[Air-L] Online adjudication?

Charles Ess charles.ess at gmail.com
Tue Nov 27 07:17:21 PST 2012


Dear AoIRists,

On behalf of a legal scholar colleague who is interested in recent
developments in online adjudication, including efforts at e-rulemaking,
online dispute resolution, e-petitioning, and other forms of e-participation
as both implementations of and improvements on some version of Habermas's
more recent (2006) theory of adjudication - specifically:
Sturm¹s concept of multi-partiality ( Sturm and Gadlin, 2007, Conflict
Resolution and Systemic Change, Journal of Dispute Resolution, Vol. 2007:3,
pp. 1 ­ 63.)
And recent works by Claudia Landwehr,
2010, Discourse and Coordination: Modes of Interaction and their Roles in
Political Decision-Making, The Journal of Political Philosophy, Vol. 18:1,
pp. 101­22; 
and Landwehr and Holzinger, 2010, Institutional Determinants of Deliberative
Interaction, European Political Science Review, vol. 2:3, pp. 373­400.

-- suggestions and tips for either additional resources along these lines,
and/or any research groups or centers that may also be focusing on these
threads of scholarship and research?

As always, many thanks in advance,
- charles
Associate Professor in Media Studies
Department of Media and Communication
University of Oslo 
P.O. Box 1093 Blindern
NO-0317 
Oslo Norway
Tel. +47 228 50404
email: charles.ess at media.uio.no

Lifetime member, Association of Internet Researchers

³At vove er at miste fodfæstet for en stund, ikke at vove er at miste
sig selv² [To dare is to lose your footing for an hour; not to dare is to
lose yourself] - Kierkegaard





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