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State of the field: What can political ethnography tell us about anti-politics and democratic disaffection?

State of the field: What can political ethnography tell us about anti-politics and democratic disaffection?
State of the field: What can political ethnography tell us about anti-politics and democratic disaffection?

This article adopts and reinvents the ethnographic approach to uncover what governing elites do, and how they respond to public disaffection. Although there is significant work on the citizens' attitudes to the governing elite (the demand side) there is little work on how elites interpret and respond to public disaffection (the supply side). It is argued here that ethnography is the best available research method for collecting data on the supply side. The article tackles longstanding stereotypes in political science about the ethnographic method and what it is good for, and highlights how the innovative and varied practices of contemporary ethnography are ideally suited to shedding light into the 'black box' of elite politics. The potential pay-off is demonstrated with reference to important examples of elite ethnography from the margins of political science scholarship. The implications from these rich studies suggest a reorientation of how one understands the drivers of public disaffection and the role that political elites play in exacerbating cynicism and disappointment. The article concludes by pointing to the benefits to the discipline in embracing elite ethnography both to diversify the methodological toolkit in explaining the complex dynamics of disaffection, and to better enable engagement in renewed public debate about the political establishment.

Democratic governance, Disaffection, Elites, Ethnography
0304-4130
Boswell, John
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Corbett, Jack
ad651655-ac70-4072-a36f-92165e296ce2
Dommett, Kate
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Jennings, Will
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Flinders, Matthew
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Rhodes, R.A.W.
cdbfb699-ba1a-4ff0-ba2c-060626f72948
Wood, Matthew
2dd0c89e-a284-4012-a125-72b883df6af8
Boswell, John
34bad0df-3d4d-40ce-948f-65871e3d783c
Corbett, Jack
ad651655-ac70-4072-a36f-92165e296ce2
Dommett, Kate
dd8cd2e6-1c4f-4b86-bf69-826005087ef8
Jennings, Will
2ab3f11c-eb7f-44c6-9ef2-3180c1a954f7
Flinders, Matthew
d4982871-f267-4c51-a12b-1e0340ed4465
Rhodes, R.A.W.
cdbfb699-ba1a-4ff0-ba2c-060626f72948
Wood, Matthew
2dd0c89e-a284-4012-a125-72b883df6af8

Boswell, John, Corbett, Jack, Dommett, Kate, Jennings, Will, Flinders, Matthew, Rhodes, R.A.W. and Wood, Matthew (2019) State of the field: What can political ethnography tell us about anti-politics and democratic disaffection? European Journal of Political Research, 58 (1). (doi:10.1111/1475-6765.12270).

Record type: Article

Abstract

This article adopts and reinvents the ethnographic approach to uncover what governing elites do, and how they respond to public disaffection. Although there is significant work on the citizens' attitudes to the governing elite (the demand side) there is little work on how elites interpret and respond to public disaffection (the supply side). It is argued here that ethnography is the best available research method for collecting data on the supply side. The article tackles longstanding stereotypes in political science about the ethnographic method and what it is good for, and highlights how the innovative and varied practices of contemporary ethnography are ideally suited to shedding light into the 'black box' of elite politics. The potential pay-off is demonstrated with reference to important examples of elite ethnography from the margins of political science scholarship. The implications from these rich studies suggest a reorientation of how one understands the drivers of public disaffection and the role that political elites play in exacerbating cynicism and disappointment. The article concludes by pointing to the benefits to the discipline in embracing elite ethnography both to diversify the methodological toolkit in explaining the complex dynamics of disaffection, and to better enable engagement in renewed public debate about the political establishment.

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EJPR 28 November 2017 - Accepted Manuscript
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What_can_political_ethnography_tell_us_a (1) - Accepted Manuscript
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Accepted/In Press date: 22 December 2017
e-pub ahead of print date: 23 March 2018
Published date: 2019
Keywords: Democratic governance, Disaffection, Elites, Ethnography

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 416728
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/416728
ISSN: 0304-4130
PURE UUID: b4dede33-5a47-4582-932d-dae2c5527498
ORCID for John Boswell: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-3018-8791
ORCID for Jack Corbett: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-2005-7162
ORCID for Will Jennings: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-9007-8896
ORCID for R.A.W. Rhodes: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-1886-2392

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Date deposited: 05 Jan 2018 17:30
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 06:02

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Contributors

Author: John Boswell ORCID iD
Author: Jack Corbett ORCID iD
Author: Kate Dommett
Author: Will Jennings ORCID iD
Author: Matthew Flinders
Author: R.A.W. Rhodes ORCID iD
Author: Matthew Wood

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