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Addressing the citizenship and democratic deficits: the potential of deliberative democracy for public administration

By: Nanatcjo. Tina.
Material type: materialTypeLabelArticlePublisher: 2010Description: p.376-399.Subject(s): Public administration In: American Review of Public AdministrationSummary: This article reviews and synthesizes diverse streams of literature to assess the potential of deliberative democracy for American public administration. It asserts that the field should refocus its attention on the role of citizens in the work of government to help address the pervasive citizenship and democratic deficits in the United States. American public administration has an obligation to address these deficits because (a) it is required to do so by democratic ethos, (b) it has contributed to the deficits with its widespread embrace of bureaucratic ethos, and (c) it must find ways to effectively engage citizens within modern network and collaborative governance structures. This article identifies delib erative democracy as one potential method to help fulfill these obligations and explains how deliberative processes may help address the deficit problems. the article concludes by identifying a preliminary research agenda for exploring the potential of deliberative democracy for public administration. - Reproduced.
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Articles Articles Indian Institute of Public Administration
Volume no: 40, Issue no: 4 Available AR88249

This article reviews and synthesizes diverse streams of literature to assess the potential of deliberative democracy for American public administration. It asserts that the field should refocus its attention on the role of citizens in the work of government to help address the pervasive citizenship and democratic deficits in the United States. American public administration has an obligation to address these deficits because (a) it is required to do so by democratic ethos, (b) it has contributed to the deficits with its widespread embrace of bureaucratic ethos, and (c) it must find ways to effectively engage citizens within modern network and collaborative governance structures. This article identifies delib erative democracy as one potential method to help fulfill these obligations and explains how deliberative processes may help address the deficit problems. the article concludes by identifying a preliminary research agenda for exploring the potential of deliberative democracy for public administration. - Reproduced.

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