Democratic legitimacy in regional economic organizations: the European Union in comparative perspective
Publication Title
Economy and Society
Document Type
Article
Department or Program
Sociology
Publication Date
2017
Keywords
comparative regionalism, democracy, European Union, integration, legitimacy, regional economic organizations
Abstract
Regional organizations have been widely criticized for lacking democratic legitimacy, but these criticisms have been rather ad hoc, concerned with single case studies and reliant on unclear standards or metrics. Are all organizations similarly deficient? And how does the European Union (EU), the target par excellence of the criticisms, fare in comparative perspective? In this paper, we take a first step towards answering these questions by leveraging the rich debate on the EU to identify several institutional dimensions of democratic legitimacy and operationalizing them for comparative analysis. We then investigate the most important regional economic organizations (REOs) in the world. Our findings are three-fold: (i) there is systematic variation across REOs, with a group doing rather well, one mixed, and one poorly; (ii) procedural dimensions fare better than those related to representation or local self-determination; (iii) no organization exhibits or lacks legitimacy in all dimensions. These results qualify the perception that democratic legitimacy deficits are indiscriminately pervasive and indicate that the EU belongs to the most democratically legitimate group.
Recommended Citation
Duina, Francesco and Tobias Lenz. 2017. “Democratic Legitimacy in Regional Economic Organizations: The European Union in Comparative Perspective.” Economy and Society 46 (3-4): 398-431.
Comments
Original version is available from the publisher at: https://doi.org/10.1080/03085147.2017.1377946