Freeman Spogli Institute for International Studies Center on Democracy, Development, and the Rule of Law Stanford University


CDDRL Courses


The Dialogue of Democracy

Course number(s): COMM 137/ 237, POLISCI 232T/332T, AMSTUD 137
Offered Winter quarter in the 2010-2011 academic year

Instructors
James S. Fishkin - Stanford University

All forms of democracy require some kind of communication so people can be aware of issues and make decisions. This course looks at competing visions of what democracy should be and different notions of the role of dialogue in a democracy. Is it just campaigning or does it include deliberation? Small scale discussions or sound bites on television? Or social media? What is the role of technology in changing our democratic practices, to mobilize, to persuade, to solve public problems? This course will include readings from political theory about democratic ideals - from the American founders to J.S. Mill and the Progressives to Joseph Schumpeter and modern writers skeptical of the public will. It will also include contemporary examinations of the media and the internet to see how those practices are changing and how the ideals can or cannot be realized.

Level
Graduate and undergraduate

Units
4-5

Department
Department of Communication
School of Humanities and Sciences