The document discusses the disconnect between national leaders and local practitioners in the field of civic engagement. It explores how civic engagement has evolved from social movements of the past to become more diverse and localized today. While local practitioners focus pragmatically on issues in their communities, national leaders emphasize principles of democracy and deliberation but do not always represent the racial diversity of the field as a whole. Bridging the gaps between local and national efforts could help strengthen and support the growing work of civic engagement.
Calling the Roll: Study Circles for Better SchoolsNatalie Aflalo
Policy Research Report. A two-year evaluation by the Southwest Educational Development Laboratory of statewide study circle programs that addressed education issues in Arkansas and Oklahoma. This study places special emphasis on the role of policymakers in study circles.
Core Principles for Public Engagement grew out of President Obama's "Open Government Directive," a call for executive departments and agencies to take specific actions in the areas of transparency, participation, and collaboration. As you might guess, the civic engagement field was abuzz in meetings, on email discussion lists, and on phone calls considering how we could support this effort.
Everyone agreed that the field of practice, as a whole, needed to articulate what we consider to be quality public engagement. And this clarity, whether or not it impacts the Open Government Directive, would be of great benefit to the field.
A core group from the civic engagement worked together to develop a set of principles. They engaged the field in a collaborative and transparent way to encourage broad involvement among networks to create a set of principles that everyone could get behind.
Download the lesson plan here: http://everyday-democracy.org/resources/civic-engagement-lesson-plan-parts-1-and-2
Lesson Plan 1 is an introduction to "civic health" and its connection to "great citizenship." It helps students learn about how ordinary citizens in Connecticut participate in the public arena by volunteering, voting, donating, working with neighbors and public officials, learning about and engaging on issues, attending public events and hearings, etc. They also get to reflect on what are some of the attributes of "great citizenship," examine their own communities and civic health in Connecticut, and understand the importance of civic participation for making communities and our society better for all.
Lesson Plan 2 is an introduction to Chapter 3 in Eric Liu's book "The Gardens of Democracy," which discusses the attributes and value of "great citizenship" for our society and democracy. Students will be able to reflect on and model "great citizenship" in their schools, neighborhoods, and pubic life. By allowing students to explore their connections to others at their schools and communities and adopting a different way of thinking about collective responsibility, this learning can be transformative and imbued with civic agency.
A curriculum for community dialogue about a the role of the military in American democracy as we re-align our national security priorities and tools with a strategy that better reflects today's threats. Includes: a new vision for national security, a primer on civil-military relations, how to get involved in our democratic system,overview of the military services, two models of dialogue with veterans, one for small private groups, the other for larger public conversations.
Lesson Plan 3 helps teachers engage their students on "living citizenship" through classroom and personal civic engagement activities by the students using a "civics scorecard" that helps them explore different ways to become "great citizens." The "scorecard" activity allows students to learn more about "civic health" through actual civic participation in their schools and communities.
Download the lesson plan here: http://everyday-democracy.org/resources/civic-engagement-lesson-plan-part-3
On August 2-4, experts and advocates for strengthening our nation's democracy came together to create new momentum and plans for bringing together the emerging democracy reform movement behind a common set of priorities. At the second Strengthening Our Nation's Democracy conference, participants shared what they have been learning from their work across the country, and rolled up their sleeves to create collective recommendations and action steps.
Calling the Roll: Study Circles for Better SchoolsNatalie Aflalo
Policy Research Report. A two-year evaluation by the Southwest Educational Development Laboratory of statewide study circle programs that addressed education issues in Arkansas and Oklahoma. This study places special emphasis on the role of policymakers in study circles.
Core Principles for Public Engagement grew out of President Obama's "Open Government Directive," a call for executive departments and agencies to take specific actions in the areas of transparency, participation, and collaboration. As you might guess, the civic engagement field was abuzz in meetings, on email discussion lists, and on phone calls considering how we could support this effort.
Everyone agreed that the field of practice, as a whole, needed to articulate what we consider to be quality public engagement. And this clarity, whether or not it impacts the Open Government Directive, would be of great benefit to the field.
A core group from the civic engagement worked together to develop a set of principles. They engaged the field in a collaborative and transparent way to encourage broad involvement among networks to create a set of principles that everyone could get behind.
Download the lesson plan here: http://everyday-democracy.org/resources/civic-engagement-lesson-plan-parts-1-and-2
Lesson Plan 1 is an introduction to "civic health" and its connection to "great citizenship." It helps students learn about how ordinary citizens in Connecticut participate in the public arena by volunteering, voting, donating, working with neighbors and public officials, learning about and engaging on issues, attending public events and hearings, etc. They also get to reflect on what are some of the attributes of "great citizenship," examine their own communities and civic health in Connecticut, and understand the importance of civic participation for making communities and our society better for all.
Lesson Plan 2 is an introduction to Chapter 3 in Eric Liu's book "The Gardens of Democracy," which discusses the attributes and value of "great citizenship" for our society and democracy. Students will be able to reflect on and model "great citizenship" in their schools, neighborhoods, and pubic life. By allowing students to explore their connections to others at their schools and communities and adopting a different way of thinking about collective responsibility, this learning can be transformative and imbued with civic agency.
A curriculum for community dialogue about a the role of the military in American democracy as we re-align our national security priorities and tools with a strategy that better reflects today's threats. Includes: a new vision for national security, a primer on civil-military relations, how to get involved in our democratic system,overview of the military services, two models of dialogue with veterans, one for small private groups, the other for larger public conversations.
Lesson Plan 3 helps teachers engage their students on "living citizenship" through classroom and personal civic engagement activities by the students using a "civics scorecard" that helps them explore different ways to become "great citizens." The "scorecard" activity allows students to learn more about "civic health" through actual civic participation in their schools and communities.
Download the lesson plan here: http://everyday-democracy.org/resources/civic-engagement-lesson-plan-part-3
On August 2-4, experts and advocates for strengthening our nation's democracy came together to create new momentum and plans for bringing together the emerging democracy reform movement behind a common set of priorities. At the second Strengthening Our Nation's Democracy conference, participants shared what they have been learning from their work across the country, and rolled up their sleeves to create collective recommendations and action steps.
The practice of treating everyone fairly and justly regardless of age, with special consideration to the structural factors that privilege some age groups over others.
Resource List for Dialogue and Action on Racism and Civil RightsEveryday Democracy
The resources in this document are for individuals, community leaders and groups, law enforcement officials and elected leaders who want to learn about, organize dialogue, and take action to address specific aspects of structural racism.
The first of its kind in Connecticut, this report documents the state’s civic health. It looks at key indicators of civic life in Connecticut: how Connecticut residents engage in civic organizations and group activities, how attentive they are to community problem solving and politics and how connected they are to family, friends and neighbors.
Commissioned by the W.K. Kellogg Foundation and written by Matt Leighninger of the Deliberative Democracy Consortium, this paper reviews that conversation and extends an invitation to both deliberative democracy and dialogue practitioners and to community organizers to continue it. In doing so, it invites civic engagement practitioners from diverse schools of thought to raise and tackle tough, important questions; to deepen their mutual understanding of other practices and approaches, and of the values underlying and unifying their work; and to propose ideas for working together more effectively, and with greater impact.
Recentering Democracy Around Citizens Multimedia ReportMatt Leighninger
How might we redesign local democracy around the day-to-day goals and concerns of citizens? A set of leaders in civic engagement, including representatives of national associations that represent local officials, school systems, funders, and other leaders, met in early 2010 to compare notes on their work in communities and discuss possibilities for innovation. This report describes their discussion and recommendations.
This five-session discussion guide helps people get involved in an important issue facing all of us: the well-being of our youngest children. The guide looks at how we are connected to the lives of children in our community and the “invisible” effects of racism and poverty. It also guides people in developing plans for action.
This is expanded content related to the 2013 Webinar: Systematic Civic Stewardship: An Organizing Model for Leading Change in the Social Sector | Monday, June 3, 2013
Kira Pasquesi, doctoral student in Higher Education and Student Affairs at the University
of Iowa, and Nancy Franz, Associate Dean for Extension and Outreach at Iowa State
University Extension
AGC Networks, a leading global technology solution integrator, delivers cloud-based services to businesses across India. AGC Networks will deliver communication and collaboration capabilities for new and existing customers in India, with the support and expertise of the Avaya Private Cloud Services organization.
Know more about AGC Networks here: http://www.agcnetworks.com/
The practice of treating everyone fairly and justly regardless of age, with special consideration to the structural factors that privilege some age groups over others.
Resource List for Dialogue and Action on Racism and Civil RightsEveryday Democracy
The resources in this document are for individuals, community leaders and groups, law enforcement officials and elected leaders who want to learn about, organize dialogue, and take action to address specific aspects of structural racism.
The first of its kind in Connecticut, this report documents the state’s civic health. It looks at key indicators of civic life in Connecticut: how Connecticut residents engage in civic organizations and group activities, how attentive they are to community problem solving and politics and how connected they are to family, friends and neighbors.
