Ahead of municipal elections, the quarterly Mouvements review, published by La Découverte, releases a special issue on interpellation democracy and counter-powers serving the Republic. It explores how institutions can incorporate citizen mobilizations, from interpellations to associative freedoms and the right to petition.
The Mouvements review, in its winter issue titled Interpellation Democracy: Counter-Powers Serving the Republic, examines mechanisms for citizens to influence institutions. Published by La Découverte editions, this quarterly arrives at a pivotal time, just before municipal elections, advocating for more open participatory methods.
Contributors highlight that citizen mobilizations often challenge policies seen as unfair while offering innovative alternatives. A key question arises: can the state foster criticisms directed at itself? Pierre Rosanvallon, historian and professor at the Collège de France, addresses this in an interview, stating that democracy extends beyond electoral delegation. “We must not, in the French way, think there is only one solution,” he says, emphasizing the need to “account for people’s lived experiences.”
Guillaume Gourgues, a political scientist specializing in the crisis of representative democracy, joins a roundtable where he critiques the elected officials’ decision-making monopoly. “I’m not sure we need better elected officials, but rather real mechanisms for transferring power,” he declares. He particularly targets intercommunalities, which concentrate much local power in closed circles. Gourgues suggests transforming them into more inclusive public spaces and redistributing power over critical issues like social justice, the environment, taxation, or housing—areas too vital to leave to assemblies whose representativeness is questioned.
This issue thus urges institutions to better integrate citizen interpellations, promoting a Republic more responsive to popular aspirations.