Hawaii Senator Pursues “Collaborative Legislators Network”

Our partners with the Kettering Foundation recently published a great interview with Hawaii Senator Les Ihara Jr. – who we are proud to have as an NCDD supporting member – about some exciting work he’s doing to get legislators doing more and better public engagement work. Sen. Ihara’s ideas have great potential, and we encourage you to read more about them below or find the original here.


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Developing Our Civic Culture: State Legislators and Public Engagement

Hawaii state senator Les Ihara Jr. has found many state legislators interested in engaging, deliberating, and collaborating with citizens and stakeholders on public policy issues. Former Kettering Foundation research assistant Jack Becker recently sat down with Senator Ihara to talk about his work in supporting legislators’ citizen engagement interests.

Senator Ihara has served as majority policy leader with the Hawaii State Legislature since 2006. He entered the Hawaii State House in 1986 and the Hawaii State Senate in 1994. Senator Ihara is helping to organize a National Collaborative Legislators Network to support the state legislators citizen engagement research project of the National Conference of State Legislatures in partnership with the Kettering Foundation. In addition, he cochaired NCSL’s Legislative Effectiveness Committee from 2011 to 2014 and currently serves on the Kettering Foundation’s board of directors.

Jack Becker: When were you first exposed to public engagement?

Senator Ihara: In the late 1990s I attended a public forum using the National Issues Forums Institute (NIFI) framework. Since then I’ve organized a number of NIFI forums in Hawaii on legislative issues, such as gambling, death and dying, and campaign finance. During those forums I experienced public deliberation. A group of citizens were speaking together as a group about their problems rather than advocating a single solution. They were thinking through issues and problems and examining pros and cons. It was more of a learning community than I had experienced before.

At the Kettering Foundation’s 2014 Deliberative Democracy Exchange (DDEx), you said, “To me, citizen engagement is a reflection of the culture.” Could you talk about what you meant by this?

Having been involved with the Kettering Foundation, one of the things we’ve learned is that public engagement practices do not become ongoing until they become part of the culture of a community. If an organization simply does an event, a practice, it often stops. What it takes is a culture that values and has practical use of engagement in the community.

What exists now in society is a reflection of our culture. We’ve lost some of the habits that used to foster engagement. Kettering has learned this working with schools and connecting communities with schools. We’re interested in learning how a community’s culture can evolve to include public engagement practices as part of what it means to be a community.

Photo taken at the National Conference of State Legislatures & Kettering Foundation Citizen Engagement Workshop • Dayton, Ohio • July 9-10, 2014

How have you approached supporting a culture of engagement in Hawaii?

The civic culture in Hawaii doesn’t quite have the capacity to support ongoing engagement practices. Like other cities and states, it is not well developed. I’ve worked with many citizens groups as a member of the legislature, and I provide as much support as I can to them. I’ve created a number of citizen networks and supported others, but community support, funding, and energy for them has not been sustained.

Rather than promoting public engagement because of my interest, I’ve started to focus on the needs and interests of particular communities and demonstrate that engagement can help address their needs. For example, the monthly meetings of Hawaii Legislature’s Kupuna Caucus bring together senior citizen leaders, public and private agencies, and legislators to share information and develop legislation and other actions to address common concerns among our senior citizen community. We’ve been doing this for nine years, and there’s a sense of community among participants. Engaging together feels natural and essential for the well-being of this community.

What issues are ripe for more engagement?

An example would be a zoning issue, a development issue or something that negatively impacts a neighborhood. On these types of issues, engagement is often more reactive, rather than proactive. The opportunity and challenge is to mature the initial negative energy into ongoing efforts to promote the future we want as a community.

It’s unfortunate that it often takes a negative reaction to get people to do something. The reactions we see are a reflection of the culture that exists today. Our civic culture is very critical of government and doesn’t react as a partner with government and institutions, but more so in opposition to them. It would be helpful to have a government that emulates public collaboration in its management of our common resources and spaces. Neighborhoods would then have an important partner to join with in addressing the larger public issues and problems.

Is there some particular role for legislators during these forums?

I did a project in the early 2000s with Kettering examining this question. We were trying to encourage state legislators to conduct public deliberation-type activities and act as conveners for NIF forums. We didn’t yield many results then. Our thought now is to start where legislators are. We first identify the public engagement interests legislators have, and then support those interests. The earlier project focused on encouraging legislators to become interested in what we wanted, which may have been seen as competition for their limited time and resources.

