Dear AoIRists, On behalf of a legal scholar colleague who is interested in recent developments in online adjudication, including efforts at e-rulemaking, online dispute resolution, e-petitioning, and other forms of e-participation as both implementations of and improvements on some version of Habermas's more recent (2006) theory of adjudication - specifically: Sturm¹s concept of multi-partiality ( Sturm and Gadlin, 2007, Conflict Resolution and Systemic Change, Journal of Dispute Resolution, Vol. 2007:3, pp. 1 63.) And recent works by Claudia Landwehr, 2010, Discourse and Coordination: Modes of Interaction and their Roles in Political Decision-Making, The Journal of Political Philosophy, Vol. 18:1, pp. 10122; and Landwehr and Holzinger, 2010, Institutional Determinants of Deliberative Interaction, European Political Science Review, vol. 2:3, pp. 373400. -- suggestions and tips for either additional resources along these lines, and/or any research groups or centers that may also be focusing on these threads of scholarship and research? As always, many thanks in advance, - charles Associate Professor in Media Studies Department of Media and Communication University of Oslo P.O. Box 1093 Blindern NO-0317 Oslo Norway Tel. +47 228 50404 email: charles.ess@media.uio.no Lifetime member, Association of Internet Researchers ³At vove er at miste fodfæstet for en stund, ikke at vove er at miste sig selv² [To dare is to lose your footing for an hour; not to dare is to lose yourself] - Kierkegaard