Listening for Democracy: Recognition, Representation, Reconciliation

by Andrew Dobson

2014 · Oxford University Press · 224 pages

Although much prized in daily conversation, good listening has been almost completely ignored in that form of political conversation we know as democracy. Here Andrew Dobson examines the reasons why so little attention has been paid to the listening aspect of democratic conversation, explores the role that listening might play in democracy, and outlines some institutional changes that could be made to make listening more central to democratic processes.

The focus on listening amounts to a reorientation of democratic theory and practice, providing novel perspectives on enduring themes in democracy such as recognition, representation, power and legitimacy — as well as some new ones, such as silence. Eschewing the pessimism of the ‘realist’ turn in democratic theory, Dobson shows how attention to listening can breathe life into the democratic project and help us to realize some of its objectives.

Drawing on practical examples and multidisciplinary sources, Dobson shows how listening should be at the heart of representative and deliberative democracy rather than peripheral to them. He develops a notion of dialogic democracy based on structured, ‘apophatic’, listening, and meets the challenge of showing how this could be incorporated into parliamentary democracies. What should we be listening out for? Dobson addresses the question of political noise and uses the idea of recognition to develop an account of politics that takes us beyond the Aristotelian speaking being towards a Deweyan notion of the ‘event’ around which publics coalesce. [Text Source: Oxford University Press]

 
 
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The Handbook of Listening