Citizens act as legislators in initiative elections but lack legal training. Voters commonly misunderstand the legal effects of initiatives (Gastil, Reedy, & Wells, 2007) and courts frequently strike down initiatives as unconstitutional (Miller 2009). These factors point to flaws in the communication of legal information about ballot initiatives to citizens. “Plain legal language” research (Barnes, 2006; Tiersma, 1999) suggests that citizens’ understanding of legal information increases to the extent that the communication of such information accords with citizens’ own legal communicative practices. Yet we know little about such practices. The goal of this study is to increase our understanding of those practices. Citizens’ deliberations about the legal nature and effects of ballot measures were examined through a qualitative content analysis of transcripts from the 2010 Oregon Citizens’ Initiative Review, the Citizens’ Statements produced by that review, and official state explanatory statements describing ballot measures. Deliberations and statements were coded for law-related topics, functions, uses of narrative, and motivations for narration. Citizens’ deliberations and Citizens’ Statements were found to emphasize the policy objectives and unintended or adverse consequences of ballot measures, as well as the application of legal rules to multiple factual scenarios. By contrast, official state explanatory statements describing ballot measures made no mention of policy objectives or unintentional or adverse consequences. Results suggest that citizens’ approach to assessing ballot measures may have both strategic/instrumental and realistic dimensions and that rule-application may play a key role in enabling citizens’ understanding of the legal aspects of ballot measures.
Legislation by Amateurs: The Role of Legal Details and Knowledge in Initiative Deliberation
1. LEGISLATION BY AMATEURS:
THE ROLE OF LEGAL DETAILS AND
KNOWLEDGE IN INITIATIVE DELIBERATION
Robert C. Richards, Jr. and John Gastil
The Pennsylvania State University
Department of Communication Arts & Sciences
Presentation at National Communication
Association, November, 2013
2. Overview
Previous Research and Motivations for This Study
The Oregon Citizens‟ Initiative Review, and
Methodology
Four Results
Conclusion
3. Key Findings of Previous Research
Empirical research shows voters commonly
misunderstand the legal effects of ballot measures
Courts frequently strike down ballot measures as
unconstitutional or inconsistent with other laws
Citizens deliberating about ballot measures
frequently use narrative to discuss unintended /
adverse consequences of measures
4. Motivations for This Study
Determine characteristics of citizens‟
narrative and non-narrative discourse about
measures
Identify differences between citizens’
deliberative discourse, and official voter
guide descriptions of measures
5. The Oregon Citizens‟ Initiative Review
• Public deliberation by a
random sample of 24
citizens on a ballot
initiative; analysis is
published in official
voter guide
• In 2010 two measures:
(1) Mandatory
Minimums, and
(2) Medical Marijuana
Dispensaries
6. Methodology
Content analysis of transcripts of citizens‟
deliberations and written statements, and
official voter guide descriptions of measures
Original coding scheme
Developed from prior study of government lawyers
Limitations
7. Main Results
1. Citizens frequently discussed policy objectives and
negative and unanticipated effects of measures.
2. Citizens frequently engaged in application of law to
facts, explanation of laws, evaluation of laws, and
persuasion.
3. Citizens frequently used narrative.
4. Official voter guide descriptions of measures generally
lacked these topics, functions, and mode.
8. 1. Citizens Frequently Discuss Objectives
and Adverse Consequences of Measures
Policy Objectives:
• “It is what that‟s about. It‟s about the patients who need
their medical marijuana and cannot get it”
• “This is about people that truly need it. If you don‟t
understand that point, the rest of it‟s moot”
Adverse / Unintended Consequences:
• “Well, we‟re saying the Measure is defective … in that it
has an unintended consequence of … exposing 15 to 17
year olds to potential 25 year sentences”
9. Frequency of Statements on Policy Objectives
or Adverse Consequences During CIR Deliberation
Mandatory Minimums
Topical
Concepts
Medical Marijuana
Number of
Instances
Percentage
of All
Instances
Number of
Instances
Percentage
of All
Instances
Unintended or
Adverse
Consequences
of Laws
229
7%
410
5%
Policy
Objectives or
Purposes of
Laws
213
6%
367
4%
Note. Mandatory Minimums: n=3447. Medical Marijuana: n=8377. Instances are thought
units
10. 2. Common Functions of Citizens‟ Legal Talk
Evaluating Laws:
• “…it is ambiguous and there is a lack of concrete steps in the
measure. There is too much left open to interpretation and
actions after it passes.”
