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REDEM Update Autumn/Fall 2023
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640x640transp Autumn/Fall '23
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Less than a month into the new semester, the Rethinking Democracy (REDEM) research platform has a harvest of good news to share. These are all down to collaboration and bode very well for the rest of '23 and into the new year.
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REDEM conference paper published
Congratulations to Jellen Olivares-Jirsell and Anders Hellström for publication of their article 'Activities and Counterstrategies; Populism during the COVID-19 Pandemic', in the journal Populism.

The publication came out of a research presentation they gave to REDEM's September 2021 conference on 'pandemocracy', and Jellen's contribution was supported financially via REDEM. You can see videos of the conference here.

Read a short interview with Jellen and Anders below.
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640x640transp Debating Democracy in Australia
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Derek Hutcheson recently undertook a visiting research fellowship at the Australian National University in Canberra. Alongside working on a book with a colleague at the ANU, he gave a guest seminar about democratic backsliding (‘The Toolkit of Electoral Engineering: Constructing Electoral Authoritarianism in Contemporary Russia’, Australian National University School of Politics and International Relations (SPIR), 27 July 2023) and gave an extensive interview on Australia’s leading politics podcast, ‘Democracy Sausage’.

He also visited the Parliament of Australia during his stay in Canberra, and attended several dialogues with Australian politicians and community leaders about the forthcoming referendum on an Aboriginal Voice to Parliament.
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640x640transp REDEM is approved beyond 2023
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Thanks to the work of colleagues, and an external reviewer rating of 'Excellent', it has been confirmed that REDEM will continue as a research platform at the Department of Global Political Studies, Malmö University. This is great news and opens the question: what do we want to see REDEM do next?
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'Future Society & Democracy in Europe' Research Group
The Centre for Modern European Studies (CEMES), that sits between Copenhagen, Lund, and Malmö Universities, has approved a new research group focused on the impact of digitalisation and automation on European societies and welfare systems, including questions of democracy.

The application process was highly competitive and so it's a big deal that the new group will be based here at Malmö University.

More information on the group will be posted soon.
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An interview with Jellen Olivares-Jirsel and Anders Hellström
What is the article about? 
 
The COVID-19 pandemic has affected various aspects of people's lives, including many strict governmental measures. Some citizens accepted these measures, while others protested them or even challenged the leaders' legitimacy for putting these in place.
The relationship between the pandemic and populism has raised, among others, the question of how to understand the responses to the pandemic best when the populist responses have been so varied. The article aims to provide a framework for understanding populist responses to the COVID-19 pandemic. The framework proposes studying the activities and counterstrategies of citizens.
The article reintroduces “the populist divide" framework, which helps show how populism can be used to analyse and predict populist responses during crises. We employ “the populist divide” as an analytical framework for understanding actions and counterstrategies during the COVID-19 pandemic. Our approach thus brings nuance to how crises are framed depending on the actors' trust levels. Populist relationships are not just about ideology but also about trust. The framework looks at how citizens respond to measures taken by leaders to deal with the pandemic.

Who might it interest?

We have all been through a pandemic, yet different places have had different ways to respond to the challenges the pandemic brought about. This framework offered in this article allows the reader to understand the different responses (activities and counterstrategies) and how they relate to populism and democracy, not just concerning the pandemic but also other crises.

How did this article come out of REDEM's conference?

Anders Hellström chaired a panel and discussion on Populism and the Pandemic at the Pandemocracy Panel 3 of the REDEM conference. During that period, and to date, he lectures on the Populism and Democracy module at MIM.
Jellen Olivares-Jirsell was taught at MIM and the GPS departments, where she was involved in the Euroscepticism project led by Anders Hellström.
The article "Activities and Counterstrategies; Populism during the COVID-19 Pandemic" grew from a REDEM conference and combines education and research.

What do you hope a reader can learn from your article that has relevance to rethinking democracy?

That populism can be used as an analytical category to explain the activities and counterstrategies related to the COVID-19 pandemic and other crises afflicting democratic societies.
Our approach brings forth knowledge on how crises are framed depending on the trust levels between actors, thus presenting populist relationships as determined by selective trust allocation and not necessarily one of fixed ideological paradigms. The article offers that if we can learn to trust each other, progressive democratic action is possible against democratic backsliding.
 
What do you think is necessary to improve democracy?

Democracy is never done. Democracy is an unfinished process that we need to work on as part of the continuous process of rethinking democracy. Learning about activities and counterstrategies during the COVID-19 pandemic encourages democratic awareness as the dynamics of trust between political actors are elucidated.
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