
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Democracy is often lauded as a peculiarly just and effective form of government — one that enjoys the benefits that flow from twin virtues of popular engagement and political accountability. And yet the effectiveness and resilience of democratic politics depends on the trust voters have in political institutions.
When those institutions are felt not to be responsive to the needs and fears of citizens, when politicians seem not to represent those who voted for them (and seem instead to serve their own interests or the interests of ulterior “others”), or when governments seem impotent in the face of geopolitical tensions, global supply chains or complex market realities, such conditions can provide a breeding ground for disillusionment.
In such circumstances, voters may be more inclined to punish incumbents than to invest their replacements with some democratic mandate — so beginning the electoral cycle of organised popular disaffection.
Can a democracy like Australia break that cycle, or is democratic disillusionment an inevitability?
By ABC listen4.6
3434 ratings
Democracy is often lauded as a peculiarly just and effective form of government — one that enjoys the benefits that flow from twin virtues of popular engagement and political accountability. And yet the effectiveness and resilience of democratic politics depends on the trust voters have in political institutions.
When those institutions are felt not to be responsive to the needs and fears of citizens, when politicians seem not to represent those who voted for them (and seem instead to serve their own interests or the interests of ulterior “others”), or when governments seem impotent in the face of geopolitical tensions, global supply chains or complex market realities, such conditions can provide a breeding ground for disillusionment.
In such circumstances, voters may be more inclined to punish incumbents than to invest their replacements with some democratic mandate — so beginning the electoral cycle of organised popular disaffection.
Can a democracy like Australia break that cycle, or is democratic disillusionment an inevitability?

209 Listeners

114 Listeners

77 Listeners

80 Listeners

88 Listeners

16 Listeners

49 Listeners

1,724 Listeners

851 Listeners

772 Listeners

135 Listeners

27 Listeners

85 Listeners

70 Listeners

472 Listeners

157 Listeners

327 Listeners

802 Listeners

12 Listeners

197 Listeners

112 Listeners

247 Listeners

1,013 Listeners

49 Listeners