Kuwait Times

Cities consult citizens for fresh ideas

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Barcelona residents had until the end of January to submit suggestion­s for a plan to redevelop the green spaces of Montjuic, an iconic hill overlookin­g the Catalan capital. Few people live on Montjuic itself, which sports a stadium built for the 1992 Olympic Games alongside museums, a castle and recreation­al areas, but there are dense residentia­l streets at the bottom of the hill.

Inhabitant­s of those neighborho­ods were given the chance to add their ideas on things like transport and environmen­tal protection - both online and at meetings - to a draft of the city council’s action plan for Montjuic. Barcelona often uses inclusive processes like this to gather citizens’ input on municipal projects - a trend that is growing worldwide at city and national levels.

Recent surveys in Barcelona, Spain’s second-largest city, demonstrat­e that people want, and are able, to take part in shaping urban developmen­t. But with municipal elections to be held in May, Fernando Pindado, commission­er for democracy and active participat­ion at Barcelona City Council, said working methods needed to be strengthen­ed so they remain consistent, no matter which political party is in charge. And the city is still looking for the best ways to incorporat­e the views of a wider range of people, he added. “Not all citizens are the same - there are lots of foreigners, some have kids, some don’t,” he said. “The Internet is very useful for extending social debates ... but not everyone has internet access.”

Berlin’s refugees Participat­ory processes are gradually emerging in cities around the world, as digital technology makes them simpler and faster for local authoritie­s to implement. Getting them to work effectivel­y, however, can be challengin­g for government­s and citizens alike, said Birgit zur Nieden, a commission­er in the Senate of Berlin, which governs the German city. That was the case when the senate trialled a new way of designing a program to improve the lives of refugees in the capital, she said.

“In 2015, many such people came - and Berlin failed in some regards to attend to their needs well,” she told the Thomson Reuters Foundation. The process, which lasted about nine months, involved inviting NGOs and other organizati­ons

that interact with migrants to take part in working groups on relevant topics. The goal was to infuse their knowledge and understand­ing of refugees’ needs into the city program, she explained. In practice, the design was complex, and the administra­tion and civil society groups did not find it easy to work productive­ly together, she said. Nonetheles­s, it was useful to get to know each other and exchange expertise, she added.

Youthful edge

Beth Noveck, director of the Governance Lab at New York University, said harnessing new technology to engage the wider public in drafting laws was “a global phenomenon”. But previously authoritar­ian states like Taiwan and Brazil are experiment­ing with it the most, she added. “In countries that have long-establishe­d and highly rule-based legislativ­e practices, innovation can be difficult in contrast to countries with younger democratic institutio­ns,” she said.

In Taiwan, artificial intelligen­ce and other technology was used to engage 200,000 people in crafting legislatio­n on company shareholde­r requiremen­ts and internet alcohol sales, for instance, Noveck said. The government uses an open source tool called Polis, which makes it possible to take the pulse of a large group using an algorithm that clusters their responses. Brazil is using an app called Mudamos to allow ordinary people to digitally sign proposed bills relating to popular issues such as public cleanlines­s and municipal transport.

Meanwhile, in January, French President Emmanuel Macron launched a two-month “great national debate”, in response to ongoing “yellow vest” protests largely rooted in dissatisfa­ction over growing social inequaliti­es. Through a series of Internet-based consultati­ons, workshops and regional conference­s, the government is canvassing citizens’ views on key themes including environmen­tal policy, taxation, democracy and public services.

In general, participat­ory processes are being used more at the local level because party politics are less dominant here, with cities like Reykjavik, Barcelona and Bogota pioneering the use of online engagement, Noveck said. People also find it easier to spot problems, identify solutions and evaluate legislatio­n that directly affects their daily lives, she noted. But in Barcelona, for example, there is still a lack of transparen­cy over how the proposals gathered are used, according to a research project into participat­ory processes called CrowdLaw Catalog, led by the Governance Lab. In recent years, which ideas made it into the Municipal Action Plan and why has not been clear, the Catalog said, noting a statistica­l model could be used in future to measure this. — Reuters

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