State legislators are focused on state-level public policy issues and legislation. In the NCSL-Kettering project, I’m finding more legislators who have an interest in turning the policymaking process into a collaborative venture. One of my major efforts is to find and identify these types of legislators who have an interest in collaboration and figure out how to support their interests. I do this through a variety of organizations, including the Kettering Foundation, National Conference of State Legislatures, and others.

What are the biggest challenges you face identifying these people and supporting them in this work?

One of the challenges is that it takes time to identify legislators, get to know them, and then support them along the way. It’s a long process, and legislators are busy. But it’s encouraging that the legislators we work with suggest other legislators to contact. So I see promise in building this network.

During legislative sessions, it’s especially hard to get away from legislative work. And so one of the biggest challenges is to find time when legislators are available to meet. Face-to-face meetings are critical to building understanding and support. It is during these meetings that we identify the type of support that legislators want. This is critical.

The other challenge we face is in building capacity within non-legislator networks, such as the National Coalition for Dialogue and Deliberation, so that practitioners can engage legislators as partners and support them with what they need. Since legislative bodies have little capacity for public deliberation type work, the opportunity is to build capacity amongst external partners to provide group facilitation and deliberative experience to legislatures. Another opportunity is to facilitate connections and ongoing relationships between external facilitators and interested legislators.

At DDEx you went on to propose what you called a “collaborative legislators network.” What kind of space or association would this be?

I want to establish a group or network for state legislators from around the county—legislators who have a more collaborative approach to policymaking or want to learn more about being collaborative with citizens and stakeholder groups. What I’ve learned in the last several years is that there is a distinct leadership model that some legislators emulate that is more collaborative. These people use principles of facilitation and a partnership approach with the public when developing policy.

This leadership model is notable because collaborative legislators do this as opposed to wielding power and pushing through legislation with little engagement. The prevailing leadership culture in politics tends to be more about pushing for certain goals and outcomes. I believe there are many politicians who want to embody a more collaborative model. I am very hopeful after our meeting at DDEx that we met some of these people in Dayton, Ohio.

So far, I’ve been in contact with more than 100 legislators who could become part of a national network of legislators interested in public engagement and collaboration. My vision is for this network to become a national community of state legislators that serve as a model for collaborative, problem-solving leadership, as an alternative to traditional power-based leadership.

One of my upcoming projects is to help connect practitioners of public deliberation with legislators. For example, I’ve heard from members of the National Coalition for Dialogue and Deliberation who want legislators to do more public deliberation. My advice is that instead of pursuing this as an item on their agenda, they should start where legislators are and what their interests are. Legislators each have their own story on why and how they ran for office. For many, that includes an interest in an engaged citizenry and healthy democracy, which is a good starting place for practitioners and activists to build a supportive relationship with a legislator.

Jack Becker is a former Kettering Foundation research assistant. He currently works for Denver Public Schools Office of Family and Community Engagement. He can be reached at jackabecker@gmail.com. Follow him on twitter: @jackabecker

You can find the original version of this Kettering Foundation blog post at http://kettering.org/kfnews/developing-our-civic-culture.

Great Things Start at NCDD Conferences: The San Diego Deliberation Network

We know that amazing work in our field often begins with the connections made and synergies ignited during NCDD conferences, and we are so pleased to share a great example of how that happens. The piece below from NCDD supporting members Mary Thompson and Martha Cox tells the story of how, from a conversation at NCDD’s 2012 conference, the new San Diego Deliberation Network was born. We can’t wait to see what other great work will begin this week at NCDD 2014!


A new twist on a collaborative model of deliberation and dialogue has emerged in San Diego, based on the old adage: begin with the end in mind.  In this hotbed of bio-science, communications technology, security and defense innovations, San Diego has incubated a new development, a network of networks, to benefit the region by helping citizens develop their role as producers in the region’s democracy, building stronger communities.

The seedlings of the San Diego Deliberation NetworkA Regional Collaboration for Civic Conversation were planted when Kettering Foundation fellow and NCDD Board member Dr. Martín Carcasson connected with NCDD supporting member Henry Williams at NCDD’s 2012 conference in Seattle. The two soon collaborated to have Martín give a talk on deliberative democracy at a local library in San Diego in the summer of 2013. Among the attendees were a few representatives of local universities as well as the League of Women Voters who, excited by the ideas and potentials discussed during the event, began working together on bringing more deliberative practices to San Diego.

A couple months later, a meeting was convened where Martín, San Diego Mesa College political science professor Dr. Carl Luna, and executive director of the San Diego Foundation’s Center for Civic Engagement B.H. Kim sketched a vision of a network of academic institutions and good governance groups which would leverage each node’s strengths, factor in each node’s needs for affiliation and publicity, and ensure the robustness of the overall network, including a plan for growth.

