ArXiv TLDR

Participation and Representation in Local Government Speech

🐦 Tweet
2604.21202

Olivia Martin, Amar Venugopal

econ.EMcs.CL

TLDR

Analyzing a decade of California city council meetings, this study reveals demographic biases in public participation and the limited impact of remote access.

Key contributions

  • Created a massive new dataset of city council meeting transcripts from 115 California cities over a decade.
  • Found public participants are older, whiter, more male, liberal, and homeowners than the general voter population.
  • Observed public participation surges when land use and zoning topics are on meeting agendas.
  • Showed eliminating remote access reduces speaker numbers but does not significantly alter speaker demographics.

Why it matters

This paper offers the most comprehensive empirical portrait of local democracy participation to date. It highlights significant demographic biases and how institutional design choices, like remote access, affect public input. These findings are crucial for understanding and improving equitable representation.

Original Abstract

Local government meetings are the most common formal channel through which residents speak directly with elected officials, contest policies, and shape local agendas. However, data constraints typically limit the empirical study of these meetings to agendas, single cities, or short time horizons. We collect and transcribe a massive new dataset of city council meetings from 115 California cities over the last decade, using advanced transcription and diarization techniques to analyze the speech content of the meetings themselves. We document two sets of descriptive findings: First, city council meetings are frequent, long, and vary modestly across towns and time in topical content. Second, public participants are substantially older, whiter, more male, more liberal, and more likely to own homes than the registered voter population, and public participation surges when topics related to land use and zoning are included in meeting agendas. Given this skew, we examine the main policy lever municipalities have to shift participation patterns: meeting access costs. Exploiting pandemic-era variation in remote access, we show that eliminating remote options reduces the number of speakers, but does not clearly change the composition of speakers. Collectively, these results provide the most comprehensive empirical portrait to date of who participates in local democracy, what draws them in, and how institutional design choices shape both the volume and composition of public input.

📬 Weekly AI Paper Digest

Get the top 10 AI/ML arXiv papers from the week — summarized, scored, and delivered to your inbox every Monday.