Deliberative democracy in Taiwan : a deliberative systems perspective

Author(s)

    • Fan, Mei-Fang

Bibliographic Information

Deliberative democracy in Taiwan : a deliberative systems perspective

Mei-Fang Fan

(Routledge research on Taiwan / series editor, Dafydd Fell)

Routledge, 2021

Available at  / 2 libraries

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Note

Includes bibliographical references and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

This book is a pioneering analysis of the deliberative systems approach in Taiwan, extending an understanding of Taiwanese democratic politics and consolidating links between theoretical development and a practical application of deliberative practices. As a front-runner of new democracies in Asia and a relatively open society, Taiwan provides a model for deliberative governance, with a view towards institutional innovation and increasing democratisation. This book considers how components within the intricate web of micro- and macro- deliberative systems perform different functions, complement each other, and contribute both to policy change and democratic innovation. Specific cases are provided - such as participatory budgeting in Taipei City and the government-academia alliance model - to demonstrate the long-term systemic effects of mini-publics and citizen actions. In addition, the book proposes the possibility of deliberative democracy for other countries in the world, alongside various policy issues, including mini-publics, e-participation, co-governance, citizen science, negotiation mechanisms, and the deliberative practices of indigenous peoples. Deliberative Democracy in Taiwan will appeal to students and scholars of East Asian studies, Taiwanese politics, political science and social movement studies.

Table of Contents

1. Introduction: democracy as deliberative systems Part 1: Complex interactions of micro- and macro- deliberative systems 2. The Public space 3. The Empowered space 4. Transmission and accountability Part 2: Deliberative policy-making and democratic innovations 5. The democratisation of science in deliberative systems 6. Indigenous grassroots participation and the co-evolution of deliberative systems 7. Democratic innovations and participatory budgeting in deliberative systems 8. Conclusion

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