TY - JOUR
T1 - Sustainable development as an organizing principle for discursive democracy?
AU - O'Mahony, Patrick
AU - Skillington, Tracey
PY - 1996/3
Y1 - 1996/3
N2 - This paper explores how different collective types of actor (for example, business, policy or social movement representatives), with distinct systems of beliefs, category schemes and institutional projects, have become engaged in the production of a variety of symbolic representations of 'sustainable development'. Sustainable development has become a shared concept amongst certain actors, allowing a minimum level of consensus to prevail. Minimum consensus has facilitated the cultivation of a more structured argumentation space with regard to this issue and the potential for attainment of a new level of discursivity between types of actor who now share common ground with respect to certain themes. However, actor differences become apparent when institutional logics which condition behavioural practice and mediate ongoing communicative interaction on sustainable development are studied more closely. Taken together, a number of factors can form a barrier to meaningful discursive exchange and limit the potential for 'discursive' democracy.
AB - This paper explores how different collective types of actor (for example, business, policy or social movement representatives), with distinct systems of beliefs, category schemes and institutional projects, have become engaged in the production of a variety of symbolic representations of 'sustainable development'. Sustainable development has become a shared concept amongst certain actors, allowing a minimum level of consensus to prevail. Minimum consensus has facilitated the cultivation of a more structured argumentation space with regard to this issue and the potential for attainment of a new level of discursivity between types of actor who now share common ground with respect to certain themes. However, actor differences become apparent when institutional logics which condition behavioural practice and mediate ongoing communicative interaction on sustainable development are studied more closely. Taken together, a number of factors can form a barrier to meaningful discursive exchange and limit the potential for 'discursive' democracy.
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/0030461381
U2 - 10.1002/(sici)1099-1719(199603)4:1<42::aid-sd35>3.0.co;2-e
DO - 10.1002/(sici)1099-1719(199603)4:1<42::aid-sd35>3.0.co;2-e
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:0030461381
SN - 0968-0802
VL - 4
SP - 42
EP - 51
JO - Sustainable Development
JF - Sustainable Development
IS - 1
ER -