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Conserving the Councillor: A Case for Widespread Local Officeholding

Conserving the Councillor: A Case for Widespread Local Officeholding Guided by participatory and deliberative conceptions of democracy, local governments have embraced the need for increased citizen participation in decision‐making. Yet, at the same time, a systematic reduction in the number of councillor seats has seen a precipitous decline in opportunities to participate in the council chamber. With specific reference to the Australian case, this paper seeks to explain this incongruity, suggesting that the answer lies in the wide adoption of democratic theorists' narrow conceptualisation of the role of the councillor. Viewed solely as representatives, whether in the corporate, mirror, or delegate mode, councillors are valued only insofar as they prove instrumental to an efficient and responsive system of governance. Their participation, itself, is not intrinsically valued. Drawing on novel and extant empirical evidence to demonstrate the participatory virtues of officeholding, this paper argues that when due regard is afforded to councillors' participatory role, a normative case for widespread — and more inclusive — officeholding emerges. http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png Australian Journal of Politics & History Wiley

Conserving the Councillor: A Case for Widespread Local Officeholding

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Publisher
Wiley
Copyright
© 2023 The University of Queensland and John Wiley & Sons Australia, Ltd
ISSN
0004-9522
eISSN
1467-8497
DOI
10.1111/ajph.12840
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

Guided by participatory and deliberative conceptions of democracy, local governments have embraced the need for increased citizen participation in decision‐making. Yet, at the same time, a systematic reduction in the number of councillor seats has seen a precipitous decline in opportunities to participate in the council chamber. With specific reference to the Australian case, this paper seeks to explain this incongruity, suggesting that the answer lies in the wide adoption of democratic theorists' narrow conceptualisation of the role of the councillor. Viewed solely as representatives, whether in the corporate, mirror, or delegate mode, councillors are valued only insofar as they prove instrumental to an efficient and responsive system of governance. Their participation, itself, is not intrinsically valued. Drawing on novel and extant empirical evidence to demonstrate the participatory virtues of officeholding, this paper argues that when due regard is afforded to councillors' participatory role, a normative case for widespread — and more inclusive — officeholding emerges.

Journal

Australian Journal of Politics & HistoryWiley

Published: Jun 1, 2023

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