European Citizens' Conference on the City of Tomorrow
2006-07-14
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Short description
The Citizens' Conference is organised by a 6th Framework Programme project RAISE. The Citizens' Conference process involved the participation of 26 citizens in a sequence of three preparatory workshops where they provided their views about the urban sustainability. The result was a “Citizens' Declaration on the City of Tomorrow”, which was presented to EU policy-makers and stakeholders at the European Parliament in Brussels.
Project executive
RAISE project Consortium, Co-ordinated by Carlo Sessa,Institute of Studies for the Integration of Systems (ISIS)
Participants
Scientific officer for European Commission: Mr. Eric Ponthieu, European Commission, DG Research (eric.ponthieu@cec.eu.int)
RAISE project Consortium: : Carlo Sessa,Institute of Studies for the Integration of Systems (ISIS),Project Co-ordinator, Gerald Berger, The Interdisciplinary Centre for Comparative Research in the Social Sciences (ICCR), Yves Mathieu, Ramboll Management, Ovidiu Romosan,
Impact Consulting Ltd., Tadeusz Zoltowski,The Foundation for European Scientific Cooperation (FEWN)
Participants: Gaušas Simonas, Mirti Marika, Terasmaa Triin, Habiba Boughaba, Šujanová Silvia, Malmborg Hanne, Egonsson Daniel, Shoshilos Andreas, Tàborossy Gabriella, Holzer Georg-Sebastian, Kozlowski Cezary Michal, Gabrane Ilze, Ditu Sebastian George, Zammit Anthony, Zallmannova Eva, Zouzia Afroditi, O'Toole Desmond, Cain Artwell, Kekki Arto, Gerlach Florian, Hageman Rachel, Malagon Eduardo, Gouveia Nuno, Leloup Claude, Hadfield Linda, Cassanmagnago Anna Maria,
Objectives
The project aim was to raise the awareness and test the acceptance and usability of results achieved by the recently closed or ongoing EU research projects on urban sustainability.
Activities
The process starts with the announcement of the conference on the web, then the collection of applications, the selection of a representative panel of citizens, the work of the panel in three workshops, preparation
of the “Citizens Declaration” and presenting the Declaration to the EU institutions (European Parliament) in the Final Conference.
Process
The process of selecting participants began by sending out application forms to several city networks, cities, citizens’ organisations as well as NGOs with the request to forward these to their members. Among more than 570 applications 26 participants were selected based on quantitative (age, gender, occupation, education, etc) and qualitative (three open questions in the application form) criteria.
The Citizens' Conference process was organised in a sequence of three preparatory workshops in Vienna, Rome, and Brussels. During these meetings, the citizens were fully briefed about the urban sustainability concept and were asked to provide their views on a series of research results of projects aimed at improving the quality of life of European cities. The outcome resulted in the drafting of a “Citizens' Declaration on the City of Tomorrow” to be presented to EU policy-makers and stakeholders at the European Parliament in Brussels.
Results
After the three workshops the Citizens have drafted the Declaration with the support of the RAISE team. This takes the form of a short text where the citizens declare their wishes about the City of Tomorrow and the conclusions
and recommendations on the application of the EU Research which stem from their work. Annexes to the Declaration show their further opinions about the most important concerns in the four urban research areas – sustainable transport, sustainable built environment, cultural heritage, urban governance – what they want or are willing to accept, and what the
EU research seems to consider or not to be considering enough. A feedback to the local authorities could be also ensured if cities directly adopt the Declaration as part of the implementation of European agend on sustainable development at the local level.
Evaluation
Done by ICCR (Vienna) and FEWN (Jablonna/Warsaw). The overall assessment is positive, no specific need for improvement was identified. The results are presented in: ASSESSMENT AND IMPACT OF THE RAISE CITIZENS’ CONFERENCE. http://www.raise-eu.org/docs/RAISE%20Declaration%20Assesment.pdf
Difficulties
No specific difficulties were reported, maybe only time restrictions, since a citizens’ conference process is extremely demanding. Participants – who, on average, are not experts of the particular field they deliberate – are expected to concentrate during the conference while receiving a lot of new information. Therefore,they should be given the time and space to process this information. The format of the RAISE Citizens’ Conference entailed three preparatory meetings which lasted two days each. The moderator –a consortium member of the RAISE team – tried to allocate as much time as possible to discussion and deliberation.