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Between Diversity, Representation and ‘Best Evidence’: Rethinking Select Committee Evidence-Gathering Practices

TLDR
In this paper, the authors draw insights from over 60 interviews with select committee chairs, members and staff to gain insight into their perspectives on evidence diversity and the potential of mini-publics to promote this.
Abstract
Select committees play an important role in scrutinising government policy. They have come under increasing pressure to seek evidence for their inquiries—including both formal and informal evidence—from a wider range of stakeholders. Two particular pressures can be observed within this trend. First, committees are expected to show commitment to hearing from a more diverse set of stakeholders. The second pressure relates to the representativeness of those providing evidence. Consequently, they have been urged to increase public engagement. The recent Citizens’ Assembly into adult social care points to one mechanism for engaging a ‘mini-public’ in committee inquiries. Due to their use of random and stratified sampling to recruit participants, mini-publics could diversify the evidence base and facilitate public scrutiny of the committees. However, we know little of what committee members and staffs think about these issues. In this article, we draw insights from over 60 interviews with select committee chairs, members and staff to gain insight into their perspectives on evidence diversity and the potential of mini-publics to promote this. We find that traditional approaches to inquiries are still favoured. While mini-publics are seen as a solution to the failings of current approaches to public engagement, this is for instrumental reasons, meaning that they are only valued in particular circumstances. Ultimately, further culture change is required if committee inquiries are to move substantially beyond the traditional approach.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Is this a men’s world? On the need to study descriptive representation of women in lobbying and policy advocacy

TL;DR: In this paper, the demographic composition of the interest group community was analyzed and the women representation in the world of political advocacy was examined, showing that despite the important role of interest groups in modern democracies, despite the fact that interest groups play an important role in modern democracy, women are not represented in interest group representation.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Webs of Belief around ‘Evidence’ in Legislatures: The case of select committees in the UK House of Commons

TL;DR: This paper explored how MPs and officials make sense of evidence in committee settings and found that legalistic definitions around evidence shape wider beliefs in how to engage with knowledge claims and the practices of undertaking inquiries, and are underpinned by a distinctly political function of knowledge use in politics.

UK parliamentary select committees: crowdsourcing for evidence-based policy or grandstanding?

TL;DR: In this paper, a survey of 919 "discretionary" witnesses, including those submitting written and oral evidence, examines the case for arguing that there is political bias and grandstanding in the way select committees go about selecting witnesses, interrogating them and using their evidence to put reports together.
Journal ArticleDOI

(Inequality in) Interest Group Involvement and the Legitimacy of Policy Making

TL;DR: In this article , the authors show that unequal participation between group types reduces the benefits of interest group consultation for citizens' perceived legitimacy of decision-making processes and that these legitimacy losses cannot be compensated for by policies that represent the opinion of the underrepresented groups and are even greater when policy decisions favour the over-represented groups.
Peer ReviewDOI

(Inequality in) Interest Group Involvement and the Legitimacy of Policy Making

TL;DR: In this article , the authors show that unequal participation between group types reduces the benefits of interest group consultation for citizens' perceived legitimacy of decision-making processes and that these legitimacy losses cannot be compensated for by policies that represent the opinion of the underrepresented groups and are even greater when policy decisions favour the over-represented groups.
References
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Book

Participation and democratic theory

TL;DR: In this article, the sence of political efficacy and participation in the workplace is discussed. But it is not discussed in detail, and the authors do not discuss the role of workers' self-management in this process.
Book

Democracy and Expertise: Reorienting Policy Inquiry

Frank Fischer
TL;DR: In this article, the authors discuss the relationship between technical knowledge and public responsibility in the public deliberation process and advocate for a Constructivist Theory of Contributory Expertise as a means of empowerment.
Book

Going to Extremes: How Like Minds Unite and Divide

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present three ways to prevent extremist activities: Extremism: Why and When, Movements, and Three Ways to Prevent Extremism, and Good Extremism.
MonographDOI

Democracy and Expertise

Frank Fischer
Book

Deliberative mini-publics : involving citizens in the democratic process

TL;DR: Deliberative mini-publics as discussed by the authors provides a comprehensive account of the booming phenomenon of deliberative mini publics, offers a systematic review of their variety, discusses their weaknesses, and recommends ways to make them a viable component of democracy.
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