You wrote recently about the importance of citizens, juries or assemblies. Could you explain what these are and why you think they might help to revive our ailing politics? We inherited a form of democratic politics which emerged in Britain out of medieval politics. And that was the basis on which we created our modern democracies. But it's pretty obvious over time that there are a couple of problems with this.
In this last episode of Martin Wolf’s series, the FT’s chief economics commentator sits down with the FT’s executive opinion editor, Jonathan Derbyshire, to give his concluding thoughts on the state of the world’s democracies. Drawing on arguments in Martin’s latest book, The Crisis of Democratic Capitalism, and his conversations in this series, they discuss what role citizens’ juries could play in rectifying some of what has gone wrong in the past couple of decades.
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Martin Wolf: in defence of democratic capitalism
Citizens’ juries can help fix democracy
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For the FT review of Martin’s book click here
Read a transcript of this episode on FT.com
This episode is presented by Martin Wolf. The producer is Laurence Knight. The executive producer is Manuela Saragosa and the sound engineer is Breen Turner. The FT's global head of audio is Cheryl Brumley.
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