Description

Book Synopsis

A collection of essays examining the Australian Citizens' Parliament, a project in deliberative democracy held in 2009. Explores its organization, the deliberation, the flow of beliefs and ideas, facilitator and organizer effects, and its impacts from a variety of theoretical, empirical, and practice perspectives.



Trade Review

“As innovators in democratic process, we know how much we depend on learning from practical trials and real-world experiences. This work captures the experience in detail and provides an important reference point for anyone hoping to bring deliberation and the citizen’s voice back into how we do government.”

—Iain Walker,executive director, The newDemocracy Foundation


“This study shows that deliberative capacity, personal efficacy, and common political ground can be developed through the careful design of deliberative institutions among ordinary citizens; even so, meaningful political influence over a broader social scale remains as elusive as ever. The editors present valuable and hard-won lessons for citizens, leaders, and academics who hope to realize the practical political and moral benefits of a more truly deliberative and democratic public life. The Australian Citizens’ Parliament and the Future of Deliberative Democracy is full of practical wisdom for anyone who sets out to create a democratic deliberative space for ordinary citizens.”

—Mark E. Button,University of Utah


“From conception to conclusion, this book narrates and analyzes an ambitious experiment in deliberative democracy: the Australian Citizens’ Parliament. Integrating social science analyses of many kinds of data with reflections by philosophers and civic reform–minded public participation practitioners, the volume offers a rich sense of what occurred in the different phases of the ACP process and provides a nuanced assessment of the strengths and weaknesses of this large-scale deliberative democracy experiment. This wonderful case study is a must-read for everyone interested in deliberative democracy.”

—Karen Tracy,University of Colorado, and author of Challenges of Ordinary Democracy



Table of Contents

Contents

List of Illustrations

List of Tables

Acknowledgments

Introduction

Lyn Carson, John Gastil, Janette Hartz-Karp, and Ron Lubensky

Part I: Deliberative Design and Innovation

1 Origins of the First Citizens’ Parliament

Lyn Carson and Luca Belgiorno-Nettis

2 Putting Citizens in Charge: Comparing the Australian Citizens’ Parliament and the Australia 2020 Summit

Janette Hartz-Karp and Lyn Carson

3 Choose Me: The Challenges of National Random Selection

Ron Lubensky and Lyn Carson

4 Grafting an Online Parliament onto a Face-to-Face Process

Brian Sullivan and Janette Hartz-Karp

Part II: Exploring Deliberation

5 Listening Carefully to the Citizens’ Parliament: A Narrative Account

Ron Lubensky

6 Deliberative Design and Storytelling in the Australian Citizens’ Parliament

Laura W. Black and Ron Lubensky

7 What Counts as Deliberation? Comparing Participant and Observer Ratings

John Gastil

8 Hearing All Sides? Soliciting and Managing Different Viewpoints in Deliberation

Anna Wiederhold and John Gastil

9 Sit Down and Speak Up: Stability and Change in Group Participation

Joseph A. Bonito, Renee A. Meyers, John Gastil, and Jennifer Ervin

Part III: The Flow of Beliefs and Ideas

10 Changing Orientations Toward Australian Democracy

Simon Niemeyer, Luisa Batalha, and John S. Dryzek

11 Staying Focused: Tracing the Flow of Ideas from the Online Parliament to Canberra

John Gastil and John Wilkerson

12 Evidence of Peer Influence in the Citizens’ Parliament

Luc Tucker and John Gastil

Part IV: Facilitation and Organizer Effects

13 The Unsung Heroes of a Deliberative Process: Reflections on the Role of Facilitators at the Citizens’ Parliament

Max Hardy and Kath Fisher, with Janette Hartz-Karp

14 Are They Doing What They Are Supposed to Do? Assessing the Facilitating Process of the Australian Citizens’ Parliament

Li Li, Fletcher Ziwoya, Laura W. Black, and Janette Hartz-Karp

15 Supporting the Citizen Parliamentarians: Mobilizing Perspectives and Informing Discussion

Ian Marsh and Lyn Carson

16 Investigation of (and Introspection on) Organizer Bias

Lyn Carson

Part V: Impacts and Reflections

17 Participant Accounts of Political Transformation

Katie Knobloch and John Gastil

18 Becoming Australian: Forging a National Identity

Janette Hartz-Karp, Patrick Anderson, John Gastil, and Andrea Felicetti

19 Mediated Meta-deliberation: Making Sense of the Australian Citizens’ Parliament

Eike Mark Rinke, Katie Knobloch, John Gastil, and Lyn Carson

20 How Not to Introduce Deliberative Democracy: The 2010 Citizens’ Assembly on Climate Change Proposal

Lyn Carson

Conclusion: Theoretical and Practical Implications of the Citizens’ Parliament Experience

Janette Hartz-Karp, Lyn Carson, John Gastil, and Ron Lubensky

Index

The Australian Citizens Parliament and the Future

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    A Hardback by Lyn Carson, John Gastil, Janette Hartz-Karp

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      View other formats and editions of The Australian Citizens Parliament and the Future by Lyn Carson

      Publisher: Pennsylvania State University Press
      Publication Date: 26/08/2013
      ISBN13: 9780271060125, 978-0271060125
      ISBN10: 0271060123

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      A collection of essays examining the Australian Citizens' Parliament, a project in deliberative democracy held in 2009. Explores its organization, the deliberation, the flow of beliefs and ideas, facilitator and organizer effects, and its impacts from a variety of theoretical, empirical, and practice perspectives.



