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Title: Open democracy: reinventing popular rule for the twenty-first century
Creators: Landemore Hélène
Collection: Электронные книги зарубежных издательств; Общая коллекция
Subjects: Deliberative democracy.; Representative government and representation.; Political participation.; Deliberative democracy — Case studies.; Deliberative democracy; Political participation; Representative government and representation; EBSCO eBooks
Document type: Other
File type: PDF
Language: English
Rights: Доступ по паролю из сети Интернет (чтение, печать, копирование)
Record key: on1158505904

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"To the Ancient Greeks, democracy meant gathering in a public space and arguing based on an agenda set by a randomly selected assembly of 500 other citizens. To the Icelandic Vikings in Northern Europe a few centuries later, it meant gathering every summer in a large field, a place where they held their own annual "parliament," and similarly talking things through until they got to relatively consensual decisions about the common's fate. Our contemporary representative democracies are very different. Modern Parliaments are intimidating buildings that are much harder to access for ordinary citizens-quite literally. They are typically gated and guarded, and it often feels as if only certain types of people-people with the right suit, accent, bank account, connections, even last names-are welcome to enter them. In Open Democracy, Landemore revitalizes the model of success from ancient open democracies alongside the problems of the present-day representative democracies in order to get to the heart of the issues which contemporary democratic societies are dealing with today. Something has been lost between the two, Landemore argues: accessibility; openness to the ordinary man and woman. Landemore believes the move to "representative" democracy, a mediated form of democracy seen as unavoidable in mass, commercial societies, also became a move towards democratic closure, and exclusivity. Open Democracy asks how can we recover the openness of ancient democracies in today's world, and would it help the crisis of democracy? In diagnosing what is wrong with representative democracy, Landemore offers a normative alternative and strategy-one that is more true to the democratic ideal of "government of the people, by the people, for the people." This alternative conception (open democracy) is one Landemore believes can be used to imagine and design more participatory, responsive, accountable, and smarter institutions, thereby strengthening our democracies along with on the whole, our societies"--.

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Table of Contents

  • Cover
  • Contents
  • Acknowledgments
  • Prologue
  • 1. Introduction
    • A New Paradigm
    • On Vocabulary
    • On Method
  • 2. The Crisis of Representative Democracy
    • The Crisis of Representative Democracy: Empirical
    • The Crisis of Representative Democracy: Conceptual
    • The Road Not Taken
    • The Realists’ Objections
    • Contemporary Solutions and Their Limits
  • 3. The Myth of Direct Democracy
    • Rousseau’s Mistake
    • Representation, Modernity, and the Problem of Size
    • The Myth of Classical Athens as a Direct Democracy
    • Direct versus Open
  • 4. Legitimacy and Representation beyond Elections (Part One)
    • The Problem with Consent Theory
    • Definitions
    • Lottocratic Representation
    • Self-Selected Representation
    • On the Accountability of Non-Elected Democratic Representatives
    • Conclusion
  • 5. Legitimacy and Representation beyond Elections (Part Two)
    • On Legitimacy Again
    • Tacit versus Explicit Majoritarian Authorization
    • Conflicts of Legitimacy
    • Liquid Representation
  • 6. The Principles of Open Democracy
    • Assembly Democracy versus Electoral Democracy
    • The Principles of Open Democracy
    • What about the Role of Parties in Open Democracy?
    • What about Referendums in Open Democracy?
  • 7. Let the People In! Lessons from a Modern Viking Saga
    • Iceland as an Early Democratic Laboratory
    • The 2010–2013 Constitutional Process
    • Democratic Innovations in the Icelandic Process
    • Was the Constitutional Proposal Any Good?
    • Causal Mechanisms
    • Iceland as an Open Democracy?
  • 8. On the Viability of Open Democracy
    • On the Alleged Failure of the Icelandic Experiment
    • Objections to the Generalizability of the Icelandic Case
    • The Objection from Incompetence
    • The Risk of Capture by the Permanent Bureaucracy and Interest Groups
    • The Objection from the Possible Illiberalism of More Majoritarian Institutions
    • The Lack of Accountability (at the Systems Level)
    • How Many Evenings Would Open Democracy Take?
    • From Here to There
  • 9. Conclusion: Open Democracy in a Global World
    • On the Scale of Popular Rule: Toward Dynamic Inclusiveness
    • On the Site of Popular Rule: Toward Substantive Equality
    • Conclusion
  • References
  • Index

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