ABSTRACT

For deliberative democrats, the strength of any democracy is public deliberation, the frequent and reasoned discussion between citizens on political issues.

Despite all the theoretical claims made about deliberative systems, the question remains how to empirically assess both the legitimacy and function of deliberative systems in the real world and how individual sites of deliberation interact within the larger political system. In other words, what is the legitimacy of each individual component and under which conditions can these components improve the legitimacy of the wider system? These are the central research questions for this book looking particularly through the prism of the citizen-led mini-public G1000 in Belgium, which grew out of a feeling of deep democratic crisis. Offering empirically measurable translations of philosophical concepts, the book enhances our understanding of how political systems function, and of the viability of a deliberative democracy at a larger scale. Finally, it provokes fundamental normative questions on how we want to shape our society, especially divided ones.

This text will be of key interest to scholars, students and practitioners of deliberative democracy, and to those interested in democratic theory and more broadly political science, communication, sociology, and philosophy.

chapter |9 pages

Introduction

Studying the legitimacy of citizen-led deliberative democracy

chapter 1|13 pages

Democratic innovation in an unlikely place

chapter 3|26 pages

Participants and non-participants

chapter 4|15 pages

Democratic credentials and trade-offs

chapter 6|21 pages

Political uptake

chapter 7|17 pages

Public endorsement

chapter |8 pages

Conclusion

Deliberation between mini- and maxi-public