PhD ThesisIn light of increasing concern about the democratic recession spreading across established
representative democracies this PhD explores how digital democratic innovations are used in
emerging political parties, to involve members and supporters directly in intra-party policy
formation and decision-making. This is explored through a case study of Danish political
party Alternativet, which constitutes a recent example of an emerging political party that
claims to promote and practice new and inclusive ways of doing politics, experimenting with
digital technologies for this purpose. In this respect the case of Alternativet illustrates a larger
trend of what has been labelled connective parties (Bennett et al., 2017) or movement parties
(Porta et al., 2017) by other authors. As with many of these parties, Alternativet experienced
electoral success relatively quickly and has been represented in parliament since 2015, and in
several local councils since 2017. Thus, Alternativet, like similar emerging parties, is an
attempt to combine democratic innovations with party politics and traditional political
institutions in liberal representative democracies. This is interesting considering how
democratic innovations are often conceptualised in contrast to classic representative political
institutions. Both democratic innovations and Internet technologies have promised, but
struggled to deliver, an increase and deepening of citizen participation in democratic decision
making. While they have demonstrated that they can engage citizens in political questions, it
has been a particular challenge to turn engagement into impact on final political decisions.
These decisions are usually taken in decision-making fora dominated by political parties, such
as governments, parliaments and local councils. So connective parties, such as Alternativet,
posses a potential ability to provide consequentiality to citizen participation by combining
democratic innovations with party politics. However, so far insufficient attention has been
given to the kind of (re-invigorated) democracy these parties promote, and what kind of
participation the digital platforms they use facilitate. This thesis address exactly those
questions.
The study employs a mixed methods approach, combining semi-structured interviews and
participant observation with a party member survey. Interviews with key stakeholders in the
party and participant observations during a two months visit at the party’s national secretariat
are used to explore how and why the party uses digital tools to engage party members and
supporters in policy formation and decision-making. This includes the motivation to engage
members actively in policy formation in the first place. Based on this, the thesis identifies four
dimensions of intra-party democracy promoted by the party elite: An aggregative crowd
sourcing dimension, a deliberative dimension, a developmental dimension, and a more
traditional delegation dimension. Each of the (many) digital platforms used in the party have
affordances that speak to each of these dimensions. A survey distributed among party
members and supporters is then used to explore the support for each of these four dimensions
of intra-party democracy. This data indicates that support for intra-party democracy among the
party supporters can reasonably be considered along the same four dimensions. These findings
are significant for our understanding of the role both democratic innovations and political
parties can play in revitalising democracy
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