Liquid Democracy
Liquid democracy is a technologically enabled and scalable hybrid of direct and representative democracy.[2] Liquid Democracy, a subset of Delegative Democracy, is a powerful voting model for collective decision making in large communities. Liquid Democracy combines the advantages of Direct Democracy and Representative Democracy and creates a truly democratic voting system that empowers voters to either vote on issues directly, or to delegate ones voting power to a trusted party.[3]
Sustainable Superabundance: A Universal Transhumanist Invitation.[править]
"Superdemocracy upholds the concept of delegated voting, via systems such as “liquid democracy”. This enables citizens to delegate their votes in specified areas of debate to people whom they trust in these areas. In case someone changes their mind, delegations can be revoked or reassigned at any time.
Liquid democracy is a tech-enabled improvement to those parliamentary systems in which a single elected member of parliament is meant to represent the voter in all areas of debate. With liquid democracy, representation is no longer an all-or-nothing affair. Accordingly, liquid democracy moves away from the unhelpful fiction that politicians are supposed to have been elected to carry out every nook and cranny of their election manifesto. It enables a set of approvals and affirmations that is much more fine-grained - an ongoing dynamic conversation with nuance and inventiveness."
- David Wood, Executive Director, Transpolitica From the subchapter titled "Beyond lowest common denominator voting"[4]
External links[править]
- Medium.com Article - Liquid Democracy: True Democracy for the 21st Century by Dominik Schiener Nov 23, 2015
- Medium.com Article - An Introduction to Liquid Democracy by Jim Rutt Feb 26, 2018
- Techcrunch Article - Liquid democracy uses blockchain to fix politics, and now you can vote for it by Danny Crichton Feb 24, 2018
- Liquid democracy uses blockchain to fix politics, and now you can vote for it
- LiquidFeedback.org
- Liquid Democracy.net