Posted on July 9, 2011 by Yoram Gat
[M]en err in two ways, either by ignorance or by malice.
Francesco Guicciardini, Dialogue on the Government of Florence
A model of government quality and government selection mechanism quality
The two chief desirable characteristics of government are
- representativity (r): the government is representative when its efforts are aimed at promoting the general interests (rather than personal or narrow interests), and
- competence (c): the government is competent when it is able to enact effective policy in accordance with its aims.
A representative, competent government enacts policy that effectively promotes the general interest.
Modeled in this way, the quality of a government is a function of its representativity and its competence, q = q(r,c), increasing in both arguments (e.g., q(r,c) = r c). The quality of a mechanism for selecting a government is measured by its tendency to produce high-quality governments.
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Filed under: Elections, Sortition | 29 Comments »
Posted on July 4, 2011 by Yoram Gat
newDemocracy is an Australian website that introduces itself as follows:
Citizens are seeking Parliaments that are less adversarial and less short term in outlook. The newdemocracy Foundation researches and publishes alternative democratic methods that seek to deliver this. We pursue alternatives more likely to identify common ground, end the continuous campaign, and return representatives to focus on issues, not opinion polls.
We don’t need better politicians. We need a better system.
Read about these options here, and get involved.
Under “Alternatives”, newDemocracy presents various ideas, including “Demarchy” – following John Burnheim and Brian Martin, “A Senate Drawn by Lot” – following Alex Zakaras and linking to a post by Keith Sutherland on this blog, and “The Popular Branch” – following Ethan Leib.
The force behind the website is apparently Luca Belgiorno-Nettis. The website also lists various luminaries among its supporters including Prof. Lyn Carson.
One item that I find particularly valuable is the slogan mentioned in one of the entries: Don’t Vote – It Only Encourages Them!
Filed under: Opinion polling, Participation, Proposals, Sortition | 3 Comments »
Posted on June 30, 2011 by keithsutherland
The recent publication of John Burnheim’s autobiography by Sidney University Press (Burnheim, 2011) coincides with improved availability of his 1985 work, Is Democracy Possible? (Burnheim, 2006). Although SUP republished the book in 2006 they have only recently made it available on Amazon.com. John very kindly sent me copies of both books, even though he knew that I would not be the most sympathetic reviewer, as we have always disagreed fundamentally on the potential of sortition in our offline exchanges.
John divides his adult life into three two-decade periods during which he moved from the priesthood through philosophy to retirement, pausing en route only to (assist in) blowing up the Sydney University philosophy department (1973) and publishing an attempt to torpedo democracy in its modern incarnation (1985).
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Filed under: Books, Sortition | 62 Comments »
Posted on June 28, 2011 by Yoram Gat
I recently linked to a WSWS story about the Indignants in Syntagma Square. The Kathimerini newspaper has a story as well. As can be expected, the tone is much more equivocal.
In Syntagma Square, some see the dawn of a new politics
As Indignant protests enter second month, opinions divided about nature and future of the movement
[…]
Costas Douzinas, a law professor at Birkbeck, University of London, recently penned one of the most flattering profiles of the Indignants in Britain’s The Guardian newspaper, after being invited to speak in Syntagma. For him “this is the most political movement we have had in Greece, and perhaps in Europe for the past 20 years. It is totally political and in a way it changes our understanding of what politics means,” he says.
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Filed under: Athens, Sortition | 2 Comments »
Posted on June 27, 2011 by Common Lot Sortitionist
I’m wondering if anyone has a recommended reading list. In particular what are opinions about either of the following regarding relevance to the promotion or understanding of sortitional selection?
Filed under: Books, Sortition | 11 Comments »
Posted on June 25, 2011 by Yoram Gat
A deliberative poll for California’s future:
What’s Next California is an unprecedented attempt to bring the people into the process in a new way—one that is representative and thoughtful. A scientific random sample of the entire state will be transported to a single place for a weekend of face-to-face discussions, in small groups and in dialogue with competing experts. In California’s first statewide “Deliberative Poll,” the people will be supported by factual information and will consider the critical arguments on both sides of issues, then will articulate their priorities for fixing the state. A number of Deliberative Polls have been conducted at the national and local levels in sixteen countries around the world, including Britain, Australia, Denmark, and the United States. The deliberations will take place in Torrance on the weekend of June 25th. More than 300 citizens representing every region of the state will spend the weekend working in small groups and posing questions to public officials and policy experts. These in-depth discussions will likely range over legislative representation, taxation, whether local governments should have more autonomy and control over public services, and the initiative process.
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Filed under: Opinion polling, Sortition | 5 Comments »
Posted on June 25, 2011 by Yoram Gat
The WSWS has a critical report about the “indignants” movement in Greece:
Greece: The Syntagma Square movement—no real democracy
It is not easy to report on the “Indignants”, the protesters in Athens’ Syntagma Square. We spent almost an hour trying to find someone responsible who could tell us about the goals and character of the movement, without success.
[…]
There was no one willing to provide information about the objectives and purpose of the movement, and take responsibility for this. This game of hide and seek is not a coincidence. It is justified by reference to the principle of “genuine” or “direct” democracy, according to which the people take decisions directly, without the mediation of political representatives or parties. In fact, it serves to hide the real political objectives of the Indignants.
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Filed under: Athens, Participation, Sortition | 14 Comments »
Posted on June 17, 2011 by Yoram Gat
One of the six steps that Mickey Edwards offers for “fixing Congress” is to fill congressional committee vacancies by lot.
Edwards’s critique of elected government starts promisingly enough:
Angry and frustrated, American voters went to the polls in November 2010 to “take back” their country. Just as they had done in 2008. And 2006. And repeatedly for decades, whether it was Republicans or Democrats from whom they were taking the country back. No matter who was put in charge, things didn’t get better. They won’t this time, either; spending levels may go down, taxes may go up, budgets will change, but American government will go on the way it has[.]
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Filed under: Press, Proposals, Sortition | 4 Comments »
Posted on June 16, 2011 by peterstone
Kleroterian David Grant has posted a short video about the casting of lots by the Amish (doubtless with religious intent):
Filed under: Sortition | 1 Comment »
Posted on June 14, 2011 by Yoram Gat
The 1905 edition of the The New International Encyclopedia opens its entry on elections with the following paragraph:
ELECTION, in politics, is the choice of public officers by the vote of those who are entitled to exercise the elective franchise. This is to be distinguished, on the one hand, from the appointment of officers by a superior, as by a king, a president, a governor, or a mayor; and, on the other hand, from their selection by lot. The last-named method of choosing public officers was considered by Aristotle one of the characteristic features of a popular government. It has been advocated by other writers, because of its tendency to prevent the formation of political parties. Party organization, the caucus, the coalition of different factions, the corruption of voters, the falsification of election returns, the interest of a particular candidate and kindred evils, it is argued, will all be swept away if officers are selected by lot.
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