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Deliberative systems : deliberative democracy at the large scale

โœ Scribed by John Parkinson; Jane J Mansbridge


Publisher
Cambridge University Press
Year
2012
Tongue
English
Leaves
206
Series
Theories of institutional design
Category
Library

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โœฆ Synopsis


'Deliberative democracy' is often dismissed as a set of small-scale, academic experiments. This volume seeks to demonstrate how the deliberative ideal can work as a theory of democracy on a larger scale. It provides a new way of thinking about democratic engagement across the spectrum of political action, from towns and villages to nation states, and from local networks to transnational, even global systems. Written by a team of the world's leading deliberative theorists, Deliberative Systems explains the principles of this new approach, which seeks ways of ensuring that a division of deliberative labour in a system nonetheless meets both deliberative and democratic norms. Rather than simply elaborating the theory, the contributors examine the problems of implementation in a real world of competing norms, competing institutions and competing powerful interests. This pioneering book will inspire an exciting new phase of deliberative research, both theoretical and empirical

โœฆ Table of Contents



Content: 1. A systemic approach to deliberative democracy / Jane Mansbridge, James Bohman, Simone Chambers, Thomas Christiano, Archon Fung, John Parkinson, Dennis F. Thompson, and Mark E. Warren --
2. Rational deliberation among experts and citizens / Thomas Christiano --
3. Deliberation and mass democracy / Simone Chambers --
4. Representation in the deliberative system / James Bohman --
5. Two trust-based uses of minipublics in democratic systems / Michael K. MacKenzie and Mark E. Warren --
6. On the embeddedness of deliberative systems: why elitist innovations matter more / Yannis Papadopoulos --
7. Democratizing deliberative systems / John Parkinson.
Abstract:

A major new statement of deliberative theory that shows how states, even transnational systems, can be deliberatively democratic. Read more...


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