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Local Government Programming In-service October 22 & 23, 2014 Deliberative Governance: Civil Discourse and Public Engagement Presented by Bill Rizzo Professor & Local Government Specialist UWEX Local Government Center

Local Government Programming In-service October 22 & 23, 2014

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Local Government Programming In-service October 22 & 23, 2014. Deliberative Governance: Civil Discourse and Public Engagement Presented by Bill Rizzo Professor & Local Government Specialist UWEX Local Government Center. Toward More Deliberative Local Government: A Theory of Change. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Local Government Programming In-service October 22 & 23, 2014

Local Government Programming In-service

October 22 & 23, 2014Deliberative Governance:Civil Discourse and Public Engagement

Presented by Bill RizzoProfessor & Local Government Specialist

UWEX Local Government Center

Page 2: Local Government Programming In-service October 22 & 23, 2014

Toward More Deliberative Local Government:

A Theory of Change To be democratic, local government must be

representative.   To be representative, local government must be

well-informed.

To be well-informed, local government must be deliberative.

To be deliberative, local government must be collaborative.

To be collaborative, the governance environment must be civil.

Page 3: Local Government Programming In-service October 22 & 23, 2014

What is ‘deliberative governance?’

Deliberative governance is a set of three topics dealing with how communities make decisions,

address local issues, meet local needs, and solve local problems. It is, therefore, not just a core local

government topic but a core community development topic.

 

Page 4: Local Government Programming In-service October 22 & 23, 2014

Three Topics

1. Civility and Civil Discourse

2. Public Engagement

3. Deliberative Process

Page 5: Local Government Programming In-service October 22 & 23, 2014

Civility

Tolerance

Respectful Interaction

Listening

Compromise

Page 6: Local Government Programming In-service October 22 & 23, 2014

Civil DialogueCivility – Tolerance, Respectful Interaction, Listening, Compromise

Dialogue – An exchange of ideas and opinions. (Merriam-Webster Dictionary)

Civil Dialogue – A respectful exchange of views during which participants listen to better understand others’ perspectives and seek solutions through compromise and the pursuit of common ground.

Page 7: Local Government Programming In-service October 22 & 23, 2014

Civility is not a new idea in government.

Absent a civil environment, effective public engagement is virtually impossible.

The public is frustrated with the lack of civility in government.

Civility is intentional; a civil governance environment can be built and sustained.

Page 8: Local Government Programming In-service October 22 & 23, 2014

Public Engagement…

…what local officials do to find out what their constituents think, feel, believe, and value…what concerns them…relative to a local issue, problem or decision.

Page 9: Local Government Programming In-service October 22 & 23, 2014

Purposes of Public Participation

(IAP2) To inform the public;

To consult the public;

To involve the public;

To collaborate with the public;

To empower the public

Page 10: Local Government Programming In-service October 22 & 23, 2014

Public Engagement Principles

(IAP2) Those affected by a decision are

involved in the decision-making process.

The public's contribution will influence the decision.

Decision-makers communicate to participants how their input affected the decision.

Recognizes and communicates the needs and interests of all participants, including decision makers.  

Page 11: Local Government Programming In-service October 22 & 23, 2014

Public Engagement Challenges in Local

Government Differing views of representative democracy;

Local government culture, process, and history;

Public attitudes toward involvement;

The politicization of government

Page 12: Local Government Programming In-service October 22 & 23, 2014

Deliberative Engagement

Engagement activities in which the public collaborates with local officials to define an issue and generate solution and policy ideas to address it.

Two-step process:1. Issue Naming & Framing2. Public Deliberation

Page 13: Local Government Programming In-service October 22 & 23, 2014

Issue Naming & Framing

Issue Naming - What is the problem we need to talk about?

Issue Framing - What are the critical options and drawbacks are for deciding what to do about that problem?

Page 14: Local Government Programming In-service October 22 & 23, 2014

Done through a representative team of citizens;

Involves learning about the issue and how citizens feel about it?

Addresses three questions: What concerns you about this issue? Given those concerns, what would you or

others do about it? If that worked to ease your concern, what are

the downsides or trade-offs we might then have to accept?

 Produces an Issue Guide for public deliberation step.

Page 15: Local Government Programming In-service October 22 & 23, 2014

When to Name & Frame an Issue

With “wicked” problems;

Contentious issue;

When an issue affects most or all of a community;

Issue keeps coming back…eludes resolution;

Do NOT use with routine issues or issues that can be resolved using education, technology, or technical information.

Page 16: Local Government Programming In-service October 22 & 23, 2014

Public Deliberation Facilitated, structured public events

where a representative collection of citizens meet to talk about and evaluate each alternative generated by a Naming & Framing team. Three questions are addressed:

What actions should be taken to implement this alternative?

What are the advantages of this alternative?

What are the tradeoffs of this alternative?

May produce preferred alternative/recommendation.

Page 17: Local Government Programming In-service October 22 & 23, 2014

Provides local officials with good information to support decision-making;

Build a community’s ‘deliberative capacity:’

Promotes sustainable decisions;

Helpful for addressing difficult, stubborn issues.

Page 18: Local Government Programming In-service October 22 & 23, 2014

Intended Outcomes & Impacts

(the “so what” question) Increase community problem-solving capacity;

Minimize transaction & opportunity costs;

Change the culture & cycle of disengagement;

Produce more supportable, sustainable policies;

Page 19: Local Government Programming In-service October 22 & 23, 2014

Audience Wants and Needs When and how to engage;

Tools and strategies for engagement planning and implementation

Reducing or intervening in conflict associated with uncivil or disruptive behavior by citizens and officials;

How to increase citizen involvement;

Core concepts and principles.

Page 20: Local Government Programming In-service October 22 & 23, 2014

Programming Opportunities Base concepts education

Public engagement planning

Tools & resources

Engaging local officials

Page 21: Local Government Programming In-service October 22 & 23, 2014

Resources My page on the LGC website

(http://lgc.uwex.edu/dg/index.html)

LGC Public Engagement Planning Tool

IAP2 Spectrum IAP2 Toolbox

Clear Vision Case Study

Page 22: Local Government Programming In-service October 22 & 23, 2014

Scholarship Opportunities Case studies, exemplars;

Impact measurement;

Examine attitudes of local officials toward civility, civil dialogue, public engagement, and deliberative process and techniques.

Training and education guides.

Page 23: Local Government Programming In-service October 22 & 23, 2014

Local Government Programming In-service

October 22 & 23, 2014Deliberative Governance:Civil Discourse and Public Engagement

Presented by Bill RizzoProfessor & Local Government Specialist

UWEX Local Government Center