The built-in network would encompass the San Diego Foundation’s Center for Civic Engagement, the League of Women Voters, and representatives from all of the major academic institutions in the San Diego region:

  • San Diego State University
  • University of San Diego
  • University of California San Diego
  • San Diego City College; Mesa College
  • Point Loma Nazarene College
  • California State University San Marcos.

The result was recognition of the San Diego group – the largest cohort ever accepted by the Kettering Foundation – as a learning exchange and member of their 2014-15 New Centers for Public Life.

A team of nine people representing six of the network’s members have traveled to three Kettering workshops, conducted community surveys and conversations, and laid its institutional framework.

SDDN photo

Feb. 26, 2014 • The San Diego Deliberation Network at the Kettering Foundation in Dayton, OH. From left: Dr. Leroy Brady, San Diego City College; Dr. Lindsey Lupo, Point Loma Nazarene College; Dr. Karen Shelby, University of San Diego; Mary Thompson, Martha Cox, League of Women Voters; BH Kim, Former Director, San Diego Foundation’s Center for Civic Engagement; Dr. Nancy Fredericks, San Diego City College; Dr. Kimber Quinney, California State University San Marcos; Tiveeda Stovall, University of California San Diego.

Mindful of another adage, the greatest strength can be the greatest weakness, the Network has worked hard to overcome its biggest challenge: a working organizational structure that would allow accountability of both the representing individual institution and the Network itself.  At monthly sessions, the Network has mapped out how decisions will be made in the network’s name.

Committed to the goals of strengthening communities through a partnership with academia and community, the prediction is that the Network will continue to grow.  Many of the Network members have joined NCDD as individuals and view NCDD in bio-science terms as an extension of its “genetic make-up!”

Though still in its infancy (neither a website nor a home base exists), given the San Diego Deliberation Network’s origins from NCDD 2012 onward and its growing affiliations, the future is so bright you’re going to need shades!

Mary Thompson & Martha Cox
League of Women Voters North County San Diego
San Diego Deliberation Network

Thanks so much to Martha & Mary for putting together this great piece and to Martín Carcasson for helping with it!

NIF Caucus at NCDD 2014 – Friday Dinner

We want to make sure that all of you who are attending NCDD 2014 this week know that there is going to be a dinner for past or present affiliates of our partners at the National Issues Forums Institute. Learn more in the note below from Nancy Gansender and RSVP to her.

NIF-logoAre you an NIF moderator/facilitator? Are you part of the NIF network, past or present? Do you remember the PPIs or are you part of its successors, Centers for Civic Life?

Can we talk? Let’s do so over dinner this Friday, October 16 at the NCDD 2014 conference.

Let’s share our common past, and build on our rich experience and chart a bright future.

Conveners: Patty Dineen, Craig Paterson and Nancy Gansneder.

Plan to join us? Shoot Nancy an email (nancyg@virginia.edu) so we can make reservations.

NIF & Kettering Host Online Immigration Conversation Monday

We encourage NCDD members to join our partners with the National Issues Forums of Northern Virginia and the Kettering Foundation for a webinar conversation on immigration tomorrow, Sept. 29th. The conversation will use KF’s new online deliberation tool, Common Ground for Action, so make sure to join us and check it out! You can read the invitation from Bill Corbett of NIFNVA below or find the original here.


NIF-logoI’m writing invite you to an upcoming online National Issues Forum, a small, moderated, chat-based deliberation on a critical issue facing America.

It takes place on Monday, September 29 at 7:30 pm to 9:30 pm EDT. All you need to participate is a web browser and the willingness to use chat for conversation.

The topic is “Immigration in America — How Do We Fix a System in Crisis?” The issue guide is at this link. The issue guide provides the road map for our discussion and essential background. If you’d like to watch a three-minute video that previews the topic, you can view it on our website by clicking here.

You can register by reply to this message or by completing the online form at the new website of National Issues Forums of Northern Virginia. The forum is limited to twelve people…first-come, first-served…but more forums are coming.

The forum uses a new software tool from the Kettering Foundation that brings moderated deliberation on national issues to a wider audience.

Below is a screen shot of a Common Ground graphic produced by an online National Issues Forum earlier this month. It is the product of ten people working through the issues together in a discussion about how to fix American politics.

I hope you are as interested as I am in helping to develop this new tool for more people to participate in political life.