Commissioned by the W.K. Kellogg Foundation and written by Matt Leighninger of the Deliberative Democracy Consortium, this paper reviews that conversation and extends an invitation to both deliberative democracy and dialogue practitioners and to community organizers to continue it. In doing so, it invites civic engagement practitioners from diverse schools of thought to raise and tackle tough, important questions; to deepen their mutual understanding of other practices and approaches, and of the values underlying and unifying their work; and to propose ideas for working together more effectively, and with greater impact.
Recentering Democracy Around Citizens Multimedia ReportMatt Leighninger
How might we redesign local democracy around the day-to-day goals and concerns of citizens? A set of leaders in civic engagement, including representatives of national associations that represent local officials, school systems, funders, and other leaders, met in early 2010 to compare notes on their work in communities and discuss possibilities for innovation. This report describes their discussion and recommendations.
This five-session discussion guide helps people get involved in an important issue facing all of us: the well-being of our youngest children. The guide looks at how we are connected to the lives of children in our community and the “invisible” effects of racism and poverty. It also guides people in developing plans for action.
This is expanded content related to the 2013 Webinar: Systematic Civic Stewardship: An Organizing Model for Leading Change in the Social Sector | Monday, June 3, 2013
Kira Pasquesi, doctoral student in Higher Education and Student Affairs at the University
of Iowa, and Nancy Franz, Associate Dean for Extension and Outreach at Iowa State
University Extension
AGC Networks, a leading global technology solution integrator, delivers cloud-based services to businesses across India. AGC Networks will deliver communication and collaboration capabilities for new and existing customers in India, with the support and expertise of the Avaya Private Cloud Services organization.
Know more about AGC Networks here: http://www.agcnetworks.com/
Today, plenty of buildings are described as sustainable -- using less fossil-fueled power than traditional structures. But certain designs, like that of the zeroHouse, threaten to revolutionize the idea of green building and overshadow predecessors to radically redefine sustainability. Few buildings truly live up to the idea of sustainability in the way the zeroHouse could. Using cutting-edge, green technology, the zeroHouse design works completely off the grid (as in the power grid), feeding only on the renewable energy of the sun.
AGC Networks (AGC) is a Global Solution Integrator representing the world’s best brands in Unified Communications, Network Infrastructure & Data Center, Cyber Security (CYBER-i) and Enterprise Applications to evolve the customer’s digital landscape.
AGC’s ability to tailor solutions across quadrants is strengthened through delivery of seamless customer support services. A leader in Enterprise Communications in India, AGC has significant presence across Middle East, Africa, North America, Australia, New Zealand, Singapore, Philippines and UK serving over 3000 customers. In collaboration with global technology leaders like Avaya, Intel Security, Juniper, Cisco, HP, Verint and Polycom among others, AGC delivers Return on Technology Investment (ROTI) thereby accelerating customers’ business.
For more information, log on to www.agcnetworks.com
Una guía suplementaria diseñada para dar a personas de un mismo origen racial o étnico la oportunidad de hablar sobre temas de racismo antes y después de los diálogos regulares de un programa de diálogo para el cambio en la comunidad. Estas discusiones suplementarias se pueden llevar a cabo con diálogos basados en la guía Cómo enfrentar el racismo en una nación diversa.
This is a nine-session discussion guide for students to engage in 90-minute discussions on issues around racism. The first session allows students to build trust by learning about each other's personal backgrounds and experiences related to race and ethnicity, setting the stage for them to explore family roots, stereotypes, racial tension, skin color, white privilege, segregation and, ultimately, ways to make their school better.
This holiday season consider showcasing the quality of your company by spreading good cheer, sophistication and thoughtfulness with a gift of wine from the Boisset Collection. Choosing a corporate gift can be overwhelming and time consuming, however you can get the competitive advantage with the impression of a great wine gift. Please allow me to take care of all of the smallest details for you and deliver a memorable gift to your client's doorstep. You might even consider adding your company logo or personal monogram to one of our bottles. I look forward to working with you...spreading good cheer one bottle at a time.
Bonnes Fêtes!
BONUS: $5 GROUND SHIPPING PER GIFT SET !!!!!!
3 12 2008 Myths & Realities Of Democratic Trustee Governance Of Public Commun...michelletscott
This study examines the public engagement practices of the public community college boards of trustees. The trustees’ perceptions of public engagement were pursued through inquiry within five categories: (a) role and responsibilities, (b) definition of public engagement, (c) public engagement practices, (d) barriers to public engagement, and (e) how to make public engagement more effective. The results of study emerged within five major thematic areas, which have implications for theory and practice—(a) trustee roles, (b) trustee relationships with the public, (c) administrative and organizational structures, (d) leadership, and (e) policy which have implications for theory and practice. Finally, the three key conclusions of this study are (a) trustees do not identify deliberative public engagement as a role priority or a default priority; (b) the role of trustees must be reframed and redefined to include democratic public engagement practices; and (c) the public's role in democratic governance must be reclaimed.
Teaching Democracy and Active Citizenship through Citizenship Education: How ...Paulina Pospieszna
Citizenship education, i.e. activities aimee4ed to teach citizens of recipient countries basic values, knowledge, and skills how to be an active and engaged citizen, has become a popular form of empowering young people within democracy assistance of young democracies from Visegrad countries. This paper outlines some of the programs aimed at educating and activating young people in Eastern Europe to be more socially responsible for their local community, region, and country, and focuses on impact evaluation of these programs. Different methods used to evaluate the impact of the citizenship education programs are being presented and discussed together with their advantages and limitations. These suggestions can be useful for both practitioners whishing to learn whether their citizenship education programs produce impact, as well as for researchers wanting to answer the question whether and how citizenship education efforts of organizations from Visegrad countries influence young people.
Sustainable community development from whats wrong to whats str.docxmabelf3
Sustainable community development: from what's wrong to what's strong | Cormac Russell | TEDxExeter: Link to video
Asset Based Community Development (Philippines): Link to video
Truly sustainable economic development: Ernesto Sirolli at TEDxEQChCh: Link to video
Remember it is important to listen to the people of the community about what they want rather than to decide to make your own plan. You have involve them and empower them. Look what assets they have and by asset it can be their skills too which you can utilize to bring positive change in the community.
Community development
SWK301
SEMINAR 6.
Locating Community Development
‘Community work’ is used as a generic term for much of the work people do in communities, however-
‘community development aims to transform unequal, coercive and oppressive structures …..’ (Kenny, 2015)
*
Rothmans typology…Community DevelopmentSocial Planning
Social ActionGoalsCapacity building, network building, self help, process orientated.To solve a particular problem. Task orientatedSocial change
Institutional change
Power shiftsAssumptionsPeople need community. The community holds the answers to it’s issues.There are substantive problems that experts can fixSociety is unjust and unequal. Power must be challengedStrategies for changeInvolvement of broad range of people to determine and address their own issuesGather data about issue and make decisions about most logical course of actionConsciousness raising and mobilizing of people to take action against the causes of oppressionCharacteristics, tactics used Consensus, communication, discussion among diverse groupsConsensus or conflictConflict, direct action, confrontation, negotiation.Practitioner rolesFacilitator, networker, event management, group worker, Expert, researcher, analyst, social policy worker, project managerAdvocate, organiser, media liaison, event management
Rothmans typology
*
Popple’s Models of Community Work Practice ModelStrategyMain role/title of workerExamples of work/agenciesKey textsCommunity CareCultivating social networks and voluntary services. Developing self-help concepts.Organizer / VolunteerWork with older people, persons with disabilities, children under 5 years oldBeresford & Croft (1986); Heginbotham (1990); Mayo (1994)Community organisationImproving co-ordination between different welfare agenciesOrganizer / Catalyst / ManagerCouncils for Voluntary Service, Racial Equality Councils, SettlementsAdamson et al. (1988); Dearlove (1974); Dominelli (1990)Community developmentAssisting groups to acquire the skills and confidence to improve quality of life. Active participation.Enabler / Neighbourhood Worker / FacilitatorCommunity groups, Tenants groups, citizens organisations…..Association of Metropolitan Authorities (1993); Barr (1991)Social/community planningAnalysis of social conditions, setting of goals and priorities, implementing and evaluating services and programmesEnabler / Facilitator.
Collaborating for Equity and Justice: Moving Beyond Collective ImpactJim Bloyd, DrPH, MPH
By ARTHUR T. HIMMELMAN, BILL BERKOWITZ, BRIAN D. CHRISTENS, FRANCES DUNN BUTTERFOSS, KIEN S. LEE, LINDA BOWEN, MEREDITH MINKLER, SUSAN M. WOLFE, TOM WOLFF AND VINCENT T. FRANCISCO | January 9, 2017 Non-Profit Quarterly
The United States has historically struggled with how to treat all its citizens equitably and fairly while wealth and power are concentrated in a very small segment of our society. Now, in the face of growing public awareness and outcry about the centuries-long injustices experienced by African Americans, Native Americans, new immigrants, and other marginalized groups, we believe that our nation urgently needs collaborative multisector approaches toward equity and justice. For maximum effectiveness, these approaches must include and prioritize leadership by those most affected by injustice and inequity in order to effect structural and systemic changes that can support and sustain inclusive and healthy communities. Traditional community organizing and working for policy change will supplement the collaborative approach. We believe that efforts that do not start with treating community leaders and residents as equal partners cannot later be reengineered to meaningfully share power. In short, coalitions and collaborations need a new way of engaging with communities that leads to transformative changes in power, equity, and justice.
