Deliberative Democratic prospects? International and Australian experience
Event Information
About this Event
DETAILS
Date: December 5 (Thursday)
Time: 5:30 pm for a 6 pm start
Venue: Members Dining Room 1, Old Parliament House
Registration is essential.
ABOUT
All over the world, citizens and decision-makers increasingly turn to deliberative democracy to break national political deadlocks. From the Irish constitutional convention to the French Convention on Climate Change to Hong Kong’s residents calling for a citizens’ assembly, there is a growing appetite for forums designed for ordinary citizens to come together, learn about complex issues, and exchange reasons to think about solutions for the common good.
Can it happen here? Australia has been an early adopter, but the ill-fated Citizens’ Assembly on a carbon tax marks a singular failure thus far to scale deliberative practices to the federal level.
This hour-long panel discussion offers lessons from OECD countries and the Global South and invites reflections about the role, opportunities and limits of these national forums in Australia.
PANELLISTS
Claudia Chwalisz, OECD
Nicole Curato, Centre for Deliberative Democracy and Global Governance, University of Canberra
Beth Slatyer, Canberra Alliance for Participatory Democracy
Damian Carmichael, Department of Industry, Science and Innovation
MODERATOR
Simon Niemeyer
HOST
Centre for Deliberative Democracy and Global Governance
University of Canberra
CONTACT
Email: delibdem@canberra.edu.au
Twitter: @DelDemUcan
Website: deldem.canberra.edu.au