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Journal ArticleDOI

Participatory Adaptation in Contemporary Parliamentary Committees in Australia

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TLDR
In this article, the authors discuss the findings of empirical research that examined how and why parliamentary committees are adapting their public engagement practices and identify four common participatory adaptations including: employing new ways to promote and publicise committee work; using digital interfaces to collect and manage public input; increasing accessibility to affected publics; and building participatory capacity of committee members and affected public.
Abstract
Contemporary parliamentary institutions operate in a dynamic participatory and digital context. Recent studies demonstrate that many parliaments are rethinking how they reach out to the public in this changing environment. This article discusses the findings of empirical research that examined how and why parliamentary committees are adapting their public engagement practices. Parliamentary staff in six Australian parliaments were interviewed about the forms and extent of participatory adaptation in their committee systems. The research finds while committees continue to rely heavily on standard practices, such as written submissions and formal public hearings, many are adapting the way their public outreach and engagement practices. Four common participatory adaptations are identified including: employing new ways to promote and publicise committee work; using digital interfaces to collect and manage public input; increasing accessibility to affected publics; and building participatory capacity of committee members and affected publics. The article argues that in an era of significant political and digital change, parliamentary committees need to adopt a more strategic approach to participatory reform to better connect with, and represent, diverse publics.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Can independent regulatory agencies mend Europe’s democracy? The case of the European Medicines Agency’s public hearing on Valproate:

TL;DR: In 2017, the European Medicines Agency staged the first effort at democratic innovation within transnational European Union institutions directly influencing the transnational regulation of medicin... as mentioned in this paper, which was the start of a new era of democratic innovation in health care.
Book ChapterDOI

Whose Space? A Critical Approach to Increasing Public Engagement with the Australian Space Sector

Sumen Rai
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors argue that attempts to increase public engagement, including attracting a diverse workforce for the sector, will not succeed unless the dominant discourses which are being reproduced through public engagement activities (including those around race, class, and gender) are examined critically for hidden exclusionary messages and practices.
Journal ArticleDOI

Democratic Innovation in the Scottish Parliament: An Evaluation of Committee Mini-Publics

TL;DR: The intention of the Scottish Parliament was to make it a more innovative, participatory, and deliberative legislature than the UK had experienced before as discussed by the authors, and this intention was achieved by making it more participatory and participatory.
MonographDOI

Parliament: A Question of Management

TL;DR: For centuries scholars and practitioners have studied parliament and its potential reform from an institutional perspective as mentioned in this paper , but few authors have addressed in depth the internal relationships among parliamentary actors, their competing beliefs and their influence on parliament's effectiveness.
References
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Book

Communities of Practice: Learning, Meaning, and Identity

TL;DR: Identity in practice, modes of belonging, participation and non-participation, and learning communities: a guide to understanding identity in practice.
Book

Citizen Politics: Public Opinion and Political Parties in Advanced Industrial Democracies

TL;DR: In this article, the authors discuss the nature of mass belief, how we participate in politics, and who participates in the political process, and the social bases of party support, and discuss attitudes and voting choices.
Book

Ruling The Void: The Hollowing Of Western Democracy

Peter Mair
TL;DR: Ruling the Void as discussed by the authors analyzes democratic trends over the last few decades, in Europe and America, and argues that there are two complementary processes at work, popular disengagement and the withdrawal of political elites from a representative role, are both contributing to the death of the political party and with it the characteristic form of Western democracy.
Book

Republic.com 2.0

TL;DR: Sunstein this paper argues that the real question is how to avoid "information cocoons" and to ensure that the unrestricted choices made possible by technology do not undermine democracy, and proposes new remedies and reforms to help democracy avoid the perils, and realize the promise of the Internet.
Book

Democratic Innovations: Designing Institutions for Citizen Participation

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors draw together evidence from a variety of democratic innovations from around the world, including participatory budgeting in Brazil, Citizens’ Assemblies on Electoral Reform in Canada, direct legislation in California and Switzerland and emerging experiments in e-democracy.
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