POLITICS & SOCIETY FUNG and WRIGHT
Deepening Democracy: Innovations in
Empowered Participatory Governance
ARCHON FUNG
ERIK OLIN WRIGHT
As the tasks of the state have become more complex and the size of polities
larger and more heterogeneous, the institutional forms of liberal democracy
developed in the nineteenth century—representative democracy plus techno-
bureaucratic administration—seem increasingly ill suited to the novel problems
we face in the twenty-first century. “Democracy” as a way of organizing the state
has come to be narrowly identified with territorially based competitive elections
of political leadership for legislative and executive offices. Yet, increasingly, this
mechanism of political representation seems ineffective in accomplishing the
central ideals of democratic politics: facilitating active political involvement of
the citizenry, forging political consensus through dialogue, devising and imple-
menting public policies that ground a productive economy and healthy society,
and, in more radical egalitarian versions of the democratic ideal, ensuring that all
citizens benefit from the nation’s wealth.
The Right of the political spectrum has taken advantage of this apparent
decline in the effectiveness of democratic institutions to escalate its attack on the
very idea of the affirmative state. The only way the state can play a competent and
constructive role, the Right typically argues, is to dramatically reduce the scope
and depth of its activities. In addition to the traditional moral opposition of liber-
tarians to the activist state on the grounds that it infringes on property rights and
We wish to thank all of the participants of the Real Utopias V: Experiments in Empowered Deliber-
ative Democracy conference, held in Madison, Wisconsin (January 2000), for valuable comments on a
previous version of this article. We would also like to thank our many friends and collaborators in this
ongoing endeavor to discover more democratic governance forms, especially Joshua Cohen, Bradley
Karkkainen, Dara O’Rourke, and Charles Sabel.
POLITICS & SOCIETY, Vol. 29 No. 1, March 2001 5-41
© 2001 Sage Publications, Inc.
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