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  1. Reasons and Inclusion: The Foundation of Deliberation.Erik Schneiderhan & Shamus Khan - 2008 - Sociological Theory 26 (1):1-24.
    This article provides two empirical evaluations of deliberation. Given that scholars of deliberation often argue for its importance without empirical support, we first examine whether there is a "deliberative difference"; if actors engaging in deliberation arrive at different decisions than those who think on their own or "just talk." As we find a general convergence within deliberation scholarship around reasons and inclusion, the second test examines whether these two specific mechanisms are central to deliberation. The first evaluation looks at outcomes (...)
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  • Can Multi-Stakeholder Initiatives Improve Global Supply Chains? Improving Deliberative Capacity with a Stakeholder Orientation.Vivek Soundararajan, Jill A. Brown & Andrew C. Wicks - 2019 - Business Ethics Quarterly 29 (3):385-412.
    ABSTRACT:Global multi-stakeholder initiatives are important instruments that have the potential to improve the social and environmental sustainability of global supply chains. However, they often fail to comprehensively address the needs and interests of various supply-chain participants. While voluntary in nature, MSIs have most often been implemented through coercive approaches, resulting in friction among their participants and in systemic problems with decoupling. Additionally, in those cases in which deliberation was constrained between and amongst participants, collaborative approaches have often failed to materialize. (...)
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  • Survey Article: Recipes for Public Spheres: Eight Institutional Design Choices and Their Consequences.Archon Fung - 2003 - Journal of Political Philosophy 11 (3):338-367.
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  • Survey article: Recipes for public spheres: Eight institutional design choices and their consequences.Archon Fung - 2003 - Journal of Political Philosophy 11 (3):338–367.
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  • Deliberative Impacts: The Macro-Political Uptake of Mini-Publics.John S. Dryzek & Robert E. Goodin - 2006 - Politics and Society 34 (2):219-244.
    Democratic theorists often place deliberative innovations such as citizen's panels, consensus conferences, planning cells, and deliberative polls at the center of their hopes for deliberative democratization. In light of experience to date, the authors chart the ways in which such mini-publics may have an impact in the “macro” world of politics. Impact may come in the form of actually making policy, being taken up in the policy process, informing public debates, market-testing of proposals, legitimation of public policies, building confidence and (...)
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  • Norms, motives and radical democracy: Habermas and the problem of motivation.Daniel Munro - 2007 - Journal of Political Philosophy 15 (4):447–472.
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  • The Politics of Institutional Renovation and Economic Upgrading: Recombining the Vines That Bind in Argentina.Gerald A. McDermott - 2007 - Politics and Society 35 (1):103-144.
    Through a comparative, longitudinal analysis of the wine industry in two Argentine provinces, this article finds that different political approaches to reform and not simply socioeconomic endowments determine the ability of societies to build new institutions for economic upgrading. A “depoliticization” approach emphasizes the imposition of arm’s-length incentives by a powerful, insulated government but exacerbates social fragmentation and impedes upgrading. A “participatory restructuring” approach promotes the creation and maintenance of new public-private institutions for upgrading via rules of inclusive membership and (...)
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  • Does Rational Ignorance Imply Smaller Government, or Smarter Democratic Innovation?Melissa Lane - 2015 - Critical Review: A Journal of Politics and Society 27 (3):350-361.
    Ilya Somin argues that in light of the public's rational political ignorance we should make government smaller. But his account of the phenomenon of rational ignorance does not justify his policy prescription of smaller government; on the contrary, it implies that we should revamp the current framework of democratic institutions. This is because, since Somin fails to set out a principled basis on which to value democracy even in the face of rational ignorance, he cannot explain why we should want (...)
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  • Moving the State: The Politics of Democratic Decentralization in Kerala, South Africa, and Porto Alegre.Patrick Heller - 2001 - Politics and Society 29 (1):131-163.
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  • Survey Article: Recipes for Public Spheres: Eight Institutional Design Choices and Their Consequences.Archon Fung - 2003 - Journal of Political Philosophy 11 (3):338-367.
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  • The Epistemic Value of Public Opinion: Theoretical and Practical Considerations.Marcos Engelken-Jorge - 2015 - Critical Horizons 16 (3):264-279.
    This paper discusses the claim that citizens lack sufficient political knowledge to make sound judgements on public matters. It is contended that practical judgements raise essentially two types of claims, namely a claim to empirical truth and a claim to normative rightness, and that there are good reasons to believe that people's insufficient political knowledge undermines both of them. Yet, an examination of the dynamics of public opinion formation reveals that there is an epistemic potential in public opinion, though it (...)
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  • Beyond Figures and Numbers Participatory Budgeting as a Leverage for Citizen Identity and Attachment to Place.Justyna Anders-Morawska & Marta Hereźniak - 2019 - International Studies. Interdisciplinary Political and Cultural Journal 24 (2):27-40.
    The purpose of the paper is to examine the potential of participatory budgeting for the formation of citizen identity and attachment to the place in terms of individual, territorial and thematic focus. In the theoretical discussion, the authors analyse the concepts of place attachment, social identity and their influence on civic participation. The authors propose a conceptual framework for the analysis of relationships between PB, place attachment, and social identity. In the case of the community development model of PB, place (...)
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