Toward a New Perspective on Forms and Sites of Democratic Life

How do we determine if democracy is succeeding or failing? Is it people “watching” politics or “doing” politics or both? These are questions that Dr. Andrea Felicetti engages with in his perspective piece, as traditional understandings of civic responsibilities in democracy are reconsidered. According to Felicetti, behaviors once deemed problematic to the health of a democratic society—anonymity, non-participation and spectatorship are now being reconsidered and they might have some benefits for democratic life. In particular, spectatorship, or merely observing political activities, is highlighted in this article as many citizens choose to be bystanders in politics. However, Felicetti encourages us to rethink the role of spectatorship in creating a vibrant democracy, asking the following questions: What forms might positive spectatorship take? In what contexts might we find this? How can we observe them empirically?

How Can Spectatorship Be Positive for Democracy?

Spectatorship has long been criticized as detrimental or burdensome to encouraging engagement with the democratic process—citizens are not engaged or willing to be involved in political activities. That said, Felicetti challenges us to consider that observing politics can be a positive stimulus for political engagement. Citizens can better understand their political environment and the issues being discussed through moments of observatory reflection. At the same time, watching citizens can question information, improving their ability to think critically. Moreover, Felicetti proposes that the learning of political dynamics through spectatorship leads in some cases to eventual collaboration as citizens unite around common interests and form collective identity. In this sense, while many are quick to discount spectatorship as antithetical to democratic engagement, it is actually necessary for building political understanding and action.

Where Does Spectatorship Take Place?

There are several locations where we can witness positive displays of spectatorship take place, according to Felicetti. He illustrates deliberative assemblies, participatory governance, social movements, and the workplace or schools as the common sites of positive spectatorship. These real-world spaces provide opportunities for citizens to present their perspectives and collectively reflect on shared challenges. For example, in the workplace, we do not just work; we are actively observing how shared challenges are managed, thus shaping our sense of democratic responsibility. By empirically examining positive spectatorship in these daily environments, Felicetti believes that researchers can begin to understand how people process their problems together.

Why It Matters

The emphasis on the positive forms of spectatorship in this article ultimately reconceptualizes how political theorists think about current democratic engagement. These activities are necessary for a healthy democratic landscape, challenging traditional arguments that participation alone is a signal of a healthy democracy. Felicetti encourages future researchers to pursue qualitative and quantitative approaches to study positive spectatorship in real-world environments—including social media and digital platforms. By pursuing an empirical-based strategy, we can start to engage with overlooked elements of democratic life beyond participation and learn from a massive segment of the democratic ecosystem.

Read the original article in Policy Studies Journal:

Felicetti, Andrea. 2025. “Toward a New Perspective on Forms and Sites of Democratic Life.” Policy Studies Journal, 53(4): 1098–1107. https://doi.org/10.1111/psj.70021.

About the Article’s Author(s)

Andrea Felicetti (PhD, Australian National University) is an Associate Professor at the Department of Political Science, Law, and International Studies at the University of Padua. His research interests and teaching activities revolve around democratic theories, public spheres, and governance. 

Agendas and Instability in American Local Politics: A Study of the Austin City Council Agenda 1900-2020

How does the itinerary of topics that the government chooses to focus on change over time at the local level? The everyday life of citizens has been directly impacted by decisions made at the local level, with the issues being spotlighted on the agenda reflecting local priorities. Scholarship has understudied the development of policy agendas at the local-level, displacing focus on the interactions between federal and state-level activities. This article looks to examine long-term changes in local policy agendas by focusing on policy developments within the city of Austin, Texas, and how local agenda dynamics are influenced by national-level agendas, population shifts, and institutional changes.

Hypotheses

The authors test the theoretical argument that local policy agendas will expand in response to changes in national-level agenda(s), local population growth, and institutional reforms.

