Varieties of Public Representation

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Authors

Pettit, Philip

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Volume Title

Publisher

Cambridge University Press

Abstract

Three metaphors have driven the notion of political representation. Pictorial representation has suggested that representatives ought to resemble and stand in for the represented; juridical representation that they ought to act for the represented; and theatrical representation that they ought to interpret and speak for the represented. The paper distinguishes the corresponding concepts of representation � simulative, agential and interpretive � and shows how they may apply with different kinds of representative and represented entities, individual and collective. It illustrates the use to which these distinctions may be put in a brief discussion of Washington and Westminster systems.

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Book Title

Political Representation

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Restricted until

2037-12-31