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Just Sortition, Communitarian Deliberation: Two Proposals for Embedded Climate Assemblies

Africa
Democracy
Political Participation
Representation
Climate Change
Political Engagement
Public Opinion
Nicole Curato
Faculty of Business, Government and Law, University of Canberra
Nicole Curato
Faculty of Business, Government and Law, University of Canberra
Melisa Ross
Universität Bremen
Lucas Henrique Nigri Veloso
Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais UFMG

Abstract

Sortition or recruiting randomly selected everyday citizens is a core feature of climate assemblies. Sortition, the argument goes, enforces the principle of inclusiveness, as everyone has a fair shot at getting invited to the climate assembly. This form of recruitment, however, faces criticism. It challenges traditional structures of representation and decision-making where elders, religious leaders, elected representatives, and community organisers typically give voice to the ideas and grievances of everyday people. For some, sortition valorises the atomised individual who can speak their mind in a forum, without any mechanism for the individual to reconnect their deliberative experience to the wider community. In this article, we draw on the experience of the province of Zambezia in Mozambique as one randomly selected Assembly Member took part in the world’s first Climate Assembly on the Climate and Ecological Emergency. Based on in-depth interviews, focus group discussions, and feedback sessions with local organisations in Zambezia, we offer practical insight on how sortition can deepen community connection and maximise the impact of climate assemblies in delivering practical outcomes for climate change adaptation, especially in communities experiencing extreme poverty. Using grounded normative theory, our study demonstrates how sortition can promote justice by elevating the voices of those most impacted by climate change. We also demonstrate why a communitarian approach to citizen assemblies enhances accountability and shared learning and empowers members to translate global deliberations into local actions.