Description
The Democracy Reimagined: Advancing Democratic Resilience and Renewal Conference is hosted by the Centre for Deliberative Democracy and the Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung Australia and New Zealand at the University of Canberra,in collaboration with the Australian National University and the Australian Resilient Democracy Research and Data Network. As democracies across the globe contend with significant threats, including deepening polarisation, rising
extremism, and the proliferation of mis- and disinformation, the urgency of strengthening democratic resilience has never been greater. This conference brings together an international community of scholars and practitioners to deepen and expand the conversation around democratic resilience. Through engaging theoretical, empirical, and practice-oriented perspectives, we aim to address critical challenges of our times: including falling political trust, rising polarisation and the resurgence of violent extremism, and to examine how formal and informal institutions and actors can help build a more resilient democracy.
| Period | 15 Nov 2025 → 17 Nov 2025 |
|---|---|
| Event type | Conference |
| Location | AustraliaShow on map |
| Degree of Recognition | International |
Documents & Links
Related content
-
Research output
-
Bouncing Back or Forward? Two Approaches to Democratic Resilience After Extremist Attacks
Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
-
Bridging the Gap: Citizens, Elected Officials and Deliberative Engagement in Australian Democracy
Research output: Book/Report › Reports
-
Democracy in a Diabolical Soundscape
Research output: A Conference proceeding or a Chapter in Book › Chapter › peer-review
-
Democratic Resilience: Moving from Theoretical Frameworks to a Practical Measurement Agenda
Research output: Working paper › Discussion paper
-
Projects
-
Deliberative Democracy Toolkit
Project: Research
-
Democratic Resilience: The Public Sphere and Extremist Attack
Project: Research
-
Learning Democratic Resilience: Public Sphere Responses to Extremism
Project: Research