Home arrow Books Items arrow Real Democracy
Nov 23, 2008 at 10:05 AM
 
 
Main Menu
Home
Primera Plana / Headlines
Documentos / Documents
Referendos / Plebiscites
Libros / Books
Enlaces / Links
Derechos Humanos / H. Rights
FORO / Participative Forum
::: BLOGS :::
Venezuela Hoy. Blog de Marcos Villasmil...
Comentario Internacional. Blog de Yaxys Dallán...
Para leer si queda tiempo. Blog de Alberto Muller...
Reciba actualizaciones por correo
Novedades / New Items
Favoritos / Popular
CUBA

 Iniciativas Democráticas

Entrega de firmas para un referendo
Disponibles en nuestra sección
DOCUMENTOS en Español

:: DONACIONES ::

You may help this effort for democracy with your valued donation to offset the cost of maintaining this site and to assist us in our efforts in favor of democracy and human rights.
Click on the button above to use PayPal. Or you may send a check to Participatory Democracy Cultural Initiative, Inc. Send a note to DemocraciaParticipativa.net with your commitment.

INSTRUCCIONES

Official PayPal Seal

Syndicate
Privacy Policy
[administrar sitio]
This is a bilingual site. Individual contributions are either original Spanish or English. Few translations are made / Sitio bilingüe con colaboraciones en español o inglés. La mayoría no son traducidas al otro idioma.

: : DERECHOS HUMANOS / HUMAN RIGHTS : :

Este es un espacio dedicado a la defensa de los derechos humanos y a la denuncia de sus violaciones.  Este esfuerzo tiene carácter universal y está abierto a las víctimas y a sus defensores en todo el mundo, en español e inglés.  Pulse el botón de Derechos Humanos a su izquierda. 
 
This is a space devoted to human rights where complaints and reports on violations may be published by all concerned.  This section is a universal effort opened to the victims and their advocates all over the World, in English and Spanish.  Please, click on the Human Rights button on your left.

: : FORO PARTICIPATIVO / PARTICIPATIVE FORUM : :

En el Foro Participativo convergen la mayoría de los aportes de nuestros cibernautas con opiniones sobre temas históricos, económicos, políticos y/o sociales que afectan a la democracia y a los derechos humanos. Hay contribuciones breves y también artículos o ensayos, que están abiertos al debate.  Le invitamos a participar - pulse el botón Foro/Forum de la barra superior. Encuentre más abajo una lista de los últimos aportes al FORO.

The Participative Forum is open to all cybernauts willing to share their opinions on democracy and human rights by region within all historical, economic, political and/or social facets.  Your contributions might be as short and to the point or as elaborated as you wish, and they'll all be open to debate.  Everyone is invited to participate in English and/or Spanish. Click on the menu bar Foro/Forum above. Find below a list of the latest contributions to the FORUM.

Entre la paz y la violencia, Venezuela decide su destino - Gerardo E. Martínez-Solanas
La burla y la mentira son monólogos peligrosos en la Cuba de hoy - Silvio Benítez
¡Sí podemos! - Eduardo J. Barrios P.
ELECCIONES VENEZOLANAS: A PONERNOS LAS PILAS - Marcos Villasmil
Hospitales en Cuba: ¿lo llevas todo? - Yoani Sánchez
Concluye Feria del Libro de Miami - Alberto Müller
Declaración del Proyecto Demócrata Cbano - Proyecto Demócrata Cubano
Panamá 2009: mirando al futuro - Yaxys Cires Dib
ELECCIONES EEUU: ANATOMÍA DE UNA CAMPAÑA - Marcos Villasmil
Cuba:Casta e intriga - Yaxys Cires Dib
Real Democracy PDF Print E-mail

REAL DEMOCRACY:
THE NEW ENGLAND TOWN MEETING AND HOW IT WORKS
By Frank Bryan
For democracy, smaller is better


To bring Iraq and Afghanistan into the 21st century, look back to 17th-century New England
By Robert I. Rotberg


New England's three-century experiment with real democracy - the face-to-face variety practiced in 500 annual town meetings - contains abundant lessons for Iraq and Afghanistan. Participatory democracy will be more secure and more effective in both of those liberated entities if it is introduced painstakingly from the bottom, rather than imposed centrally from the top.

Frank Bryan, who writes tellingly and thoroughly about Vermont's 210 annual town meetings over three decades, concludes that "town meetings come about as close to paragon status as reasonable people would agree is possible within the limits of human nature."

His central claim is that ordinary citizens are prepared to work at and practice real democracy in towns, the smaller the better, more than they are to participate in representative democracy (that is, elected party politics) in America.

