How and Why Deliberative Democracy Enables Co-Intelligence and Brings Wisdom to Governance

Janette Hartz-Karp
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引用次数: 12

Abstract

Over the past decade, state and local governments throughout Australia have focused on how to improve community consultation. Government consultation processes, regulated with the best of intentions to involve the public, have come under heavy criticism as being DEAD (Decide, Educate, Announce and Defend). It has become apparent that the problem community consultation was supposed to fix – including the voice of the community in developing policy and plans – has remained problematic. Worse, the fix has often backfired. Rather than achieving community engagement, consultation has frequently resulted in the unintended consequence of community frustration and anger at tokenism and increased citizen disaffection. Traditional community consultation has become a “fix that failed”, resulting in a “vicious cycle” of ever-decreasing social capital1 (Hartz-Karp 2002). Ordinary citizens are less and less interested in participating, evidenced by the generally low turn-out at government community consultation initiatives. When the community does attend in larger numbers, it is most often because the issue has already sparked community outrage, inspiring those with local interests to attend and protest. In their endeavour to change this situation, government agencies have created and disseminated ‘how to’ community consultation manuals, conducted conferences and run training sessions for staff. Issues of focus have included project planning, risk analysis, stakeholder mapping, economic analysis, value assurance, standardisation and so forth. Implementation models have illustrated a desired shift from informing, educating and gaining input from citizens, to collaboration, empowerment and delegated decision-making. Although new engagement techniques have been outlined, it has not been clarified how agencies can achieve such a radical change from eliciting community input to collaborative decision-making. Regardless, to reassure the public that improvements have been made, community consultation has been ‘re-badged’ to ‘community engagement’. A new vocabulary has developed around this nomenclature. However, the community has remained unconvinced that anything much has changed. The question is: Why hasn’t the community accepted these efforts with enthusiasm? The most optimistic response is that there will be a lag time between the announcement of improvements and actual improvements, and an even longer time lag between seeing the results and a resumption of the community’s trust in government. The more pessimistic response (one that also has resonance with many public sector staff) is that in essence, not a lot has changed. The ‘re-badging’ and management improvements have not resulted in the public feeling more engaged or empowered.
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协商民主如何以及为什么使共同智能成为可能并为治理带来智慧
在过去的十年里,澳大利亚各州和地方政府都在关注如何改善社区咨询。政府的咨询程序,以最好的意图让公众参与进来,受到了严厉的批评,因为它已经死了(决定,教育,宣布和捍卫)。很明显,社区协商应该解决的问题——包括社区在制定政策和计划中的声音——仍然存在问题。更糟糕的是,补救措施往往适得其反。磋商并没有实现社区参与,而是经常导致社区对象征性行为的沮丧和愤怒,以及公民不满情绪的增加。传统的社区协商已经成为一种“失败的修复”,导致社会资本不断减少的“恶性循环”1 (Hartz-Karp 2002)。普通市民参与的兴趣越来越少,政府社区咨询活动的投票率普遍较低就是明证。当社区确实有很多人参加时,通常是因为这个问题已经引发了社区的愤怒,激励了那些与当地利益相关的人参加和抗议。在努力改变这种情况的过程中,政府机构编制和散发了“如何”社区协商手册,举办了会议,并为工作人员举办了培训班。重点问题包括项目规划、风险分析、利益相关者映射、经济分析、价值保证、标准化等等。实施模式表明了从告知、教育和获取公民投入到协作、授权和授权决策的理想转变。虽然已经概述了新的参与技术,但尚未澄清机构如何能够实现从征求社区投入到协作决策的这种根本性变化。无论如何,为了让市民放心,我们已将“社区谘询”“重新”贴上“社区参与”的标签。围绕这个命名法已经形成了一个新的词汇。然而,社区仍然不相信有什么大的变化。问题是:为什么社区没有热情地接受这些努力?最乐观的回应是,在宣布改善和实际改善之间会有一段时间的滞后,而在看到结果和恢复社会对政府的信任之间,则需要更长的时间。更为悲观的回应(这也引起了许多公共部门员工的共鸣)是,从本质上讲,变化不大。“重新贴标签”和管理上的改进并没有让公众感到更投入或更有权力。
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