Deliberative Ideals Across Diverse Cultures

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    Abstract

    In the scheme of history, most political deliberation has taken place outside the modern West. But the study of deliberation, however extensive it has become, has largely ignored this wider world. Examining how deliberation manifests across different societies has considerable promise for both explanatory and normative political theory. To explain why people deliberatewhich should be among the first questions deliberative democrats ponderit is first necessary to examine how people deliberate, and why this varies. Doing so with a comparative and historical perspective, even in the preliminary fashion presented here, reveals how social and political ideals can motivate and shape deliberative practice. And there are normative stakes in this agenda. If collective deliberation is to prevail in global governance, we must fashion political ideals which motivate diverse peoples to come together in discourse, rather than confront their problems, or compound them, by less desirable means.
    Original languageEnglish
    Title of host publicationOxford Handbook of Deliberative Democracy
    EditorsAndré Bächtiger, John Dryzek, Jane J. Mansbridge and Mark Warren
    Place of PublicationUnited Kingdom
    PublisherOxford University Press
    Pages86-99
    Volume1
    Edition1st Edition
    ISBN (Print)9780198747369
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 2018

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