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Water Cooler Democracy: A Review of Hearing the Other Side: Deliberative versus Participatory Democracy by Diana C. Mutz
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Gregg L. Frazer
Published/Copyright:
April 3, 2008
Diana Mutz's Hearing the Other Side is intended to be an empirical study of the tension between deliberative democracy and participatory democracy. While she concludes that the factors which promote one discourage the other, there are significant flaws in her approach to the question which call her conclusions into question.
Keywords: deliberative democracy; participatory democracy
Published Online: 2008-4-3
©2011 Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co. KG, Berlin/Boston
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Articles in the same Issue
- Article
- A Collapse of the Campaign Finance Regime?
- From Bad to Worse: The Unraveling of the Campaign Finance System
- Rethinking the Campaign Finance Agenda
- Decline and Fall? The Roberts Court and the Challenges to Campaign Finance Law
- Rolling in the Dough: The Continued Surge in Individual Contributions to Presidential Candidates and Party Committees
- Internet Fundraising in 2008: A New Model?
- Political Equality, the Internet, and Campaign Finance Regulation
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- Whither Republican Women: The Growing Partisan Gap among Women in Congress
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- Bridging Divides through Political Talk: Admirable Goal or Harmful Folly?
- Water Cooler Democracy: A Review of Hearing the Other Side: Deliberative versus Participatory Democracy by Diana C. Mutz
- Review of Richard Skinner's More than Money: Interest Group Action in Congressional Elections
- Review of Samples, The Fallacy of Campaign Finance Reform and La Raja, Small Change: Money, Political Parties, and Campaign Finance Reform