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Emancipation cannot be programmed: blind spots of algorithmic facilitation in online deliberation
Journal article   Peer reviewed

Emancipation cannot be programmed: blind spots of algorithmic facilitation in online deliberation

Contemporary politics, Vol.26(5), pp.531-552
2020

Abstract

algorithms artificial intelligence automation Deliberative democracy mini-publics online deliberation Political science Technological ethics Civics and citizenship Internet, digital and social media
Challenges in attaining deliberative democratic ideals - such as inclusion, authenticity and consequentiality - in wider political systems have driven the development of artificially-designed citizen deliberation. These designed deliberations, however, are expert-driven. Whereas they may achieve 'deliberativeness', their design and implementation are undemocratic and limit deliberative democracy's emancipatory goals. This is relevant in respect to the role of facilitation. In online deliberation, algorithms and artificial actors replace the central role of human facilitators. The detachment of such designed settings from wider contexts is particularly troubling from a democratic perspective. Digital technologies in online deliberation are not developed in a manner consistent with democratic ideals and are not being amenable to scrutiny by citizens. I discuss the theoretical and the practical blind spots of algorithmic facilitation. Based on these, I present recommendations to democratise the design and implementation of online deliberation with a focus on chatbots as facilitators.

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UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)

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#10 Reduced Inequalities

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Citation topics
6 Social Sciences
6.27 Political Science
6.27.157 Political Representation
Web Of Science research areas
Political Science
ESI research areas
Social Sciences, general
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