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Eliten zu konsultieren, biete zwar Beratung, jedoch keine politische Gleichberechtigung, wohingegen die Konsultation des Volks politische Gleichberechtigung biete, jedoch keine Beratung. Dies schreibt James Fishkin der Stanford University für das Projekt Tomorrow's Europe.
This is the "basic and recurring problem" with public consultation, states the 24 September article, which explores whether we can have a method which "represents everyone under conditions where the people can become informed and can think through difficult issues".
Fishkin advocates the "deliberative poll", dating from ancient Athens and involving the election of a random microcosm of citizens chosen by lot, a "discussion group", as a way of addressing this deficit.
This system embodies deliberation through carefully-balanced background materials, moderated small group discussions and plenary sessions which answer the groups' questions, and culminates in a confidential questionnaire, the results of which are compared to poll results at the beginning of the process, the author explains.
Fishkin highlights three fundamental problems addressed by the deliberative poll:
He claims that the deliberative poll solves these problems by:
Fishkin concludes by stating that "we need to experiment with different modes of democratic consultation and use social science to ensure that processes are balanced and representative".
Only by "experimentation" can the dilemma of deliberative but unequal elite processes versus equal but not deliberative plebiscitary processes be surmounted, he adds.