“…Most prominently, consensus conferences and other mini-publics have been criticized for their limited impact on policy making (Delborne et al, 2013; Dryzek & Tucker, 2008; Guston, 1999; Ureta, 2016). As a result, we can find a “systemic turn” in deliberation research where scholars increasingly investigate how deliberative mini-publics should and can impact broader political systems (Rountree et al, 2022). Authors have proposed, for example, to tailor deliberation activities to windows of policy-making opportunity, in terms of topic (e.g., consideration of competing themes), timing (e.g., early stage engagement), and the involvement of DM (Burgess, 2014; Caluwaerts & Reuchamps, 2015; Delborne et al, 2013; Itten & Mouter, 2022; Kaplan et al, 2021; Rask & Worthington, 2012; Richter et al, 2022).…”