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Deliberation

107 bytes added, 09:51, 1 December 2012
Justification of Deliberation
Deliberation systems have three main functions, according to the the writers of Deliberative systems<ref>Parkinson, J., & Mansbridge, J. (Eds.). (2012). Deliberative Systems: Deliberative Democracy at the Large Scale, Cambridge University Press. p.10-12</ref>.
# '''Epistemic''' - Good deliberation should produce well corroborated and inter-subjective [[SON]]. It should produced unbiased decisions, and eliminate as much as possible [[group thinking]]. The decision by the citizens will be well informed.
# '''Ethic''' - Good deliberation will take the needs of all members and will produce optimal inclusive solutions. A solution that will enable all members to feel that they are benefiting from being a member in the group.
# '''Democratic''' - People will engage shared challenges, will recognize and understand on other citizens, and will be responsible for the acts taken by the state. This will make the citizens influential, involved and responsible, and will strength [[social capital]]. It will strive to get as much inclusive solution so that everybody will feel that he is been concerned as important and equal citizen.