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Iceland could have been innovative: Participatory democracy.

politics & society
6 Mai 13:30 - 14:30
60 Minuten
Beginner
English
Vortrag

Beschreibung:

Iceland could have been innovative: With the first truly crowdsourced constitution.

Nearly a thousand randomly selected Icelanders initiatively expressed wishes and contributed ideas. In November 2010, a citizen panel of 25 people was selected from 523 candidates. Although the Supreme Court entered caveat at the request of the "old conservative elites' opposition", it bypassed the parliament, because the court declared the 25 persons a Constitutional Council. Within only four months the men and women – accompanied by the citizens via Facebook, Youtube, Twitter and other sites – enrolled a jointly draft.

However, a majority in Parliament has now decided that before the end of parliamentary election on 27th April there won't be a vote on the constitutional text. In the current Parliament the supporters of the text are slightly predominant, but according to the polls, conservative parties could dominate after the election – and they would reject the new constitution.

Birgitta Jónsdóttir, Icelandic politician and chairwoman of the newly formed Pirate Party (Piratar), gives an overview of the constitutional initiative and update us on current policy developments as well as the International Modern Media Institute (IMMI). She will talk about the lessons learned of the crowdsourced constitution and will explain how open and participatory policy could and should look like.

 

Organized in partnership with the reSource transmedial culture berlin/transmediale.