Skip to ContentSkip to Navigation
University of Groningenfounded in 1614  -  top 100 university
About us Campus Fryslân

PhD defence Anna Mikhaylovskaya

When:Th 13-11-2025 11:30 - 13:30Where:Auditorium of Campus Fryslân, Wirdumerdijk 34, 8911 CE Leeuwarden (also online)
decorative image
Anna Mikhaylovskaya

We are pleased to announce that Anna Mikhaylovskaya will defend her PhD thesis on 13 November 2025 in the Auditorium of Campus Fryslân, Wirdumerdijk 34, 8911 CE Leeuwarden.

It is possible to follow the defence online via the livestream.

Programme:

  • 11:00 - Walk-in

  • 11:30 - Layperson’s talk

  • 12:00 - PhD defence

  • 13:30 - Coffee and tea for attendees

decorative image
Front page of the thesis

Thesis abstract

In an age where digital media is often blamed for fueling polarization and enabling surveillance, this dissertation explores a different story: how technology can strengthen democracy. It focuses on Digital Democratic Innovations (DDIs) — online platforms and tools designed to let citizens take part in political decision-making.

Rather than looking only at the risks of digital tools, this research asks how they might be used to promote democratic values and foster active citizen participation. Drawing from real-world examples, the thesis argues that DDIs can make citizen engagement more inclusive, transparent, and meaningful.

The analysis is structured around four core themes. First, it explores how DDIs can foster more equal deliberation, particularly when it is supported by AI facilitation. Second, it looks at how DDIs can promote inclusiveness by lowering barriers to citizen participation and including marginalized voices. Third, it examines the potential of DDIs to build mutual political trust between citizens and decision-makers, especially by increasing transparency. Finally, it considers how digital tools can help nurture democratic virtues — like open-mindedness, critical thinking or commitment to equality — among citizens.

While acknowledging challenges such as algorithmic bias, privacy concerns, and unequal access to technologies, this dissertation argues that well-designed DDIs can align with core democratic values and help build inclusive and genuinely participatory democracies in the digital age.

You can read Anna's entire thesis here.

Anna Mikhaylovskaya

Anna Mikaylovskaya is a researcher specializing in political theory, digital humanities, and global and local governance. Her PhD project explores digital democratic innovations and their potential to enhance citizen participation, deliberation, and influence in political decision-making. Anna focuses on identifying gaps and shortcomings in existing digital participation systems to improve their inclusivity, deliberative quality, and empowering potential, aiming to make democratic innovations more effective and equitable.

Share this Facebook LinkedIn
View this page in: Nederlands