Democratic Innovation Deliberation Representation and Association 1st Edition by Michael Saward – Ebook PDF Instant Download/Delivery: 0203280083, 9780415234429
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Product details:
ISBN 10: 0203280083
ISBN 13: 9780415234429
Author: Michael Saward
Democratic Innovation Deliberation Representation and Association 1st Table of contents:
Part I Deliberative democracy: Advocacy and critique
1 The quest for deliberative democracy
Equality, deliberation and deliberative democracy
The Deliberative Poll (and other deliberative microcosms)
Deliberative Polling and democratic theory
Some results
More on the role of deliberation
Conclusions
Notes
2 Toward deliberative institutions
Are citizen forums deliberative institutions?
The wider porject ofdeliberative design
Where now for deliberative democracy?
Notes
3 Deliberation as public use of reason – or, what public? whose reason?
I
II
III
IV
V
VI
Notes
4 The European Union’s democratic deficit
A deliberative perspective
Introduction
Voting or arguing?
Private and public autonomy
The notion ofthe public sphere
Processes of legitimation
Bargaining or arguing?
Comitology and deliberation
Conclusion
Notes
5 Less than meets the eye
Democratic legitimacy and deliberative theory
Deliberative democracy and political legitimacy
Voting and aggregation
The broader view of political gleitimacy
Differential legitimacy
Siting deliberative democracy
The undermining metaphor: a critique of Cohen
Deliberative democracy and exclusion: the Schumpeterian question
Conclusion
Notes
6 Discursive democracy vs. liberal constitutionalism
Understanding the deliberative turn
Deliberative democracy’s assimilation to liberal constitutionalism
Discursive democracy as a critical alternative
Enter the critics
Different kinds of communication
The role ofthe public sphere
Networks ofdemocracy
Conclusion
Notes
Part II Representation and deliberation
7 Group representation, deliberation and the displacement of dichotomies
Feminist theory
Interests, identities and group representation
Social groups
Objective judgement
Conclusion
8 From theory to practice and back again
Gender quota and the politics of presence in Belgium
Arguing for enhanced representativeness
Mechanisms to improve representativeness
Belgium as a laboratory for guarantees of representation 4
Recognizing gnizing gender as patr ofsocial identity
Social identity, guarantees ofrepresentation and presence
Notes
9 Deliberative democracy, ecological representation and risk
Towards a democracy of the affected
Introduction
Ecological democracy: an ambit claim
The community-of-fate
The intuitive green appeal of deliberative democracy
The critique of deliberative democracy
Linking deliberation and representation
Conclusion
Notes
10 Ecological constitutionalism and the limits ofdeliberation and representation
Constitutionalism, democracy and ecological political thought
Ecological values and ecological democracy
The critique of ecological democracy
Representing nature by ‘proxy’
Deliberative democracy
Deliberation, risk and values
Conclusion
Notes
11 Governance, self-representation and democratic imagination
Identifying the shifts from government to governance
Threats and challenges facing democratic governance
Demo-elites/everyday makers and Rawls’s political liberalism
The public reason argument
Public reason and political community
The building ofpolitical capital
Final comments
Part III Associations and democracy
12 Active citizenship and associative democracy
Democracy for citizenship
Main designs ofassociative democracy
Relevancevance of associative democracy to cietinzship
Conclusion
Notes
13 Associative democracy – fashionable slogan or constructive innovation?
Associations in ‘mass society’: social pacifiers or schools ofdemocracy?
The solution? Associative democracy
The counter position: associations’ undemocratic nature
An empirical perspective
Direct impact: ‘school of democracy’
Indirect impact: societal integration
A contribution to democracy?
Notes
14 Social capital, associations and civic republicanism
Civic republicanism and the common good
Social capital and civic virtue
Associations and civic virtue
Conclusion
Notes
15 Deliberative democracy versus direct democracy – plus political parties!
Deliberation and decision
Parties and democracy
Parties and deliberation
Parties and procedures
Parties and citizens
Conclusions: deliberative and direct democracy – and political parties!
Notes
Conclusion
Variation, innovation and democratic renewal
Dimensions of variation
Political unit and political community
Constraining majorities
Sub-group relationships
The making of decisions
Accountability
Formal and informal, public and private
A future for democratic theory?
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