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Terry Bouricius's avatar

Exactly because a significant number of people will likely decline to serve on bodies that meet for extended terms of office, is the reason for two key things. Firstly, there should be stratified sampling to improve (though not perfectly) the diversity of the body to match the population. And secondly, that none of their product is adopted without approval of a short duration Policy Jury, which would have quasi-mandatory service, like current court juries. Only statistically accurately representative Policy Juries (that might serve for a week or two) can adopt laws after hearing the pro and con arguments. This is the topic of the next post.

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Holly Perkins Smirl's avatar

Interesting ideas on policy review panels. I read Gastil and Sunstien in relation to your premise. Possibly implementation might need to be by lottery yes but busy middle class people like my teacher daughter or

architect daughter with two busy kids might have to have something like the jury duty summons or even national guard summons to even be enticed them to participate in that civic duty, compensation or no. To get a cross section of ages, educational backgrounds, and economic levels is even harder. I'd love to see the change occur but it took 250 years to get this flawed system.

Holly

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