E-democracy
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E-democracy, a portmanteau of the words "electronic" and "democracy," comprises the use of electronic communications technologies such as the Internet in enhancing democratic processes within a democratic republic or representative democracy. It is a political development still in its infancy, as well as the subject of much debate and activity within government, civic-oriented groups and societies around the world.
The term is both descriptive and prescriptive. Typically, the kinds of enhancements sought by proponents of e-democracy are framed in terms of making processes more accessible; making citizen participation in public policy decision-making more expansive and direct so as to enable broader influence in policy outcomes as more individuals involved could yield smarter policies; increasing transparency and accountability; and keeping the government closer to the consent of the governed, thereby increasing its political legitimacy. E-democracy includes within its scope electronic voting, but has a much wider span than this single aspect of the democratic process.
E-democracy is also sometimes referred to as cyberdemocracy or digital democracy. Prior to 1994, when the term e-democracy was coined in the midst of online civic efforts in Minnesota, the term teledemocracy was prevalent.
Practical issues with e-democracy
The challenge for governments and bureaucracies, as well as for individuals and groups, is to develop tools and adapt processes so as to meet the aspirations of e-democracy. There are numerous practical and theoretical issues which have yet to be scoped, understood or solved, and work is underway in many democracies on a wide and diverse set of experiments and trials to test approaches and techniques.[citation needed]
One major obstacle to the success of e-democracy is that of citizen identification. For secure elections and other secure citizen-to-government transactions, citizens must have some form of identification that preserves privacy and maybe also one which could be used in internet forums. The need to allow anonymous posting while at the same time giving certain contributors extra status can be solved using certain cryptographic methods. In the United Kingdom there is much contention about the introduction of the British national identity card.
Another obstacle is that there are many vested interests that would be harmed by a more direct democracy. Amongst these are politicians, media moguls and some interests in big business and trade unions. These organizations may be expected to oppose meaningful application of e-democracy concepts.
Robert's Rules of Order notes that a deliberative assembly requires an environment of simultaneous aural communication; otherwise "situations unprecedented in parliamentary law may arise."[1] Even in a teleconference or videoconference, adjustments must be made in reference to how recognition is to be sought and the floor obtained.[2] The common parliamentary law has not yet developed standardized procedures for conducting business electronically.
Internet as political medium
The Internet is viewed as a platform and delivery medium for tools that help to eliminate some of the distance constraints in direct democracy. Technical media for e-democracy can be expected to extend to mobile technologies such as cellphones.
There are important differences between previous communication media and the Internet that are relevant to the Internet as a political medium. Most importantly the Internet is a many-to-many communication medium where radio and television, which broadcast few-to-many, and telephones broadcast few-to-few, are not. Also, the Internet has a much greater computational capacity allowing strong encryption and database management, which is important in community information access and sharing, deliberative democracy and electoral fraud prevention. Further, people use the Internet to collaborate or meet in an asynchronous manner — that is, they do not have to be physically gathered at the same moment to get things accomplished. The lower cost of information-exchange on the Internet, as well as the high-level of reach that the content potentially has makes the Internet an attractive medium for political information, particularly amongst social interest groups and parties with lower budgets. For example, environmental or social issue groups may find the Internet an easier mechanism to increase awareness of their issues compared to traditional media outlets, such as television or newspapers, which require heavy financial investment. Due to all these factors, the Internet has the potential to take over certain traditional media of political communication such as the telephone, the television, newspapers and the radio.
Benefits and disadvantages
Contemporary technologies such as electronic mailing lists, peer-to-peer networks, collaborative software, wikis, Internet forums and blogs are clues to and early potential solutions for some aspects of e-democracy. Equally, these technologies are bellwethers of some of the issues associated with the territory, such as the inability to sustain new initiatives or protect against identity theft, information overload and vandalism.
Some traditional objections to direct democracy are argued to apply to e-democracy, such as the potential for governance to tend towards populism and demagoguery. More practical objections exist, not least in terms of the digital divide between those with access to the media of e-democracy (mobile phones and Internet connections) and those without, as well as the opportunity cost of expenditure on e-democracy innovations.
Electronic democracy can also carry the benefit of reaching out to youth, as a mechanism to increase youth voter turnout in elections and raising awareness amongst youth. With the consistent decline of voter turnout e-democracy and electronic voting mechanisms can help revert that trend. Youth, in particular, have seen a significant drop in turnout in most industrialized nations, including Canada, the United States and the United Kingdom. The use of electronic political participation mechanism may appear more familiar to youth, and as a result, garner more participation by youths who would otherwise find it inconvenient to vote using the more traditional methods. Electronic democracy can help improve democratic participation, reduce civic illiteracy and voter apathy and become a useful asset for political discussion, education, debate and participation.[3]
Electronic direct democracy
Electronic direct democracy is a form of direct democracy in which the Internet and other electronic communications technologies are used to ameliorate the bureaucracy involved with referendums. Many advocates think that also important to this notion are technological enhancements to the deliberative process. Electronic direct democracy is sometimes referred to as EDD (many other names are used for what is essentially the same concept).
