The role of emotion in enabling and conditioning public deliberation outcomes: a macro-level analysis
Komporozos-Athanasiou, A; Thompson, M
Date: 14 July 2015
Article
Journal
Public Administration
Publisher
Wiley
Publisher DOI
Abstract
Citizen participation in deliberation activities within public health systems is
increasingly seen as essential in achieving more patient-centred, equitable and
democratic care. However recent studies show patients’ lived, affective experience of
illness and care remains poorly understood within deliberative fora. In response, ...
Citizen participation in deliberation activities within public health systems is
increasingly seen as essential in achieving more patient-centred, equitable and
democratic care. However recent studies show patients’ lived, affective experience of
illness and care remains poorly understood within deliberative fora. In response, this
paper argues that emotion is central in mediating deliberation, and in conditioning
deliberative outcomes. To understand how this occurs, we use a sociologicallyinformed notion of ‘biographical affect’ to address links between emotion, and social
and political action. Benefits of this approach for healthcare deliberation are illustrated
through an in-depth case study of a major citizen participation forum in the UK National
Health Service. Our conclusions call for alternative orientations to participation that
involve committed engagement with participants’ affective experiences.
Management
Faculty of Environment, Science and Economy
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