Every body know the mantra:
Think global and act local, but nobody do nothing and there is a huge number of poor people increasing all over the world.
Why?
Connecticut Civic Ambassadors are everyday people who care about and engage others in their communities by creating opportunities for civic participation that strengthens our state’s “Civic Health.” Civic Health is determined by how well diverse groups of residents work together and with government to solve public problems to strengthen their communities. Read more below on how you can be an agent of change in your own community by joining the team.
A comprehensive guide designed to help you recruit people to your community change effort, work with the media, master social media, and tell your story in many different formats along the way.
Ripple Effects Mapping Tip Sheet for Evaluating Community Engagement Everyday Democracy
Community Engagement and Dialogue to Change strategies can lead to many positive changes in your community. However, direct impacts can be tough to track. Ripple Effects Mapping (REM) allows you, along with local leaders and others in your community, to assess impacts from your Dialogue to
Change efforts. It allows you to visually document the impacts your efforts have had on individuals, on your community, and on institutions and systems over time. These are tips for rolling out a Ripple Effects Mapping process:
Evaluation Guide Toolkit (Companion to Evaluating Community Engagement Guide)Everyday Democracy
Includes an Evaluation Capacity Self-Assessment Tool,
Sample Community Engagement Logic Model, Logic Model Template, Data Collection and Planning Template and Ripple Mapping Tip Sheet
The Wondertwins, "Black"- September 27th, West Hartford, CT Everyday Democracy
The Wondertwins, famed veteran hip-hop dance duo from Boston, perform their newest piece, BLACK. BLACK explores the traumatizing effects of police violence towards the black community by incorporating dance with historic and contemporary audio and video clips. Post-show dialogue will be facilitated by Everyday Democracy and the Connecticut Collaborative on Poverty, Criminal Justice and Race.
This is a brief guide developed for Stand Against Racism Day, 2019. The guide helps communities discuss immigration and how it connects to racial equity.
“American citizenship brings legal rights, protections, and responsibilities. But its meaning goes deeper. To be a citizen is to be accepted, to feel safe, to be ‘one of us.’ ”
Racism is rooted in our country's history and is embedded in our culture, and yet the history of structural racism is rarely taught or portrayed. Racism is still one of the greatest barriers to fulfilling the promise of our democracy. That is why Everyday Democracy uses a racial equity lens in all the work we do.
Unfortunately, most people in the U.S. have not had the chance to study and understand how racism has evolved and how it continues to affect every area of our lives. We don’t usually learn about it in school, except in cursory ways. Even then, it is often portrayed as a part of a distant past that stopped with the fight for civil rights in the 60s. That, in itself, is part of the “invisible” power of structural racism.
There are many people who don’t realize that, as a country, we still have work to do to create equal opportunities for all. And many aren’t aware that all of us – of every region of the country, of every color and ethnic background – are still dealing with the impact of slavery, Jim Crow, and other policies that have perpetuated unfair advantages based on color. All of us need to deepen our understanding of our full history, so that we can move beyond “us vs. them” to “us.” Only as we understand the forces that have shaped our lives can we begin imagine and create a democracy that supports voice and belonging for all.
To share an important part of this history, the New York Historical Society (NYHS) has developed a curriculum to help students and communities explore the legacy of racism. It includes three comprehensive units and printable resources. This curriculum was developed as part of NYHS’s current exhibit, Black Citizenship in the Age of Jim Crow, that explores the struggle for full citizenship and racial equity. This powerful exhibit uncovers not only the overt and hidden racism that marked a pivotal era in our history, it highlights the day-to-day acts of courage that so many people took to claim citizenship as belonging. It is impossible to see this exhibit without thinking about the parallels for today.
We invite you to use and share this curriculum with students, coworkers, family members, and community members. And then we invite you to work with us at Everyday Democracy to use your learning as a catalyst for expanding the dialogue and creating equitable change in your community and our country.
Monitoring Health for the SDGs - Global Health Statistics 2024 - WHOChristina Parmionova
The 2024 World Health Statistics edition reviews more than 50 health-related indicators from the Sustainable Development Goals and WHO’s Thirteenth General Programme of Work. It also highlights the findings from the Global health estimates 2021, notably the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on life expectancy and healthy life expectancy.
Preliminary findings _OECD field visits to ten regions in the TSI EU mining r...OECDregions
Preliminary findings from OECD field visits for the project: Enhancing EU Mining Regional Ecosystems to Support the Green Transition and Secure Mineral Raw Materials Supply.
Jennifer Schaus and Associates hosts a complimentary webinar series on The FAR in 2024. Join the webinars on Wednesdays and Fridays at noon, eastern.
Recordings are on YouTube and the company website.
https://www.youtube.com/@jenniferschaus/videos
Jennifer Schaus and Associates hosts a complimentary webinar series on The FAR in 2024. Join the webinars on Wednesdays and Fridays at noon, eastern.
Recordings are on YouTube and the company website.
https://www.youtube.com/@jenniferschaus/videos
Working with data is a challenge for many organizations. Nonprofits in particular may need to collect and analyze sensitive, incomplete, and/or biased historical data about people. In this talk, Dr. Cori Faklaris of UNC Charlotte provides an overview of current AI capabilities and weaknesses to consider when integrating current AI technologies into the data workflow. The talk is organized around three takeaways: (1) For better or sometimes worse, AI provides you with “infinite interns.” (2) Give people permission & guardrails to learn what works with these “interns” and what doesn’t. (3) Create a roadmap for adding in more AI to assist nonprofit work, along with strategies for bias mitigation.
Donate to charity during this holiday seasonSERUDS INDIA
For people who have money and are philanthropic, there are infinite opportunities to gift a needy person or child a Merry Christmas. Even if you are living on a shoestring budget, you will be surprised at how much you can do.
Donate Us
https://serudsindia.org/how-to-donate-to-charity-during-this-holiday-season/
#charityforchildren, #donateforchildren, #donateclothesforchildren, #donatebooksforchildren, #donatetoysforchildren, #sponsorforchildren, #sponsorclothesforchildren, #sponsorbooksforchildren, #sponsortoysforchildren, #seruds, #kurnool
RFP for Reno's Community Assistance CenterThis Is Reno
Property appraisals completed in May for downtown Reno’s Community Assistance and Triage Centers (CAC) reveal that repairing the buildings to bring them back into service would cost an estimated $10.1 million—nearly four times the amount previously reported by city staff.
About Potato, The scientific name of the plant is Solanum tuberosum (L).Christina Parmionova
The potato is a starchy root vegetable native to the Americas that is consumed as a staple food in many parts of the world. Potatoes are tubers of the plant Solanum tuberosum, a perennial in the nightshade family Solanaceae. Wild potato species can be found from the southern United States to southern Chile
Synopsis (short abstract) In December 2023, the UN General Assembly proclaimed 30 May as the International Day of Potato.
2. “The W.K. Kellogg Foundation supports children, families and communities
as they strengthen and create conditions that propel vulnerable children
to achieve success as individuals and as contributors to the larger community and society.”
W.K. Kellogg Foundation Mission Statement, adopted December 2007
The W.K. Kellogg Foundation’s revised mission statement reflects the foundation’s efforts to more sharply focus its
work in alignment with W.K. Kellogg’s original intent. Part of that effort consists of a new strategic framework,
which integrates programming in our areas of expertise (Education and Learning; Food, Health and Well-Being; and
Family Economic Security), and which supports and unifies that programming with an institutional commitment to Civic
Engagement and Racial Equity.
In our on-going work to act on those commitments, in 2008 the foundation launched a “learning year,” featur-
ing a dialogue among 40 organizations from across the country, all committed to civic engagement, albeit using a
variety of approaches, with a variety of objectives. The outcome was a rich, often challenging, always enlightening
conversation about civic engagement means, goals and terminology, among practitioners too often siloed by their field or
their network.
Commissioned by the W.K. Kellogg Foundation and written by Matt Leighninger of the Deliberative Democracy
Consortium, this paper reviews that conversation and extends an invitation to both deliberative democracy and
dialogue practitioners and to community organizers to continue it. In doing so, it invites civic engagement practitioners
from diverse schools of thought to raise and tackle tough, important questions; to deepen their mutual understanding of
other practices and approaches, and of the values underlying and unifying their work; and to propose ideas for working
together more effectively, and with greater impact.
We hope that as funders and practitioners, you will read this paper both as an invitation to dialogue and as a path to
more innovative, inclusive and effective civic engagement in supporting children, families and communities in their
efforts to help vulnerable children succeed.
Sincerely,
Sterling K. Speirn Anne B. Mosle
President/CEO Vice President – Programs
W.K. Kellogg Foundation W.K. Kellogg Foundation
3. When describing how people come together to work on issues of common concern,
Marshall Ganz lists three necessary narratives: the ‘story of self,’ the ‘story of us,’ and
the ‘story of now.’ People need to tell the story of self in order to articulate (for them-
selves as well as others) why they care about what they’re doing. Collectively, they
need to weave a story of us that encompasses those shared hopes and concerns. And
they must develop a story of now that helps them translate those ambitions into action.
