Abstract

This paper presents a participant-observation account of my experience as a randomly selected participant at a Citizens’ Assembly. I reflect on what the unique experience of ‘seeing like a citizen’ can add to accepted understandings and practices of mini-public deliberation. I find that the experience, though energising, exciting and ultimately hugely worthwhile, also upended many of my prior assumptions grounded in academic scholarship and previous experience as an observer, facilitator and organiser of such events. I draw on the experience to shed new light on the capacity of assembled citizens to: accurately reflect the concerns of the broader community; soberly digest and reflect on evidence; earnestly engage in reasoned argumentation with one another; carefully reach sophisticated or thought-through recommendations as a collective; or ultimately gain a broader sense of efficacy from their engagement as individuals. The point in making these observations is not to critique moves toward democratic innovation (or the specific Citizens’ Assembly I was a part of), but to push forward scholarship and practice to respond and adapt to these little considered challenges.

Highlights

  • John BoswellThis paper presents a participant-observation account of my experience as a randomly selected participant at a Citizens’ Assembly

  • A great deal has been written about the experiences and perceptions of citizens who participate in novel processes of mini-public deliberation

  • The process was run by consultants from the Involve Foundation, the leading democratic engagement specialist in the UK, and featured many of the standard characteristics of bestpractice mini-public deliberation

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Summary

John Boswell

This paper presents a participant-observation account of my experience as a randomly selected participant at a Citizens’ Assembly. I find that the experience, though energising, exciting and hugely worthwhile, upended many of my prior assumptions grounded in academic scholarship and previous experience as an observer, facilitator and organiser of such events. I draw on the experience to shed new light on the capacity of assembled citizens to: accurately reflect the concerns of the broader community; soberly digest and reflect on evidence; earnestly engage in reasoned argumentation with one another; carefully reach sophisticated or thought-through recommendations as a collective; or gain a broader sense of efficacy from their engagement as individuals. The point in making these observations is neither to critique the Citizens’ Assembly I was part of (which was exemplary of best practice), nor to critique moves toward deliberative innovation more broadly (which I largely support).

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