Sincerely,

Bill Corbett National Issues Forums of Northern Virginia

Bill_Corbett_NIF_of_Northern_Vir@mail.vresp.com

Changing “Child-Adult” Dynamics in Public Participation

Our partners at the Kettering Foundation recently published an insightful interview about civic infrastructure and the relationship between elected officials and their constituents with NCDD supporting member Matt Leighninger of the Deliberative Democracy Consortium. We encourage you to read it below or to find the original by clicking here.


kfMatt Leighninger thinks the capacities of citizens have grown tremendously over the years. But one of the misalignments between having better engagement and more productive use of citizens’ capacities has been the inclination of decision makers to adopt a “child-to-adult” orientation to the public. What we need, he says, is an “adult-to-adult relationship.”

In thinking about how we create those types of relationships, former KF research assistant Jack Becker has been talking with civic leaders around the United States. He recently interviewed Matt Leighninger, the executive director of the Deliberative Democracy Consortium (DDC), an alliance of major organizations and leading scholars working in the field of deliberation and public engagement. The DDC represents more than 50 foundations, nonprofit organizations, and universities, collaborating to support research activities and advance democratic practice in North America and around the world. Over the last 16 years, Matt has worked with public engagement efforts in more than 100 communities, in 40 states and four Canadian provinces. Matt is a senior associate for Everyday Democracy and serves on the boards of E-Democracy.Org, the National School Public Relations Association, and The Democracy Imperative.

One of topics I’ve been trying to put my finger on is civic infrastructure. When I talked with Sandy Heierbacher about this, she explained it as “the big picture of why we do this work” which she goes on to say are “the underlying systems and structures that enable people to come together to address their challenges effectively.” Betty Knighton added to this discussion by arguing that we have to do a better job at identifying where these “conversations occur naturally in our community.” Matt Leighninger, one of our fields’ many careful surveyors of community engagement practices, contributed to this conversation by tracing some of the arenas of practice and thinking about what kind of leadership it takes to foster engagement.

Jack Becker: When we think of civic infrastructure what activities are most important?

Matt Leighninger: There are official spaces set up for participation like public meetings, public hearings, advisory committees, some of which are legally required, some of which are traditional things which our governments and school systems have established. Then there are more informal or semi-formal kinds of things at the grassroots level like parent-teacher associations (PTAs), homeowners associations, labour associations, and community organizing outfits. Some of them have semi-official connections in certain situations to local governments (for example, PTAs are connected to the school) and sometimes they do not. There are other associations that people belong to in some sense but are not necessarily that participatory or are not that meaningful to them like vehicles for fundraising, rather than mediating institutions. There is a new kind of locus for engagement like online forums that are popping up around geographic interest or issue-based interest and often they are poorly connected or not connected to the official participation structures or the informal grassroots ground floor of democracy groups that are a little bit older and not so online focused. I think these are some of the main things in terms of arenas for people that are a part of the infrastructure.

In The Civic Renewal Movement: Community Building and Democracy in the United States by Carmen Sirianni and Lewis A. Friedland (2005), the authors trace innovations in democratic engagement by looking at various arenas of practice, such as urban planning, health, and education, among others. How do you see engagement in these arenas of practice?

They all have taken somewhat different paths in different issue areas and they are generally not connected at all with one another. So, within land use and planning, we see it is driven to a large extent by increasingly tense confrontations between residents and planners and residents and the local officials or developers around various kinds of land use decisions. I see one of the motivating factors of increased engagement being the desire to avoid the screaming-match type of meetings. With health, it’s more driven by the data and the realization that the social determinants of health and the way people live is in many ways much more influential as far as their health plan comes in than what kind of care they get. So, healthy communities’ coalitions which started emerging 20 years ago kind of reflect that interest on how to improve health or figure out how to reduce obesity or substance abuse or promote healthier living by biking or through similar activities. With education, it is more financial than anything else. Some of it has to do with the same worries like the screaming-match meeting and also other kinds of issues like school closures, which is a definite driver of engagement of education, and financial stuff like funding, which is mainly district level and not grassroots level.

In what ways are these areas of practice being connected together?

I don’t think there’s a lot of work to connect them, and that’s a shame for all kinds of reasons. One basic one is that public participation is incredibly inefficient in the sense that it is each organization and an issue area on its own trying to engage people in those issues despite the fact that these people often have interests in a range of issues, they don’t just care about education, they care about other things too, and also because the issues themselves are interrelated (for example, healthy kids learn better and having places to live affects their health). So, it makes sense to try and think how you can achieve participation in a more holistic way that is more citizen-centred rather than the way in which we try to do it now.

What kind of thinking would that require?