      Trade Review

      “As innovators in democratic process, we know how much we depend on learning from practical trials and real-world experiences. This work captures the experience in detail and provides an important reference point for anyone hoping to bring deliberation and the citizen’s voice back into how we do government.”

      —Iain Walker,executive director, The newDemocracy Foundation


      “This study shows that deliberative capacity, personal efficacy, and common political ground can be developed through the careful design of deliberative institutions among ordinary citizens; even so, meaningful political influence over a broader social scale remains as elusive as ever. The editors present valuable and hard-won lessons for citizens, leaders, and academics who hope to realize the practical political and moral benefits of a more truly deliberative and democratic public life. The Australian Citizens’ Parliament and the Future of Deliberative Democracy is full of practical wisdom for anyone who sets out to create a democratic deliberative space for ordinary citizens.”

      —Mark E. Button,University of Utah


      “From conception to conclusion, this book narrates and analyzes an ambitious experiment in deliberative democracy: the Australian Citizens’ Parliament. Integrating social science analyses of many kinds of data with reflections by philosophers and civic reform–minded public participation practitioners, the volume offers a rich sense of what occurred in the different phases of the ACP process and provides a nuanced assessment of the strengths and weaknesses of this large-scale deliberative democracy experiment. This wonderful case study is a must-read for everyone interested in deliberative democracy.”

      —Karen Tracy,University of Colorado, and author of Challenges of Ordinary Democracy



      Table of Contents

      Contents

      List of Illustrations

      List of Tables

      Acknowledgments

      Introduction

      Lyn Carson, John Gastil, Janette Hartz-Karp, and Ron Lubensky

      Part I: Deliberative Design and Innovation

      1 Origins of the First Citizens’ Parliament

      Lyn Carson and Luca Belgiorno-Nettis

      2 Putting Citizens in Charge: Comparing the Australian Citizens’ Parliament and the Australia 2020 Summit

      Janette Hartz-Karp and Lyn Carson

      3 Choose Me: The Challenges of National Random Selection

      Ron Lubensky and Lyn Carson

      4 Grafting an Online Parliament onto a Face-to-Face Process

      Brian Sullivan and Janette Hartz-Karp

      Part II: Exploring Deliberation

      5 Listening Carefully to the Citizens’ Parliament: A Narrative Account

      Ron Lubensky

      6 Deliberative Design and Storytelling in the Australian Citizens’ Parliament

      Laura W. Black and Ron Lubensky

      7 What Counts as Deliberation? Comparing Participant and Observer Ratings

      John Gastil

      8 Hearing All Sides? Soliciting and Managing Different Viewpoints in Deliberation

      Anna Wiederhold and John Gastil

      9 Sit Down and Speak Up: Stability and Change in Group Participation

      Joseph A. Bonito, Renee A. Meyers, John Gastil, and Jennifer Ervin

      Part III: The Flow of Beliefs and Ideas

      10 Changing Orientations Toward Australian Democracy

      Simon Niemeyer, Luisa Batalha, and John S. Dryzek

      11 Staying Focused: Tracing the Flow of Ideas from the Online Parliament to Canberra

      John Gastil and John Wilkerson

      12 Evidence of Peer Influence in the Citizens’ Parliament

      Luc Tucker and John Gastil

      Part IV: Facilitation and Organizer Effects

      13 The Unsung Heroes of a Deliberative Process: Reflections on the Role of Facilitators at the Citizens’ Parliament

      Max Hardy and Kath Fisher, with Janette Hartz-Karp

      14 Are They Doing What They Are Supposed to Do? Assessing the Facilitating Process of the Australian Citizens’ Parliament

      Li Li, Fletcher Ziwoya, Laura W. Black, and Janette Hartz-Karp

      15 Supporting the Citizen Parliamentarians: Mobilizing Perspectives and Informing Discussion

      Ian Marsh and Lyn Carson

      16 Investigation of (and Introspection on) Organizer Bias

      Lyn Carson

      Part V: Impacts and Reflections

      17 Participant Accounts of Political Transformation

      Katie Knobloch and John Gastil

      18 Becoming Australian: Forging a National Identity

      Janette Hartz-Karp, Patrick Anderson, John Gastil, and Andrea Felicetti

      19 Mediated Meta-deliberation: Making Sense of the Australian Citizens’ Parliament

      Eike Mark Rinke, Katie Knobloch, John Gastil, and Lyn Carson

      20 How Not to Introduce Deliberative Democracy: The 2010 Citizens’ Assembly on Climate Change Proposal

      Lyn Carson

      Conclusion: Theoretical and Practical Implications of the Citizens’ Parliament Experience

      Janette Hartz-Karp, Lyn Carson, John Gastil, and Ron Lubensky

      Index

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