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Online Consultation: Governments Engaging Citizens Seminar By Steven Clift, Publicus.Net

Online Consultation: Governments Engaging Citizens Seminar - From the Archives

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An in-depth seminar from the early 2000's on governments using the Internet to consult citizens. Related: http://stevenclift.com

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Page 1: Online Consultation: Governments Engaging Citizens Seminar - From the Archives

Online Consultation: Governments Engaging Citizens

Seminar

By Steven Clift, Publicus.Net

Page 2: Online Consultation: Governments Engaging Citizens Seminar - From the Archives

Online Consultation SeminarCopyright 2003, Steven Clift, Publicus.Net

Online Consultation

Seminar Outline

• Introduction• Online Consultation• Conclusion

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Introduction

Page 4: Online Consultation: Governments Engaging Citizens Seminar - From the Archives

Online Consultation SeminarCopyright 2003, Steven Clift, Publicus.Net

Introduction• Moving from one-way old media to two-way

communication

• Many-to-many communication is the focus of this seminar

• “The most democratizing aspect of the Internet is the ability for people to organize and communicate in groups.”- Steven Clift from Democracy is Online article in, OnTheInternet, April 1998

Page 5: Online Consultation: Governments Engaging Citizens Seminar - From the Archives

Online Consultation SeminarCopyright 2003, Steven Clift, Publicus.Net

Introduction

• Taking the E-citizen perspective – What do people actually do online? – How can that knowledge be used to design

interactive opportunities?

• Time online. People spend more time in their e-mail box than surfing on the web.

• E-mail is where the e-citizens roam. The web is a tremendous and valuable complement.

Page 6: Online Consultation: Governments Engaging Citizens Seminar - From the Archives

Online Consultation SeminarCopyright 2003, Steven Clift, Publicus.Net

Introduction

• Daily Internet Activities – PewInternet.OrgOn a typical day, Americans with net access:

– Go online - 53%– Send email - 46– Use an online search engine

to find information - 29 – Get news - 22– Surf the Web for fun - 22– Look for info on a hobby - 19– Check the weather - 17 – Do any type of research for

their job - 16

– Do an Internet search to answer a specific question - 14

– Research a product or service before buying it - 14

– Get financial information - 13– Look for info about movies,

books, or other leisure activities - 13

– Send an instant message - 11– Check sports scores - 10– Look for political

news/information - 9 – Research for school or training -

9 – Visit a government Web site - 8

Page 7: Online Consultation: Governments Engaging Citizens Seminar - From the Archives

Online Consultation SeminarCopyright 2003, Steven Clift, Publicus.Net

Introduction

• Local online groups, where might e-citizen already “be”?– Club EGroups– Religious Institutions E-News lists– Local Business and Trade Groups E-Lists– Sports Group E-Lists– Media Hosted Web Forums– Social Chat Forums (Younger net users)– Civic/NGO E-Lists– Neighbors, Apartment Complexes– EGroups with Personal FriendsAdapted from PewInternet.Org report on Online Communities

Page 8: Online Consultation: Governments Engaging Citizens Seminar - From the Archives

Online Consultation SeminarCopyright 2003, Steven Clift, Publicus.Net

Introduction

• Do most people view the Internet as a way to get involved locally? Not yet. We must change that.

– 67% of American Internet users say the Net helps them get involved in things outside their community

– 9% say it helps them get involved in things close to home.

– However, 26% of American Internet users (or 28 million people) have employed the Internet to contact or get information about local groups.

• From PewInternet.Org’s, Online Communities survey, continued …

Page 9: Online Consultation: Governments Engaging Citizens Seminar - From the Archives

Online Consultation SeminarCopyright 2003, Steven Clift, Publicus.Net

Introduction

• Of American Internet users, they go online “often” or “sometimes”:– 41% for information about local stores or merchants. – 35% for news about their local community or community events. – 30% for information about local government. – 24% for information about local schools. – 13% to email public officials. (Only half of all net users say their

town has a Web site, and few net users find it very useful.)

– 11% of Internet users say they are aware of at least one local issue where the net played a role in organizing citizens to communicate with public officials.

– Percentage doubles to 22% for Internet users who are active members of online communities.

– Source: PewInternet.Org Online Communities survey

Page 10: Online Consultation: Governments Engaging Citizens Seminar - From the Archives

Online Consultation SeminarCopyright 2003, Steven Clift, Publicus.Net

Introduction

• If “barriers to entry” to publishing information or hosting discussions online are low, what scarcities remain?

– User Time – User Attention– Resources available to produce quality content,

host consultations and discussions

• Increasing expectations of users important• These factors must always be taken into

consideration.

Page 11: Online Consultation: Governments Engaging Citizens Seminar - From the Archives

Online Consultation SeminarCopyright 2003, Steven Clift, Publicus.Net

Introduction

• Value of online community and consultations include:

– Anywhere– Anytime – On your own time– Diverse voices– Complement not replace existing participation

• Can overcome the “democratic divide” despite digital divide

• Most current decision-making processes have specific place and time restrictions.