I think there needs to be planning, there needs to be a new form of planning. Local level primarily, but all the other levels of government and society can benefit by this and add to it. You need to be able to have people who represent a range of sectors come together and take stock of what there is and learn from each other. The most basic step that communities can do is simply bring together people who do engagement in different arenas, who often don’t even know that they exist and don’t know each other, and have them compare notes and figure out if there are ways that they can work together. That is a very basic step that can be very helpful.

I find that every so often I experience an “a-ha” moment in life and work—a moment of clarity that legitimizes my work, compels me to act, or clarifies a problem I have been working on. Have you had any of these moments recently?

This notion about connecting games and fun with participation is definitely an important “a-ha” moment. Games are not simply a way to liven an otherwise dull process. The meaning here is kind of deeper. If you are thinking like a game designer, you’re thinking about how you are going to gratify people and if you can do that effectively, then that’s essentially the same kind of thinking that has to go into public engagement even if what you are designing is not necessarily a game. Then there is the importance of thinking about the frequency of participation and the fact that it might be better to plan things that are more frequent and regular, such as every week. In some of these online game forums, the amount of time people are spending is probably a fair amount of time and some of the tasks are quite complex, all this runs counter to the impulses engagement people have to think we have to make participation convenient for people because they have short attention spans and are very busy. I think we should spend more time questioning these assumptions.

So public participation should be gratifying and competitive like a game? That seems to really buck conventional wisdom.

Well certainly. Socializing, cultural things like food, music and drama, and cross-generational socializing, these things carry with them a basic gratification. With cross-generational socializing, for example, it’s not just that people want to hang out with the younger people, it’s actually younger people that want to hang out with the senior citizens. The cross-generational thing is actually real. Friendly competition between people should be a part of the exercises, too, because that is a motivator and people enjoy it and again, it kind of runs a little bit counter to the traditions that have gone into this field because a lot of people came into this because they cared about conflict resolution or were tired of competitive politics. And yet, competition is not necessarily a bad thing and I think it can be really productive.

One of the challenges we have in making the case for better public participation essentially boils down to a communications problem. It can take a long time to explain this work well so finding analogies that make sense to people is important. Do you have any insight into how we can do this?

Well I had a good sense after many years of doing this work about the small picture of democracy and community engagement: how you recruit people, organize meetings and facilitate them. But it wasn’t until many years after that, that I got a sense of the big picture when I was in Lakewood, Colorado, which is a suburb of Denver. I was there because residents of Lakewood had said in surveys that it was a great community. They thought that the schools and parks were good, they valued the services they were getting from the local government, everything was wonderful and yet the city budget had gone fairly deeply into the red because 9 times in the last 30 years citizens had voted down sales tax increases to maintain the same level of services. So the mayor had brought people together for a meeting to talk about this. There were various community leaders present and other citizens, and the mayor asked them what they wanted him to do, whether he should raise taxes or cut services. Somebody said, “Mayor, we like you and we think you are right for us but essentially what we have had here is an apparent child-to-adult relationship between the citizens and government, and what we need to establish is an adult-to-adult relationship.” We need more of this kind of analogy because people can relate to it.

Do you think there is recognition amongst public and elected officials that citizens want to be treated like adults, and within that, what an adult relationship looks like?

Some of them do, but a lot of them don’t. What’s difficult is that their experiences with participation are so bad. Their experiences with public engagement is three minutes on a microphone in a meeting where they don’t get anything out of it and they feel attacked and mistrusted and citizens tend not to like them. The interviews that Tina and Cynthia did a couple of years ago with state legislators and members of congress show a dark and dire picture. They had almost no ability to envision any kind of better setup and that was the most disturbing thing about that. Not only did they have all these bad experiences, they just didn’t think it was possible to have a productive conversation with a group of people. They have some conversations with citizens in the grocery store or somewhere public but other than that they have no good interactions with citizens.

But they do want to have more positive interactions with citizens, right?

Yes, if you push them on they would probably propose this kind of adult-to-adult framework and they would resonate with that. But not only do they have a hard time envisioning what it would look like, they also on many cases don’t think that it is even possible.

You’ve contributed to this work about “making public participation legal.” I think most people’s reaction is to say, “I didn’t know it was illegal.” But actually, as you point out, it’s not particularly clear what forms of participation are explicitly authorized, and many officials are afraid to take chances with forms of participation other than the conventional public hearing.

