Deliberative Constitutional Change in a Polarised Federation

    Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingChapterpeer-review

    Abstract

    Citizens Assemblies are innovative deliberative democratic processes that recommend constitutional or other key legal reforms. They are formed from 100-plus randomly-selected citizens who convene over several months to learn from experts in a particular area of public policy, and thereafter to recommend a specific law reform. In the 2010 Australian general election, the incumbent Labor governments promise to create a Citizens Assembly attracted strongly unfavourable popular media responses. In contrast, this article reports empirical data showing generally high Australian levels of trust in Citizens' Assemblies and deliberative democracy. The article also engages in further analysis to search for signs that such trust varies with social demographics; marked demographic cleavages could potentially be fatal to the success of reforms. In a first set of results, the article finds surprisingly uniform trust in deliberative democracy across most demographic groups (eg, defined by age, sex, educational achievement, political party and region). However, trust in Citizens Assemblies, while still generally uniform, is subject to more variation, including intriguing regional, populist and other distinctions.
    Original languageEnglish
    Title of host publicationTomorrow's Federation: Reforming Australian Government
    EditorsPaul Kildea, Andrew Lynch and George Williams
    Place of PublicationSydney, Australia
    PublisherThe Federation Press
    Pages350-370
    Volume1
    ISBN (Print)9781862878228
    Publication statusPublished - 2012

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