Message received? Examining transmission in deliberative systems
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Authors
Boswell, John
Hendriks, Carolyn
Ercan, Selen A.
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Taylor & Francis
Abstract
With the systemic turn in deliberative democratic theory, there is
renewed and broadened emphasis on the inclusion of all affected by
a political decision in the making of those decisions. The key enabler
of inclusion at a system level is transmission: theoretically, a deliberative
system is more democratic if it can foster the transmission of
claims and ideas across different sites, especially between informal
sites of public deliberation and the more formal institutions of political
decision-making. Yet little is known about the mechanisms of
transmission in deliberative systems. How, and to what effect, is
transmission facilitated in practice? This paper draws on case studies
of three promising mechanisms of deliberative transmission: institutional,
innovative and discursive. We discuss the key factors that
enable or hinder different forms of transmission, and reflect on the
ways in which they might be strengthened in deliberative systems.
Our analysis suggests that the systemic turn in deliberative democracy
should go hand-in-hand with a nuanced understanding of how
transmission occurs across different sites. As such, our discussion has
important implications for deliberative scholars and practitioners as
they go about conceptualizing, studying and steering deliberative
democracy at the large scale.
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Critical Policy Studies
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Open Access
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Restricted until
2037-12-31
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