000 01967cam a2200229 4500500
005 20250112045550.0
041 _afre
042 _adc
100 1 0 _aPellizzoni, Luigi
_eauthor
700 1 0 _a Vannini, Laurent
_eauthor
245 0 0 _aAn Idea in Decline?
260 _c2013.
500 _a55
520 _aDeliberative democracy spread rapidly regardless of differences in political and administrative traditions. An equally fast-evolving debate has addressed both its virtues and drawbacks, gradually shifting from theory to practice and from a focus on deliberative arenas to a concern for their policy and institutional context but without questioning the fundamentally benign nature and implications of public deliberation. However, we may be approaching a turning point. A growing literature is developing a different, more corrosive type of critique, the underlying theme of which is not the revitalization of democracy and the role of deliberative forums in governance but the neoliberalization of society and the integration of deliberative democracy in the rationality of government at work as part of this process. As a consequence, well-known problems are read or ranked differently and new questions gain salience for being closely related to politics and the political realm. This paper discusses the basic arguments developed in this literature, in which weaknesses and drawbacks do not look incidental and redeemable but largely purposeful and responsible for the very success of deliberation itself. However, this critique points to a renewed research agenda rather than to the ill-fated character of deliberative democracy.
690 _agovernance
690 _adeliberative democracy
690 _aneoliberalism
690 _agovernmentality
690 _aparticipation
786 0 _nParticipations | o 6 | 2 | 2013-09-23 | p. 87-118 | 2034-7650
856 4 1 _uhttps://shs.cairn.info/journal-participations-2013-2-page-87?lang=en
999 _c194879
_d194879