It’s not true that all participation is legal, of course, but I think part of the point that we are making in that work is that it is often unclear as to what is legal because of how outdated and how generic many laws are about the legal ways to get input from people. So, to some extent yes, there are some mandates for participation processes that don’t work. So the Budget Control Act is one example that people always point to saying the Act compels them to do certain forms of bad participation. The more common problem is not the mandate issue but is simply a lack of clarity about what is allowed and what isn’t, particularly when it comes to anything related to the Internet because most of the laws don’t really take the Internet into account. I think part of the dynamic here is that citizens’ capacities and expectations have gone way up, one way that manifests itself is that people are more litigious and so therefore people are suing their governments and other institutions at a higher rate, and other institutions are spending more money defending themselves and limiting their liabilities. As a part of that whole dynamic, the legal people inside public institutions are more powerful than ever before.

So it sounds like one of the basic trade-off calculations officials are making is about innovating in the public square and playing it safely as to not get sued. What are some other basic trade-offs you see elected officials wrestling with?

The most basic trade-off is that it is time intensive, staffing intensive, and for a short-term gain, it is often not feasible. Part of what is going to happen is that public officials and other decision makers are going to be willing to seed choices to citizens. One of the scenarios is that in exchange for votes, public officials and other people basically say, “You get the say on this,” and that’s a bargain that would work on both sides. It brings with it all kinds of dangers.

One of the basic threads of this conversation is that in some places, some of the time, some people are deciding to take a chance and do something different. That sounds like leadership, and it makes sense, you need somebody who is willing to initiate all this. So what does leadership look like among people who do engagement work?

Well, there are different kinds of levels and sets of people here. I think locally, you have to have people who have a stake in the community and are willing to take a long view, like community foundations, universities, public officials, city managers. Also, there are people who are more on the citizen side of the spectrum like longtime community organizers or chambers of commerce. It is not like they are the people who would come up with a plan all alone, but part of the whole challenge here is in involving regular people and envisioning the community that they want in terms of infrastructure and not just the environment.

Do you think there’s a portrait of a “civic leader”?

Well as you pointed out before, it has a lot to do with the willingness and the skill to engage. From so many of these leadership roles, we continue to prepare people and give people the expectation that they are going to be experts or representatives or both. And when they get into these roles, people find out that they cannot just do those things. You cannot just be an expert or just be a representative because the citizens don’t want that. Citizens want to be heard. So there’s a great deal of surprise from experts and officials as to how great citizens’ expectations are. When I first started work with officials I thought it was all going to be an intellectual thing like tools and reports and stuff like that. We got to those kinds of things, but the first thing was group therapy. We were all talking about why they were elected by their peers to make decisions on their behalf and three months into their first term everyone was screaming at them and they did not know why. So there is a major expectation shift and therefore an educational shift.

Not to count short the many citizens, communities, organizations, and public officials doing good work, but it seems like there’s a fairly small group of leaders involved in thinking about and convening this level of high quality engagement. Have you been able to work with the other leaders in the field successfully?

Yes, it is a pretty small group of people and we’ve known each other for a long time in most cases. So it is pretty congenial, and it seems like there are only a few groups. We try to support each other, and they try to convene meetings where people kind of try to compare notes, which is really good. The National Dialogue for Mental Health has been a great step forward, and it has been an actual project where people have been sort of forced to work together. You get one level of understanding of somebody by reading/hearing about it, but you get a whole advanced level of understanding where you actually have to do it together with them. But I think that’s still a very small step, and part of what we need to be doing is working more intensively with local leaders and spend more time trying to work with different kinds of organizations than with groups specifically involved in the engagement field. There is a whole new category of groups that have come along as a part of the civic infrastructure.

Jack Becker is a former Kettering Foundation research assistant. He currently works for Denver Public Schools Office of Family and Community Engagement. He can be reached at jackabecker@gmail.com. Follow him on twitter: @jackabecker

You can find the original version of this interview at http://kettering.org/kfnews/citizens-and-elected-officials.

Telling Our Stories: Featured Entries to NCDD’s Dialogue Storytelling Tool

NCDD has been experimenting with collecting examples of dialogue and deliberation projects through the “Dialogue Storytelling Tool” we launched last summer at www.ncdd.org/storytelling-tool.

SuccessStoriesCoverIn partnership with the Kettering Foundation, we’ve been gathering brief case studies and project descriptions from dialogue and deliberation practitioners. Today we’re releasing a 19-page report that shares some of the best entries we’ve received so far.

Please check it out, share it widely, and add your stories today!

Some of the projects you’ll learn about in the doc are UrbanMatters, Migrant Farmworkers Reading Project, the Oregon Citizens Initiative Review, the Palestinian-Jewish Living Room Dialogue, Engaging in Aging, and more.

It has always been more challenging to collect case examples of projects than to get people to share information on their organization, method, or fee-based programs like upcoming trainings. Our strategy with the Dialogue Storytelling Tool is to keep the tool as simple as possible, and to emphasize the convenience of filling out a simple form in order to share your work with Kettering, with Participedia, and on the NCDD blog.