This simple formula gained visibility during the 2008 presidential election, which was
historic for the sheer volume of civic engagement by people of both political parties.
By asking them to develop these three narratives, Ganz helped prepare thousands of
citizens to work cohesively and effectively on the presidential campaign.1
In the diverse, diffuse, and expanding field of civic engagement, we are trying to weave
together those same three narratives. Perhaps the main dividing line, and area of
negotiation, lies between the people who describe this work mainly in terms of “justice”
or “equity,” such as community organizers, and those who frame it in terms of “democ-
racy” and “public deliberation.” These friendly, intense, difficult struggles have been
evident throughout the Kellogg Foundation’s Civic Engagement Learning Year
(CELY), and they were on display at “No Better Time: Promising Opportunities in
Deliberative Democracy for Educators and Practitioners” (NBT), a conference
organized by the Democracy Imperative and the Deliberative Democracy Consortium.2
The “story of self” for each subset of the field is becoming more widely known; the
“story of us” is beginning to come together, though challenges remain; the “story of
now” lies before us, waiting to be jointly created.
Perhaps the most promising development is that, as they have heard one another’s
stories, leaders representing the different forms of civic engagement have been
impressed by the high level of collective commitment and mutual interest. People
recognize that while they come to this work from different directions, they have
learned many of the same lessons and share many of the same goals. “It was
enlightening to see how many different kinds of people are committed to civic
engagement,” says Jah’Shams Abdul-Mumin of the Los Angeles nonprofit Suc-
cess: A New Beginning. “We may use different terminology and have different local
issues, but most of the discussion was about how similar our work is,” agreed Eduardo
Martinez of the New Mexico Forum for Youth in Community. These growing relation-
ships are critical assets for the field; “relational transformation is often necessary
before individuals can do anything together,” argues Hal Saunders of the Interna-
tional Institute for Sustained Dialogue and the Kettering Foundation.
For civic engagement to develop from a diffuse set of activities into a more cohesive,
coherent field, these leaders will need to work out shared, mutually satisfactory
answers to some fundamental questions about power and equity. How should we
balance the need for equitable, inclusive processes with the desire for equitable
outcomes? Can we incorporate what we have learned about organizing, mobilizing,
and involving citizens in the way our communities function, so that civic engagement
becomes a regular, broadly supported component of governance rather than a series
of ad hoc, intermittent, under-resourced exercises? Ultimately, how can we create
systems where people feel valued, independent, and powerful?
The events that informed this report
The Civic Engagement Learning Year was
funded by the W.K. Kellogg Foundation and
coordinated by PolicyLink in 2008-2009. It
engaged representatives from over 40
organizations across the U.S. to promote
learning within civic engagement through a
series of national convenings, working groups,
online exchanges, and joint projects among
organizations who approach civic engagement
from different perspectives, including community
organizing, deliberative democracy, race and
equity, youth and next generation leadership,
communications and technology, and outcome
measurement.
“No Better Time: Promising Opportunities in
Deliberative Democracy for Educators and
Practitioners” was a three-day conference in July
2009 that brought together over 250 practitioners
and researchers from the U.S. and other parts of
the world. It was organized by The Democracy
Imperative and by the Deliberative Democracy
Consortium. The focus of the conference, as the
title implies, was on deliberative democracy,
but it also attracted people who represent a
more explicit justice or equity perspective.
“Creating Spaces for Change” was written by Matt
Leighninger, Deliberative Democracy Consortium.
1
4. Who are we? The roots and branches of active civic engagement
“Active civic engagement” is a rather dry term for a concept with a rich historical
tradition. The work as we know it today is descended from at least a century of
social movements: efforts to mobilize ordinary people to advocate for their interests.
These movements for civil rights, women’s rights, labor, and other causes have left
deep imprints on the values and tactics of civic engagement today. Most current
practitioners think of their work as either directly or indirectly contributing to values
like justice, liberty, and equity; they are all trying to maximize “the power of people to
make change,” as Martha McCoy of Everyday Democracy puts it. Many of the basic
strategies pioneered in those movements are still evident: emphasizing networks and
relationships to recruit people, giving people opportunities to share their stories and
decide what they want to achieve, and encouraging people in all kinds of action efforts,
from volunteerism to advocacy.
On the other hand, even though people in this field still like to use the term
“movement” to describe their work, civic engagement has lost much of its movement
flavor. For example, even though many community organizers trace their work to the
historical contributions of people like Cesar Chavez, Jane Addams, or the Rev. Dr.
Martin Luther King, Jr., they seem less likely to connect what they are doing locally
with any present-day national leaders or organizations. Furthermore, these tactics
are being used in a wider variety of settings, partly because people who started out
as community organizers have gone on to serve as public officials and in many other
decision-making roles. These policymakers have adapted the skills and philosophies
of traditional community organizing to fit the perspectives and needs of their
new positions.
There is a similar degree of diversity – and a similar disconnect between “national”
leaders and their local counterparts – within the set of people working to advance
deliberative democracy. The leaders who are mobilizing citizens to address public
issues, consider different policy options, and create action plans include public
officials, planners, human relations commissioners, school administrators, police
officials, funders, and neighborhood leaders. Most of these people don’t identify with
“deliberative democracy” – and many have never even heard of the term.
In fact, deliberative democracy may be the most muddled, least understood strand of
civic engagement. Part of what happened at the “No Better Time” conference was
the advocates of deliberative democracy explaining, to themselves as well as to
others, where they have come from and where they are trying to go. They too have
incorporated, and lifted up, elements of the earlier protest movements, including
critical masses of participants, small groups that feature storytelling as well as
deliberation, and action at a range of levels. But they are just as likely to trace these
practices to the grassroots adult education formats of the late 19th Century, or to the
town meetings of 18th Century New England, or even to ancient Athens.3
Key Terms
Citizen: There is intense discussion about the
use of the word “citizen.” Some argue that it has
acquired an exclusive meaning that privileges
some people at the expense of others. “It sends
a message of exclusion, especially with the
immigrant backlash,” says Maggie Potapchuk
of MP Associates. Others argue that we should
try to revive its broader, historic meaning rather
than giving it up entirely. In this guide, I use the
term “citizens” to refer to all kinds of residents,
not just citizens in the narrow legal sense.
Civic engagement is also a widely contested
term; it has been used to describe traditional
political activities, like voting; more active forms
of participation in government, such as public
meetings or advocacy work; and categories
of public opinion, like the level of attachment
that residents feel for their communities. This
report focuses on two of the main forms of active
civic engagement: community organizing and
deliberative democracy. Practitioners of these
approaches mobilize ordinary people to influence
and inform public decision-making, and (in some
cases) to contribute their own effort and ideas to
public problem-solving.
2
5. What confuses everyone else, at least in part, is that many of the practitioners and researchers
who identify with “deliberative democracy” see deliberation and dialogue among diverse groups of
people as an end in itself, not just a vehicle for combating injustice and inequality. They think of citizen
participation as both a process and an outcome. As Laura Harris of Americans for Indian Opportunity
puts it, “Our CELY group was surprised that not everyone defines civic engagement as being all about
social justice.”
There is an important racial dynamic at work here as well: most of these deliberative democracy
advocates, at least at the national level, are white, whereas the leaders of community organizing and
racial equity are a racially diverse group. Maggie Potapchuk of MP Associates says that “Racial
equity organizations have not fully utilized or even been aware of deliberative democracy technologies
and processes. The disinterest is partly due to the perception/reality that deliberative democracy is
predominantly a ‘white field’ that may not embrace principles of equity.”
Why did this happen? How did a set of people who share so many of the same influences and goals
become so segregated that they now have trouble seeing what they have in common? A number of
reasons have been proposed. Some people point out that the “national” or “organized” leaders aren’t
representative of the people organizing deliberative democracy efforts on the ground – that at the
community level, the practitioners are much more racially (and politically) diverse than any of the of
national civic engagement camps. Others argue that few people have the luxury of devoting their time
to issues of democracy and citizenship, and that the demographic makeup of the institutions offering
those kinds of jobs – universities, foundations, certain nonprofit organizations – tends not to reflect the
racial diversity of the population as a whole.
3
6. Personally, I wonder if another part of the answer lies
in how the leadership of social movements changed
over the last half-century. Before the 1960s, it was
quite common for white people, and white males in
particular, to be among the leading advocates on behalf of
others – doing much of the talking, helping to carry the
banner for the poor, or women, or people of color. But
by the end of the ‘60s the leaders of those movements
were almost invariably people who represented those
populations: people of color, women, and poor people were
the ones doing all of the leading, talking, and banner-
waving. By the time I got to college in the ‘90s, it seemed
even more obvious that other demographic groups didn’t
need white males like me in the most visible, public lead-
ership roles. There was, however, a need for public spaces
where all kinds of people could do their own talking – and
where that talk could actually have an impact on political
decisions and, ultimately, on the living conditions of ordi-
nary people.4
So deliberative democracy, which to some
may seem like an unappealing abstraction, became for
others of us a compelling, concrete strategy for achieving
justice, liberty, and equity. As the work has proliferated
and as the organizations have become more established,
we find ourselves with a set of national leaders who talk
in inspiring terms about the need to reorient democracy
around the needs of the broader public – and who are
themselves not terribly representative of that broader
public. For me, this is a somewhat awkward realization,
because in this analysis, the work of people like me can
also be viewed as a way for us to maintain our own posi-
tions and perceptions of leadership and worth to society –
and in spite of that, I think that it is of worth to society.
