Experts and Democratic Legitimacy. Tracing the Social Ties of Expert Bodies in Europe

Eva Krick and Cathrine Holst have edited a new volume with Routledge that challenges the technocratic reading of expert bodies, such as central banks, advisory committees and regulatory agencies. 

Abstract

Expert contributors ask in what way expert bodies are subject to some of the key pressures in contemporary governance, such as democratisation, politicisation and expertisation. Based on empirical studies, the book traces the multiple social ties of expert bodies and refines the common perception of expert bodies as ‘de-politicised’ institutions that are detached from political interference and societal input. It further theorises the tension and reconcilability between reliable, independent expert knowledge on the one hand and the need for accountability and legitimacy in modern policy-making on the other hand.

Refining the detached, de-politicised image of non-majoritarian institutions, Experts and Democratic Legitimacy will be of great interest to scholars of European studies, political and social theory, modern governance and policy-making. This book was originally published as a special issue of European Politics and Society.

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Experts and Democratic Legitimacy. Tracing the Social Ties of Expert Bodies in Europe

Eva Krick and Cathrine Holst (eds)

Routledge, 2019

Published Dec. 9, 2019 9:50 AM - Last modified Feb. 2, 2022 5:07 AM