
Democratic theory's deliberative turn has hit a dead end. It is unable to find a good way to scale up its small-scale, formally-organized deliberative mini-publics to embrace the entire community. Some turn to deliberative systems for a way out, but none have found in that a credible way of deliberatively involving the citizenry at large. Deliberation Naturalized offers an alternative way out-one we have been using all along. The key sites of democratic deliberation are citizens' everyday political conversations networked across the community. Informal networked deliberation is how all citizens actually deliberate together, directly or indirectly. That is how public opinion emerges in civil society. Networked deliberation satisfies the classic deliberative desiderata of inclusion, equality, and reciprocity, albeit differently than standard mini-publics. Reconceptualizing democratic deliberation in those terms highlights some real threats to the networked mode of deliberative democracy, such as polarization, message repetition, and pluralistic ignorance. Deliberation Naturalized assesses the extent of each of those threats and proposes ways of protecting real-existing deliberative democracy against them. By focusing on the mechanisms underpinning everyday democratic deliberation among ordinary citizens, Deliberation Naturalized offers a truly novel approach to deliberative democracy.
This book investigates how to improve existing deliberative democracy by shifting the focus from formal mini-publics to the informal, networked political conversations occurring within everyday civil society. Author Ana Tanasoca utilizes democratic theory and network analysis to argue that the true site of democratic deliberation is the decentralized, everyday interaction of citizens. She presents a framework that evaluates how these informal networks satisfy core deliberative requirements like inclusion and reciprocity while identifying specific systemic vulnerabilities.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars in political theory view this work as a significant intervention in the debate over the scalability of deliberative democracy. Readers frequently note the academic rigor of the prose and the author's ability to bridge abstract democratic theory with the practical realities of modern social networks.
Page Count:
296
Publication Date:
2020-01-01
Publisher:
OUP Oxford
ISBN-10:
0192592254
ISBN-13:
9780192592255
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