Imagine that all of us—all of society—have landed on some alien planet and need
to form a government: clean slate. We do not have any legacy systems from the
United States or any other country. We do not have any special or unique
interests to perturb our thinking. How would we govern ourselves? It is unlikely
that we would use the systems we have today. Modern representative democracy was
the best form of government that eighteenth-century technology could invent. The
twenty-first century is very different: scientifically, technically, and
philosophically. For example, eighteenth-century democracy was designed under
the assumption that travel and communications were both hard...
Tag - conferences
Last month, Henry Farrell and I convened the Third Interdisciplinary Workshop on
Reimagining Democracy (IWORD 2024) at Johns Hopkins University’s Bloomberg
Center in Washington DC. This is a small, invitational workshop on the future of
democracy. As with the previous two workshops, the goal was to bring together a
diverse set of political scientists, law professors, philosophers, AI
researchers and other industry practitioners, political activists, and creative
types (including science fiction writers) to discuss how democracy might be
reimagined in the current century...