23 de mai. de 2013

Debates sobre E-participation

e-participation - What's the X-Factor?

22 May 2013 | 8 Visits | Rating: No votes
"e-participation - tools, processes, policy", that is the name of the workshop, the youthpart project organised within the framework of the conference "Building tomorrows Europe" in Bonn, on May 7-8.
The conference was the 25th anniversary celebration of the National Agency for the EU programme "Youth in Action" and youth participation is a key field of interest in international youth work. Consequently, the project youthpart that aims to explore e-participation for young people and their inclusion into the digital society, took over the challenge to bring a high-quality workshop on e-participation & youth alive: 35 interested participants joined this workshop, where experts from Ireland, Austria and Germany stirred up the discussion and brought a broad variety of perspectives to the table. 

The x-factor - what makes online participation successful?
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"There has to be a binding agreement and the process has to be taken serious", responds Eva Panek from Liquid Democracy e.V. "Of course, there are different other factors, but these are
the most important ones, according to my opinion". For Andreas Karsten from youthpolicy.org, the problem is a different one. "Everyone assumes e-participation is cheap and quick. But it is
not and that makes e-participation not completely working as it could be, at least at this point in history where we are now". For him, the x-factor lies in the assigned budget for programming and the website. "That should not exceed  10% of the overall budget for the e-participation project". Deirdre Lee from the European project Puzzled by Policy adds, that just the website or a tool does not make the process. "Also," she states,"Policy does not change overnight. It has to be an integrated process with realistic goals". Judith Schossböck from the European project Ourspace says, "There are direct and indirect ways of effective youth participation. Yet, seeing the direct impact to the process is crucial for individuals, and this can happen through by having fun or receive a form of recognition, for example ".

Relationship between e-participation and inclusion
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Lorena Jaume from I&G Co:llaboratory who facilitated the workshop opened quickly the floor for discussion and contributions from the audience. "Don't we reach anyway the top 10%, the elite of society, through online participation, what about the disadvantaged young people", a person from the audience asked. Another contribution pointed out that youth people may be disadvantaged because they live in rural areas and might be left behind when it comes to digital participation due to lacking internet connection. One person from the audience encountered that it has explicitly the so-called disadvantaged young people who connected themselves through social media during the riots in England last year. Andreas Karsten suggested that while most participation processes and tools online still require text-based input. A change towards more interactive, audio and visual input is needed.

An online tool is participatory when...
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One returning question also in international debates is, what makes an online tool participatory and how is the relation between online and offline. Hence, Lorena Jaume took the chance to challenge the panelists with these questions. Most panelists agreed that online and offline processes need to be combined in order to be effective. Additionally, Eva Panek points out, there need to be incentives for young people and tools need to be ad-hoc, flexible and with a low threshold to be able to to pick young people up where they usually often are, namely online. Deirdre Lee brings it down to three hallmarks, that make tools participatory. "Clearly, that is accessibility, transparency and accountability", she states. For Judith Schossböck a certain digital gap is a part of the process, one need to deal with still at this point. Also Andreas Karsten can list three specific hallmarks for participatory tools: "A tool has to present that historic context of a debated topic, furthermore, it is needed to include the position a person or institution has towards a topic over time, and of course, accountability, meaning, what has changed over time related to a debated topic".

10 years from on there will be no more e-participation
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Time flew by quickly and the 75 minutes discussion time were approaching its end and Lorena Jaume invited the panelists to become fortune tellers: "According to you what has to be done 10 years from now on?". 
Deirdre Lee hopes that participation becomes a normal part of daily life and that technology plays an important part in it. Also the movement of open data and further developments in social media will support it. "Gaining experiences about e-participation processes, more exchange about this still young phenomenon, building up knowledge", summarizes Eva Panek. "The school curriculum needs to take up these developments", states Judith Schossböck,"already now we observe a generation gap in schools where teacher try to prevent pupils in engaging with social media". Andreas Karsten hopes for smaller devices and less big screens. He also draws a little bit of a doomsday scenario:"The real battles are outside of youth sector when it comes to e-participation. Everyone needs to know who Neelie Kroes is and what needs to be done to keep the internet infrastructure open and decentralised. Otherwise, in 10 years, it will be too late to debate about e-participation as we know it now, as it will be a victim of media regulation".

Presented Projects:
    liqd.net & ypart.eu

    puzzledbypolicy

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