Type | Working Paper |
Title | Why Peru? The recall referendum in the Andean countries and the Peruvian specificity |
Author(s) | |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 2013 |
Abstract | This presentation focuses on the study of both legal provisions and practices of the recall referendum on the local level in the Andean countries. This type of referendum is defined as a bottom up mechanism of direct democracy (from here on MDDs), activated by the collection of signatures and aimed at removing an elected authority from office through a vote. With Peru in a prominent position, this device has become one of the most intensively used mechanisms of participation in South America. However, it has been practically ignored by scholars until very recent times. This lack of interest could be explained by the following: - Two movements dominate the promotion of citizen's participation in Latin America; one from the top, from national governments, in what has been identified as the constitutionalization of participation (Colombia 1991 or Venezuela 1999 as examples) and the other from the bottom, from the municipalities (Porto Alegre or Montevideo as well known examples driven by successful leftist parties since the late eighties). Accordingly, studies on direct democracy have mostly focussed on the national level (Welp and Serdült 2009; Lissidini et al 2008), while studies of the wider range of deliberative institutions have focussed in particular on the local level (Robin and Ford 2013, Goldfrank 2011, Annunziata 2011, Veneziano 2005). This division positions the recall referendum as a marginal institution within both. - The previous is reinforced by the focus of MDD research on direct intervention of citizens in policy making or in populist uses of top down referenda. In contrast, the recall referendum is oriented to remove representatives2 . - Lastly, studies of participatory democracy give prominence to deliberation and consensus, while the recall referendum promotes binary decisions as well as polarization, and is expressed through traditional electoral participation. |
» | Latin America - Latinobarómetro Survey 2009 |