Abstract:
Multi-stakeholder initiatives (MSIs)—private governance mechanisms involving
firms, civil society organizations, and other actors deliberating to set rules, such as
standards or codes of conduct, with which firms comply voluntarily—have become
important tools for governing global business activities and the social and environmental
consequences of these activities. Yet, this growth is paralleled with concerns
about MSIs’ deliberative capacity, including the limited inclusion of some marginalized
stakeholders, bias toward corporate interests, and, ultimately, ineffectiveness
in their role as regulators. In this article, we conceptualize MSIs as deliberative
systems to open the black box of the different elements that make up the MSI polity
and better understand how their deliberative capacity hinges on problems in different
elements. On the basis of this conceptualization, we examine how deliberative
mini-publics—forums in which a randomly selected group of individuals
from a particular population engage in learning and facilitated deliberations about
a topic—can improve the deliberative capacity of MSIs.