The Lottery as a Democratic Institution
Citation:
Gil Delannoi, Oliver Dowlen, and Peter Stone, The Lottery as a Democratic Institution, The Policy Institute, July, 2013Download Item:
Abstract:
Proponents of random selection in politics have identified at least eight potential contributions that the practice can make to the political process. These are: descriptive representation, prevention of corruption and/or domination, mitigation of elite-level conflict, control of political outliers, distributive justice, participation, rotation, and psychological benefits. We argue that random selection makes its strongest contribution when it selects citizens to function as impartial guardians of the political system. This means selecting citizens at random, not to make policy or enact laws, but to protect the integrity of the political process?by making and enforcing legislative ethics standards, for example. Random selection?s strongest contribution is to the prevention of corruption and/or domination; the fact that it enables descriptive representation, while undeniably true, is less important to politics.
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Trinity College Dublin (TCD)
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http://people.tcd.ie/pstoneDescription:
PUBLISHED
Author: Stone, Peter
Sponsor:
Trinity College Dublin (TCD)Publisher:
The Policy InstituteType of material:
ReportCollections
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Full text availableSubject:
lottery, democracy, representation, corruption, random selection, sortitionMetadata
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