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  1. Reflections on Hearing the Other Side, in Theory and in Practice.Diana C. Mutz - 2013 - Critical Review: A Journal of Politics and Society 25 (2):260-276.
    In response to my book's finding that there is a tradeoff between two apparently desirable traits—a propensity to participate in politics, on the one hand, and to expose oneself to disagreeable political ideas, on the other—symposium participants suggest a number of reasons why this tradeoff should not trouble participatory democratic theorists. One argument is that electoral advocacy (the type of participation I measure) is not an important form of participation anyway, so we are better off without it. However, those people (...)
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  • Anonymity, Pseudonymity, and Deliberation: Why Not Everything Should Be Connected.Alfred Moore - 2018 - Journal of Political Philosophy 26 (2):169-192.
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  • Lottocracy or psephocracy? Democracy, elections, and random selection.Daniel Hutton Ferris - forthcoming - European Journal of Political Theory.
    Would randomly selecting legislators be more democratic than electing them? Lottocrats argue (reasonably) that contemporary regimes are not very democratic and (more questionably) that replacing elections with sortition would mitigate elite capture and improve political decisions. I argue that a lottocracy would, in fact, be likely to perform worse on these metrics than a system of representation that appoints at least some legislators using election – a psephocracy (from psēphizein, to vote). Even today's actually existing psephocracies, which are far from (...)
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