Methodology

City council meeting minutes in Austin, Texas were analyzed using a 120-year sample of agenda items from 1900 to 2020. These meeting minutes were content-coded using the Austin Agendas Project codebook that tracked changes in agenda size and issue content. The authors also calculated an entropy score to measure the number of agenda subtopics by year. Additionally, the study included measures of all U.S. House and Senate hearings that occurred during the 1900-2020 period, to compare local agenda shifts with national-level activities.

Key Findings

Post-War Conditions Triggered Agenda Expansion in Austin

Figure 2 demonstrates that the local agenda of Austin expanded greatly following World War II and has continued to increase into the contemporary period. The number of items and subtopics discussed each year on the local agenda increased significantly, expanding the scope of policy items in focus. These findings suggest that the growth of local agenda items was highly receptive to wartime conditions which sparked a reevaluation of local needs such as infrastructure and property taxes. Furthermore, this finding confirms that the occurrence of major or dramatic national events can transcend into an activation of local-level policy agendas.

Figure 2. Number of Items and Topics on the Austin City Agenda, 1900-2020.

Population Growth Drives the Local Agenda

As shown in Figure 5, the increase in the number of citizens in Austin correlated with an expansion of the local agenda. However, these dynamics are not necessarily stable, as the local agenda expanded more than the increase of citizens following World War II, and around 1990, the local agenda stagnated despite a growing population. These fluctuations indicate that while the local agenda does not firmly follow steady population growth patterns, local policy agendas are generally receptive to the need to accommodate interests of newer residents.

Figure 5. Population Growth and Agenda Expansion.

Why It Matters

This article provides an analysis of how local policy agendas respond to changing forces, such as population growth, national agendas, and institutional reforms. It contributes to the field by providing an empirical analysis of local policy developments and thereby offering an opportunity for scholarship to further explore trends in local-level policy dynamics. The authors argue that expanding the scope of this research could help uncover the interplay between local and national agendas, as well as patterns in policy experimentation in other cities.

Listen to their Podcast Interview

The authors participated in the Art of Science Podcast (AoS) to discuss their study on local policy agendas in Austin, Texas. You can listen to their interview via either link below:

Read the original article in Policy Studies Journal:

Mortensen, Peter B. and Brooke Nicole Shannon. 2025. “ Agendas and Instability in American Local Politics: A Study of the Austin City Council Agenda 1900–2020.” Policy Studies Journal 53(4): 815–832. https://doi.org/10.1111/psj.12587.

About the Article’s Author(s)

Peter B. Mortensen is a full professor at the Department of Political Science, Aarhus University. His research interests include public policy and local and national agenda setting. 

Brooke Nicole Shannon is an assistant professor in the Department of Political Science at the University of Memphis. Her research explores the policy agenda of city councils, American political development at the local level, policy process theory, and local institutions such as city councils, mayors, and law enforcement departments.

Does the Implementation Status of Gender Provisions Affect the Implementation of a Peace Agreement? Evidence from Colombia’s 2016 Peace Agreement Implementation Process

Consider these questions: How involved are women in the negotiation and implementation of peace agreements? Are the rights and well-being of women well-reflected in peace programs? The protection of women’s rights has been a cornerstone of recent discussions in post-war peacebuilding, as recent scholarship has begun to explore the extent to which women have a voice in negotiations and are able to include gendered protections. This article investigates whether such protections included in Colombia’s Final Agreement in 2016 were implemented. The 2016 agreement in Colombia was finalized after a series of negotiations in Havana that started in 2012 between the Colombian government and the leftist insurgency FARC (Fuerzas Armadas Revolucionarias de Colombia – Ejercito del Pueblo). To guide this study, the author specifically asks: To what degree are the gender provisions negotiated in a peace agreement implemented compared to gender-neutral provisions? Does the implementation status of gender provisions affect the implementation of the peace agreement?

Hypotheses

The author introduces two hypotheses to determine the relationship between the implementation of gender protections and the peace agreement’s success:

H1: The incorporation of gendered provisions in the peace agreement is negatively associated with implementation, compared to gender-neutral provisions.

