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- Interactive_democracy abstract "An interactive democracy or iDemocracy is a type of democracy that encourages direct interaction in order to create a fairer society according to the expressed will of the people.[citation needed]Interactive democracy is by its very nature 'interactive'. Accordingly, advocates of iDemocracy believe that change should happen at a number of levels and does not simply refer to one's ability to vote which does not in itself lead to a fair society. A true iDemocracy requires that people learn to think in a democratic way in all aspects of their lives - from the transactions they make, to the way in which they learn and relate to others. The key mantra is: being interactively democratic means thinking and acting democratically!iDemocracy recognises the potential importance of communications technologies which can be utilised to transform current power structures for the greater good by ensuring that people have more direct involvement in decision-making processes right across the political-economic, scientific-technological, social and cultural spectrum. Ideologically speaking, it has the potential to more readily reform the activities of, for example, existing dysfunctional government and corporate systems and other prevailing knowledge systems at the local, national, international and global levels if they are perceived to be not serving the interests of humanity at large. Crucially, iDemocracy is distinct to eDemocracy in terms of who sets the agenda. Typically, with regards to eDemocracy, which advocates the use of such things as ePetitions, the agenda is for the most part set by the institutions of power and then presented to the people on the assumption they will respond according to the options they are given. By contrast, in an iDemocracy, in which a democratic attitude is more thoroughly embedded within the fabric of society, the reverse is true because the agenda is created by the people who then present it to the institutions of power in order to exert influence. This ensures that iDemocracy is built from the ground up, not imposed from the top down (which is un-democratic).".
- Interactive_democracy wikiPageExternalLink interactivedemocracy.blogspot.com.
- Interactive_democracy wikiPageExternalLink www.democracylab.org.
- Interactive_democracy wikiPageExternalLink www.mysociety.org.
- Interactive_democracy wikiPageExternalLink Page297.asp.
- Interactive_democracy wikiPageID "17052586".
- Interactive_democracy wikiPageRevisionID "606207981".
- Interactive_democracy subject Category:Democracy.
- Interactive_democracy subject Category:Politics_and_technology.
- Interactive_democracy comment "An interactive democracy or iDemocracy is a type of democracy that encourages direct interaction in order to create a fairer society according to the expressed will of the people.[citation needed]Interactive democracy is by its very nature 'interactive'. Accordingly, advocates of iDemocracy believe that change should happen at a number of levels and does not simply refer to one's ability to vote which does not in itself lead to a fair society.".
- Interactive_democracy label "Interactive democracy".
- Interactive_democracy sameAs m.0416vy5.
- Interactive_democracy sameAs Q6045260.
- Interactive_democracy sameAs Q6045260.
- Interactive_democracy wasDerivedFrom Interactive_democracy?oldid=606207981.
- Interactive_democracy isPrimaryTopicOf Interactive_democracy.