Other factors contribute to the divide between the
national and local advocates of civic engagement (or the
“formal and informal fields” as Eduardo Martinez
described them). One factor may be the attitudes and
communication styles of some of the national leaders.
For example, “The organizing community often treats
people in a pejorative manner,” argues Jah’Shams
Abdul-Mumin. “Meanwhile, the deliberative democracy
crowd includes a lot of extremely intellectual types,” he
says. “Neither group owns up to the things they can do
better to relate to people.”
national-level
practitioners
and academics
local civic engagement
leaders and practitioners
can also be described as the
‘formal’ and ‘informal’ fields
Civic engagement is divided by geography, with some (but not enough)
overlap between local leaders and the academic researchers and
practitioners who communicate nationally.
Civic engagement is also divided by the issues people are working on locally.
crime youth issues
planning and
land use
education
other issuesrace and difference
poverty public finance
4
7. Finally, local civic engagement practitioners may simply have
a more pragmatic view of their work than the national
leaders. They are motivated primarily by the need to make
progress on a particular issue area, such as education, crime
prevention, race and difference, land use, poverty, or public
finance. Many of the public officials are motivated by bad
experiences in the past – they are trying to find ways of
working with the public that reduce tension, rebuild trust,
and lead to better, more informed policy decisions. They don’t
necessarily think of their efforts as having to do with democracy
or deliberation. Similarly, local community organizers may be
less likely than their national counterparts to use terms like
social justice.
These disconnects are apparent in the practice of civic
engagement: some local efforts appear to have been modeled on
examples from other communities, or based on guidelines
provided by a national organization, but many others seem to
have been created from whole cloth. It is difficult to estimate
just how many of these ‘home-grown’ efforts have taken place.
One example is the state of California, where “Hundreds of
deliberative participation activities are taking place annually,”
reports Terry Amsler of the Collaborative Governance Initiative
of the Institute for Local Government. “Most of them appear
to be homegrown, either managed by city or county staff or by
private consulting firms.” The best projects tend to exhibit some
of the same principles – local organizers simply learned them
by trial and error, or applied them from previous experiences in
working with citizens.
One thing seems clear: the demand for this kind of work is out-
stripping the capacity of the civic engagement ‘field’ to describe
and support it. As active civic engagement has evolved from a
series of social movements, and an even older set of democratic
traditions, it has become more common and less clearly defined.
“People doing this work on the ground need practical applica-
tions they can use immediately,” says BongHwan Kim of the
Los Angeles Department of Neighborhood Empowerment, “and
they often don’t know where to turn. In fact, they often fail to
realize that other people are facing the same challenges, so they
try to reinvent the wheel.” At a time when knowledge about how
to organize, mobilize, and involve citizens is more needed, by
more different kinds of leaders, than ever before, fewer people
seem to recognize that this knowledge already exists, or that
there are organizations and individuals equipped to help them
use it.
5
8. What do we have in common? Riding the tide of civic change “simotiously”
This proliferation of civic engagement activities seems to be propelled by larger shifts in citizenship and the
relationship between residents and governments. Over the last twenty years, ordinary people have developed
new civic attitudes and capacities; they are better educated, more diverse, less apt to defer to government
and other forms of authority, more adept at using new technologies, and more willing to take productive (or
disruptive) roles in public decision-making.
All kinds of leaders – not just elected officials but anyone with any kind of membership or constituency
– have had to adjust to these shifts, and all the new tensions and opportunities they bring. A number of
common adaptations have developed, often separately from one another. Michael Brown, from the New
Mexico Forum for Youth in Community, describes it eloquently and creatively when he says that civic
engagement work has evolved “’simotiously.’”
All of the different strands of civic engagement have been affected by this tide of civic change, and it seems
to have created more commonalities between them:
6
• Becoming more proactive in the ways they reach out to all kinds of citizens, who are busier
than ever and more selective about how they spend their time.
• Becoming more committed to bringing together different kinds of people – across lines of
race and class, political affiliation, or decision-makers vs. residents – so that those people
can interact, dialogue, and negotiate directly rather than through intermediaries.
• Providing more opportunities for people to share their experiences – as John Esterle of the
Whitman Institute puts it, “emphasizing the power of story.”
• Giving people more opportunities to make up their own minds and take initiative themselves –
Ian Bautista of the United Neighborhood Centers of America says that in his work, the
“predisposition toward working ‘with,’ not ‘on,’ or ‘for,’ is another key tie to democratic
practices and deliberation.”
• Becoming more insistent on the need for political legitimacy, and developing more sophisticated
analyses of how power operates in communities (though the different civic engagement camps
continue to use different language about power – more on that on the next page).
9. 7
The notion of “deliberation” is often identified with advocates of deliberative democracy, but some
community organizers argue that while they don’t always name it explicitly, the idea figures prominently in
their work as well. “The practice of deliberative dialogue...is already utilized by our organization to collect
community voice on a number of issues,” says Eduardo Martinez. “While we did not refer to the process as
‘deliberative dialogue,’ the dialogue process usually opens our Forums and/or community planning sessions
as an introduction to deeper strategic or community planning sessions.”
The shared lessons became more evident though the CELY meetings and the NBT conference, to the extent
that different kinds of practitioners felt that they are now all in the same boat. Many stereotypes fell by
the wayside: it became apparent that community organizers are just as likely to build relationships and
negotiate with local officials as they are to “march on City Hall;” it was revealed that deliberative
democracy practitioners do not routinely win “million-dollar grants.” It became clear to community
organizers that deliberative democrats do in fact care deeply about moving from dialogue to action and
tangible outcomes; deliberative democrats were reassured that community organizers care deeply about
the quality of the discussions they lead and convene. “Stereotypes are natural,” says Danielle Atkinson of
Michigan Voice, “and they’re often based in some sort of reality – community organizers may care most
about action, deliberative democracy people may focus more on talk. But when we get together, we realize
we have a lot more in common, and that the ‘other’ is not the enemy.”
A key part of puncturing these stereotypes was enabling participants to get beyond the sometimes
impenetrable terms that are so common in civic engagement. Once they understood the labels more fully,
people recognized the shared principles that lay behind them. For example, one commonly heard refrain
from people who had just been introduced to the concept of deliberative democracy was “I didn’t know
there was a name for what I was already doing.”5
Different people gave prominence to different terms – for
example, Danielle Atkinson defined deliberative democracy as a subset of community organizing – but it
was clear that they had a great deal in common.
Some participants described this realization in personally significant terms. “I had an epiphany in New
Hampshire,” says William Burton of Common Ground Resolution Services. “I hadn’t expected to see
all these alignments with things that I’m already doing. One of the most exciting takeaways for me is
that this field is a work in progress – I felt like ‘I’ve got to get in on this.’” The term “deliberative
organizing,” coined by Maryanne Galindo of Success: A New Beginning, began to gain some currency as a
way of describing the melding of these different approaches to civic engagement.
10. 8
...And what are the differences?
In the rush of unexpected harmony and good feeling, however, it is almost too easy to gloss over the fact
that some significant differences remain between civic engagement approaches. Furthermore, these distinc-
tions may become more critical, not less, as the rising tide of citizen energies and expectations leads to
heightened interest in the ways that people interact with their institutions. In other words, if there is greater
demand for civic engagement, it will become more important that we have a common understanding of what
engagement means.
Difference #1: Naming ‘the field’ and the goals of the work
There seems to be broad agreement among people representing different strands of civic engagement that
the language we use is often an obstacle. “Language problems always happen to new movements,” Laura
Harris laments.6
There are two levels to this discussion: the more superficial question about the terms and
labels we use to describe our work, and the more fundamental question about how we explain our goals.
It is easier for people to talk about the question of how to name ‘the field.’ No one is fully satisfied with any
of the over-arching, macro-level terms for the practice of engaging citizens in public life. Civic engagement,
public involvement, public participation, and all the other civic synonyms have fuzzy, overlapping meanings,
and none of these terms seems compelling to ordinary people.
This dissatisfaction with the terms also applies to the different strands of civic engagement. Many advocates
of deliberative democracy admit that “deliberative democracy” is overly abstract, intellectual, and off-
putting. Similarly, some proponents of “community organizing” feel that that term has been stretched so
far over the last forty years that it has lost much of its meaning.
