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Sortition: past and present

Sortition: past and present
Sortition: past and present
Since ancient times sortition (random selection by lot) has been used both to distribute political office and as a general prophylactic against factionalism and corruption in societies as diverse as classical-era Athens and the Most Serene Republic of Venice. Lotteries have also been employed for the allocation of scarce goods such as social housing and school places to eliminate bias and ensure just distribution, along with drawing lots in circumstances where unpopular tasks or tragic choices are involved (as some situations are beyond rational human decision-making). More recently, developments in public opinion polling using random sampling have led to the proliferation of citizens' assemblies selected by lot. Some activists have even proposed such bodies as an alternative to elected representatives. The Journal of Sortition benefits from an editorial board with a wide range of expertise and perspectives in this area. In this introduction to the first issue, we have invited our editors to explain why they are interested in sortition, and to outline the benefits (and pitfalls) of the recent explosion of interest in the topic.
8-23
Saunders, Ben
aed7ba9f-f519-4bbf-a554-db25b684037d
JOS Editorial Board
Saunders, Ben
aed7ba9f-f519-4bbf-a554-db25b684037d

JOS Editorial Board (2025) Sortition: past and present. Journal of Sortition, 1 (1), 8-23. (doi:10.53765/3050-0672.1.1.008).

Record type: Editorial

Abstract

Since ancient times sortition (random selection by lot) has been used both to distribute political office and as a general prophylactic against factionalism and corruption in societies as diverse as classical-era Athens and the Most Serene Republic of Venice. Lotteries have also been employed for the allocation of scarce goods such as social housing and school places to eliminate bias and ensure just distribution, along with drawing lots in circumstances where unpopular tasks or tragic choices are involved (as some situations are beyond rational human decision-making). More recently, developments in public opinion polling using random sampling have led to the proliferation of citizens' assemblies selected by lot. Some activists have even proposed such bodies as an alternative to elected representatives. The Journal of Sortition benefits from an editorial board with a wide range of expertise and perspectives in this area. In this introduction to the first issue, we have invited our editors to explain why they are interested in sortition, and to outline the benefits (and pitfalls) of the recent explosion of interest in the topic.

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Published date: 1 January 2025

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 498390
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/498390
PURE UUID: cc880328-14a3-451b-9ee2-82a98400d65c
ORCID for Ben Saunders: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-5147-6397

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Date deposited: 18 Feb 2025 17:30
Last modified: 19 Feb 2025 02:47

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Contributors

Author: Ben Saunders ORCID iD
Corporate Author: JOS Editorial Board

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