Citizen deliberation in Germany: lessons from the ‘Bürgerrat Demokratie’
Citizen deliberation in Germany: lessons from the ‘Bürgerrat Demokratie’
This article explores the capacity of randomly-selected, citizen deliberation procedures to deliver on their promise to generate inclusive and considered citizen judgements, connecting these to political authority and the broader public sphere. These ‘mini-publics’ are increasingly adopted in representative democratic systems. Germany is no exception and has been at the forefront of this trend. The article begins with a historical overview of citizen deliberation in Germany, followed by in-depth analysis of the pioneering case of the Bürgerrat Demokratie. This analysis shows mini-publics can produce more inclusive and considered citizen input into policy-making than self-selected participation, but highlights the need for attitudinal stratification in participation selection if mini-publics are to represent politically alienated citizens. Furthermore, it details how the Bürgerrat Demokratie's combination of an innovative, four-phase process design with civil society campaign expertise holds lessons for connecting citizen deliberation to both political authority and the public sphere without institutionalising the process.
510-534
Dean, Rikki
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Hoffmann, Felix
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Geissel, Brigitte
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Jung, Stefan
d2da1904-30d0-4feb-800d-38054a24b0e2
Wipfler, Bruno
ea3c9a06-3feb-40d0-8d8e-7cb57850f5aa
2024
Dean, Rikki
a830dbdb-7c38-41d3-9d18-02c335d645cb
Hoffmann, Felix
681f8568-cb4e-4f79-8327-fc13480b7bd4
Geissel, Brigitte
68b350ca-bd18-40aa-8ec5-1951d2aff15f
Jung, Stefan
d2da1904-30d0-4feb-800d-38054a24b0e2
Wipfler, Bruno
ea3c9a06-3feb-40d0-8d8e-7cb57850f5aa
Dean, Rikki, Hoffmann, Felix, Geissel, Brigitte, Jung, Stefan and Wipfler, Bruno
(2024)
Citizen deliberation in Germany: lessons from the ‘Bürgerrat Demokratie’.
German Politics, 33 (3), .
(doi:10.1080/09644008.2022.2088732).
Abstract
This article explores the capacity of randomly-selected, citizen deliberation procedures to deliver on their promise to generate inclusive and considered citizen judgements, connecting these to political authority and the broader public sphere. These ‘mini-publics’ are increasingly adopted in representative democratic systems. Germany is no exception and has been at the forefront of this trend. The article begins with a historical overview of citizen deliberation in Germany, followed by in-depth analysis of the pioneering case of the Bürgerrat Demokratie. This analysis shows mini-publics can produce more inclusive and considered citizen input into policy-making than self-selected participation, but highlights the need for attitudinal stratification in participation selection if mini-publics are to represent politically alienated citizens. Furthermore, it details how the Bürgerrat Demokratie's combination of an innovative, four-phase process design with civil society campaign expertise holds lessons for connecting citizen deliberation to both political authority and the public sphere without institutionalising the process.
Text
Citizen Deliberation in Germany Lessons from the B rgerrat Demokratie
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e-pub ahead of print date: 22 June 2022
Published date: 2024
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 504708
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/504708
ISSN: 0964-4008
PURE UUID: 741d3692-2b47-4fc2-9799-a9ce76d49e52
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Date deposited: 18 Sep 2025 16:35
Last modified: 19 Sep 2025 02:15
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Contributors
Author:
Rikki Dean
Author:
Felix Hoffmann
Author:
Brigitte Geissel
Author:
Stefan Jung
Author:
Bruno Wipfler
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