These are the only required fields in the form:

  • Name and email
  • Title of program
  • Short description
  • Your role in the project

All additional fields are optional!  We encourage NCDD members to get in the habit of submitting the basics of all your projects on the tool. We’ll create publications like this one featuring your stories, share them with our friends at Kettering and Participedia, and we hope to eventually feature them on a map of projects.

NCDD members are busy, and we know it’s difficult to find the time to tell people about all your great projects. The Dialogue Storytelling Tool makes it easy to report on your dialogue and deliberation projects and events, and let NCDD help spread the word.

Kettering, Participedia, and NCDD are all interested in what you’ve got going on, and may follow up with you to learn more about your work.

Look for this image in the sidebar on the NCDD site whenever you have a moment to share your project’s story:

ShareYourStory-sidebarimage

NIF for the Skilled Facilitator: An NCDD 2014 Pre-Conference Training

Join Craig Paterson of the California NIF Network, Patty Dineen of the National Issues Forums Institute and Pennsylvania NIF and others (TBA) on Thursday, October 16 for a 6-hour workshop on moderating National Issues Forums to your skill set.

NIF-logoThis session, titled NIF for the Skilled Facilitator, is designed for experience facilitators who would like to add National Issues Forums to their répertoire. The aim of this workshop is to expand the use of NIF, grow the NIF network and, of course, add another ‘tool’ to the experienced facilitator’s dialogue and deliberation toolkit.

NIF is known for its amazing issue books and skilled “issue framing,” and for its close relationship with the Kettering Foundation. Check out many NIF resources in NCDD’s Resource Center on NIFI or visit the NIFI site at www.nifi.org for more information.

A modest fee of $25.00 will be charged to cover food and materials. The group will be intentionally kept small, with a maximum of 25 participants.

Please add this to your calendar if you’re interested — and make your travel plans for the 2014 NCDD conference accordingly. (You’ll want to arrive on Wednesday, October 15th if you’re flying in.)  A registration form will be online soon; just keep an eye on the conference schedule page.

Questions about the pre-conference workshop? Contact Nancy Gansneder at njg5w@virginia.edu.

NCDD’s Long-Term Mapping Efforts

Last week, I announced the visual mapping process NCDD is conducting that leads into our national conference in October. I’m excited to say that about 30 graphic recorders have expressed interest in being involved, and that the interviews are going very well so far thanks to our interviewer, Kathryn Thomson!

At and after the conference, we plan to expand the project to more fully map our field in a way that creates a valuable product for all of us.

US-GoogleMap-outlinedWe are interested in creating several maps, or a single map with multiple layers, that can show things like:

  • The geographic reach of people working in dialogue and deliberation, and of their projects and programs
  • The capacities and assets represented in the field–especially in terms of capacity to convene dialogues, capacity to mobilize others to convene dialogues, and assets that could be considered tangible aspects of civic infrastructure (like facilitator training programs, physical and online spaces for convening, etc.)
  • Consultants and facilitators who are available for hire, including information about the topics they have experience with, the methods they have expertise in, and the training programs they’ve participated in. (Note: NCDD has a member map and directory, but we’d like to find a comprehensive tool that combines map and searchable directory features, and collaborate with other networks expand it well beyond NCDD’s membership.)

We are currently looking for help from those who’ve had direct experience with mapping or data visualization tools to share their experience so we can make a well informed decision about which tool or tools to use. Ideally we would like a tool that is easy to use both to create and to understand the output. The tool also has to handle a very large dataset.

Please contact me at sandy@ncdd.org if you’d like to help advise NCDD on this larger mapping project — or add a comment if you have specific ideas or recommendations. Questions that may help guide your response are…

  1. What tool have you used to create network maps?
  2. What do you think it did exceptionally well?
  3. What do you wish it did better?
  4. What tools would you avoid?

And for those of you with mapping experience, please add your name and email to the comments and plan to join me on Friday at 11am on a group brainstorming call to dig further into these questions and mapping technologies!

Visual Mapping Process Leading into NCDD 2014

NCDD is in the midst of an exciting mapping process leading up to our national conference in the DC area this October. We’re conducting this initial mapping project–and a more in depth mapping process we hope to launch at the conference–in collaboration with the Kettering Foundation.

Cool mapping image f

Cool mapping image from www.mindmapart.com.

There is a vast field of organizations, communities and networks whose work centers around collaborative group practices. This work goes by many different names (dialogue and deliberation, deliberative democracy, whole systems change, collective intelligence, collaborative problem solving, etc.), and NCDD was formed to bridge these and other streams of practice to help us learn from, be inspired by, and work with each other.

