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Mini-publics and policy impact analysis: filtration in the citizens’ assembly on social care

Lynne Poole () and Stephen Elstub ()
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Lynne Poole: University of the West of Scotland
Stephen Elstub: Newcastle University

Policy Sciences, 2025, vol. 58, issue 2, No 5, 343 pages

Abstract: Abstract The use of mini-publics to enable some citizens to feed policy recommendations into public policy processes is gaining popularity. However, assessing whether and to what extent mini-publics have policy impact is extremely challenging due to the complexity of policy processes. We make the case for a new approach to analysing mini-public policy impact with respect to an analysis of the journeys made by each mini-public recommendation, with a view to developing a better understanding of their influence within the specific policy context in which they operate. We propose that employing a ‘filtration’ lens enables a consideration of not only which recommendations are accepted, rejected or ignored by public authorities, but whether they are reconceptualised. We develop a framework that enables the classification of the recommendations and their policy journeys and apply it to the Citizens’ Assembly on Social Care, commissioned by select committees in the House of Commons. Through analysis of the grey literature around the case we were able to establish the type of journey each recommendation had undergone. This provided us with nuanced analysis of what was filtered out, where, how, by whom, and why. We therefore believe the framework is a significant addition to the toolkit of those researching mini-publics.

Keywords: Public policy; Social care; Citizens’ assemblies; Mini-publics; Deliberative democracy; Policy impact (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2025
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DOI: 10.1007/s11077-025-09567-8

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