Changing constitutions through 'Deliberative Voting': A New Approach
Abstract
'Deliberative Voting' describes a new kind of constitutional referendum. It is a
'deliberative democratic' innovation, which means that it aims to solve one of
the oldest tensions of democratic lawmaking - between robust citizen
involvement and careful deliberation. While citizen participation in lawmaking
is desirable, it is also usually problematic. Few people outside of government
have the time or expertise for well-informed, rigorous and reflective
deliberation over the making of new laws. Normally we therefore delegate
lawmaking to parliaments, whose members we expect will be suitably
informed. Yet the solution of delegation is increasingly untenable - and
undesirable - in the unique case of constitutional lawmaking. Leaving voters
out of a process of reform now attracts convincing charges that both the
process and the constitution it yields are illegitimate. Back in 1901, Australia
thus became the second country, after Switzerland, to make constitutional
referendums mandatory. Since then, referendums on key constitutional
amendments in Europe and elsewhere have become commonplace.
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Pandora's Box
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Restricted until
2099-12-31
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