Scaling up deliberation: testing the potential of mini-publics to enhance the deliberative capacity of citizens
Scaling up deliberation: testing the potential of mini-publics to enhance the deliberative capacity of citizens
This paper tests the possibility of embedding the benefits of minipublic deliberation within a wider voting public. We test whether a statement such as those derived from a Citizens’ Initiative Review (CIR) can influence voters who did not participate in the pre-referendum minipublic deliberation. This experiment was implemented in advance of the 2018 Irish referendum on blasphemy, one of a series of social-moral referendums following the recommendations of a deliberative assembly. This is the first application of a CIR-style voting aid in a real world minipublic and referendum outside of the US and also the first application to what is principally a moral question. We found that survey respondents exposed to information about the minipublic and its findings significantly increased their policy knowledge. Further, exposing respondents to minipublic statements in favour and against the policy measure increased their empathy for the other side of the policy debate.
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Suiter, Jane
b6e6fff4-b711-43e6-bbbd-a44ea614a71e
Muradova, Lala
5f2595b4-c347-4e45-bae5-bb0f5b397fa4
Gastil, John
4a093b38-2cf4-4546-a8e8-5b99f4e8d5ad
Farrell, David M.
45c8507a-8e1c-499b-8d27-3d5a2701b1ac
18 September 2020
Suiter, Jane
b6e6fff4-b711-43e6-bbbd-a44ea614a71e
Muradova, Lala
5f2595b4-c347-4e45-bae5-bb0f5b397fa4
Gastil, John
4a093b38-2cf4-4546-a8e8-5b99f4e8d5ad
Farrell, David M.
45c8507a-8e1c-499b-8d27-3d5a2701b1ac
Suiter, Jane, Muradova, Lala, Gastil, John and Farrell, David M.
(2020)
Scaling up deliberation: testing the potential of mini-publics to enhance the deliberative capacity of citizens.
Swiss Political Science Review, 26 (3), .
(doi:10.1111/spsr.12405).
Abstract
This paper tests the possibility of embedding the benefits of minipublic deliberation within a wider voting public. We test whether a statement such as those derived from a Citizens’ Initiative Review (CIR) can influence voters who did not participate in the pre-referendum minipublic deliberation. This experiment was implemented in advance of the 2018 Irish referendum on blasphemy, one of a series of social-moral referendums following the recommendations of a deliberative assembly. This is the first application of a CIR-style voting aid in a real world minipublic and referendum outside of the US and also the first application to what is principally a moral question. We found that survey respondents exposed to information about the minipublic and its findings significantly increased their policy knowledge. Further, exposing respondents to minipublic statements in favour and against the policy measure increased their empathy for the other side of the policy debate.
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Accepted/In Press date: 6 July 2020
e-pub ahead of print date: 14 August 2020
Published date: 18 September 2020
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 506987
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/506987
ISSN: 1662-6370
PURE UUID: cb436edd-9dd8-4c68-bea0-0875faac7432
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Date deposited: 25 Nov 2025 17:37
Last modified: 26 Nov 2025 03:09
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Contributors
Author:
Jane Suiter
Author:
Lala Muradova
Author:
John Gastil
Author:
David M. Farrell
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