Milán, Italia
This article aims to contribute to the debate on democratic representation by critically engaging with Niko Kolodny’s The Pecking Order, particularly his justification of democracy through the principle of Equal Influence. While Kolodny argues that representative democracy can avoid relations of inferiority if citizens retain sufficient control over decision-making, this analysis questions whether his model adequately captures the dynamic, interactive, and reletional nature of representation. Moreover, it is argued that Kolodny’s framework overlooks the democratic value of diverse forms of political representation that go beyond strictly promissory conception, such as anticipatory, gyroscopic, and surrogate representation. By drawing on deliberative democratic theory, this article highlights a tension between Kolodny’s egalitarian justification of democracy and richer conceptions of representation, calling for a broader appreciationof the complexity and normative potential of representative practices.
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