new ways of delivering public consultation - laria conference presentation 2015
TRANSCRIPT
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LARIA Annual Conference 2015“HOW DO WE MAKE A DIFFERENCE THROUGH NEW WAYS OF WORKING?”University of York, March 2015Addressing the challenges of local consultations – an international perspective
This work will be conducted in accordance with ISO 20252, the international standard for market and social research
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Presentation agenda
Challenges for local consultations
Overview of European methods & approaches
Detailed case studies
Concluding remarks
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Value for money
Value for money
Actionability Transparency, inclusiveness,
equality
Challenges for local authority consultation activity
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A wide variety of non-traditional participative methods
Further info: www.partizipation.at/methods.html
Advocacy planning
Activating survey
Dragon Dreaming
Cooperative discourse
Ephesus Model
Worldcafé
Fish Bowl
Neo-socratic dialogue
Planning for real
Dynamic Facilitation
3C method
Citizen exhibition
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Italy: Milan’s sharing economy
The issue: City administration recognised the value of promoting and facilitating a sharing economy
Sequence of events: • Steering group drafted proposition document• sharexpo event with variety of stakeholders• Online survey• Agreement on final framework
Further info: www.milanosmartcity.org
Outcomes and learnings: • Raised awareness and promoted opportunities• Gained buy in from a variety of stakeholders• Created networks, empowering residents• Optimised the use of resources and access to
services, spaces, and information
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Poland – 18 consultations across 16 boroughs
The issue: strengthen citizen participation in a new democracyWho was involved: a joint effort between local government, researchers, experts, 65 volunteers, and 3,500 residentsMethods used: 18 consultations, ca. 351 hours engaging with residents, 75 meetings took place, a wide range of approaches Outcomes & learnings: ● a coordinated, more cost effective effort● residents shaped local initiatives and policy ● the story of the consultations were gathered in a book
● Example 1: Wola street lighting – in situ observation, accompanied walks, local media, 3D street model, workshops
● Example 2: Warsaw Old Town consultation around regeneration of UNESCO world heritage site, green spaces, and promotion of culture
Further info: http://www.konsultacje.um.warszawa.pl/
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Czech Republic: future city game
Further info: http://creativecities.britishcouncil.org/urban_co-design_tools/future_city_game
Who is involved: Residents from diverse social backgrounds and professional disciplines; a games master who moderates throughoutRules: Over 1-2 days, players compete in teams through three stages – envisioning, testing and presenting – and then vote on the best idea. Benefits: Stimulates original ideas in cities, dynamic, gamified, inclusive, international
• Joint venture comprising various stakeholders• Aim: to facilitate creative and cultural activities• Winning idea: design of a cycle path along river lined with sculptures and schedule of cultural events
• Aim: to engage residents in the bid for European Capital of Culture • Winning idea: district regeneration, transformation of unused brewery into a social and cultural centre
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NL: Face your world project Amsterdam
Further info: www.faceyourworld.net
The issue: Design of a local park, to be used by all segments of the local community.Who was involved: Local borough administration, funding from various sources, an urban regeneration organisation
Outcomes & learnings: ● Designs were approved and park opened ● Young people influenced their neighbourhood ● Innovative technology facilitated translation of
ideas into reality ● Prize for civic value from the environment
ministry
Methods: ● An empty gymnasium was turned into an urban lab● Discussions with diverse local residents ● The Interactor design software
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Outcome & learnings: ● Children’s ideas and were integrated
into community planning, e.g. new train stations, housing, infrastructure
● Resulted in new methods and practices for planning efforts
Sweden: Involving children in community planning
Further info: www.trafikverket.se/PageFiles/157570/children_and_young_people_in_spatial_planning.pdf
The issue: Recognising that children need to be involved in physical planningWho was involved: Six municipalities in Sweden took part Methods used: Children were engaged in diverse ways, discussions and activities, making models of urban spaces, drama and photography, creating a book
