Democracy of the Future

Democracy of the Future

Today, democracies around the world are under increased national and international pressure. Trust in democratic actors and institutions is declining, while right-wing populist movements and authoritarianism are on the rise. This is shifting political discourse to the right and threatening democratic values.

The Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung is committed to fostering democracy, the rule of law, equality, and civic education. We want to enhance the involvement of civil society expertise in political decision-making and open up more opportunities for direct participation in the political process. Political advice and British-German dialogues are key instruments in our promotion of democracy.

Discussions around democracy are an integral part of FES UK’s work. In recent years, we have worked on projects on citizens’ assemblies, the (non-)representation of certain social groups in Parliament, and tackling the right-wing populist push to retrovert gender relations.

In our efforts to strengthen and sustain democracy, we also work closely with our Democracy of the Future office in Vienna. Together, we seek democratic solutions to the social problems faced by the UK.

Latest Events

Tuesday, 22.10.2024 | Democracy of the Future | Event

On the afternoon of Tuesday 22nd October 2024, the Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung London office co-hosted an exchange in Portcullis House with Phil Brickell…


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18.06.2024 | Work, Economy & the Just Transition, Democracy of the Future | Event

NASUWT the Teachers’ Union, the GEW, and the Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung UK office are undertaking a joint project to explore the impact of the increase…


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Tuesday, 30.01.2024 | Democracy of the Future | Event

On Tuesday 30th January 2024, the Friedrich-Ebert Stiftung London Office and Compass hosted a roundtable discussion on the topic of pre- and…


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Related Publications

Mainstream and Far Right Islamophobia: A UK-Germany Comparison

Seema Syeda & Titus Molkenbur (2023): The far right is organising internationally to build a globally connected movement of ethno-nationalists that share Muslim communities as a common target. The left and progressive response must also be international.

Mainstream and Far Right Islamophobia: A UK-Germany Comparison

Far-right figures propagate the so-called »Great Replacement Theory«, which assumes an elite conspiracy aimed at deliberately minoritising an imagined ethnically homogenous white majority. The framing of »clan criminality« has increasingly been used in Germany to portray criminals as members of archaic family networks, supposedly in contrast to »Western values«. In the UK, responses to extremist violence and gangled sex abuse is often racialised as a Muslim problem. The far right is organising internationally to build a globally connected movement of ethnonationalists that share Muslim communities as a common target. The left and progressive response must also be international.

Read the full report here.

Mainstream and far right islamophobia

Syeda, Seema; Molkenbur, Titus

Mainstream and far right islamophobia

A UK-Germany comparison
London, 2023

Download publication (310 KB, PDF-File)