toward more civil, productive public discourse a brief orientation for aba mediation week, 2011 matt...
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Toward More Civil, Toward More Civil, Productive Public DiscourseProductive Public Discourse
A brief orientation for ABA A brief orientation for ABA Mediation Week, 2011Mediation Week, 2011
Matt Leighninger
Deliberative Democracy Consortium
www.deliberative-democracy.net
Public meetings and public hearings often don’t work for officials OR citizens.
How can we improve them?
Public officials spend time and energy to engage citizens…
Public hearings Town hall meetings Constituent service Newsletters, e-bulletins, web-sites The media Advocacy and nonprofit groups In other, more informal settings
…but they are frustrated with traditional formats for engagement
In these settings, citizens:Seem uninformedAre not civil, respectful toward officialsDisagree with one another and are not willing to compromiseDo not understand the economic, political, or legal restraints on government
“What drove me to try structured, planned public engagement was my awful experience with unstructured, unplanned public engagement.”
– John Nalbandian, former mayor of Lawrence, Kansas
What works better?
Proactively reaching out to recruit large, diverse numbers of people
Using process techniques (usually in small groups) that allow people to be heard, to learn, and to consider a range of views or options
Going beyond talk: using process to gather policy input, encourage volunteerism, and galvanize action by small groups of people
Some recent large-scale examples
National “Our Budget, Our Economy” project, 2010
“Oregon Citizens’ Initiative Review,” 2010 Michigan “Hard Times, Hard Choices”
convening, 2010 Seven-state “Horizons” project, 2005-present(For more, see pp. 13-14 in NCDD Resource
Guide)
Coverage of public deliberation project in MI
Process is important: Recruitment strategies
Map community networks;
Involve leaders of those networks;
Hold a kickoff meeting;
Follow up, follow up, follow up.
Process is important: Small-group strategies
No more than 12 people per group;
Facilitator who is impartial (doesn’t give opinions);
Written materials provide background info, main views or options, discussion questions;
Start with people describing their experiences, end with action planning.
Resources
• www.deliberative-democracy.net• www.ncdd.org • www.everydaydemocracy.org• www.americaspeaks.org• www.publicagenda.org• www.kettering.org• www.nlc.org