to votes in referendums far surpasses that of elections, protests, or votes in legislatures. The aim of this thesis is to challenge this approach to referendums. I will argue that referendums, even referendums with constitutional content, are democratic processes like any other. This thesis interrogates the treatment of referendums in theory and practice. It challenges the ideas that inform the view of referendums as exceptional democratic processes. This is not an argument against the use of referendums. Far from it. Instead, it is an argument for the normalization of referendums. To argue for the normalization of referendums is to say that referendums are not higher-order decision-making processes that operate on a distinct democratic plane. Referendums are just one of many ways that direction is given to representatives in a democracy. Certain features of referendums distinguish them from other democratic processes. In particular, they give more specific direction to representatives than elections do. There are features of referendums that are significant and distinctive, but nothing places them above –or apart from– other democratic processes.</p>
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spelling oxford-uuid:8b234ae4-3e0d-4a37-9f60-89fda5588d0f2022-03-26T22:36:05ZThe uses and abuses of referendumsThesishttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_db06uuid:8b234ae4-3e0d-4a37-9f60-89fda5588d0fORA Deposit2018Trueblood, LGreen, L<p>Referendums, especially referendums with constitutional content, are often treated as exceptional acts. They are treated as exceptional in a democratic sense, because they are thought to go beyond the usual democratic processes and institutions. Since referendums are thought to be exceptional in a democratic sense they are treated as exceptional in a constitutional sense too. The political and legal significance attributed to votes in referendums far surpasses that of elections, protests, or votes in legislatures. The aim of this thesis is to challenge this approach to referendums. I will argue that referendums, even referendums with constitutional content, are democratic processes like any other. This thesis interrogates the treatment of referendums in theory and practice. It challenges the ideas that inform the view of referendums as exceptional democratic processes. This is not an argument against the use of referendums. Far from it. Instead, it is an argument for the normalization of referendums. To argue for the normalization of referendums is to say that referendums are not higher-order decision-making processes that operate on a distinct democratic plane. Referendums are just one of many ways that direction is given to representatives in a democracy. Certain features of referendums distinguish them from other democratic processes. In particular, they give more specific direction to representatives than elections do. There are features of referendums that are significant and distinctive, but nothing places them above –or apart from– other democratic processes.</p>
spellingShingle Trueblood, L
The uses and abuses of referendums
title The uses and abuses of referendums
title_full The uses and abuses of referendums
title_fullStr The uses and abuses of referendums
title_full_unstemmed The uses and abuses of referendums
title_short The uses and abuses of referendums
title_sort uses and abuses of referendums
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