In this discussion of labels, different people have different ambitions. Some seem to be looking for language
that will be catchy and compelling enough to build broad popular support for civic engagement or one of its
strands. Others want a term like “deliberative organizing” that will help unify different camps. Still others
are focused simply on finding terms that accurately describe what they mean. (One of the surprises at No
Better Time, in fact, was that people who had considered themselves outsiders to deliberative democracy
thought it was an apt and welcoming term. “It has meaning,” says William Burton, “and it provides a hook
for a longer elevator speech.” “It’s awesome – don’t give it up!,” says Jah’Shams Abdul-Mumin.)
If our main ambition is to build popular support and recognition, one way forward would be to conduct
more thorough research on how ordinary people respond to different terms and explanations. Communica-
tions experts and organizations could help civic engagement advocates understand what kinds of language
will resonate with the public, and lay out some informed choices about how to describe the work (either the
‘field,’ or the different strands, or all of the above).
11. 9
That kind of research would be premature, however, if the field hasn’t dealt adequately with the more
substantive – and delicate – side of the language discussion: the question of how to name the goals of
civic engagement. Many advocates of deliberative democracy argue that efforts to engage citizens must be
described in broad, open-ended, value-neutral terms – attempts to help the community “make progress”
on an issue, for example, or “chart a course” for the future. They claim that projects must be framed in
ways that welcome a broad range of people and viewpoints, including conservatives as well as progressives.
“Our job is to create the space within which democracy can happen,” wrote one respondent to the follow-up
survey for the No Better Time conference. “I worry more about alienating the right than the left,” wrote
another respondent.
Some of the people who identify more with community organizing approaches say that goals of “equity” or
“social justice” must be stated explicitly. Some also prefer titles and descriptions that privilege particular
segments of the population – hearing the “voices of the underrepresented,” for example. One respondent to
the No Better Time survey asked, “Why work for democracy or be in a democracy if you are not working
for justice and equality? Otherwise ‘deliberative democracy’ is just [nonsense].”
Difference #2: “Neutrality” and equity in processes and outcomes
A separate but related difference has to do with what happens once citizens have been ‘engaged,’ and are
communicating with one another about their concerns and priorities. For deliberative democrats, the notion
that good group process techniques can provide a sufficiently level playing field for these discussions is the
conceptual backbone of their work. They put their faith (and expertise) in several strategies:
• Assembling a set of participants that mirror the broader community, usually by mobilizing a
very large, diverse critical mass of people;7
• Convening people in small groups (generally 8-12 participants), at least for the most substantive
parts of the process;
• Training facilitators who can ensure that all participants have a chance to speak, that a range
of viewpoints is considered by the group, and that the group manages its time and topics wisely –
and who can do this without inserting their own views and opinions into the discussion;
• Giving groups the opportunity to set or at least ‘buy in’ to a set of ground rules or norms that
will help them govern their behavior;
• Encouraging participants, especially at the beginning of a process, to share experiences that
relate to the issue or topic at hand; and
• ‘Framing’ public issues up front, usually in some type of written guide, in a way that provides
unbiased background information and lays out a range of views or options.
12. Deliberative democrats are confident that these techniques can establish neutrality in the process. Further-
more, they feel that equitable processes produce equitable outcomes – that deliberative democracy is an
important tool for achieving social justice and racial equity, even if (and perhaps because) those goals are
seldom listed explicitly by the initiators of a project. “If the deliberative process is truly open, transparent,
participatory, and broadly diverse, positive progress on social justice will emerge,” wrote one respondent to
the No Better Time survey.
Many other civic engagement practitioners are skeptical about these assumptions. To them, the whole
notion of ‘neutrality’ sounds naïve. “Neutrality would be beautiful if it were real,” joked Everette Hill of the
New Mexico Forum for Youth and Community. “Before the conference, I never even thought of neutrality
as a key component of democracy,” says Danielle Atkinson. Underneath the high-blown language, critics
suspect, deliberative democracy processes might easily be used to submerge critical voices and justify the
maintenance of the status quo in a community. “Two questions typically come up,” says Maggie Potapchuk.
“One, whether these technologies are being implemented with inclusion and equity principles, and two,
whether consensus-building activities include accountability mechanisms to ensure the marginalized voices
have an equitable voice and role in the decision-making process.”
“The field of dialogue needs to improve its ability to tackle tough issues such as racism,” agrees Chris
Wagner of the Sustained Dialogue Campus Network. “More attention needs to be paid to how to effectively
deal with these issues within processes that are often open-ended, driven by personal experience, and often
conducted by community members rather than experts in social justice.”
10
13. 11
Practitioners with a more explicit focus on justice and equity use the term “democracy” to imply equitable
outcomes, not just neutral processes. “Democracy is about more than just ensuring that every voice is
heard,” says Danielle Atkinson. “In fact, sometimes participation must be inequitable in order for out-
comes to be equitable.” This inequitable participation takes two main forms: first, some practitioners focus
on numbers and representation, and try to ensure that the ‘marginalized’ or ‘under-represented’ members
of a community constitute the majority of the voices at the table. The assumption here is that the voices of
the powerful, and those who benefit from the status quo, are already well-represented in public life and
decision-making, and so any attempt at broader engagement should favor populations who have not
benefited – typically the poor, people of color, and young people. John Gaventa of the Institute for
Development Studies, who has worked extensively on civic engagement efforts in the Global South, argues
that much of this work relies on “creating situations where a public official or some other leader is in a
room with people who are poor and disadvantaged, and has to listen carefully to what they are saying.”8
A variation on this strategy is to do a better job of incorporating under-represented groups in the
planning stages of civic engagement efforts, so that the eventual pool of participants is naturally more
diverse. Maggie Potapchuk, among others, points out that deliberative democracy projects are often
initiated by relatively homogeneous sets of people, and that this often has a major impact on the way
issues are framed. Potapchuk suggests that “deliberative democrats should always be asking, ‘Who has been
affected most?’ by a particular issue and policy – and support their leadership to frame the issue, recruit
other people affected, and help people move from discussion to action.”
A second tactic is to facilitate the discussions or meetings differently. Facilitators can argue for viewpoints
that are under-represented, present information that supports those claims, or lead exercises that prompt
participants to think more critically about mainstream views. “Facilitators need to understand power
dynamics and structural racism, and have the skills necessary to intervene – which includes questioning
stereotypes,” says Potapchuk. “It also means asking questions about the impact of policy decisions on
different groups, having historical knowledge of cumulative and systemic advantages for whites and
disadvantages for people of color, and discussing common values to ensure equity for ALL, not some.”
There is no clear consensus on these two tactics for achieving equitable outcomes, even among people who
identify with an explicit justice or equity focus. Some practitioners uphold the need to bring a higher per-
centage of ‘under-represented’ voices to the table, and reject the idea of non-neutral facilitation (“If you
have the right mix of people in the room, passive facilitation is better,” says Atkinson). Others support
the latter and reject the former: William Burton says, “I hate the idea of just bringing the ‘marginalized’
together. There has to be a point in time where we can all interact and talk about common aspirations. In
fact, the idea that we can’t create level playing fields may itself be discriminatory.”
14. 12
I think that, fundamentally, all of these differences over
neutrality and equity have to do with how people view
their relationship with government. Most community
organizers think of their work as taking place outside ‘the
system’ – they are mobilizing people to have an impact on the
leaders who retain decision-making power. To them, trying to
create neutral processes and arenas seems like a distraction
at best; at worst, bringing in other viewpoints may
weaken the independent voice and power of the base they
have built in the community. Deliberative democrats, on the
other hand, aren’t trying to affect the system: they are trying
to reconstitute the system along more participatory lines.
They aren’t building an independent power base to challenge
or negotiate with decision-makers – they’re trying to change
where and how the decision is made.
(A couple of caveats here: first, as is evident throughout this report,
the views and strategies of community organizers and deliberative
democrats are shifting and perhaps converging. The generalizations
made in the previous paragraph are just that, and they are probably
less true than ever before. Second, it would be easy to characterize
community organizing efforts as civic engagement initiated by
people outside government, and deliberative democracy projects as
civicengagementinitiatedbygovernments.Infact,mostdeliberative
democracy efforts are organized by leaders outside government, and
many public officials have used community organizing strategies
and messages to mobilize their constituents.)
It may be that both community organizers and deliberative
democrats have a far too government-focused view of public
decision-making and problem-solving. Framing every effort
to engage citizens as if it were either in opposition to, or in
the service of, government may severely limit the potential
of civic engagement.
15. Situation
(different approaches
fit different situations)
community organizing
issue
advocacy
racial
equity
deliberative democracy
13
Improving engagement and improving democracy
The “story of us” that is emerging from these conversations on civic engagement reveals a great deal of
convergence among different practices and approaches. Even when they were confronted with the
differences over questions like neutrality and equity, the participants in the CELY meetings and NBT
conference tended to emphasize the commonalities and the idea that people should choose different
approaches for different situations, rather than sticking to a single, “correct,” one-size-fits-all strategy.
The different approaches, many people felt, complemented one another more than they conflicted. Danielle
Atkinson described this as a “wheel of engagement” that illustrates the impulse to “get people involved
somewhere – each activity has a value – it isn’t a hierarchy – you can step in anywhere” (see illustration).9
Many others wanted to meld the different approach-
es even further, by raising awareness of the common
principles and helping practitioners learn more from
the tactics used in other strands of civic engagement.
