fieldsdemocracy
Fieldsdemocracy is a theoretical framework for democratic participation that organizes decision-making around multiple social fields, such as economic, cultural, scientific, ecological, and technological domains. In this view, each field operates with its own norms, actors, and sources of legitimacy, while cross-field coordination seeks to align divergent interests through plural and polycentric governance mechanisms. The approach blends insights from field theory with contemporary debates on participatory and deliberative democracy, emphasizing that not all decisions are best made within a single centralized arena.
Origins and development are contested, but the concept has appeared in scholarly discussions since the early
Core elements include field-level assemblies or councils that enable stakeholders to voice concerns and propose policies,
Critiques focus on potential fragmentation, coordination costs, and the risk that powerful fields dominate agendas. Critics
See also: participatory democracy, deliberative democracy, polycentric governance, field theory.