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      The LIO’s growing democracy gap: an endogenous source of polity contestation

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          Abstract

          The Liberal International Order (LIO) is under pressure from various angles. To account for this phenomenon, a recent trend is to focus on endogenous sources of contestation—institutional properties of the order that create negative feedback effects. In this article, we seize on and extend an endogenous explanation centring on the LIO’s political structure and institutional design. While existing research stipulates a connection between the rising authority of liberal international organisations (IOs) and their increasing politicisation, we still lack a clear understanding of the reasons behind the growing rejection of the order at the level of mass publics. We argue that the LIO’s institutional setup contains a widening ‘democracy gap’ denoting a disconnect between the participatory legitimation requirements for the exercise of political authority and the technocratic legitimation rationale characterising IOs. By creating a justification deficit, the democracy gap incites growing political dissatisfaction and, by implying a responsiveness deficit, it turns policy contestation into outright polity contestation. We probe the plausibility of our theoretical argument in case studies of the EU and the international regimes on trade and human rights, and subsequently discuss the analytical and normative implications of our argument.

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              Populism and the economics of globalization

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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                christian.kreuder-sonnen@uni-jena.de
                berthold.rittberger@gsi.lmu.de
                Journal
                J Int Relat Dev (Ljubl)
                J Int Relat Dev (Ljubl)
                Journal of International Relations and Development
                Palgrave Macmillan UK (London )
                1408-6980
                1581-1980
                21 September 2022
                : 1-25
                Affiliations
                [1 ]GRID grid.9613.d, ISNI 0000 0001 1939 2794, Department of Political Science, , Friedrich Schiller University Jena, ; Carl-Zeiß-Str. 3, 07743 Jena, Germany
                [2 ]GRID grid.5252.0, ISNI 0000 0004 1936 973X, Department of Political Science, , LMU Munich, ; Oettingenstrasse 67, 80538 Munich, Germany
                Article
                275
                10.1057/s41268-022-00275-x
                9490710
                8c53cdbc-eed5-420b-bf4a-17b254272a6e
                © Springer Nature Limited 2022, Springer Nature or its licensor holds exclusive rights to this article under a publishing agreement with the author(s) or other rightsholder(s); author self-archiving of the accepted manuscript version of this article is solely governed by the terms of such publishing agreement and applicable law.

                This article is made available via the PMC Open Access Subset for unrestricted research re-use and secondary analysis in any form or by any means with acknowledgement of the original source. These permissions are granted for the duration of the World Health Organization (WHO) declaration of COVID-19 as a global pandemic.

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                Categories
                Original Article

                authority,contestation,democracy,legitimacy,liberal international order

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