Citizens’ assemblies, a new form of democratic representation? No 34, 2022/3 - pagesPages 5 to 36Citizens’ assemblies, a new form of democratic representation?By Hélène Landemore, Jean-Michel FourniauPages 37 to 79Deliberative citizens: the Citizens’ Convention on Climate and deliberationBy Bénédicte Apouey, Jean-Michel Fourniau, Solène TournusPages 81 to 106Engagement and politicization processes within the Citizens’ Convention on ClimateBy Nathalie Blanc, Laurence GranchampPages 107 to 137Participation that is both technical and political. A typology of the measures of the Citizens’ Convention on ClimateBy Selma TiliketePages 139 to 171“Who governs a citizens’ assembly?” The role of the governance committee in the Citizens’ Convention on ClimateBy Jean-Michel FourniauPages 173 to 204The negotiated boundaries of citizen assemblies. The case of the Citizens’ Convention on Climate (2019–2020)By Maxime Gaborit, Laurent Jeanpierre, Romane RozencwajgPages 205 to 235Did the Citizens’ Convention on Climate work like a parliamentary assembly?By Éric BugePages 237 to 260The parliamentarization of deliberative democracy: Why do elected officials institutionalize citizen participation in their parliament?By Min Reuchamps, Ann-Mireille SautterPages 261 to 281Placing the Convention: an outlier amongst climate assemblies?By Graham SmithPages 285 to 309The margins of what can be said within and outside of an institutional participation mechanism: Citizen debt audits in MadridBy Jessy Bailly