
Building on recent theories of interactive governance and political leadership, Interactive Political Leadership develops a concept of interactive political leadership and a theoretical framework for studying the role of elected politicians in the age of governance. The purpose of the theoretical framework is to inspire and guide empirical research into how elected politicians perform political leadership in a society where citizens and other stakeholders play an active role in making and implementing political decisions and what barriers, challenges, and dilemmas they encounter in relation to the performance of interactive political leadership. The research framework draws extensively on recent theories of interactive governance and political leadership and other new developments in political science and public administration research. Moreover, it finds inspiration in current tendencies and embryonic examples of interactive political leadership performed by elected politicians operating at different levels of governance in Western liberal democracies. The basic assumption is that political legitimacy is essential for the survival of a political system, and that interactive political leadership stands out as a promising way of securing what political scientists denote as input-, throughput-, output-, and outcome legitimacy in the age of governance. Hence, interactive political leadership aims to establish a bridge between representative democracy and emergent forms of political participation, to promote political learning and accountability, to strengthen the political entrepreneurship of elected politicians, and to advance the political system's implementation capacity through resource mobilization. The book develops 20 propositions that sets the agenda for a new and much needed field of empirical research into political leadership in the age of governance.
This book investigates how elected politicians can effectively exercise leadership within the complex, multi-stakeholder environment of modern interactive governance. Eva Sørensen, a scholar in public administration, constructs a theoretical framework that bridges traditional representative democracy with contemporary participatory models. By analyzing the shifting role of politicians, the author argues that interactive leadership is a necessary mechanism for maintaining political legitimacy across input, throughput, output, and outcome dimensions.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars and practitioners in public administration view this work as a foundational text for understanding the evolving responsibilities of elected officials in collaborative governance systems. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose, which is designed primarily for researchers and advanced students of political science.
Page Count:
233
Publication Date:
2020-01-01
Publisher:
OUP Oxford
ISBN-10:
0191083828
ISBN-13:
9780191083822
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