'This is one of the most ambitious and valuable works of legal and social theory of recent years and is a major contribution to recent efforts to work out the meaning of philosophical pragmatism for social thought. The authors synthesize a breath-taking range of material, but the argument remains tightly focused throughout.' William H. Simon, Columbia Law School, USA 'This book is simply one of the most subtle and original reflections on democracy and learning to appear in many years. Anyone who thinks that democracies must learn to survive and that enquiry has a democratizing potential should read, and reflect on it.' Charles Sabel, Columbia Law School, USA 'In this important book, Lenoble and Maesschalck make a major contribution to contemporary debates in democratic political theory. Their unique legal-philosophical analysis of the problem of reflexive governance in terms of collective learning in the public interest will appeal to a wide range of academic audiences in the social and political sciences and in socio-legal studies.' Peter Vincent-Jones, University of Leeds, UK 'This is a timely and thought-provoking book which urges both democratic and legal theorists to recognise the implications of new forms of governance and which emphasises the importance of collective-identity formation in the processes of deliberative and reflexive governance.' Julia Black, London School of Economics, UK 'This book is well written and scholarly... a major new step on the road to recapturing governance discourse from the shackles of the economic and the deliberative approaches.' Cambrian Law Review