From bargaining to arguing, from strategic to communicative action? theoretical distinctions and methodological problems in empirical studies of deliberative policy processes
Research output: Journal contributions › Journal articles › Research › peer-review
Standard
In: Critical Policy Studies, Vol. 3, No. 2, 2009, p. 153-183.
Research output: Journal contributions › Journal articles › Research › peer-review
Harvard
APA
Vancouver
Bibtex
}
RIS
TY - JOUR
T1 - From bargaining to arguing, from strategic to communicative action?
T2 - theoretical distinctions and methodological problems in empirical studies of deliberative policy processes
AU - Saretzki, Thomas
PY - 2009
Y1 - 2009
N2 - In debates on public policy and deliberative democracy, the conceptual distinctions of communicative vs. strategic action and of arguing vs. bargaining play a prominent role. In many contributions to the deliberative turn these distinctions have often been interpreted and treated almost like synonyms. Understood as equivalent dichotomies projected on a one-dimensional scale, people taking the deliberative turn seemed to have only one way to go: from bargaining to arguing, from strategic to communicative action. Yet the distinction of strategic vs. communicative action stems from the theory of action of Jrgen Habermas, while the juxtaposition of bargaining vs. arguing was introduced by Jon Elster as a distinction of two modes of communication. These different theoretical backgrounds and perspectives notwithstanding, one finds converging references to both distinctions when authors tried to get a clue as to what it means to be 'truly deliberative'. Still, in many cases the conceptual relation of the two distinctions seems to be far from clear. The article discusses the interrelations of these different theoretical backgrounds and perspectives with conceptual and methodological problems that matter when one tries to use the two distinctions in empirical studies of deliberation or suggests possible practical perspectives for deliberative democracy.
AB - In debates on public policy and deliberative democracy, the conceptual distinctions of communicative vs. strategic action and of arguing vs. bargaining play a prominent role. In many contributions to the deliberative turn these distinctions have often been interpreted and treated almost like synonyms. Understood as equivalent dichotomies projected on a one-dimensional scale, people taking the deliberative turn seemed to have only one way to go: from bargaining to arguing, from strategic to communicative action. Yet the distinction of strategic vs. communicative action stems from the theory of action of Jrgen Habermas, while the juxtaposition of bargaining vs. arguing was introduced by Jon Elster as a distinction of two modes of communication. These different theoretical backgrounds and perspectives notwithstanding, one finds converging references to both distinctions when authors tried to get a clue as to what it means to be 'truly deliberative'. Still, in many cases the conceptual relation of the two distinctions seems to be far from clear. The article discusses the interrelations of these different theoretical backgrounds and perspectives with conceptual and methodological problems that matter when one tries to use the two distinctions in empirical studies of deliberation or suggests possible practical perspectives for deliberative democracy.
KW - Politics
KW - arguing
KW - bargaining
KW - communicative action
KW - strategic action
KW - deliberation
KW - policy process
U2 - 10.1080/19460170903385650
DO - 10.1080/19460170903385650
M3 - Journal articles
VL - 3
SP - 153
EP - 183
JO - Critical Policy Studies
JF - Critical Policy Studies
SN - 1946-0171
IS - 2
ER -