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Multilevel Politics in the European Union and its Member States (Y)

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Lecture notes Multilevel Politics in the European Union and its Member States 2025. (midterm)

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Subido en
18 de octubre de 2025
Número de páginas
31
Escrito en
2025/2026
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Theresa kuhn
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Week 1 - Introduction to European Politics
Two basic conceptualizations of democracy → minimalist and maximalist
★​ Minimalist;
○​ Focuses on elections in which citizens delegate decision-making power to
politicians;
○​ Are there free and fair elections including more than one party?
○​ Are the chief executive and the parliament elected and has there been alternation
in power?
○​ Josef Schumpeter;
★​ Maximalist;
○​ Focus on outcomes;
■​ Liberal democracy;
■​ Civil rights;
○​ Are human rights protected and are all people equal before the law?
○​ Can everyone express themselves freely, join associations and protest?
○​ Do elected politicians represent the will of the voters?
○​ Robert Dahl;
■​ Effective participation;
■​ Equality in voting;
■​ Gaining enlightened understanding;
■​ Exercising final control of the agenda;
■​ Inclusion of adults;
■​ No political system fulfils these criteria;
■​ Partly competing with each other.

Measuring Democracy
★​ Binary view of democracy;
○​ This approach treats democracy as a simple yes/no category;
■​ A country is either a democracy or it is not;
○​ The advantage is that it is straightforward and easy to classify;
○​ The limitation is that it cannot capture "in-between" cases, such as countries that
have elections but weak protections for rights;
★​ V-Dem (Varieties of Democracy Project);
○​ Collects evaluations from country experts across hundreds of indicators;
○​ Covers both procedural aspects (rules, elections, institutions) and substantive
aspects (civil liberties, equality, inclusion);
○​ Provides historical data, not only current scores;
○​ Offers a multidimensional and fine-grained picture of democracy;
★​ Polity Project (Polity IV / V):
○​ Ranks countries on a scale from –10 (full autocracy) to +10 (full democracy);

, ○​ Emphasizes institutions, such as executive constraints, competitiveness of
political participation, and selection of leaders;
○​ Often used in political science research;
★​ Freedom House (Freedom in the World):
○​ Publishes annual Freedom Scores;
○​ Classifies countries as Free, Partly Free, or Not Free;
○​ Focuses on civil liberties (speech, religion, assembly) and political rights
(elections, participation);
○​ More normative and advocacy-oriented compared to Polity or V-Dem.

Historical Development of Democracy
★​ Authoritarian rulers need to make credible commitments to rule increasingly wealthy
countries: Citizens will only pay taxes and contribute to war efforts if they can trust that
the monarch will not steal their money.
★​ These commitments are more believable when there is a credible threat to the monarch‘s
safety in case of betrayal, e.g. previous monarchs have been killed or exiled and
institutions have been set up to protect property rights.
★​ A middle class is also important as they have a strong interest in stability and power to
overthrow the monarch.
★​ Instrumental in the development of British democracy.

Democracy and Wealth
★​ Modernization Theory posited by Lipset (1959), argues that democracy can only take
hold in countries that are sufficiently wealthy, urban and educated.
★​ Other factors such as wealth, passing of time and political system lead countries to
transition from unconsolidated to consolidated democracies.
★​ Consolidated Democracies are much less likely to revert back to authoritarianism and are
resilient against crises.

The role of the EU
★​ Democratic norms and institutions are part of Copenhagen criteria to join the EU;
○​ Don’t confuse them with Convergence criteria for Euro zone!
○​ Political criterion: “Institutional stability as a guarantee of a democratic and
constitutional system, of the protection of human rights and of respect for and
the protection of minorities”;
○​ Economic criterion: “a functioning market economy as well as the capacity to
cope with competitive pressure and market forces within the Union.”;
○​ Acquis criterion: candidate’s ability to take on the obligations of membership →
that means the whole law as well policies of the EU (the so called "Acquis
communautaire") – including adherence to the aims of political, economic and
monetary union;
★​ Greece, Spain and Portugal join after restoring democracy in the 1970s and 80s;
★​ Eastern enlargement in 2000s: democratization in Central Eastern European countries;

, ★​ However, EU cannot prevent democratic backsliding: The rules are set up to monitor
countries before they join but are less effective in constraining countries from reverting
back towards authoritarianism after they join;
★​ Also, criticism about the EU’s democratic deficit.

European politics today
★​ Most countries in Europe have multiparty parliamentary systems:
○​ Multiple party compete in elections.
○​ Elections government formation, mostly between 2 or more parties.
○​ Link between government and parliament: the executive is supported by
parliament and can dissolve the parliament.
○​ Extensions: Minority governments, semi-presidential systems, two-party
systems.

European politics today
★​ Common understanding of the political landscape:
★​ Political conflict typically based on divisions over classic left-right ideology (on role of
the state in the economy);
★​ Increasingly important second dimension of ideology: new policy issues such as
immigration, globalization, minority rights, climate change, and European integration.

What is multilevel politics?
Multilevel governance:
★​ dispersion of authority away from the central state (Liesbet Hooghe and Gary Marks);
★​ Upwards to the EU and other international institutions;
★​ Downwards to regional and local levels;
Politics at different levels intertwined and influence each other.

, Week 2 - Democratic politics in Europe
Recap 1st year

Legitimacy
★​ Belief in legitimacy (Max Weber)
○​ ‘probability that to a relevant degree the appropriate attitudes will exist [leading
to] submissiveness to persons in positions of power' (Weber 1962: 74).
○​ Consent to be led
○​ Discussed in lecture 10
★​ Institutional legitimacy
○​ Close to legal and philosophical questions

Input, output, throughput legitimacy
★​ Input legitimacy (Fritz Scharpf):
○​ Political criterion
○​ Government by the people
○​ European ‘demos’ involved in decision making process
○​ Representative institutions
Vs.
★​ Output legitimacy (Scharpf):
○​ Performance criterion: Addresses performance
○​ Government for the people
○​ Outcome in general interest
★​ Throughput legitimacy
○​ Vivien Schmidt (2013)
○​ Procedural criterion: Quality of government processes
○​ Government of the people
○​ Accountability, transparency, inclusiveness and
○​ Linking input and output legitimacy
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