Cart
Free US shipping over $10
Proud to be B-Corp

Do-It-Yourself Democracy Caroline W. Lee (Associate Professor of Sociology, Associate Professor of Sociology, Lafayette College)

Do-It-Yourself Democracy By Caroline W. Lee (Associate Professor of Sociology, Associate Professor of Sociology, Lafayette College)

Summary

From Facebook campaigns to cellphone polling, citizen participation in politics has increased dramatically in recent years. This book argues that while participatory innovations have democratized the ways in which major institutions operate, they have also been coopted by governments and corporations as effective tools to facilitate cost-cutting, labor control, profitability, and retrenchment.

Do-It-Yourself Democracy Summary

Do-It-Yourself Democracy: The Rise of the Public Engagement Industry by Caroline W. Lee (Associate Professor of Sociology, Associate Professor of Sociology, Lafayette College)

Citizen participation has undergone a radical shift since anxieties about bowling alone seized the nation in the 1990s. Many pundits and observers have cheered America's twenty-first century civic renaissance-an explosion of participatory innovations in public life. Invitations to have your say! and join the discussion! have proliferated. But has the widespread enthusiasm for maximizing citizen democracy led to real change? In Do-It-Yourself Democracy, sociologist Caroline W. Lee examines how participatory innovations have reshaped American civic life over the past two decades. Lee looks at the public engagement industry that emerged to serve government, corporate, and nonprofit clients seeking to gain a handle on the increasingly noisy demands of their constituents and stakeholders. The beneficiaries of new forms of democratic empowerment are not only humble citizens, but also the engagement experts who host the forums. Does it matter if the folks deepening democracy are making money at it? How do they make sense of the contradictions inherent in their roles? In investigating public engagement practitioners' everyday anxieties and larger worldviews, we see reflected the strange meaning of power in contemporary institutions. New technologies and deliberative practices have democratized the ways in which organizations operate, but Lee argues that they have also been marketed and sold as tools to facilitate cost-cutting, profitability, and other management goals - and that public deliberation has burdened everyday people with new responsibilities without delivering on its promises of empowerment.

Do-It-Yourself Democracy Reviews

At a time when paralysis plagues professional politics, this fascinating book takes us deep into a parallel universe. Here, under the watchful eyes of professional deliberation managers, citizens negotiate with one another to make the hard choices their elected representatives so often duck. This book reminds us that when governments fail, citizens will seek democracy elsewhere - and that for all the rhetoric of do-it-yourself empowerment, there's no guarantee they'll find it. A mesmerizing and ultimately frightening read. * Fred Turner, author of The Democratic Surround *
I have been involved for decades in the field that Caroline Lee insightfully describes and criticizes in this remarkable book. Although I recognize myself in some of its satirical passages, I consider it essential reading for anyone who cares about deliberative democracy and also community service, youth engagement, and other civic practices. We cannot move forward without addressing the shortcomings Lee explores. * Peter Levine, Tufts University *
In Do-It-Yourself Democracy, Caroline Lee powerfully demonstrates the often unexpected consequences of deliberative decision making practices. This rich and complex analysis, forcefully argued and elegantly presented, makes important contributions to our understanding of the development of new forms of political engagement as well as to fundamental debates over the democratic character of the modern American state. By illuminating how participatory practices function simultaneously as methods for the containment of dissent and the production of consent, Caroline Lee provides a cautionary tale for the present moment. * Elisabeth S. Clemens, University of Chicago *
A fresh and fascinating look at participatory democracy today. As Caroline Lee demonstrates, we've come a long way from the 1960s. Now, the Obama administration supports the efforts, civic leaders endorse them, and corporations underwrite them. Lee gets to the heart of the matter by focusing on the wizards behind the democratic curtain - the professionals who organize participatory events. Do-It-Yourself Democracy is, in turn, idealistic, moving, personal, deeply researched, elegantly written, skeptical, wise, and highly recommended. * James A. Morone, author of The Devils We Know *

About Caroline W. Lee (Associate Professor of Sociology, Associate Professor of Sociology, Lafayette College)

Caroline W. Lee is Associate Professor of Sociology at Lafayette College.

Table of Contents

Introduction: Democracy 2.0? ; Part I: A Different Approach to the Public Engagement Renaissance ; 1. Are You Ready to Talk? Democracy in Miniature ; 2. The Idealists Behind the Curtain ; Part II: Process Evangelists: Spreading the Gospel of Deliberation ; 3. Debating Facilitator Roles: Challenging Enemy Institutions or Embracing Living Systems? ; 4. Walking Our Talk: Zen, Jesus, and Being the Change ; Part III: Authenticity Above All: Civic Engagement as a Management Tool ; 5. The Arts and Crafts of Real Engagement ; 6. Tiny Expectations: Activating Empathetic Citizens ; Part IV: A Punishing Practice: The Spirit of Deliberative Capitalism ; 7. Sharing the Pain: The Lessons Deliberation Teaches ; Conclusion: Down Market Democracy and the Politics of Hope ; Postscript: Notes on Data and Methods ; Notes ; References ; Index

Additional information

GOR007474419
9780199987269
0199987262
Do-It-Yourself Democracy: The Rise of the Public Engagement Industry by Caroline W. Lee (Associate Professor of Sociology, Associate Professor of Sociology, Lafayette College)
Used - Very Good
Hardback
Oxford University Press Inc
20150115
304
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
This is a used book - there is no escaping the fact it has been read by someone else and it will show signs of wear and previous use. Overall we expect it to be in very good condition, but if you are not entirely satisfied please get in touch with us

Customer Reviews - Do-It-Yourself Democracy