To vote for this proposal
on Change.org,
click here
A "Department of Democracy" proposal
Imagine what it would be like to have a cabinet-level Department
of Democracy in the U.S. -- or in any other country, for that matter...
Many believe that democracy in the U.S. has been under serious
attack recently. Usual freedoms and expected government transparency
have eroded, adding to the long-term toxic influence of special
interest lobbying. Barack Obama's election is, in part, a declaration
that We the People want our democracy back. Obama has pledged to
make
serious reforms that engage the public more actively in politics
and governance. Do they go as far as we need them to go?
There is little sign -- as of this writing in November 2008 --
that Obama or his closest advisors are aware of the many innovations
of recent decades for making our democracy not only more effective
and vibrant, but even demonstrably wiser. (See THE
TAO OF DEMOCRACY and this
site's feature articles on co-intelligent democracy.)
And at the grassroots, few citizens and activists realize that
the resolution of every issue they are
passionate about depends overwhelmingly on the quality of our democratic
process. And -- if recent years are any sign -- we can't just assume
that our democracy will be healthy and make the improvements it
needs to meet 21st century challenges.
How could the Obama administration -- with our insistence and support
-- leave a legacy of innovative, empowered, wise democracy that
could not be easily undermined by special interest power, no matter
what happens to Obama himself?
A cabinet-level Department of Democracy would greatly help secure
and promote a vibrant democratic culture in the United States --
particularly one that enables the citizenry's bottom-up power to
make wise policy decisions. This would include and go beyond the
various democratic initiatives proposed in Obama's campaign statements.
Below is one vision of what such a department might cover. It is
definitely a draft. Much of the first part covers ground already
proposed by Obama. Later parts include institutions to engage citizens
in generating collective intelligence in policy-making. If you would
like to comment on this, you can do in on the
Wiser Democracy blog. If you'd actually like to offer revisions,
visit its
QuickTopic page. Just click on the numbered "comment dot"
after the line you want to comment on. (Other people's comments,
if any, can be viewed by clicking on the little glasses symbol at
the end of each line, or by clicking on the COMMENT FORUM or COMMENT
REVIEW tabs at the top of the page.)
Of course, if you would like to take some initiative in organizing
around this idea, or have any connections with Obama administration
who might be interested, either run with it or write me directly
at cii [at] igc [dot] org. The Co-Intelligence is making an effort
to share this vision with the Obama through a number of our own
avenues.
-- Tom Atlee
THE DEPARTMENT OF DEMOCRACY
Purpose: To secure
and promote a vibrant democratic culture in the United States.
The Office of Democratic Culture
Purpose: To ensure
the health of our democratic commons -- elections, freedoms, skills,
information access, and the creative marriage of unity and diversity.
* Electoral Integrity
- Voting technologies monitoring
- Disclosure of special interest electoral involvements
- Campaign finance reform
* Democratic Rights, Freedoms, Responsibilities,
and Skills
- Democracy education and skills training
- Promotion of democratic rights, freedoms, responsibilities, and
skills
- Defense of democratic rights and freedoms
* Open Information Environment
- Government information access / Freedom of information
- Robust journalism
- Web freedom and information flow among citizens
* Unity in Diversity
- Transpartisan and trans-polarization dialogues and initiatives
[e.g., Reuniting
America and Public
Conversations Project]
- Search for common ground dialogues and initiatives [e.g., Search
for Common Ground and Future
Search]
- Diversity dialogues and initiatives (multi-cultural, interracial,
interfaith, etc.)
* Democratic cultural affairs
- Art - fine, performance, and multi-media -- about or invoking
democracy
- Celebrations of democracy
- Validations of democratic heroes and projects
The Office of Government Accountability
Purpose: To help citizens manage the governments
they establish to secure their common welfare and future.
* Citizen evaluation of government
agencies and officials
* Special interest influence tracking and publicizing
* Protection of whistleblowers
The Office of Citizen Deliberation
Purpose: To access the collective wisdom of the citizenry
to guide our public activities, policies, and programs.
* Citizen state-of-the-nation (and
local state-of-the-community) councils [e.g., Wisdom
Councils and Macleans
Magazine 1991 "The People's Verdict"]
* Advisory citizen deliberations on
issues, budgets, proposals, candidates, etc. [e.g.,
Citizen Deliberative Councils
and Participatory
Budgets]
* Watershed, regional, and stakeholder
councils
* Citizen deliberation-based government institutions
[e.g., Danish
Consensus Conferences and British
Columbia's Citizens Assembly]
* Official commitment to take citizen
deliberative findings seriously [e.g., Western
Australia's Ministry of Planning and Infrastructure]
The Office of Public Participation
and Citizen Engagement
Purpose: To broadly involve
citizens with each other, their communities, and the public affairs
that matter to them.
* Public conversation programs [e.g.,
Everyday
Democracy, Conversation
Cafés, National
Issues Forums]
* Public commentaries and input on
politics and governance [e.g.,
input on public issues, online forums re proposed legislation]
* Community engagement, service, and
volunteerism
* Public affairs political activism, campaigns, and co-creative
collaborations
* Positive engagement with dissent, unrest, and crisis
[e.g., Dynamic
Facilitation, Nonviolent
Communication, Open
Space Conferences]
The Office of Democratic Innovation
Purpose: To continue the tradition
of our nation's founders in fostering democratic innovations that
serve not only this country but the world.
* Global research on existing democratic
innovations (electoral,
public
participation, citizen
engagement, etc.)
* Forums for sharing democratic innovations
* Funding for democratic experimentation, research and development
* Legislation and programs for increasingly vibrant democracy
Vote for this proposal
See also
Innovations in Democracy
Draft Platform (Initiated by Co-Intelligence Institute 2001)
Agenda
for Strengthening Our Nation's Democracy (Initiated by AmericaSpeaks
2008)
Co-Intelligent
Wise Democracy Theory and Vision
Home || What's
New || Search || Who
We Are || Co-Intelligence
|| Our Work || Projects
|| Contact || Don't
Miss || Articles || Topics
|| Books || Links
|| Subscribe || Take
Action || Donate || Legal
Notices
If you have comments about this site, email cii@igc.org.
Contents copyright © 2003-2008, all rights reserved, with
generous permissions policy (see Legal Notices)
|