Citizens' Assemblies

Many democracies around the world have been plagued by various disturbing developments. Some of the most prominent are an increased political and societal polarisation, decreasing trust of citizens in the institutions of representative democracy and democracy as the form of the government itself, as well as decreasing voter turnout. Therefore, to ensure their longevity, democracies must reinvigorate themselves. We believe that the democratisation of democracy and a more comprehensive and frequent involvement of the citizens in the will-formation and decision-making processes by means of citizens’ assemblies could be a part of the solution. This innovative participation form offers the potential

  • to strengthen citizens’ relationship with the democratic system and thus their trust in institutions;
  • to reinforce the feeling of emancipation and thus work to counter political disenchantment, while generating new output variants and thus a new democratic legitimacy;
  • to counteract mounting political and social polarisation by addressing controversial and polarising issues.

Find out more in our study below, co-written by Prof. Wolfgang Merkel, Prof. Andreas Schäfer and Dr. Filip Milačić. Available both in English and German.

Publication

Citizens' assemblies

Merkel, Wolfgang; Milačić, Filip; Schäfer, Andreas

Citizens' assemblies

New ways to democratize democracy
Vienna, 2021

Download publication (400 KB, PDF-File)


Publikation

Bürgerräte

Merkel, Wolfgang; Milačić, Filip; Schäfer, Andreas

Bürgerräte

Neue Wege zur Demokratisierung der Demokratie
Vienna, 2021

Download publication (420 KB, PDF-File)


News and Activities around Citizens' Assemblies

12.01.2022

Democratization of Democracy: The Conference on the Future of Europe as a Role Model?

Op-Ed • by Filip Milačić

In the recent years there has been much talk about the erosion of liberal democracy, which has been manifested in various disturbing developments: from decreasing trust of citizens in the institutions of representative democracy and decreasing voter turnout to the growing political and societal polarization and the rise of the populist radical Right that promotes ethnic nationalism and attacks civil rights and individual liberties.

Against the backdrop of these developments, the European Union has launched the Conference on the Future of Europe (CoFoE), one of the most ambitious democratic innovations in their history. The CoFoE is a Europe-wide citizen assembly that is tasked to deliberate about solutions for Europe's most pressing challenges such as the Covid-19 pandemic, climate change and social justice.

Find out whether the CoFoE lives up to the ambitions it sets to reinvogerote European democracy from a theoretical point of view in the Euractiv Op-Ed by FES Democracy of the Future researcher Filip Milačić below.

Read contribution:
Democratization of Democracy: The Conference on the Future of Europe as a Role Model?  (euractiv.com)