engaging the citizen - futures for civil society

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Presentation by The Rt Hon George Reid at NICVA\'s Annual Conference on 21st November 2008

TRANSCRIPT

ENGAGING THE CITIZENFutures For Civil Society

The Rt Hon George Reid

•The Drivers of Change

•The Challenge of Politics

“The development of a dynamic and responsive strategy for outreach and public engagement”

“We must try to accept that we have a shared past and try to learn from it.

“The differences in our societies must cease to be barriers between us.

“We must learn to live together – not only to be supportive of our respective individual diversities but indeed to be champions of respect and tolerance of others”

N.I. CHALLENGES

• Promotion of Vision and Values

• Division on Religious Boundaries

• Tolerance of Difference

• Collective Campaigns

• Trust in|from the Assembly

• Dependency on State Funding

• Clear unifying Agenda

GOALS OF INQUIRY

• Explore threats and opportunities

• Identify how policy and practice can be enhanced

• Improve ability of civil society to meet future challenges

WHAT IS CIVIL SOCIETY?

• Associational Life• The ‘good’ society

• Arenas for public deliberation

“Civil Society is a goal to aim for, a means to achieve it and a framework for engaging with

each other about ends and means”

FUTURES THINKING

“The purpose of looking at the future is to disturb the present”

PLEASE, NO CONSULTANT SPEAK!

FAULT LINES

• Challenge of Sustainability

• Isolation of the Poorest

• Social Cohesion under Pressure

• Shifting Activism and increasing obstacles to

engaging with civil society

FAULT LINES

• Application of Technology

• Voluntary & Community Organisations lose their

Distinctiveness

• Diminishing Areas for Public Deliberation

• Marginalisation of Dissent

LOCAL LIFE

DIVERSITY WARS

ATHENIAN VOICES

GLOBAL COMPACT

WHAT NEXT?

• Social Justice and Climate Change

• Financial Industry

• The Media

• The Deliberative Process

• Marginalisation of Dissent

ANOTHER FAULT LINE

• Devolution as a Driver of Change

• State no longer sole source of authority

• Responsibility for Civil Society largely

devolved

QUESTION 1

Is Devolution Decentralisation,

power handed down from the Centre?

Or is Devolution a dynamic process,

power rising up from the People?

QUESTION 2

Does the Northern Ireland Assembly

practise Representative Democracy?

Or does the Northern Ireland Assembly

practise Participative Democracy?

COMPARISONS

• Architecture

• Accessibility

• Accountability

• Equal Opportunities

• Sharing of Power

“The development of a dynamic and responsive strategy for outreach and public engagement”

• A People’s Parliament

• Politics too important to leave to the politicians

• Let the People in

• Let the People have their say

• Let the People change law

“We must learn to live together – not only to be supportive of our respective individual diversities but indeed to be champions of respect and tolerance of others”

A Civic Agenda?

• Decide Representative or Participative

Democracy

• Decide Decentralisation or

Devolution

A Futures Agenda

• Think Needs not Positions

• Consult with Civic Society

• Open the Assembly to the People

• Agree a Petitions System

• Stand for Election

“Look to the Future. Accept the Challenges. Society fails if the citizen is not engaged.

“Setting an agenda for change is not a burden. It’s a responsibility. And an opportunity to change for good”

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