Can Deliberation Cure the Ills of Democracy?
Can Deliberation Cure the Ills of Democracy?
Janet M. Peck Professor of International Communication and Director of the Deliberative Democracy Lab
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Abstract
Democracy needs to make a connection between “the will of the people” and what is actually done. This connection has broken down in a world of propaganda, social media enclaves, misinformation, and manipulation. Meanwhile our political divisions seem ever more intractable and our democracies ever more ungovernable. Based on decades of applying and perfecting methods of deliberative democracy in countries around the world, Fishkin argues that deliberative democracy can have surprisingly positive effects on all these problems. Fishkin’s method of Deliberative Polling has been applied 150 times in countries around the world. In this book, Fishkin synthesizes the results and shows how they can be applied to help resolve many of democracy’s seemingly intractable challenges. Deliberative democracy can be applied to major national and local decisions, it can spread in the schools, it can be used by corporations, it can make for more meaningful ballot propositions, it can help reform the primary system, it can scale with technology. Most importantly, it can help reform electoral democracy, help preserve the guardrails that protect the electoral process, and provide key policy inputs on almost every contested issue from climate change to the rights of minorities. Fishkin ends by laying out a vision for how to combine elections with deliberation and build a more deliberative society—one that cures our extreme partisanship and leads to substantive dialogues that foster mutual respect and more engaged voters.
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