"Calling the Question": The Politics of Time in a Time of Polarized Politics

In this paper, we examine the role of time in shaping decision-making processes in a town meeting, a type of legislative body common in many New England towns. Town meetings are one of the oldest and most democratic institutions of local governance in the United States, and they provide a rich aren...

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Main Authors: Elizabeth L. Krause, Anurag Sharma
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Firenze University Press 2016-10-01
Series:Cambio
Subjects:
Online Access:https://oaj.fupress.net/index.php/cambio/article/view/1238
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spelling doaj-8442a63b18eb48f89c9df9d89cf5a3312021-06-02T13:07:11ZengFirenze University PressCambio2239-11182016-10-013610.13128/cambio-19255"Calling the Question": The Politics of Time in a Time of Polarized PoliticsElizabeth L. KrauseAnurag Sharma In this paper, we examine the role of time in shaping decision-making processes in a town meeting, a type of legislative body common in many New England towns. Town meetings are one of the oldest and most democratic institutions of local governance in the United States, and they provide a rich arena in which to investigate how large groups of people convene and make decisions together. A mixed-methods approach enabled our team of researchers to gain insight into the processes and dynamics that played out in one town meeting. We analyze the tensions between democratic values of “taking time” vs. “being efficient.” The dynamics are particularly compelling because of an absence of the typical two parties that dominate U.S. political culture. Attitudes toward time closely aligned with voting behaviors. Our study concludes that, even in the context of a culturally and economically homogenous New England town-meeting membership, orientations to temporality are contested and meaningful. Situated historically, these orientations reflect citizens’ embrace or rejection of “time-thrift” and suggest implications for participatory democracy. https://oaj.fupress.net/index.php/cambio/article/view/1238TimeDecision-makingDemocracyTown meeting
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Elizabeth L. Krause
Anurag Sharma
spellingShingle Elizabeth L. Krause
Anurag Sharma
"Calling the Question": The Politics of Time in a Time of Polarized Politics
Cambio
Time
Decision-making
Democracy
Town meeting
author_facet Elizabeth L. Krause
Anurag Sharma
author_sort Elizabeth L. Krause
title "Calling the Question": The Politics of Time in a Time of Polarized Politics
title_short "Calling the Question": The Politics of Time in a Time of Polarized Politics
title_full "Calling the Question": The Politics of Time in a Time of Polarized Politics
title_fullStr "Calling the Question": The Politics of Time in a Time of Polarized Politics
title_full_unstemmed "Calling the Question": The Politics of Time in a Time of Polarized Politics
title_sort "calling the question": the politics of time in a time of polarized politics
publisher Firenze University Press
series Cambio
issn 2239-1118
publishDate 2016-10-01
description In this paper, we examine the role of time in shaping decision-making processes in a town meeting, a type of legislative body common in many New England towns. Town meetings are one of the oldest and most democratic institutions of local governance in the United States, and they provide a rich arena in which to investigate how large groups of people convene and make decisions together. A mixed-methods approach enabled our team of researchers to gain insight into the processes and dynamics that played out in one town meeting. We analyze the tensions between democratic values of “taking time” vs. “being efficient.” The dynamics are particularly compelling because of an absence of the typical two parties that dominate U.S. political culture. Attitudes toward time closely aligned with voting behaviors. Our study concludes that, even in the context of a culturally and economically homogenous New England town-meeting membership, orientations to temporality are contested and meaningful. Situated historically, these orientations reflect citizens’ embrace or rejection of “time-thrift” and suggest implications for participatory democracy.
topic Time
Decision-making
Democracy
Town meeting
url https://oaj.fupress.net/index.php/cambio/article/view/1238
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