Communicative Democracy: A Version of Deliberative Democracy

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Communicative Democracy: A Version of Deliberative Democracy
Cortina, Adela

From the journal ARSP Archiv für Rechts- und Sozialphilosophie, Volume 96, June 2010, issue 2

Published by Franz Steiner Verlag

article, 10787 Words
Original language: English
ARSP 2010, pp 133-150
https://doi.org/10.25162/arsp-2010-0013

Abstract

The nineteen-nineties saw the so-called “deliberative turn in democracy”, which was taken up by a large number of democracy theorists. This paper sets out: 1) to analyse why this turn took place; 2) to classify the different proposals of deliberative democracy into two models (D1 and D2), in view of their epistemological effectiveness (model D1 assumes the pattern of Rawls’ political liberalism, and model D2, Habermas’ Theory of Discourse); 3) to display the superiority of D2 over D1; 4) to point out certain shortcomings in Habermas’ deliberative-discursive politics and to propose a model of democracy which will enable these to be improved on, to be known as “communicative democracy”.

Author information

Adela Cortina