REDIRECT is a four-year research project funded (€3 millions) by the Horizon Programme (and UKRI for the Exeter participation). It aims is to enhance our understanding of the current transformations of representative democracy in Europe at national and supranational level, assessing whether the centre of gravity of democratic representation is shifting away from the traditional forms of political intermediation, such as parties, parliaments, and party-based government, towards other forms of political representation. Its focus is on the representative disconnect, a multidimensional phenomenon of regression of the demos-kratos linkage involving institutional, behavioural and affective components, which risks undermining the trust in and legitimacy of the overall system of democratic representation. The two main questions REDIRECT addresses are: a) what are the nature, scope, aspects and causes of the representative disconnect; and b) how can the current representative disconnect be addressed, ameliorated, and/or rectified? The Exeter team comprises Dario Castiglione, Lise Herman, Oliver James, Alice Moseley, and Andrew Schaap. Dario and Andy will work on the more theoretical aspects of the project, while Lise, Oliver and Alice will study the role that Citizens’ Assemblies can play in the changing ecology of political representation. The project comprises seven international partners, from Italy, Belgium, Hungary, Norway, Poland, and the UK.
Visions of Representation is a series of interviews recorded by Andrew Schaap with scholars in democratic theory as part of the Horizon-funded Redirect project. In these interviews, world-leading experts in democratic theory discuss their ideas about the shifting dynamics in practices of representation in contemporary political life. The interviews introduce the state of the art of contemporary academic debates about the nature of representation, including diagnoses of the disconnect between representatives and represented in Western democracies and proposals for reconnection through democratic innovations.
Andrew Schaap is Associate Professor of Politics at the University of Exeter with research interests in democratic theory and twentieth century political thought. His current research examines the politics of civility, with particular focus on understanding how ordinary citizens undertake the ‘labour of civility’ in social and political life, including within health care, higher education and urban life.
Mihaela Mihai on Representative Claim-Making and Social Ignorance
In this interview, recorded in Falmouth on 29 May 2024, Prof Mihaela Mihai (Edinburgh) discusses her article, ‘Foundational Moments, Representative Claims and the Ecology of Social Ignorance’ Political Studies 70(4) 2021: 962-982. She explains how, especially in moments of constitutional re-founding, representation can nurture social ignorance, despite the availability of ample opportunities for political contestation and alternative opinion formation.
Suzanne Dovi on Representation and Political Absence
In this interview, recorded during the ECPR annual conference at University College Dublin on 13 August 2024, Prof Suzanne Dovi (Arizona) discusses her article, ‘What’s Missing: A Typology of Political Absence,’ The Journal of Politics 2020 82(2): 559-571. She explains how understanding and properly evaluating representation requires attending not only to how representation makes groups present but also to how it makes groups absent.
Monica Brito Vieira on Representing Silence in Politics
In this interview, recorded during the BIAPT annual conference at the University of York on 10 January 2025, Prof Monica Brito Vieira (York) discusses her article, ‘Representing Silence in Politics,’ American Political Science Review 2020 114(4): 976-988. Against the tendency to understand silence as the absence of voice, she argues that silence is best understood as the site of a potential or actual presence and proposes criteria to assess the legitimacy of claims to represent silent constituencies.
Anne Phillips on Revisiting the Politics of Presence
In this interview, recorded in London on 19 March 2025, Emeritus Professor Anne Phillips discusses her contribution ‘Descriptive Representation Revisited’ to Rohrschneider & Thomassen (eds) The Oxford Handbook of Political Representation. OUP 2020: 174-191. She explains the key reasons why descriptive representation matters and addresses three perennial concerns: worries about essentialism; disagreements about the extent to which it implies a form of group representation; and questions about whose exclusion matters.
Mark Warren on Elected Representatives and Democratic Innovations
In this interview, recorded at the University of Exeter on 19 May 2025, Prof Mark Warren (British Columbia) discusses his co-authored paper (with Şule Yaylaci & Eden Beuavais), ‘When, Where and Why Might Elected Political Elites Reach for Democratic Innovations'. He explains the potential incentives for elected officials to adopt democratic innovations (such as deliberative mini-publics or participatory budgeting) and the conditions under which innovations might align with their interests.
Nadia Urbinati on The Need for Social Intermediation
In this interview, recorded at the APSA annual conference in Vancouver on 11 September 2025, Prof Nadia Urbinati (Columbia University) discusses her article, ‘The decline and the need of the key force of intermediation,’ Philosophy and Social Criticism 51(4) 2025: 559-570. She explains how it is not only the decline of parties as intermediary political bodies that contributes to the democratic disconnect: we also need to foster social intermediary bodies to make representative government more responsive to the weaker parts of society.
Simone Chambers on Deliberative Democracy and the Digital Public Sphere
In this interview, recorded at the APSA annual conference in Vancouver on 12 September 2025, Prof Simone Chambers (UC Irvine) discusses her article ‘Deliberative Democracy and the Digital Public Sphere: Asymmetrical Fragmentation as a Political not a Technological Problem,’ Constellations 30(1) 2023: 61-68. She explains how the fragmentation and privatization of public life, which poses a challenge for representative government, is not primarily due to the rise of social media but to authoritarian actors attacking democracy by wrecking the public sphere.
Michael Saward on Shape-Shifting Representation
In this interview, recorded at Friends' House in London on 24 October 2025, Prof Michael Saward discusses his article, 'Shape-Shifting Representation,' American Political Science Review 2014 108(4): 723-736. The tendency of political actors to adapt their representative claims to different audiences and constituencies is often judged negatively. Yet, Michael Saward argues that such shape-shifting representation is integral to how patterns of representation are (re)produced dynamically over time.