scholarly journals Pirates in Wonderland: Liquid Democracy has Bicriteria Guarantees

2021 ◽  
pp. 391-405
Author(s):  
Jonathan A. Noel ◽  
Mashbat Suzuki ◽  
Adrian Vetta
Keyword(s):  
Author(s):  
Julia Schwanholz ◽  
Lavinia Zinser
Keyword(s):  

Author(s):  
Julia Schwanholz ◽  
Lavinia Zinser
Keyword(s):  

2020 ◽  
pp. 105-127
Author(s):  
Hélène Landemore

This chapter determines whether non-elected bodies with intrinsic democratic credentials, such as mini-publics and self-selected representative groups like social movements, also have the legitimacy to make binding decisions for the rest of the polity. It returns to the question of political legitimacy and proposes that the democratic legitimacy of representatives comes not from individual consent, as eighteenth-century theory of legitimacy understood it, but a plurality of factors, including majoritarian authorization as a necessary but insufficient condition. Majoritarian authorization need not be of directly individual representatives but, instead, of the selection mechanism through which they are selected. The chapter then considers the circumstances under which self-selected representatives can acquire a minimal form of democratic legitimacy even in the absence of any explicit majoritarian authorization of the selection mechanism or of the individual persons thereby selected. It also looks at the problems posed by potential conflicts of legitimacy between different democratic representatives and assesses how these problems may be solved. Finally, the chapter returns to electoral representation and asks whether it could be sufficiently democratized through so-called liquid democracy schemes, which would create a system labelled as “liquid representation.”


2013 ◽  
pp. 519-525
Author(s):  
Roland A. Kohn ◽  
Mike Friedrichsen
Keyword(s):  

2013 ◽  
pp. 499-515
Author(s):  
Jennifer Paetsch ◽  
Daniel Reichert
Keyword(s):  

Author(s):  
Ben Abramowitz ◽  
Nicholas Mattei

We introduce Flexible Representative Democracy (FRD), a novel hybrid of Representative Democracy (RD) and Direct Democracy (DD), in which voters can alter the issue-dependent weights of a set of elected representatives. In line with the literature on Interactive Democracy, our model allows the voters to actively determine the degree to which the system is direct versus representative. However, unlike Liquid Democracy, FRD uses strictly non-transitive delegations, making delegation cycles impossible, preserving privacy and anonymity, and maintaining a fixed set of accountable elected representatives. We present FRD and analyze it using a computational approach with issues that are independent, binary, and symmetric; we compare the outcomes of various democratic systems using Direct Democracy with majority voting and full participation as an ideal baseline. We find through theoretical and empirical analysis that FRD can yield significant improvements over RD for emulating DD with full participation.


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