Skip to content
Login

Kirsten Bound

photo of Kirsten Bound

Demos Associate

Kirsten Bound was a senior researcher at Demos until 2008. Her work at Demos focused on democracy and emerging science and innovation in India and Brazil. She is author of India: the uneven innovator and Brazil: the natural knowledge economy and co-author with Paul Skidmore of the Everyday Democracy Index.

Posted by Kirsten Bound at 3:35pm on Wednesday, 9th April 2008

We just got back from the launch of the Everyday Democracy Index (EDI) at The Centre in Brussels. It was a chance to test our ideas with a group drawn from Member States, NGOs, index experts and journalists. Margot Wallstrom, the Vice President of the European Commission, in charge of institutional relations and communication, was there to respond.

Wallstrom heads up “Plan D for Democracy”, the Commission’s long-term plan for engaging citizens in the European policymaking process. (We’re now up to Plan D-3 as it happens). She took issue with our claim that the European democratic deficit is inherited from national governments, suggesting that this is a separate issue, requiring a different set of tools and solutions. She plans to respond to Paul's recent piece on the EDI in Esharp (see p48) in the near future.

There was a great deal of enthusiasm for EDI. One participant said “we talk about representative democracy, or participative democracy, but this could take us into a new debate”. Another person was surprised by the variation in levels of Everyday Democracy in Europe, and questioned the notion they had taken for granted – that there is a single european model of democracy.

This comparative perspective was brought into sharp relief for me  when we ran a workshop last week with a group of Latin American academics, NGOs and the Avina Foundation about expanding the EDI to Latin America.

There is huge potential for expanding the index to other regions, for drilling down into particular results or for local disaggregation of results.

Watch this space for progress. You can check out the presentation we did yesterday here. We look forward to receiving any comments and please get in touch if you would like to be involved.

Comments

(no comments at the moment)

LOGIN to add comments