Redescriptions (Jul 2020)

Weber’s Concern on Immediate Democracy and the Mediation of Parliament

  • Cristiana Senigaglia

DOI
https://doi.org/10.33134/rds.327
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 23, no. 1
pp. 20 – 35

Abstract

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Weber’s judgement on the types of immediate democracy is ambivalent; he recognizes the reduction of institutional mediation and power as well as the possibility of a more direct intervention by the people on the one hand, but he also underlines the major difficulties to find a balance between political decision making and administration, or between the exercise of power and its control. The analysis focuses on the most relevant types of immediate democracy: direct democracy, the democracy of the street, and plebiscitary democracy, and dedicates a particular attention to the referendum as the most significant instrument of immediate democracy in Weber’s view. The aim is to ascertain which aspects do not find a satisfying solution in the immediate forms of democracy, and therefore require and legitimise at the same time an institutional mediation which is fully accomplished only by a strong and effective parliament.

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