Applying Laws to Facts:
• Panelist 1: “You say that you get drunk or something,
somebody got hurt and say, „Well, it was my first time.‟ I‟m not
going to put him in 25 years in jail because it was the first time.
...”
• Panelist 2: “But looking at the other side what about the
families? Somebody got killed. It‟s a 15 year old girl who got
run over you know”
11. Frequency of Legal Communication Functions
During CIR Deliberation
Mandatory Minimums
Medical Marijuana
Functional
Concepts
Number of
Instances
Percentage
of All
Instances
Number of
Instances
Percentage
of All
Instances
Evaluating
Laws
625
18%
684
8%
Applying Laws
to Facts
587
17%
1161
14%
Explaining
Laws
235
7%
1419
17%
Persuading
Others
218
6%
643
8%
Note. Mandatory Minimums: n=3447. Medical Marijuana: n=8377. Instances are thought
units
12. 3. Citizens Use Narrative Frequently to
Discuss Legal Aspects of Ballot Measures
“…so I don‟t see any reason why a person
couldn‟t go in one day and buy some [medical
marijuana], go in the next day and buy some to
sell to his friends and I have seen no evidence
anywhere that any state has tried to prevent that
from happening”
13. Frequency of Narrative During CIR Deliberation
Mandatory Minimums
Types of
Narrative
Thought
Units
Medical Marijuana
Number of
Instances
Percentage
of All
Instances
Number of
Instances
Percentage
of All
Instances
All Types of
Thought Units
454
13%
1031
12%
Counterfactual
Thought Units
260
8%
827
10%
Co-Created
Thought Units
61
2%
152
2%
Responsive
Thought Units
23
1%
75
1%
Note. Mandatory Minimums: n=3447. Medical Marijuana: n=8377. Instances are thought
units
14. 4. Discrepancies Between Official Voter Guide
Descriptions of Measures, and Citizens‟
Deliberations and Written Statements
Official voter guide descriptions of measures:
• did not discuss policy objectives or negative or
unanticipated consequences
• did not evaluate laws,
• rarely applied laws to facts
• did not use narrative (present in citizens‟ oral
deliberations but not citizens‟ written statements)
15. Comparison of Selected Topical and Functional Concepts During
CIR Deliberation, Mandatory Minimums (Measure 73)
Citizens’ Statement
Topical or
Functional
Concept
Number
of
Instances
Voter Guide
Percentage Number of
of All
Instances
Instances
Percentage
of All
Instances
Objectives or
Purposes
6
19%
0
0%
Negative or
Unanticipated
Consequences
3
10%
0
0%
Evaluating Law
5
16%
0
0%
Applying Law
to Facts
3
10%
1
7%
Note. Citizens‟ Statement: n=31. Official Voter Guide Explanatory
Statement: n=14. Instances are thought units.
16. Comparison of Selected Topical and Functional Concepts During
CIR Deliberation, Medical Marijuana Dispensaries (Measure 74)
Citizens’ Statement
Topical or
Functional
Concept
Number
of
Instances
Voter Guide
Percentage Number of
of All
Instances
Instances
Percentage
of All
Instances
Objectives or
Purposes
4
12%
0
0%
Negative or
Unanticipated
Consequences
2
6%
0
0%
Evaluating Law
5
15%
0
0%
Applying Law
to Facts
2
6%
0
0%
Note. Citizens‟ Statement: n=33. Official Voter Guide Explanatory
Statement: n=33. Instances are thought units.
17. Conclusion
• Citizen-lawmakers strategically and
realistically analyze measures
• Voter guides lack information voters need
• Test coding scheme and coding
• Replicate this study
• Examine other states‟ voter guides
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28. Acknowledgements
• Grateful thanks to:
• Professor Dr. Katherine R. Knobloch of the Colorado State
University Department of Communication Studies
• David Brinker of The Pennsylvania State University Department of
Communication Arts & Sciences
29. Contact
• Robert C. Richards, Jr., JD, MSLIS, MA, BA
• PhD Candidate
• The Pennsylvania State University Department of Communication
Arts and Sciences
• Email: rcr5122@psu.edu
• Web: http://legalinformatics.wordpress.com/about/