Rating the debates: the 2010 UK party leaders' debates and political communication in the deliberative system
Rating the debates: the 2010 UK party leaders' debates and political communication in the deliberative system
Leader debates have become a pre-eminent means of campaign communication in numerous countries and were introduced in the UK relatively recently. However, the quality of such communication is, to put it mildly, open to question. This article uses the discourse quality index (DQI) to assess the deliberative quality of the 2010 UK party leaders' debates. When scrutinized in isolation, and viewed through the full prism of the DQI categories, the quality of discourse evidenced in the debates is a relatively poor reflection of mainstream idealizations of democratic deliberation. However, when the analysis is rehoused within the wider project of constructing a deliberative system in the UK, and is given a comparative institutional dimension, the epistemic value of the debates is revealed. The relatively high level of justification employed by the party leaders suggests that the debates are a valuable means for the mass communication of reasoned defenses of manifesto pledges to the public sphere, and that they are likely to have a significant educative effect. Moreover, we argue that sequencing such debates with representative deliberative fora will force elites to improve the deliberative quality of their communication and enhance the reflective capacity of the viewing public.
deliberation, deliberative democracy, party leaders' debates, political communication
183-208
Davidson, Stewart
b67e3cc1-f9c9-4029-bbb9-ea5268779bf2
Elstub, Stephen
c408f382-8af4-49e3-abc4-c57029485b0d
Johns, Robert
02861bc9-b704-49b1-bbc7-cf1c1e9b7a35
Stark, Alastair
98d8da9a-3bbd-44d8-aa27-f9c688f7ab88
1 May 2017
Davidson, Stewart
b67e3cc1-f9c9-4029-bbb9-ea5268779bf2
Elstub, Stephen
c408f382-8af4-49e3-abc4-c57029485b0d
Johns, Robert
02861bc9-b704-49b1-bbc7-cf1c1e9b7a35
Stark, Alastair
98d8da9a-3bbd-44d8-aa27-f9c688f7ab88
Davidson, Stewart, Elstub, Stephen, Johns, Robert and Stark, Alastair
(2017)
Rating the debates: the 2010 UK party leaders' debates and political communication in the deliberative system.
British Politics, 12 (2), .
(doi:10.1057/s41293-016-0021-9).
Abstract
Leader debates have become a pre-eminent means of campaign communication in numerous countries and were introduced in the UK relatively recently. However, the quality of such communication is, to put it mildly, open to question. This article uses the discourse quality index (DQI) to assess the deliberative quality of the 2010 UK party leaders' debates. When scrutinized in isolation, and viewed through the full prism of the DQI categories, the quality of discourse evidenced in the debates is a relatively poor reflection of mainstream idealizations of democratic deliberation. However, when the analysis is rehoused within the wider project of constructing a deliberative system in the UK, and is given a comparative institutional dimension, the epistemic value of the debates is revealed. The relatively high level of justification employed by the party leaders suggests that the debates are a valuable means for the mass communication of reasoned defenses of manifesto pledges to the public sphere, and that they are likely to have a significant educative effect. Moreover, we argue that sequencing such debates with representative deliberative fora will force elites to improve the deliberative quality of their communication and enhance the reflective capacity of the viewing public.
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e-pub ahead of print date: 16 August 2016
Published date: 1 May 2017
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Publisher Copyright:
© 2016 Macmillan Publishers Ltd.
Keywords:
deliberation, deliberative democracy, party leaders' debates, political communication
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Local EPrints ID: 489693
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/489693
ISSN: 1746-918X
PURE UUID: af1aca6b-bc25-482e-81e7-506507fa1418
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Date deposited: 30 Apr 2024 16:53
Last modified: 11 May 2024 02:13
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Contributors
Author:
Stewart Davidson
Author:
Stephen Elstub
Author:
Robert Johns
Author:
Alastair Stark
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