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Our history

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Centre for Deliberative Democracy and Global Governance
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Our history
  • About CDDGG
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Our history

In our time at the Âé¶¹´å of Canberra, the Centre for Deliberative Democracy and Global Governance (CDDGG) has gone from strength to strength in our outputs of books, articles and our receipt of prizes and research grants and in our collaborations both with academics and industry partners. But more important to us has been the consolidation of an intellectual community known for its high standards, inclusive and cooperative culture, and centrality in the global network in our field. Here is a little background on our history.

CDDGG’s Annual Portrait in 2018
CDDGG’s Annual Portrait in 2018


Origins

The original seeds of the Centre go back to 2004 when John Dryzek and Simon Niemeyer were sheltering for two days under a rock in New Zealand, waiting for the rain to stop so they could climb a mountain. Here they developed ideas that led to their Australian Research Council (ARC) Discovery Project on ‘The Micro Politics of Deliberation’. 

Shrouded in myth, legend, and bad weather in 2004 (Dryzek and Niemeyer pictured)
Shrouded in myth, legend, and bad weather in 2004 (Dryzek and Niemeyer pictured)


Early Years and Affiliation with ANU

Early 2000s

Dryzek and Niemeyer met through the Social and Political Theory Program at Australian National Âé¶¹´å (ANU), joined by Carolyn Hendriks, John Parkinson, and Bora Kanra. Deliberative democracy was the lingua franca of the Program (as observed by Bob Goodin, also working in the field).

2005

A ‘Centre for Deliberative Governance’ appeared on the Research School of Social Sciences (RSSS) website. There was no formal centre at that time, but instead a collective of colleagues working in the discipline. PhD students working with us at that time included Louise Clery, Katherine Curchin, Selen Ercan, and Melissa Lovell.

2008

The Centre’s staff and students organised an international conference at the ANU entitled ‘Dialogue across Difference.’ Dryzek also received an ARC Federation Fellowship this year (co-sponsored by the Department of International Relations in the Research School of Pacific and Asian Studies, along with RSSS). This brought ‘Global Governance’ to the Centre’s title, and for the first time the Centre had its own suite of eight rooms in the Coombs Building at ANU.

This is the era when our seminar series, annual conferences, and weekly morning teas began. Resources also flowed in from ARC grants and a Âé¶¹´å Fellowship to Niemeyer for his work on scaling up deliberation.

Members of the centre at this time included Dryzek, Niemeyer, postdoctoral research fellows Luisa Batalha, Nicole Curato, Bora Kanra, Hayley Stevenson, Beibei Tang, and PhD students John Boswell, Maria (Weng) Dano, Andrea Felicetti, Sergio Guillen, Jonathan Kuyper, Penelope Marshall (with Alex Lo and Mani Banjade dropping in occasionally) and research assistants Alessandra Pecci, Elaine dos Santos, and Juliana Rocha, and numerous visitors including Tetsuki Tamura (Nagoya Âé¶¹´å) and Anne Phillips (London School of Economics), among others.

2013

The Centre was located in School of Politics and International Relations at ANU.

 

Our move to the Âé¶¹´å of Canberra

2014

The Centre then moved to the Australia and New Zealand School of Government Institute for Governance (ANZSIG) located at the Âé¶¹´å of Canberra (UC). The Centre comprised Dryzek, Niemeyer, Curato and Rocha. Selen Ercan, appointed as a postdoctoral research fellow at UC in 2012, paved the way for the move, and joined the Centre at this time.

Our tradition of Tuesday morning tea
Our tradition of Tuesday morning tea

 

In our first year at UC, we won a series of ARC awards and research grants including the ARC Laureate Fellowship (Dryzek), Discovery Early Career Research Award Fellowship (Curato), and two Discovery Projects (Ercan, Dryzek et al; Niemeyer, Dryzek and Curato et al). These projects enabled us to create a vibrant research environment and helped re-establish the Centre in our new location, with seminar series, morning teas, annual conferences, reading group, numerous joint projects, and a summer school pioneered by Curato, which became our flagship event.

Our first PhD completion in our new home was Kei Nishiyama, followed by Emerson Sanchez and Pierrick Chalaye. Our numbers have steadily grown, including postdoctoral research fellows Jonathan Pickering, Ana Tanasoca, Jensen Sass, Quinlan Bowman, Hedda Ransan-Cooper, Sonya Duus, Hannah Barrowman, Lucy Parry, Francesco Veri, Hans Asenbaum, and Nick Vlahos.

2020

In 2019, our bid for strategic funding from UC was successful, so 2020 our existence as a Centre was formalised for the first time. We were originally located within the Institute for Governance and Policy Analysis (in the Faculty of Business, Government & Law), with John Dryzek as Director. The Directorship then moved to Simon Niemeyer, and in 2022, to Selen Ercan.

This formalisation also allowed for our first serious involvement in undergraduate teaching with Nicole Curato, Selen Ercan redesigning and beginning to convene the Centre’s undergraduate unit ‘Investigating and Explaining Society’ in the Faculty of Business Government & Law.  In 2021, our teaching team composed of Hans Asenbaum, Nicole Curato, Selen Ercan and Nick Vlahos, Nardine Alnemr and Anne Jedzini received the Âé¶¹´å of Canberra’s teaching prize for Outstanding Contribution to Student Learning. 

Anne Jedzini, Selen Ercan and Nardine Alnemr (left to right)
Anne Jedzini, Selen Ercan and Nardine Alnemr (left to right)


2022

The Centre continues to be globally recognised for research excellence, interdisciplinary collaboration, innovative teaching, high quality PhD training and culture of mutual support.

This year, we were proud to attend the graduation ceremony of our PhD students, Jane Alver, Pierrick Chalaye and Emerson Sanchez.

 

Âé¶¹´å of Canberra, Graduation Ceremony, 1 April 2022
Âé¶¹´å of Canberra, Graduation Ceremony, April 2022

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