“What are the components of all these processes that
allow people to fully participate?” asks Laura Harris.
Ian Bautista says that his network could “gain from
the expert and seasoned practitioners who have created
processes and refined practices around deliberative
democracy. Likewise, our members’ experience and
intimate knowledge of their neighbors and their neighbor-
hoods would be highly beneficial to deliberative democracy
practitioners in accessing hard to reach populations. This
combination of skill, talent, and opportunity would likely
lead to more enlightened strategies for neighborhood and
community development going forward.”
In addition to national gatherings to facilitate this learn-
ing, many participants spoke of their desire to work
together on more specific local projects. “It would be an
immense opportunity,” says Kwaku Sraha of New Mexico
Voices for Children, “to engage communities in all of your
work by collaborating with funders to use deliberative
dialogue to set priorities for issues.” “There is a lot of
room for collaboration, and I believe the conversations we
are having now are just the beginning,” agrees Alice Siu
of the Center for Deliberative Democracy.
16. 14
But an even hotter topic was the question of how to integrate the principles and strategies of civic engage-
ment more thoroughly in the way that communities function. The urgency of this desire came partly from
people’s frustration with the often temporary, project-based nature of much civic engagement work. “In
my mind the better question is when and how do we incorporate [this work] into the fabric of our commu-
nities, jurisdictions and culture,” says William Burton. “I am not sure how we can hope to get citizens to
participate with other organizations and institutions without there being the expectation that this is how we
do business.” It was also based on a shared, critical analysis of the state of American democracy, which, as
Laura Harris describes it, is dominated by “representative government and corporate structures – the most
frustrating forms of governance.” Everette Hill seemed to summarize the views of many participants when
he said that “Our purpose is to transform systems.”
This question brings the different views about power into sharper relief. There was broad agreement that,
as Will Friedman of Public Agenda put it, “talking about how to ‘embed’ this work in community life really
means talking about power.” “Deliberating may be the easy part of the equation,” says Burton. “People
and systems do not generally share or relinquish power easily if at all. Yet, the logical outcome of a delib-
erative process is that the power dynamic is altered to be more representative and authentically inclusive.”
The challenge of moving from successful techniques for mobilizing people to successful structures for self-
governance may be the ‘story of now’ in civic engagement.
17. 15
When they talk about embedding civic engagement work, the CELY and NBT participants refer repeatedly
to several key ideas:
• Proven process techniques for bringing citizens to the table, and for making the discussions
meaningful and productive. “There is a valuable process perspective and a supporting skill set
that comes from this work,” says BongHwan Kim. “Most neighborhood leaders and elected
officials don’t think about process – they think about meetings.”
• Working directly with public officials. Many people argued that elected officials and other
leaders need to be more directly involved in mobilizing citizens and interacting with them.
“We need to have more elected officials participating in civic engagement,” says Rodney
Locks, a city councilman from Brevard, North Carolina. “You need to be talking with local
officials and asking what they are doing to integrate community participation in their work,”
agrees Kim. “If you’re not working with government you’re missing a pretty key player.”
• Giving people the sense that they are valued. In a side discussion at the NBT conference
that included most of the people quoted in this paper, terms like “legitimacy,” “membership,”
and “belonging” kept coming up over and over again. “Legitimacy” was used to describe the
sense that elected officials and other decision-makers are interested in what people have to
say; “membership” referred to the sense of being part of a group united around common goals;
“belonging” meant the psychological attachment between the individual and the community.
But all of these words were used to describe the kinds of feelings that we seek to create as
we work to mobilize people – feelings that keep those people engaging with one another over
the long term.
• Recognizing that this work is about community, not just politics. All kinds of civic engage-
ment practitioners have made the mistake of over-emphasizing issues and decisions, and failing
to provide ways for people to connect socially. Jah’Shams Abdul-Mumin envisions neighbor
hoods and communities where “people are connected with one another, not just on a particular
issue, but on an ongoing basis. The relationship needs to be the constant – we check in with
each other as people, then we see what we can do together. That’s what democracy is: ‘checking
in with each other.’”
• Developing a stronger, more supportive legal framework that upholds the rights of citizens to
participate in more meaningful, powerful ways. Laura Harris, who has watched tribal
governments struggle to craft their own legal codes, reflects that all kinds of people “act
like Moses handed down the Constitution and that was it.” It is daunting to think about how
to codify the tenets of active civic engagement, which has been a very fluid, organic movement
– and yet doing so can provide communities with what Harris calls “a vehicle for liberation –
the safety and the rich creative environment where you can do something different.”
This discussion of “embeddedness” (for lack of a better term) seemed to transcend the older, narrower
questions about civic engagement. Participants in the CELY and NBT meetings didn’t just want to develop
better ways of organizing citizens to affect policymakers or “get involved” in government; and they didn’t
just want to help or compel governments to become more responsive to citizens. Instead, they were looking
for more sustainable forms of public participation, in which government was just one part of community
governance. Everette Hill argues that “We need safe spaces outside government, and all other groups and
institutions, in order to tap all the assets that a community possesses.”
18. 16
New priorities and next steps
It is clear that practitioners of the different forms of civic engagement want to learn more from one
another. They are also interested in doing some of this learning in community contexts, in addition to
national meetings. They want to look more closely at the relationships between process equity and
outcome equity. And they are resolved to “transform systems” – to find ways to shift civic engagement
from a sporadic, temporary activity reliant on organizers to a sustained, accepted part of community life.
“The paramount political question today,” says Hal Saunders, “is how spaces can be created in which
citizens can discover their capacity to respond to or generate change.”
This discussion suggests a number of strategic opportunities to advance the development of civic engagement:
1. Invest in systems for measurement, evaluation, and accountability – “We need stronger systems
for capturing and measuring impact,” says Chris Wagner. A wealth of evaluations, reports, and academic
literature has been amassed, and yet when they are challenged on the efficacy of their work, most civic
engagement practitioners resort to talking about their own experiences rather than speaking more broadly
for the field. Even more importantly, communities are not taking full advantage of the new capacities of
citizens and online technologies to make evaluation a more broadly shared, democratic activity. Here are
some potential next steps:
• Assemble and summarize all of the existing results-oriented research on civic engagement, so
as to explain more concisely the state of our knowledge about the field.
• Conduct in-depth research on cutting-edge questions, such as the impacts of ‘embedded’ forms
of engagement vs. temporary organizing efforts, and the impacts of civic engagement on
basic living conditions.
• Develop online tools for tracking, measurement, and accountability – particularly methods
and systems that would allow ordinary people to participate in the evaluation process in ways
that enhance learning and accountability.
19. 17
2. Build a stronger infrastructure for civic engagement – Because this work has proliferated outside the
boundaries of any single profession, political philosophy, or civic tradition, many local leaders and organizers
don’t know where to turn for advice and assistance. Leaders who have some financial resources (such as govern-
ment officials) turn to private consultants who may be disconnected from the larger discussions about equity and
effective practice. Leaders without ready financial resources are often left reinventing the wheel.
• Match up the situations and tactics on the “wheel of engagement” – Danielle Atkinson’s wheel
of engagement (see p. 13) could be a valuable tool for all kinds of local leaders and active
citizens. Getting down to the specifics of which approach to use in what situation would be
an important field-building conversation for community organizers, deliberative democrats,
and other civic engagement practitioners.
• Convene national or state-level meetings for practitioners of community organizing and
deliberative democracy to flesh out broader, more coordinated, and more sustainable strategies
for civic engagement. Produce ‘how-to’ materials that summarize the conclusions reached,
and provide the latest lessons learned on face-to-face and online civic engagement.
• Provide technical assistance to communities (local coalitions that include public institutions
like governments and schools as well as nonprofits, community organizers, and others) trying
to ‘embed’ democratic practices in the way they do public business.
• Convene national or state-level conferences to bring together local officials, community
organizers, school administrators, and civic engagement practitioners around questions of
civic engagement and ‘embeddedness.’
• Commission research on public spaces that exhibit qualities of joint ownership.
• Create online resources that give people basic information about civic engagement, including
relevant community examples and resources for further learning.
20. 3. Advance the justice/democracy discussion so that civic engagement advocates can describe their work
in more consistent, compelling ways – The CELY and NBT gatherings have shown that honest conversa-
tions between people from the “justice” and “democracy” perspectives can be productive and enlightening.
They also showed that the language of civic engagement is not only an impediment to understanding among
practitioners, but a major obstacle to the proliferation and advancement of what (for lack of a better term)
we call civic engagement. “In Los Angeles, we are just turning the corner toward trying to ‘popularize’
the Neighborhood Councils,” says BongHwan Kim. “We need to frame our own message so that it is more
easily understandable by people who have no knowledge of this work.”
18
• Bring selected groups together – national civic engagement practitioners for example, or
state-level practitioners, or foundation staff and grantees – for highly structured discussions or
trainings focused on racial equity, justice, and democracy.
