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Remaking heaven in small-scale democracy: A randomised experiment to encourage contested elections and greater representativeness in English local councils.

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Presentation on theme: "Remaking heaven in small-scale democracy: A randomised experiment to encourage contested elections and greater representativeness in English local councils."— Presentation transcript:

1 Remaking heaven in small-scale democracy: A randomised experiment to encourage contested elections and greater representativeness in English local councils Matt Ryan, Gerry Stoker, Peter John, Alice Moseley, Oliver James, Liz Richardson, and Matia Vannoni

2 What does local heaven look like? Increased (equal) political participation We have seen plenty of experiments around enhancing main forms political participation… – Voting – Standing for office? – Communicating with a representative – Joining a movement/campaign

3 Parish council Rural Britain – green and pleasant it can be cloudy like heaven Small communities (lowest tier of government for roughly 30% of the population of England) 9,500 parish councils and 95,000 councillors. 70,000 inhabitants to less than 200 residents. 80% of parish councils govern areas of less than 2,500 inhabitants Councillors are disproportionately old (only 8% under forty and just over 1% under thirty) and disproportionately white males (29% women and 4% black and minority ethnicities). *last census 2006 Rarely hold contested elections = legitimacy problem.

4 What do we know about recruitment? In the majority of cases a stimulus (communication) is needed to recruit a person to stand for office (Mcleod et al 1999). Recruiters tend to look first to relatively closed networks, and value people with the same characteristics that they themselves possess (Crowder-Meyer 2011, Brady et al. 1995; 1999). Logical to want confidence that the recruit will do a good job…close personal connection or often a family connection (Van Lieffringe, 2012) May also recruit from within any number of networks of ‘purpose’ where they can recognise that members have a shared identity (Lim 2008)…weak and seemingly innocuous relationships e.g. a friend of the family (Della Porta and Diani 2005)

5 …continued… Time-scarce…use crude heuristics – as proxy assume that education, income and labour-market position are related to political interest (Stromblad 2008). For recruit personal incentives key – Will I win? Will I make a difference? Can I gain access/reward/status? – Costs - Time to campaign/stand and do the job (Norris and Lovenduski 1994), being in the public eye (Lawless 2012)

6 Facilitating intervention? Literature suggests interventions need to be centred on clear understandings of the fears and ambitions of potential recruits and practically enable capacity and confidence- building through training or reassurance mechanisms.

7 May 7 Group: Hampshire, Northants, Suffolk, Surrey and Leics/Rutland

8 Sample 977 parishes 818 clerks 5 counties of Southern England 51% (498) parishes received treatment letter & briefing paper 49% (479) parishes received control letter & no briefing paper

9 Research design in a nutshell Pilot in 2013-2014 to find out best practice > treatment for 2015 Randomization of 818 clerks to take account of shared parishes Sept 2014: Control got a general letter about recruitment Sept 2014: Treatment got a letter & briefing paper from researchers with inclusion of research findings + invited to training sessions with Stoker and John Nov 2014: training takes place (two crossovers) Measurement of taking the treatment by a survey and crosschecking websites Outcomes measures by contested elections and seats, and survey measures investigating the extent of activity to recruit candidates

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11 Findings …Almost nothing Something happening with encouragement to use social media. Why? – some ancillary research information helps us understand…

12 Role is time consuming (65%) Lack of knowledge of parish councillor role (44%) Perception that parish councils have limited power to make a difference (44%) 341 responses from 977 parishes (35% response rate)

13 Forcible Enhanced powers Quotas Other (downstream) affirmative action Compensation Targeted mobilisation Training Nudging Information Facilitative Enhancing representation


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