Page 12: Online Consultation: Governments Engaging Citizens Seminar - From the Archives

Online Consultation

Page 13: Online Consultation: Governments Engaging Citizens Seminar - From the Archives

Online Consultation SeminarCopyright 2003, Steven Clift, Publicus.Net

Online Consultation

• Online consultations are (normally) time-limited events designed to inform the public policy process and inform interested citizens and experts

• Often sponsored by government and NGOs, sometimes media – this presentation has a government focus

• Related terms – online events, online hearings, e-rulemaking

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Online Consultation SeminarCopyright 2003, Steven Clift, Publicus.Net

Online Consultation

• Why do them?– Increase the quality, quantity, and diversity of

information and opinion available to decision-makers

– Educate citizens on the policy options and complex choices

– Build public and media awareness on priority issues

– Float ideas and proposals to determine interest, build support, lessen opposition

• Don’t expect them to be easy or less work than in-person consultations or public hearings

Page 15: Online Consultation: Governments Engaging Citizens Seminar - From the Archives

Online Consultation SeminarCopyright 2003, Steven Clift, Publicus.Net

Online Consultation

Online Consultation Top Ten Tips

1. Political Support Required. 

2. State Purpose, Share Context. 

3. Build an Audience.

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Online Consultation SeminarCopyright 2003, Steven Clift, Publicus.Net

Online Consultation

• 4. Choose Your Model and Elements Carefully. 

Examples– Questions and Answers– Document/Policy Comments– Online Expert Panel– Online Conference– E-Rulemaking Comments– Policy Implementation Information Exchange– Live Chat/Interview Events– Live Multimedia Events– Consultation Index (Traditional Participation)– Other Online Elements: Surveys and Polls, Comment

Forms, Petitions, Testimony, Focus Groups, Web Forums and E-mail Lists

• Here are select examples …

Page 17: Online Consultation: Governments Engaging Citizens Seminar - From the Archives

Online Consultation SeminarCopyright 2003, Steven Clift, Publicus.Net

Online Consultation

• Consultation Calendar (Traditional +)

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Online Consultation SeminarCopyright 2003, Steven Clift, Publicus.Net

Online Consultation

• Questions and Answers

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Online Consultation SeminarCopyright 2003, Steven Clift, Publicus.Net

Online Consultation

• Policy/Document comments sought

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Online Consultation SeminarCopyright 2003, Steven Clift, Publicus.Net

Online Consultation• Online Expert/Guest Panel

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Online Consultation SeminarCopyright 2003, Steven Clift, Publicus.Net

Online Consultation

• Online Conferences

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Online Consultation SeminarCopyright 2003, Steven Clift, Publicus.Net

Online Consultation• E-Rulemaking Comments

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Online Consultation SeminarCopyright 2003, Steven Clift, Publicus.Net

Online Consultation

• Policy Implementation and Info Exchange

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Online Consultation SeminarCopyright 2003, Steven Clift, Publicus.Net

Online Consultation

• Live Chats, Live Multimedia Events

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Online Consultation SeminarCopyright 2003, Steven Clift, Publicus.Net

Online Consultation• Online Polls and Surveys

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Online Consultation SeminarCopyright 2003, Steven Clift, Publicus.Net

Online Consultation• Online Polls and Surveys 2

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Online Consultation SeminarCopyright 2003, Steven Clift, Publicus.Net

Online Consultation

• Web Forums

Fujisawa City, Japan has

Government introduced topics and citizen created topic in two columns – a key innovation.

Approximately 600 of 3000 local governments in Japan have web forums, most are not active. Fujisawa is successful exception with staff time dedicated to facilitating the forum.

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Online Consultation SeminarCopyright 2003, Steven Clift, Publicus.Net

Online Consultation

• E-mail lists – are more implementation oriented

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Online Consultation SeminarCopyright 2003, Steven Clift, Publicus.Net

Online Consultation

Back to the final 5 of 10 top tips …

5. Create Structure.

6. Provide Facilitation and Guidelines. 

7. Disseminate Content and Results.

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Online Consultation SeminarCopyright 2003, Steven Clift, Publicus.Net

Online Consultation

8. Access to Decision-Makers and Staff Required. 

9. Promote Civic Education. 

10. Not About Technology. 

Full article online at:http://www.publicus.net/articles/consult.html

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Online Consultation SeminarCopyright 2003, Steven Clift, Publicus.Net

Online Consultation

Addition resources online at bottom of:http://www.publicus.net/articles/consult.html

• Bowling Together: Online Public Engagement in Policy Deliberation• OECD Citizens as Partners Guide: Information, Consultation and Public

Participation in Policy-Making  (268 pages) • Engaging Citizens in Policy-making: Information, Consultation and Public

Participation. OECD Public Management Policy Brief No. 10 • Building Digital Bridges - Creating Inclusive Online Parliamentary

Consultations • Electronic Democracy and Educating Young People • New Media and Social Exclusion (report excerpt from Hansard Society) • On-line Engagement – New Models and Implications for Government

Departments and Officials • Lessons from the Network Model for Online Engagement of Citizens • Electronic Civic Consultation: A guide to the use of the Internet in

interactive policy making (Key Dutch report from 1997)

Page 32: Online Consultation: Governments Engaging Citizens Seminar - From the Archives

Conclusion

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Online Consultation SeminarCopyright 2003, Steven Clift, Publicus.Net

Conclusion

• We have a choice – use information and communications technologies to improve the connection between citizens and their governments or not.

• We have a choice – build online efforts among and for citizens that connect them with each other in order to raise their voices in our communities or not.

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Online Consultation SeminarCopyright 2003, Steven Clift, Publicus.Net

Conclusion

• This is an evolution that can be shaped on our terms, our democratic terms.

• Ultimately, our goal is to create systems for political participation that fully accommodate the will of the people so we can improve the outcomes of our public work and society as a whole.

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Online Consultation SeminarCopyright 2003, Steven Clift, Publicus.Net

Further Information

• Democracies Online Newswirehttp://www.e-democracy.org/doOver 2500 people around the world exchanging announcements, news, and articles related to e-democracy, e-government, and e-politics.

• E-Democracy Resources Flyerhttp://publicus.net/articles/edemresources.htmlLinks to the top e-democracy starting points on a two page flyer available in HTML, Word, and PDF.

• Publicus.Net http://www.publicus.netMore articles and presentations by Steven Clift