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Vanessa Liston (TCD) Clodagh Harris (UCC) Mark O’Toole (Kilkenny County Council)

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Presentation on theme: "Vanessa Liston (TCD) Clodagh Harris (UCC) Mark O’Toole (Kilkenny County Council)"— Presentation transcript:

1 Vanessa Liston (TCD) Clodagh Harris (UCC) Mark O’Toole (Kilkenny County Council)

2 Can we enable citizens’ political participation in a way that enables inclusion, social learning and political co-operation towards the development of sustainable policy?

3  “An obvious precondition of participation is that citizens need evidence that their participation can change policy outcomes, and evidence suggests that low participation rates are linked to a perception that participation has little impact” (The Power Inquiry, 2006)

4 Participation in Ireland

5 Local government participation limited to a number of committees and through the planning process’ (Meldon et al, 2000:6). The 2008 Green paper – Stronger local democracy – options for change considers petition rights, town meetings, participatory budgeting and plebiscites as means as strengthening the connection between citizens and the local government

6  Data on public submissions and citizen consultation events is maintained internally by individual local authority departments  It is neither centralised nor published

7 Table 2: Submissions received to development Plans process

8 Table 3: Numbers attending meetings for Kilkenny Development Plans process

9  Need for deeper and wider citizen participation. ◦ Wider - ‘any growth in the numbers involved in political participation’ (Power Inquiry, 2006) ◦ Deeper - ‘any change which allows a more direct, sustained and informed participation by citizens in political decisions’ (Power Inquiry, 2006)

10 Web applications that facilitate interactive information sharing, interoperability, user- centered design, and collaboration on the World Wide Web. (Wikipedia) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8T keV_JgZq4&feature=youtu.be

11  64% of young people(16-24) use Facebook for social networking  1.9 million users of Facebook (+500% since January 2009)  Youtube 1.3 million users  Twitter 180,000 users

12  Online LAPs ◦ lap.kilkennycoco.ie ◦ lap.finalcoco.ie ◦ wiki Government organisations tweet and publish to Facebook, LinkedIn, YouTube and Flickr. Draft Sectoral Plan : Web 2.0 to connect with citizens

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14  Create a model for enabling online citizen engagement in policy development processes that ◦ Measures impact ◦ Is inclusive [towards sustainable policy] ◦ New view of representation: builds on innovations in deliberative theory by Iris Young, John Dryzek and Andre Bachtiger. ◦ Is integrated to the policy development system

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16  Impartialism: ◦ Emphasis on consensus ◦ Abstract and narrow (Held, 2006) ◦ Promoting a single form of reasoning above others  Equality : ◦ Rhetorical standards act as a barrier to the full participation of all citizens.  Common Good: ◦ Restrict the scope of discourse. ◦ Ideal deliberative environment does not exist (Young, 2000)

17  Move away from common good towards harnessing social differences as a resource.  For sustainable policy outputs deliberation must be oriented towards: including the broadest range of views present in society and; enabling discussion with the aim of understanding and accommodation.

18 Representation of discourses in policy ‘Policy should resonate with discourses in the public sphere’ (Dryzek, 2010) Meta-consensus Agreement on the domain of reasons and considerations pertaining to the issue at hand as well as the nature of the choices to be made  Normative  Epistemic  Preference

19 Good enough deliberation:  Relaxes Habermasian criteria, including sincerity  Rational discourse allocated to one point only in sequential deliberation  All communication types allowed at earlier points

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21  A public space, without barriers to communication  An empowered space, hosts deliberation among actors in institutions that produce collective decisions (e.g. Council).  Transmission: a means by which deliberations in the public space can influence decision making in the empowered space  Accountability: a process in which empowered space answers to public space  Meta-deliberation: deliberation about how the system should be organised  Decisiveness: the extent to which the above five elements determine the content of collective decisions.

22  Public Sphere ◦ Social networking ◦ Contact with representatives ◦ Evolving learning framework ◦ Aggregate output and sentiment reports on monthly basis for Council meetings ◦ Discourse ‘representatives/influencers’ emerge for dialogue sphere when a policy draft is open for consultation  Dialogue Sphere ◦ Discourse influencers deliberate in the dialogue sphere on draft policy ◦ Distance between discourses is scored and visualised ◦ Aim is to incentivise co-operative behaviour towards problem solving and inclusive policy proposals ◦ Feedback loop to public sphere  Empowered Space ◦ Output of dialogue sphere is input to policy deliberations in Council ◦ Final Council policy is scored for similarily/difference to deliberated citizen policy draft. ◦ Provide direct feedback and accountability link to public sphere

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24 Proposed SOWIT policy process Preliminary consultation Draft compiled Public Consultation Manager’s report Council SOWIT Public Sphere SOWIT Deliberation Sphere SOWIT Public Sphere Revised policy SOWIT Public Sphere Feedback

25 Questions


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