EDD requires electronic voting or some way to register votes on issues electronically. As in any direct democracy, in an EDD citizens would have the right to vote on legislation, author new legislation, and recall representatives (if any representatives are preserved).
EDD as a system is not fully implemented anywhere in the world although several initiatives are currently forming. Ross Perot was for a time a prominent advocate of EDD when he advocated "electronic town halls" during his 1992 and 1996 Presidential campaigns in the United States. Switzerland, already partially governed by direct democracy, is making progress towards such a system.[4] Several attempts at open source governance are in nascent stages, most notably the Metagovernment project. Senator On-Line, an Australian political party running for the Senate in the 2007 federal elections proposes to institute an EDD system so that Australians decide which way the senators vote on each and every bill.[citation needed]
Liquid democracy, or direct democracy with delegable proxy, would allow citizens to choose a proxy to vote on their behalf while retaining the right to cast their own vote on legislation.[5] The voting and the appointment of proxies could be done electronically. The proxies could even form proxy chains, in which if A appoints B and B appoints C, and neither A and B vote on a proposed bill but C does, C's vote will count for all three of them. Citizens could also rank their proxies in order of preference, so that if their first choice proxy fails to vote, their vote can be cast by their second-choice proxy. The topology of this system would mirror the structure of the Internet itself, in which routers may have a primary and alternate server from which to request information.
e-Democracy websites
International
- UNdemocracy.com - clearer access to United Nations documents and records
Africa
- Sokwanele - mapping interference and irregularities in the 2008 presidential, parliament and senate elections in Zimbabwe.
Europe
- How MEPs work - tracking how members of the European Parliament vote.
- FarmSubsidy.org - European Union farm subsidy payment details
United Kingdom
- TheyWorkForYou — tracks speeches and activities of UK Members of Parliament, including presenting an accessible version of Hansard
- The Public Whip - see voting records of UK parliament
- Vote Match - a quiz that voters can fill in to match their views with the views of the election candidates
- WriteToThem.com — facilitates contacting elected representatives at all levels of UK government (formerly FaxYourMP)
- HearFromYourMP.com — a site encouraging MPs to email their constituents.
- Election Maps - see the extent of electoral constituencies against various scales of mapping background. Users can select from a variety of administrative and electoral boundaries that can be overlaid on the mapping.
- Consultation Watch - aims to raise public awareness of Government consultations, encourage people to respond to consultations and share the expertise and insight of stakeholders.
- Journalisted - website of the Media Standards Trust enabling monitoring of particular journalists
- DowningStreetSays.com — searchable text of the Prime Minister's Official Spokesman's briefings.
- Downing Street e-Petitions — a petitions website for 10 Downing Street.
- FixMyStreet — a map based application facilitating citizens informing their local authority of problems needing their attention, such as broken streetlamps etc.
- GroupsNearYou — a map-based application to find local community groups in the UK
- WhatDoTheyKnow — a site designed to help people find out (through Freedom of Information requests) what the British government (at all levels) is doing.
- Comment on This - site designed to make it easier to have detailed discussions around the contents of major public documents.
References
- ^ RONR (10th ed.), p. 2).
- ^ RONR (10th ed.), p. 483).
- ^ Canadian Parties in Transition, 3rd Edition. Gagnon and Tanguay (eds). Chapter 20 - Essay by Milner
- ^ Electronic Voting in Switzerland
- ^ Proxy Proposal
See also
- Democracy (varieties)
- Demoex - Democracy Experiment
- Direct democracy
- E-participation
- eGovernment
- Electronic civil disobedience
- eRulemaking
- Emergent democracy
- Hacktivism
- Internet activism
- Media democracy
- Online consultation
- Online deliberation
- Open politics
- Open source governance
- Participatory democracy
- Parliamentary informatics
- Radical transparency
- Second Superpower
- Smart mob
External links
- access2democracy NGO - E-democracy: from theory to practice.
- Council of Europe's work on e-Democracy - including the work of the Ad Hoc Committee on e-Democracy IWG established in 2006
- Democracies Online Newswire (Do-Wire) - Announcements from Steven Clift about e-democracy, e-government, politics online and more.
- e-DC (e-Democracy Centre) - Academic Research Centre on electronic democracy. Directed by Alexander H. Trechsel, e-DC is a joint-venture between the University of Geneva's c2d, the European University Institute in Florence and the Oxford University's OII.
- IPOL - a portal on Internet and politics — Website including primary and secondary research resources related to online participation, e-democracy and the use of the Internet by parliaments and assemblies; edited by Stephen Ward, Wainer Lusoli and Rachel Gibson.
- Institute for Politics Democracy and the Internet
- Interactive Democracy - notes on how technology can improve democracy.
- ICELE - International Centre of Excellence for Local eDemocracy, a UK driven international project exploring tools, products, research and learning for local e-democracy sponsored by Communities and Local Government Programme Director for Local e-Democracy and e-Participation, Dylan Jeffrey
- Publicus.Net - Steven Clift's articles, e-democracy resource links, and special section on e-government and democracy.
- Financial Democracy, a form of E-Democracy