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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Procedures and Methods for Cross-community Online Deliberation

Cyril Velikanov
- 21 Sep 2010 - 
- Vol. 2, Iss: 2, pp 170-183
TLDR
In this article, the authors introduce a model of self-regulated mass online deliberation, and apply it to cross-border deliberation involving translation of contributions between participating languages, and then to a context of cross-community online deliberations for dispute resolution, e.g. between opposing ethnic or religious communities.
Abstract
In this paper we introduce our model of self-regulated mass online deliberation, and apply it to a context of cross-border deliberation involving translation of contributions between participating languages, and then to a context of cross-community online deliberation for dispute resolution, e.g. between opposing ethnic or religious communities. In such a cross-border or cross-community context, online deliberation should preferably progress as a sequence of segmented phases each followed by a combining phase. In a segmented phase, each community deliberates separately, and selects their best contributions for being presented to all other communities. Selection is made by using our proposed mechanism of mutual moderation and appraisal of contributions by participants themselves. In the subsequent combining phase, the selected contributions are translated (by volunteering or randomly selected participants among those who have specified appropriate language skills) and presented to target segments for further appraisal and commenting. Our arguments in support of the proposed mutual moderation and appraisal procedures remain mostly speculative, as the whole subject of mass online self-regulatory deliberation still remains largely unexplored, and there exist no practical realisation of it .

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Dissertation

Public participation in government: the place of e-participation in the City of Cape Town-Western Cape

Laban Bagui
TL;DR: Thesis submitted in fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Magister Technologiae: Information Technology in the Faculty of Informatics and Design at the Cape Peninsula University of Technology, 2013 as discussed by the authors.

Discussing Public Policy Online The case of the European Commission’s Digital Agenda Assembly 2012 online platform

TL;DR: In this article, the case of the European Commission's Digital Agenda online engagement platform and how one of the ten discussion groups on the platform facilitated public policy deliberation was analyzed. And the results of this study firstly give inputs regarding how policy discussions take place online and secondly raises some concerns over the actual deliberativeness of the online discussion on the Platform.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Can Deliberative Governance Become Inclusive

C. Velikanov
TL;DR: It is argued that, regarding such a demanding activity as is political deliberation, trying to achieve equal and uniform inclusion makes no sense, and inclusiveness should be understood as providing every individual with as much possibilities and help, as he/she is capable and willing to make use of.
Book ChapterDOI

Mass Online Deliberation in Participatory Policy-Making—Part II

TL;DR: The task is to provide an MOD blueprint for an ICT-based MOD platform that almost immediately lends itself to system implementation.
Posted Content

System-Generated Requests for Rewriting Proposals.

TL;DR: An online deliberation system using mutual evaluation in order to collaboratively develop solutions using proposals to cluster proposals according to their ideas and to find poorly written proposals candidates for rewriting is presented.
References
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Book ChapterDOI

Deliberative Democracy: Deliberation as Discussion

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors consider six major reasons or arguments for discussing a matter before reaching a decision on what to do, and suggest that spelling out answers is a valuable exercise for anyone interested in the more academic idea of deliberative democracy.
Book

Motivating political morality

TL;DR: In this article, the authors discuss the moral and political aspects of the franchise, including the duty of fair play, the right to reciprocity, and the right of free speech.
Book ChapterDOI

Internet, Discourses, and Democracy

TL;DR: It is the very purpose of the DEMOS project to exploit novel forms of computer mediated communication in order to support democracy on-line (‘e-democracy’) and to enhance citizen participation in modern societies.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Requirements and tools for an efficient eParticipation

TL;DR: The design provides for maintaining orderly and productive deliberation even within such an "overcrowded" online forum and suggests a number of scenarios for introducing eParticipation mechanisms into traditional democratic structures.
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