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Germany: engaging diverse audiences
Further info: www.partizipative-methoden.de/en/index.php?page=service-options
Activating consultationApproach: communities are consulted, and also encouraged to articulate their interests Sequence of events: ● Preliminary investigation ● Recruiting and open questioning of participants
to identify issues, and collecting early ideas for potential solutions
● After survey evaluation, results are fed back
Example: later life in Osterholz● Senior citizens reflected on various themes
around housing, mobility, public services● To address challenges of an ageing society Example: life in Berlin’s Pankdorfer Strasse ● A diverse range of neighbours shared ideas
for improvements ● Involvement of multi-lingual volunteers
Citizen’s exhibitionApproach: combines participatory and aesthetic elements, involves a range of actors, enables a public dialogue around local issuesMulti-sequence method: interviews coupled with visual methods, co-creation of contentExample: redevelopment of Potsdamer Platz● use of urban wasteland● link to city wide and EU wide projectsExample: personalised medicine in Bremen● sharing residents’ views on public health
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Spain: participatory budgeting in Pamplona
The council allocated € 500,000 for a participatory budget, asking residents to propose investment ideas
Who was involved: ca. 1,500 residents aged 16+
Methods used: 1. Residents’ ideas were collected via various channels2. Council technical experts shortlisted 34 viable projects3. Residents then voted on their preferred options
Outcomes & learnings: ● Effective idea generation ● Citizen empowerment
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NL: 3C method facilitates neighbourhood improvement
Further info: Frieling et al. (2014) ‘Collaborative Communities Through Coproduction: Two Case Studies’ American Review of Public Administration, 2014, Vol 44(1) 35–58
The issue: Improving ‘liveability’ in two neighbourhoods in the NetherlandsWho was involved: Local city councils of Lewenborg and Parkwijk, the social work agency, and a university based consultancy groupMethods used: Collaborative Communities through Coproduction (3Cs), a continuous circular process of plan making, implementation and evaluation.
Outcomes & learnings to overcome typical dilemmas:● Involves resident groups that are usually
underrepresented● Participants involved in the planning and evaluation phase
to allow for face to face deliberation● Issues were defined by resident panel to ensure equality
of production between residents and experts● A facilitator encouraged consideration of the long term
common good rather than short term goals● The 3C method facilitated continuous co-production with
residents rather than a one-off consultation
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Denmark: Wind farms consultation
The issue: The municipalities of Northern Jutland were requested to progress the planning of potential wind farm sitesWho was involved: Consultations were held between citizens, politicians and experts.
Methods used: ● Creation of a GIS model showing wind farm and
landscape● Public meetings, discussion forums, reports, online
maps – genuine dialogue Outcomes & learnings: ● Use of multiple methods and online engagement
facilitated inclusivity ● Use of GIS models enabled public to take an informed
view of proposals● Early engagement with wider public to find solutions
to controversial issues works
Further info: Hansen (2004) ‘Geographic Information and Public Participation in Environmental Decision Making’,http://www.ecoconnect.org.uk/download/Review%20of%20Good%20Practice%20on%20Community%20Engagements.pdf
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Further resources
● European Institute for Public Participation: www.participationinstitute.org
● International Association for Public Participation: www.iap2.org
● International Journal of Public Deliberation: www.publicdeliberation.net
● Urban Ideas Bakery: http://creativecities.britishcouncil.org/urban_co-design_tools/urban_ideas_bakery
● Central and Eastern European Citizens Network: www.ceecn.net
● URBACT: http://urbact.eu/
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Concluding remarks
Value for Money
● Get volunteers involved
● Mobilise existing assets & resources
● Use online approaches
Transparency & inclusiveness
● Communicate clearly & early
● Aim for a range of stakeholders
● Involve end users● Incentivise, gamify● Disseminate findings
Actionability
● Ensure stakeholder buy in
● Set realistic objectives
● Offer genuine options
● Use co-creation for practical solutions
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Thank you for listening
0345 130 [email protected]
Christoph KörbitzAssociate [email protected]
Rachel [email protected]