Does transparency generate legitimacy? An experimental study of procedure acceptance of open-and closed-door decision-making
Abstract
Transparency has been a major trend in reforms of political institutions and public administrations
in the last decades. This article analyses the main rationale for supplying transparency from the governing elites’ perspective, namely that it generates legitimacy among the constituents. Although working in a goldfish bowl entails costs for governments
the prospect of increased support weighs heavily on the other side. But does transparency have the power to increase public legitimacy?
We make both a theoretical and an empirical contribution to this question. The
theoretical contribution lies in identifying plausible causal mechanisms that may drive a positive – or a negative – link between transparency and legitimacy. We discuss three different theories of decision-making, from which such mechanisms may be derived. We
find that the common notion of a fairly straightforward positive correlation between
transparency and legitimacy is rather naïve. The effect is highly dependent on the context,
which makes transparency reforms rather unpredictable phenomena.
Empirically, we study representative decision-making in a school context. We use
vignette experiments to test the effect of transparency on legitimacy under different conditions.
Our findings indicate that transparency can indeed increase the legitimacy of representative
decision-making. People who are informed about decisions which affect their everyday lives are more willing to accept the process by which the decisions were taken if they are given insight into the reasoning behind the decisions. Interestingly, however,
this insight need not be derived from “fishbowl transparency”, with full openness of the
decision-making process. Decision-makers may significantly improve the legitimacy simply by motivating carefully afterwards the decisions taken behind closed doors (transparency in rationale). Only when transparency displays behaviour close to a deliberative
democratic ideal (respectful and rational argumentation) will full openness of the process
improve on closed-door decision-making with post-decision motivations.
Link to web site
http://qog.pol.gu.se/digitalAssets/1357/1357850_2011_8_licht_naurin_esaiasson_gilljam.pdf
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Date
2011-09Author
De Fine Licht, Jenny
Naurin, Daniel
Esaiasson, Peter
Gilljam, Mikael
ISSN
1653-8919
Series/Report no.
Working Papers
2011:08
Language
eng