
Contents
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1. Deliberative Democracy and the Ideal of Impartiality 1. Deliberative Democracy and the Ideal of Impartiality
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2. Marginalized Group Perspectives in Democratic Deliberation 2. Marginalized Group Perspectives in Democratic Deliberation
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3. Social Difference and Justice Claims: Two Problems for Deliberative Theory 3. Social Difference and Justice Claims: Two Problems for Deliberative Theory
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The Standard of Reasonableness and the Norms of Deliberation The Standard of Reasonableness and the Norms of Deliberation
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The Social and Institutional Conditions of Deliberative Legitimacy The Social and Institutional Conditions of Deliberative Legitimacy
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4. Conclusion 4. Conclusion
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Appendix Senator Carol Moseley‐Braun and the Confederate Flag Debate Appendix Senator Carol Moseley‐Braun and the Confederate Flag Debate
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5 The Uneasy Alliance of Group Representation and Deliberative Democracy
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Published:March 2000
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Abstract
One of the central aims of deliberative theory is to redeem the ideal of impartiality by defining political processes in a manner that avoids bias against valid social interests. The first section of this chapter presents the broad outlines of theories of deliberative democracy and explores the place of the concept of impartiality within them. In the next section, the different kinds of contributions that marginalized group perspectives make to democratic deliberation are explored. Next, drawing on and extending the recent feminist critiques of deliberative democracy, two interrelated challenges to deliberative theory are examined: one focused on the standard of reasonableness and the idea of reason‐giving, and the other on the contingent social and political circumstances under which marginalized‐group perspectives may sway the judgement of other citizens. Finally, the implications of these changes for our more general notions of the virtues and responsibilities of citizenship are examined.
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