Boosting, not replacing

Online deliberation tools in a face-to-face student citizens’ assembly

Auteurs

  • Emilie Frenkiel Université Paris-Est Créteil
  • Chanez Delorme Humans Matter

Résumé

This article investigates the cautious digitalization of a deliberative process that had taken place face-to-face and re-evaluates the benefits of online deliberation in the post-COVID era, where hybrid processes have multiplied. Our study focuses on how specific online deliberation tools can be used to complement offline deliberation. Certain functionalities can be combined with face-to-face deliberation to expand the range of deliberative tactics and enable deliberative processes to proceed with features that are less convenient offline. The analysis focuses on two software programmes specifically designed to facilitate high-quality online deliberation: Decidim and pol.is. The authors used these tools in the context of a university mini-public – a student citizens’ assembly at Université Paris Est Créteil – which they helped organize. These tools provided features that advanced the various stages of the deliberative process, which took place mainly offline. This study explains how these tools, based on their affordances and use of their functionalities in designing the deliberative process, boosted face-to-face deliberation by enhancing the pedagogy, inclusivity, comprehensiveness, transparency, continuity, legitimacy, and accountability of the process, without resulting in online deliberation
per se.

Bibliographies de l'auteur

Emilie Frenkiel, Université Paris-Est Créteil

Emilie Frenkiel is an associate professor at the Université Paris-Est Créteil, a researcher at LIPHA research institute and vice-director of the Institut d'études politiques Fontainebleau - UPEC. She initiated the student citizens' assembly and network of deliberating universities UNIDELIB.

Chanez Delorme, Humans Matter

Chanez Delorme is Project Manager of Innovation in Cognitive and Behavioral Sciences at Humans Matter in Paris. Previously, she was Research & Development Officer at Open Source Politics, where she implemented the Pol.is tool, facilitated live Pol.is sessions, and managed deliberation processes.

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Publiée

2025-01-15