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Ecuador: the provincialization of representation
By
Simón Pachano
(published in
2010-11-11
by
aktrianap
)
Related topics:
Related countries:
Document:
Published and/or Presented at:
Pachano, Simón (2006). Ecuador: the provincialization of representation, In: The crisis of democratic representation in the Andes. Universidad de Standford, California
Summary:
Among the many causes alluded to when explaining the problems of the Andean
countries, and especially those of Ecuador, the crisis of representation has grown in importance in recent years. Scholarly analyses as well as politicians refer
to a "crisis of representation" as an unquestionable fact that obstructs policy
making and implementation (Barrera 2001; F. Bustamante 2000). Allegedly,
deficiencies in representativeness result in problems of governability and conditions
unfavorable to the consolidation of democracy. This perspective suggests
that those deficiencies derive from the voters' dissatisfaction with the meager results
of politicians' actions in their role as authorities of popular representation,
and that, at the same time, this dissatisfaction leads to mistrust not only of the
people involved but of the institutions and the system as a whole. As a result, following
a period of exploration as voters experiment with different options, they
finally reject representative democracy and focus on alternative options, ranging
from seemingly innovative proposals to the election of anti-system leaders.