H2: A positive relationship exists between the implementation status of gender provisions and the overall implementation success of the peace agreement.

    Methodology

    This study utilizes a quantitative analysis of the 2016 Colombian Peace Agreement. Monthly data from the PAM Barometer Initiative (PAM-BI) containing 578 commitments or provisions included in the 2016 Final Agreement were collected between December 2016 and April 2023. The author utilized two different measurement indicators: implementation status and gender-specific benchmarks — that were analyzed at two levels: the stipulation and sub-theme (reforms or programs) level. This allowed the implementation progress of gendered provisions to be compared against non-gendered provisions.

    Key Findings

    Gender Provisions Lag Behind Non-Gender Provisions

    Figure 2 demonstrates that the implementation of gender provisions in the peace agreement falls behind non-gendered provisions. This pattern is consistent across all points of the Final Agreement, suggesting widespread and systemic limitations in the implementation of gender protections. Furthermore, these dynamics indicate a significant implementation gap along gender dimensions, where gendered provisions experience less success in being part of negotiated peace deals compared to provisions not directly advocating for such protections. This reaffirms the challenge of ensuring that women’s perspectives and rights are reflected in the implementation of peace negotiations.

    Figure 2. Point Specific Analysis of Gender Provisions and Implementation Status.

    Implementing More Gender Provisions Uplifts the Entire Peace Agreement

    The complete or “full” implementation of gender provisions provides a significant boost to the success of the peace process, as shown in Figure 3. The addition of more completed gendered-provisions or stipulations improves the probability of the peace agreement being implemented. This confirms the author’s second hypothesis that the implementation of gendered provisions or protections are foundational to supporting broader reforms negotiated in the agreement. Gendered conditions, in this case, act as leverage for advancing peace and stability in post-war nations.

    Figure 3. Prediction of Level Implementation Rate.

    Why It Matters

    This article provides a helpful illustration for how gendered perspectives are implemented in and shape post-war peacebuilding, in comparison with non-gendered perspectives. A dynamic connection is clearly present between gendered provisions and the rate of success for implementing a peace agreement–highlighting their significance in the peace implementation process. The author encourages future research to build upon the findings of this study to determine what conditions or factors influence the inclusion of gender protections in peace negotiations in other settings. By doing this, scholarship will be able to magnify the role of women and their perspectives in implementing important peace agreements.

    Read the original article in Policy Studies Journal:

    Joshi, Madhav. 2025. “Does the Implementation Status of Gender Provisions Affect the Implementation of a Peace Agreement? Evidence From Colombia’s 2016 Peace Agreement Implementation Process.” Policy Studies Journal 53(4): 1152–1163. https://doi.org/10.1111/psj.12584

    About the Article’s Author(s)

    Madhav Joshi is a research professor and an associate director of the Peace Accords Matrix (PAM) at the Kroc Institute for International Peace Studies at the University of Notre Dame’s Keough School of Global Affairs. He oversees the data coding for the PAM project and leads the research initiatives on peace agreement design, implementation, and post-implementation political and economic developments. His current priorities focus on collaborative initiatives fulfilling the Kroc Institute’s mandate specific to developing methodology and verifying the implementation of the 2016 peace agreement between the Colombian government and the FARC (Fuerzas Armadas Revolucionarias de Colombia – Ejercito del Pueblo). In collaboration with Catholic Relief Services-Philippines, he leads the Peace Accords Matrix-Mindanao technical accompaniment support to the Joint Normalization Committee in monitoring and verifying the implementation of the Normalization Annex in the 2014 Comprehensive Agreement on the Bangsamoro. He holds a Ph.D. in Political Science from the University of North Texas. His works are published in Political Geography, Social Science Research, British Journal of Political Science, the Journal of Conflict Resolution, the Journal of Peace Research, Democratization, International Peacekeeping, International Studies Quarterly, and many other journals.