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Citizen deliberation in Germany: lessons from the ‘Bürgerrat Demokratie’

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.
0964-4008
510-534
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
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), 510-534. (doi:10.1080/09644008.2022.2088732).

Record type: Article

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.

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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
ORCID for Rikki Dean: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-5381-4532

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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 ORCID iD
Author: Felix Hoffmann
Author: Brigitte Geissel
Author: Stefan Jung
Author: Bruno Wipfler

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