Identidades in English No 4, December 2014 | Page 57

Deliberative / Constitucional Consensus Pittsburgh Goes To Cuba* Robert Cavalier Department of Philosophy, (Carnegie Mellon University- CMU) Co-Director, Program for Deliberative Democracy Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, EEUU W hile relations between the United States and Cuba often seem frozen in time, interesting signs of change have been occurring here in Pittsburgh. It began with recent visits from Cuban groups dedicated to the political integration of Afro-descendant communities in Latin America and is culminating in the related task of revisiting the constitution of the island State. For Manuel Cuesta Morúa, a Cuban historian and political scientist, Cuban society needs once again to reflect upon the basic laws that will govern them as they move toward a more liberal society. What distinguishes his work and that of his colleagues from other proponents of democratic reform, however, is the emphasis on the principles and practices of deliberative democracy as both the form and content of this ‘constitutional conversation.’ As has become painfully clear from attempts to ‘transplant’ liberal constitutional ideals into countries without a history of democratic institutions, such societies will all too often fall back upon sectarian and tribal affiliations. In ways that unfortunately have echoes of our own political divides, each side views the other as the enemy to be defeated. In contrast to this, Cuesta Morúa proposes to ground the Cuban constitutional discussion in “deliberative forums” that involve the thoughtful, informed and engaged participation of the citizenry. While recognizing that the basic ideals of liberty and equality must be embedded in an overlapping consensus document, the path to that document begins at the local level, where these ide 2&RW