The Changing European Political Order

In the article in the European Law Journal, Johan P. Olsen studies who and what shall constitute 'Europe' and how to develop legitimate political institutions for governing it. 

Abstract

This article is about democratic accountability and a Europe struggling to find viable answers to the questions of who and what shall constitute “Europe” and how to develop legitimate political institutions for governing it. The article is, nevertheless, first and foremost about political order and change, rules for living together, the role of democratic politics in society and the relations between political organization and civilized coexistence, and the study of the political. Modern democracies live with unresolved conflict, and accountability regimes are part of an institutional arrangement for preserving order and continuity and also for creating dynamics and change. Accountability processes take place within settled and unsettled orders, and they affect and are affected by existing orders. Without denying the importance of contending interests, power struggles, strategic behaviour, non-cooperative games, and (re)distributional battles, attention is directed towards the search for unity, political cohesion and solidarity based upon the informed voluntary consent of the people through reflection and reasoned deliberation among individuals with different values, interests, understandings and resources.

Full info

Johan P. Olsen
Democratic Accountability and the Changing European Political Order

European Law Journal, Online, January 2018
DOI: 10.1111/eulj.12261

Open Access (link)


 

Published Jan. 16, 2018 9:55 AM - Last modified Jan. 30, 2022 4:48 AM