Participatory Democracy
stresses the role that participation plays
in the development of character
sees participation as the key to the transformation of people from
individual (private) to citizen (public)
Carole Pateman, a noted political theorist argues that participation must be
more than the protective adjunct to the institutional arrangements of democratic
systems. She makes three key arguments:
1) political participation has a psychological effect on those who participate
since by making decisions, citizens develop a sense of responsibility for
individual, social, and political action
2) collective decisions are more easily accepted than individual decisions.
Since most decisions are "trade offs" if one has participated in the
decision they are more likely to see the relationship between the benefit gain
and the sacrifice made
3) participation increases the feelings of community and a sense of integration
in the community--a sense of identity and group consciousness.
Thus, for classical or participatory theorists, the key function of
participation is educational (creating citizens), not instrumental
(regime stability)
Thus, classical or participatory theorists argue that
plural theorists have fundamentally revised and altered the normative
significance of democracy!!!
In part, they argue that representative democracy is really not democracy!!!!!!!