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Living Citizenship through Peer Democracy

Democracy
Development
Social Movements
Internet
Realism
Technology
Political Cultures
Peer Norbäck
Stockholm University
Peer Norbäck
Stockholm University

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Abstract

The murdered Swedish politicians Olof Palme and Anna Lindh dreamed in the 80s of "Living Citizenship" - a utopia where people are at the center, not institutions, laws, structures, or power games. It is impossible due to the critics. To reach this state, some general problems need to be solved. + People in general lack knowledge and interest. + Many voters do not have the time to familiarize themselves with all political issues. + People are required to have a deep understanding of the issues they vote on. + There is a risk that decisions are made based on emotions rather than facts. 40 years later, a new democratic invention makes this criticism fall. Peer Democracy builds upon Equal Democracy. It addresses the complexities of modern governance. It takes the requirement for equality and expands it with a new variable. The formula for Peer Democracy is: For every person, every year, one vote on an optional specific issue. The keyword is optional. Citizens can choose which single issue they vote on during a given cycle. This choice introduces a mechanism of self-selection. This subtle change has profound implications for the quality of decision-making. The Synthesis: From Equality to Expertise The optional nature of Peer Democracy naturally creates a specialized electorate for each issue. It is reasonable to assume that individuals will vote on topics where they possess a strong personal interest. They may also choose based on their professional expertise. Mathematically speaking, this transforms democracy. Peer Democracy functions as a bridge—or a function—mapping Equal Democracy to Expert Rule. Historically, the fundamental critique of direct democracy—and the primary argument for representative democracy—has been the “competence gap.” The argument posits that the general public lacks the time, knowledge, and sustained interest to make complex policy decisions. Peer Democracy dismantles this critique. Limiting the vote to one optional issue per year removes the burden of universal competence. A citizen does not need to be an expert on everything. They only need to be informed about the one issue they care about most. By moving from a static model of equality to a dynamic peer-based model, we can improve democratic decision-making. The result is a system that is both deeply democratic and highly competent at the same time. The tool for implementing Peer Democracy is an app with an open-source database, written according to all the rules of the art to protect electoral secrets and avoid unauthorized manipulation. Because it is easy to translate, it can be quickly distributed and scaled up globally. This is what is required to - in Palmes words - decentralize and democratize the public sector.