Untangling the deep and troubled roots of democracy can help define its future | Salon.com

Painting of leaders presenting the Declaration of Independence | African Slave Trade (Photo illustration by Salon/Getty Images)

“Where Europeans formed a majority, or a substantial minority, they could control the outcome of the democratic process. That allowed them to effectively exclude specific groups of people: Indigenous people, slaves and the descendants of slaves could not vote. Women could not vote.”

I’m not necessarily meaning to portray a pessimistic narrative, but the fact that we’re having this conversation at all indicates that maybe we need some kind of reboot, maybe we need to consider alternatives to these long-established institutions. I can’t say too much about these kind of deliberative assemblies, the James Fishkin model of democracy (Salon stories here). I know about that, but I haven’t studied it, and I am a little dubious about how much legitimacy these assemblies might have. Are ordinary citizens going to regard their decisions as more legitimate, let’s say, then the elected assembly? I think that’s the crucial question, because governance by lot does have something to recommended it, but only if people believe that they’re a source of authority.

Source: Untangling the deep and troubled roots of democracy can help define its future | Salon.com

One thought on “Untangling the deep and troubled roots of democracy can help define its future | Salon.com”

  1. Good post and article. Raises some ideas worth thinking about. Representative democracies and parliaments rose in Europe based on European values and beliefs. Argument would be that they cannot exist without those values and beliefs. No Europeans, no representative democracy. No Europeans or European control, no representative democracy. Concept seems easy to understand..

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