In Vermont, over years of observation, the best of the town meeting performances were in less populous places where real issues were at stake. At the local level, citizens young and old were prepared to expend energy and go to the trouble of debating and deciding questions of concern to them and their neighbors. The larger the town, the less full and the less active the participation.

If the leaders of the Afghan and Iraqi reconstruction operations devolve responsibility to local people, not just to their sheikhs, chiefs, or warlords, then it will be possible to implant sustainable democracy. Bryan is instructive in this regard: "The fundamental purpose of a town meeting is to make decisions for the commonwealth based on principles of due process and equal protection - but on a human scale." That is the way to train citizens in the democratic process. Moreover, the town meeting method of face-to-face deliberation instills tolerance and forbearance.

Bryan is hardly starry-eyed about the Vermont town meeting experience that he and his students have so painstakingly analyzed. He's the first to admit that, on average, attendance at annual town meetings is only 20 percent of registered voters, and some meetings manage to rush through their warrants in an hour or so. And he admits that modern schedules and suburbanization have diminished the efficacy and the centrality of the town meeting model.

Even so, New England has retained its tradition of deciding questions of governance together, and that is not the same as putting questions to referendum, as in California. Nor is it in any way anachronistic. With all of its real and potential flaws of pettiness and trivialization, the New England town meeting still offers a bedrock experience in collective and communal decisionmaking.

Deliberation is important. So are controversy, conflict, and compromise. The effort of arriving at win-win decisions through a process of presenting arguments and persuading opponents contributes meaningfully to the practice of democracy.

The town meeting method also resolves many of the problems of larger representative democracy, where leaders control and manipulate information for their own benefit.

At the town meeting level, all is (or should be) revealed to everyone, and decisions cannot be made without sufficient and timely intelligence (about road construction, police and fire protection, proposed capital expenditures, and so on).

Bryan employs many of the sophisticated methodologies of political science to demonstrate that the New England town meeting is not merely a traditional method by which early Americans governed themselves. It still works well for most of the inhabitants of Vermont's 210 towns, and the 634 towns in New England's other states.

In town meetings, stakeholders can only blame themselves when local government fails. Obviously, New England can't be transferred to Iraq and Afghanistan, but its lessons are still relevant.

Robert I. Rotberg teaches at Harvard University's Kennedy School of Government and has been an elected member of the Lexington, Mass., Town Meeting since 1973.

Available in bookstores:  REAL DEMOCRACY:  THE NEW ENGLAND TOWN MEETING AND HOW IT WORKS, By Frank Bryan.  Chicago University Press
320 pp., $19 (paperback)

IberLibro.com - 110 millones de libros nuevos, antiguos, agotados y de ocasión

Web hosting services
 
Cuba:
DEMOCRATIC INITIATIVES

The partial outcome of the CUBAN NATIONAL DIALOGUE, with the participation of Cubans within the island and overseas, is a new document titled "Programa TODOS CUBANOS", still open to public debate with a goal to improve its scope and objectivity for a wider participation of Cubans on this effort for all and for the good of all.  The text published by an important sector of the Cuban opposition is the product of months of dialogue among thousands of Cubans hoping for a better homeland.  This is a tangible effort of participatory democracy in action in spite of repression on the part of the Cuban regime.  Please, read here the words of its main spokesman.
 
Other Cuban democratic initiatives are listed in our Spanish section of DOCUMENTS

DOCUMENTOS en Español


Papel del Micropréstamo en la Economía Cubana hoy y en el futuro 

Habana, 18 de julio de 2008.- "Cuba lleva 50 años de atraso con respecto a cualquier otro país en cuanto a economía se refiere. Aún cuando, han aumentado las salidas del país y los cubanos nos hemos puesto al día con relación a otros aspectos de la globalización en el mundo, la manera de hacer y de entender la economía es atrasada. Y no porque no sepamos hacer negocios (que los hacemos bien en las peores circunstancias) sino por la mentalidad del cubano promedio que ha vivido durante mucho tiempo dependiente económicamente del Estado y, a pesar de considerarlo injusto, se queja de “lo que no le dan” o de lo que “no le aseguran” y, en la práctica está poco consciente de su responsabilidad personal en el mejoramiento de su situación económica. Esto, creo que está claro para todos, es plenamente justificado por décadas de centralización económica y de imposibilidades (incluso para los incondicionales al Gobierno, situados en puestos de dirección de empresas importantes) de tomar decisiones determinantes en cuestiones de negocio o, peor aun, de su seguridad económica, como el ahorro o la inversión ..."
 
Top! Top!