• Diversify the leadership of the existing deliberative democracy networks. “Diversifying the
field is really important,” says Danielle Atkinson. “You can think you’re bringing in all the
perspectives, but you just don’t know unless they’re at the table.”
• Commission research that focuses on questions of process equity vs. outcome equity, and
how they play out both in temporary civic engagement initiatives and more ‘embedded’
structures for civic engagement.
• Use the conclusions reached in meetings of civic engagement advocates and practitioners to
determine whether and how the language of this work can reflect shared goals and strategies.
• Work with a communications firm to develop new language, based in part on the outcomes of
the justice/democracy discussion, and test it with ordinary people.
21. 19
4. Mobilize the resources of higher education – Jah’Shams Abdul-Mumin points out that “Colleges
and universities have a wealth of information and manpower that could be coordinated to help residents
and other concerned citizens participate.” This was in fact a common realization among practitioners
involved in these conversations: that there were people on campuses who had similar goals and had resources
that could be helpful to community work. Nancy Thomas of the Democracy Imperative points to two key
priorities for higher education: teach democratic principles and practices across the curriculum (not just
to select students in certain programs or activities), and teach youth leadership and political engagement
skills. “To address these priorities,” she says, “Colleges and universities need to realign teaching methods
and student learning outcomes with democratic principles and practices.” She also urges the colleges and
universities to “attend to the civic leadership development needs of everyday citizens, not just matriculated
students, and to provide countless opportunities for the campus and local community to come together to
learn about and grapple with public problems.” Finally, she stresses the role of schools of education and
“the need to teach teachers to educate for democracy.”
• Convene state-level gatherings that bring together civic engagement practitioners and local
leaders with potential allies on community college and university campuses.
• Develop various kinds of curricula that universities and communities can use to educate
students and citizens in participation skills and democratic ideals. These could include curricula
for traditional college courses, training programs that appeal to community members or
mid-career professionals, or modules to be used as a component of service learning programs.
• Provide opportunities for college administrators and professors, K-12 administrators and
teachers, and student leaders to develop new models for the civic education of young people.
• Work with public administration schools or other degree programs within higher education
to help them produce graduates with the civic skills and mindset that communities need.
“PA schools train public administrators, who end up in positions where they need to be
modeling and doing civic engagement,” argues Kwaku Sraha.
22. 5. Focus on key policy targets in local governance – Though there is more attention to the challenge
of ‘scaling up’ civic engagement to the federal level, the most innovative work is still happening at the
local level. Over the last decade, local officials as a whole have become much more experienced in civic
engagement, and have pushed the discussion of these issues into their state and national associations.
The ‘story of now’ for civic engagement and the ‘story of now’ for local governance need to be brought
together.
20
• Convene national or state-level discussions between officials and civic engagement
practitioners.
• Provide technical assistance to communities working on cutting-edge civic engagement
questions and challenges.
• Develop more supportive legal frameworks for citizen participation. It is daunting for civic
engagement practitioners to think about the legal aspects of their work. Laura Harris and
BongHwan Kim warn us that not exploring these issues can have major consequences for
communities. Ten years after the creation of the L.A. neighborhood council system, Kim
reports, “Interpreting the Brown Act (California’s open meetings law) is still a problem.”
Harris has watched native communities attempt various kinds of constitutional reform, “only
to have the lawyers get hold of it and change everything.”
Articulating the ‘story of now’
Moving forward in these directions will require higher levels of collaboration between the different strands
of civic engagement, between academics and practitioners, and between public officials and other kinds of
leaders. In many cases, it will also require new investments by governments, foundations, or other funding
sources – a tall order in the current financial climate.
The funding picture is also complicated by the fact that the divides and misunderstandings between
different approaches to civic engagement are mirrored in the foundation community. John Esterle,
chair of Philanthropy for Active Civic Engagement, suggests that funders would benefit by the same sort
of conversations that practitioners enjoyed during the Civic Engagement Learning Year and the No
Better Time conference. Esterle, Atkinson, and others suggest that the techniques for productive
discussion pioneered by civic engagement practitioners should be put to use in conversations among funders,
practitioners, and other leaders. Esterle argues that “The processes of dialogue and deliberation we talk
about really need to be practiced between and among all the different players – that will help us shift into
gear around some of the key embeddedness/infrastructure issues.”
Meanwhile, the tide of civic change will continue to present both challenges and opportunities for active
civic engagement. The shifting expectations and capacities of citizens, the attempts to employ democratic
principles in governance and on the campaign trail, and the continuing development and adoption of
online technologies will generate ever more renditions of the ‘story of self’ and the ‘story of us.’ In this
environment, adapting to changes ‘simotiously’ seems like an increasingly inadequate response. To catch up
with the needs and goals of the ordinary people they wish to serve, the advocates and practitioners of civic
engagement need to articulate a more compelling and unified ‘story of now.’
23. 19
Acknowledgements
A number of people provided invaluable comments, quotes, and suggestions for this report:
Jah’Shams Abdul-Mumin, Success: A New Beginning
Terry Amsler, Collaborative Governance Initiative of the Institute for Local Government
Danielle Atkinson, Michigan Voice
Ian Bautista, United Neighborhood Centers of America
Michael Brown, New Mexico Forum for Youth in Community
William Burton, Common Ground Resolution Services
Kara Carlisle, W. K. Kellogg Foundation
John Esterle, The Whitman Institute
Will Friedman, Public Agenda
Maryanne Galindo, Success: A New Beginning
Laura Harris, Americans for Indian Opportunity
Everette Hill, New Mexico Forum for Youth in Community
BongHwan Kim, City of Los Angeles Department of Neighborhood Empowerment
Caroline Lee, Lafayette University
Rodney Locks, city councilman, Brevard, North Carolina
Eduardo Martinez, New Mexico Forum in Youth and Community
Martha McCoy, Everyday Democracy
Maggie Potapchuk, MP Associates
Hal Saunders, International Institute for Sustained Dialogue
Alice Siu, Center for Deliberative Democracy
Kwaku Sraha, New Mexico Voices for Children
Nancy Thomas, The Democracy Imperative
Chris Wagner, Sustained Dialogue Campus Network
1
Ganz, a longtime community organizer turned Harvard academic, was the primary architect of the “Camp Obama” workshops that Obama organizers
went through when they joined the campaign. Ganz feels that much of this knowledge and resolve were lost in the transition from the campaign to the
administration – he and Peter Dreier (Peter Dreier and Marshall Ganz, “We Have the Hope. Now Where’s the Audacity?” TheWashingtonPost, August
30, 2009.) have urged the president to revive “’movement’ tactics, from leaflets, vigils and newspaper ads to nonviolent civil disobedience,” in his effort
to pass health care reform. Hal Saunders gives a somewhat different critique: “The Obama Administration may be failing to distinguish between (1)
mobilizing support in an election or for a president’s programs and (2) creating spaces where citizens can discover their capacities to ‘rebuild America
one neighborhood at a time.’” This report is in part an attempt to sort through these different approaches to organizing, and describe how they might
be incorporated into the work of governance.
2
A grant from the Kellogg Foundation enabled key participants in the Civic Engagement Learning Year to attend the No Better Time
conference. This report is based partly on conversations with these participants at the conference and telephone interviews afterward.
3
James Morone’s The Democratic Wish and Carmen Sirianni’s Civic Innovation in America are helpful for looking at the long-term and more recent
history of democratic governance in the U.S.
4
Philosophically, this notion was in keeping with the spread of postmodernist ideas, which emphasized the importance of “discourses” and “counter-
discourses,” on college campuses.
5
Ian Bautista says that “Many of our members still employ ‘talking circles,’ ‘minute circles,’ or something strikingly similar to a ‘study circle,’ as
employed by our colleagues at Everyday Democracy. Almost all of our members still hold community forums at which neighbors are given the op-
portunity to provide input about and learn about civic decisions, meet policymakers, meet and discern candidates for public office, discuss important
neighborhood and community-wide issues and challenges, and otherwise engage in democratic practices on their terms.”
6
Harris went on to say that “Part of the problem is that the right-wingers stole all our good words and ruined them.” Terms like
“democracy,” “liberty,” and “citizen” now have negative connotations for many people.
7
There is also a set of deliberative democrats who use polling techniques to recruit a small representative sample of the community, instead of organiz-
ing meetings that are open to the public. They argue that these Deliberative Polls(tm), “citizens’ assemblies,” and similar exercises can both provide
informed input to public officials and serve as a model for more widely dispersed deliberations.
8
Gaventa is an eloquent advocate for the notion that the advocates and practitioners of civic engagement in the Global North have a great deal to
learn from their counterparts in the South. See Gaventa and Nicholas Benequista, “Reversing the Flow: A New Democratic Conversation?,” Alliance,
June 2009.
9
The idea is that the situation dictates the strategy. Atkinson also suggests that the wheel could be drawn so that the inner circle refers to the interests
and skills of the individual, rather than the situation.
Photographs courtesy of Jessie Neikrie.
24. One Michigan
Avenue East
Battle Creek, MI
49017-4058
USA
269-968-1611
TDD on site
Telex: 4953028
Facsimile: 269-968-0413
Internet: http://www.wkkf.org