Events
- Word and Image: Early Modern Treasures from the UCL Collections
- Centre for Early Modern Exchanges: Launch Conference
- Cultures of Surveillance - Conference
- Inspector Sangiorgi and the Sicilian mafia, 1875-1877
- Inaugural Lecture - Chronis Tzedakis
- Inaugural Lecture - Gesine Manuwald
- Inaugural Lecture - Imran Rasul
- Inaugural Lecture - Jennifer Robinson
- Inaugural Lecture - Frederic J. Schwartz
- Inaugural Lecture - Albert Weale
- Inaugural Lecture - Claire Warwick
- Inaugural Lecture - Ada Rapoport-Albert
- Inaugural Lecture - Helen Hackett
- Inaugural Lecture - Philippe Marlière
- Inaugural Lecture - Miriam Leonard
- Time-travels in literature and politics
- Displacing Persephone: Epic between Worlds
- Making Space
- Art by Animals comes to London
- Generation X Reflects: British – German Encounters
- Language, Identity and Multiculturalism Colloquium
Inaugural Lecture - Philippe Marlière
6 December 2011
20 March 2012
UCL Gustave Tuck Lecture Theatre, Wilkins Building UCL - 6.30pm
Professor Philippe Marlière (SELCS, Department of French)
Philippe Marlière was educated in France. He was a researcher in political science for the Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), and a lecturer at the University of Lille. He has a PhD from the European University Institute (Florence). In 2007, he was awarded the Marcel Liebman Chair in political science by the Université Libre de Bruxelles. His main publications are about the French Socialist Party, French politics and European social democracy.
Political Democracy or Beauty Contest?
The Parti Socialiste Primary for the 2012 Presidential Election in France
In October 2011, the French Parti Socialiste organised a primary election to choose the party’s candidate for the forthcoming 2012 presidential contest. This was an ‘open’ vote along the lines of the American model. It was presented by its proponents as a ‘democratic’ device to make the PS ‘more electable’ and ‘closer to the people’. It was also hoped that the PS would come up with an undisputed candidate. Philippe Marlière argues that far from strengthening the party, the primary may have weakened it. The primary makes party activists largely irrelevant, and boosts the influence of the media and pollsters. This has in turn depoliticised debates and aggravated the drift toward the personalisation of power, at the heart of the institutions of the 5th Republic.
