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Citizen's Evaluations of Participatory Democratic Procedures: Normative Theory Meets Empirical Science
87
Citations
14
References
1999
Year
Public ParticipationPolitical BehaviorParticipatory Decision-makingCitizen ParticipationSocial SciencesDemocracyCitizen AssemblyCollective ChoiceCollective Decision AcceptancePolitical CognitionCivic EngagementPublic PolicyParticipatory Democratic TheoristsParticipatory Democratic ProceduresPolitical ParticipationParticipatory OpportunitiesDeliberative DemocracyArtsPolitical Science
Participatory democratic theorists claim that citizens would be transformed if they participated more directly in decision-making. These theorists, however, disagree about how participatory opportunities ought to be structured. In an attempt to integrate normative political theory and empirical political science, I examined one possible benefit of citizen participation: collective decision acceptance. Models of participation offered by Jean-Jacques Rousseau and John Stuart Mill are incompatible with contemporary participatory democracy, but Marsiglio of Padua offers a persuasive argument connecting participation and collective decision acceptance. In three experiments, I compared citizen's collective decision acceptance, individual assumption reevaluation, and group satisfaction for two different participatory structures -liberal and strong democratic procedures. Citizen's short-term perceptions were influenced most by their majority or minority status; with extended participation, however, the participatory structures significantly affected citizen's evaluations of the participatory process. Contrary to expectations, the liberal democratic group scored higher on all three measures. I theorize that participatory opportunities should occur frequently, across a variety of issues, and should be structured so that citizens do not feel personally attacked in the decision-making process.
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