Public deliberation and interest organisations : a study of responses to lay citizen engagement in public policy
Date
2004
Authors
Hendriks, Carolyn
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Canberra, ACT : The Australian National University
Abstract
This thesis empirically examines how lobby groups and activists respond to innovative forms of public participation. The study centres on processes that foster a particular kind of deliberative governance including citizens' juries, consensus conferences and planning cells. These deliberative designs bring together a panel of randomly selected lay citizens to deliberate on a specific policy issue for a few days, with the aim of providing decision makers with a set of recommendations. While policy makers worldwide are attracted to these novel participatory processes, little consideration has been given to how well they work alongside more adversarial and interest-based politics. This doctoral research project examines this interface by studying what these processes mean to difference kinds of policy actors such as corporations, advocacy groups, government agencies, experts and professionals. These entities are collectively referred to in this thesis as 'interest organisations' because in some way they are seeking a specific policy outcome from the state - even government-based groups.
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Thesis (PhD)
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2033-11-26
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