Introduction
1. A Political Life Transformed
2. Pushing Citizens Aside
3. Losing Our Minds
4. Progressive Politics in the Pacific Northwest
5. A Crucial Test
6. The Best Argument Wins
7. Bureaucracy and Boycott
8. Back in the Wind Tunnel
9. Can Voters Deliberate?
10. Restoring Public Faith
Conclusion: What's Possible?
John Gastil (PhD, University of Wisconsin-Madison) is a professor
in the Department of Communication Arts and Sciences and Political
Science at the Pennsylvania State University, where he is a senior
scholar at the McCourtney Institute for Democracy. Gastil's
research focuses on the theory and practice of deliberative
democracy, especially how small groups of people make decisions on
public issues. The National Science Foundation has supported
his
research on the Oregon Citizens' Initiative Review, the Australian
Citizens' Parliament, jury deliberation, and cultural
cognition.
Katherine R. Knobloch (PhD, University of Washington) is an
assistant professor and the associate director of the Center for
Public Deliberation (CPD) in the Department of Communication
Studies at Colorado State University. At the CPD Knobloch trains
undergraduates in civic engagement and facilitation and works with
community partners to design and implement public forums. She
studies the development, evaluation, and impact of deliberative
public processes, with a focus on how
the emergence of deliberative institutions alters communities and
individuals. Her research has appeared in numerous academic
publications, including Politics, American Politics Research, and
the Journal of Applied
Communication Research.
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