Deliberative democrats seek to link political choices more closely to the deliberations of common citizens, rather than consigning them to speak only in the desiccated language of checks on a ballot.
Doing so has important implications for institutional design, the normative Theory of democracy, and priorities for future research and practice..
It simultaneously reclaims the wider Theory of Deliberative Democracy and meets the empirical critics squarely on terms that advance, rather than evade, the debate.
Deliberative Democracy between Theory and Practice cuts across this debate by clarifying the structure of a Deliberative democratic system, and goes on to re-evaluate the main empirical challenges to Deliberative Democracy in light of this new frame.
Critics argue that Deliberative Democracy is wildly unworkable in practice.
Sober thinkers from Plato to today, however, have argued that if we want to make good decisions we cannot entrust them to the deliberations of common citizens.
Deliberative democrats seek to link political choices more closely to the deliberations of common citizens, rather than consigning them to speak only in the desiccated language of checks on a ballot