People use collaborative group practices to reach numerous ends:  planning stronger communities, influencing policy, addressing long-standing conflict, inspiring people to work together to solve collective problems, increasing awareness of the nuances of public issues, and helping people connect with each other across political and social divides.

The purpose of this initial mapping project is to help people working in this broad field of practice – especially those who attend the 2014 National Conference on Dialogue & Deliberation – get a better picture of the points of connection, the overlaps, and the possibilities for collaboration between the myriad networks and organizations that are innovating in this field.

The first stage of this mapping project is a very visual one, and was born out of a brainstorming conversation I had with Rosa Zubizarreta. We will begin by interviewing ten highly collaborative organizations that work in different spheres of this work. Kathryn Thomson of LeadershipMind Consulting will conduct the interviews, which will be recorded.

Graphic recorders will use the content generated from interviews with these key organizations and networks to create visually compelling maps of their respective “ecosystems” so that NCDD conference participants may see both the larger, interconnected system and their own points of intersection within that system. (We’re still looking for graphic recorders to partner with, so let us know if you’re interested! We’d love to work with 10 graphic recorders, so we can display a wide range of styles at the conference.)

Graphic mural created by Avril Orloff at the 2008 NCDD conference.

These maps will be on display during the opening plenary of our 2014 national conference, which will bring together about 400 of the most active and influential people in our field.

In the interviews, Kathryn and our graphic recorders will dig into the networks of connections, partnerships, overlaps, and points of possible collaboration among some of the key organizations and communities of practice whose work centers around collaborative group practices.

Kathryn is conducting interviews this month with the following organizations:

  1. Animating Democracy
  2. Art of Hosting
  3. CommunityMatters Partnership
  4. Deliberative Democracy Consortium
  5. Everyday Democracy
  6. Institute for Sustained Dialogue
  7. National Issues Forums Institute
  8. The World Café community
  9. The emerging transpartisan group led by Mark Gerzon
  10. And several other membership organizations NCDD works with, like ICA, IAF and IAP2

We chose to interview these particular organizations and networks not only because we consider them to be highly collaborative, but because they represent a variety of sectors within our broad community. Obviously, there are many other highly collaborative groups in our field that we could have selected.

It is our hope that by seeing some of these ecosystems mapped out and reflected back to the NCDD community, and subsequently creating new maps at the conference, attendees will consider how they might make further, deeper connections that will result in increased capacity for all of us in this field. My recent article in the Journal for Public Deliberation points to a growing desire among many organizations to combine forces, resources and expertise to make a greater impact, and mapping the field will help enable this.

NCDD2014_blog_post_badgeCreating these visual maps is the first step of a larger process. At the October conference, we will announce a more inclusive effort to map the NCDD network using online mapping tools.

Mapping the network is one step toward inviting more people into the kind of leadership that will enable us collectively to grow a more robust, resilient and sustainable network – and recognizing some of the organizations in our field that already embody that kind of leadership.

Let us know your thoughts on this project. And if you are interested in helping advise NCDD on the second phase of our mapping process and have some knowledge about different approaches to digital mapping, please email me at sandy@ncdd.org to let me know!

Two New Issue Guides from NIF

NIF-logoOur partners at the National Issues Forums Institute – an NCDD organizational member – have just released two new issue guides for helping facilitate dialogue and public deliberation around two important issues: mental health and alcohol abuse. As always, NIFI’s discussion guides present three different approaches to addressing the problem at hand for participants to weigh.

In the mental health guide, “Mental Illness in America: How Do We Address a Growing Problem?“, the three options presented are as follows:

Option One: “Put Safety First” - This option would make public safety the top priority and support intervention, if necessary, to provide help for those with serious mental illness.

Option Two: “Expand Services” - This option would make mental health services as widely available as possible so that people can get the help they need.

Option Three: “Let People Plot Their Own Course” - This option would reduce the number of mental illness diagnoses and curtail the use of psychiatric medications, allowing for more individuality.

And in the alcohol abuse guide, “Alcohol in America: What Can We Do about Excessive Drinking?“, the options are framed this way:

Option One: “Protect Others from Danger” – Society should do what it takes to protect itself from the negative consequences of drinking behavior.

Option Two: “Help People with Alcohol Problems” - We need to help people reduce their drinking.

Option Three: “Change Society’s Relationship with Alcohol” - This option says that solutions must address the societal attitudes and environments that make heavy drinking widely accepted.

To find out more about these and other issue guides, you can visit the NIFI issue books store here.