__Abstract__
In the Netherlands, citizens have the formal opportunity to put issues – under certain
conditions – on the political agenda. This has been possible since May 2006 at the
national level and at the local level since March 2002. In addition, people increasingly
engage in an informal way, on their own initiative, to draw from their expertise,
experience and knowledge to formulate ideas for policy that they may offer to
government. Such ‘citizens’ initiatives’ can be seen, in addition to interactive policy
making, as a form of citizens’ participation (Edelenbos et al. 2008). Citizen participation
is often initiated by government; it is a bottom-up development started by citizens
themselves (Edelenbos et al. 2008).
In this chapter, we elaborate on the institutional implications of the ‘citizens’
initiatives’ within local democracy. These initiatives could be described as forms of selfgovernance,
leading to the emergence of ‘proto-institutions’ (Lawrence et al. 2002).
These proto-institutions interact with established institutions of representative
democracy. This interaction is a co-evolving process in which both types of institutions
react to each other in certain ways. In this contribution, we describe this institutional
evolution and try to find determining factors in this process. We want to provide
explanatory factors of processes of institutional co-evolution. We argue that these factors
are of major importance with regard to processes of citizen participation and co-operating mechanisms between proto-institutions developed by citizens’ initiatives and established
institutions of representative democracy