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==A guide to e-consultation==
 
==A guide to e-consultation==
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Main Topics
 
Main Topics
 
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*[[E-consultation]], an introduction
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*What is [[e-consultation]]? (an introduction).
**[[Cost and Benefits]]
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**[[Benefits and costs]]
*[[Participation]]
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**[[What stakeholders want]]
*[[Planning and Strategies]]
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**[[E-government|E-Government and Citizen's Participation]]
**[[Processes]]
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*[[Examples]] of e-consultation in practice.
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*[[Participating]] in an e-consultation
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**[[Depth of Engagement]]
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**[[The Six Consultation Criteria]]
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**[[Criteria for a Democratic Process]]
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**[[Criteria for a Deliberative Process]]
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**[[Engaging participants]]
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**How to participate
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*[[Planning]] an e-consultation
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**Consultation [[processes]]
 
**[[Technology]] for e-consultation
 
**[[Technology]] for e-consultation
  
*[[Guide notes]]
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First steps for:
 
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*[[Policy makers]], commissioning an e-consultation.
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*[[Organisers]], designing and managing one.
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*[[Facilitators]] of one part of an e-consultation.
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*[[NGO]]s and [[activists]]
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*[[Technologists]]
  
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Resources
First steps for:
 
 
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*[[Policy Makers]]
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*[[Issues]] listed at LYIT meeting
*[[Technical Experts]]
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*[[Information Resources]] : what do we know?
*[[Organisers]]
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*[[References]] to external resources
*[[Facilitators]]
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*[[Writing this guide]]
*[[NGO]]
 
*[[Activists]]
 
*[[Citizen]]
 
  
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Prepared by the [http://www.e-consultation.org/ E-Consultation Research Project].
Resources
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== E-consultation ideas ==
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Helping solve the housing crisis in SE England
 
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* [[Issues]] listed at LYIT meeting
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A team at the Deloite Datathon in Reading came up with the idea of an [{{filepath:FINAL_Presentation.pdf}} interactive consultation tool].
* [[Information Resources]] : what do we know?
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Citizens will go online to tell planners where they would like houses to be built, using all the data available over a large area. They can enter their conditions using sliders. As they change their preferences, more or less of the map will be removed, showing which areas meet their preferences. When hundreds of people have used the tool, planners will have information not only on where people prefer houses to build, but which criteria are more important to citizens.
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Distributed conversations for collaborative decision-making
 
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This is a proposal developed at the 2017 Online Deliberation Unconference.
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Once upon a time America Speaks ran 21st Century Town Meetings, in which 600 tables of 10 people all talked about a problem. Using networked computers in a room, they collected ideas from the tables and synthesised recommendations.
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Now that Internet video conferencing is more reliable, we can use the same model, distributed across a country or the world, where each group of 10 looks at a presentation to start their discussion, then discusses the issue locally (or with online breakout groups), feeding back ideas.
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Who would like to join in setting up an experiment on this model?

Latest revision as of 17:31, 25 July 2018

A guide to e-consultation

Main Topics

First steps for:

Resources

Prepared by the E-Consultation Research Project.

E-consultation ideas

Helping solve the housing crisis in SE England

A team at the Deloite Datathon in Reading came up with the idea of an interactive consultation tool.

Citizens will go online to tell planners where they would like houses to be built, using all the data available over a large area. They can enter their conditions using sliders. As they change their preferences, more or less of the map will be removed, showing which areas meet their preferences. When hundreds of people have used the tool, planners will have information not only on where people prefer houses to build, but which criteria are more important to citizens.

Distributed conversations for collaborative decision-making

This is a proposal developed at the 2017 Online Deliberation Unconference.

Once upon a time America Speaks ran 21st Century Town Meetings, in which 600 tables of 10 people all talked about a problem. Using networked computers in a room, they collected ideas from the tables and synthesised recommendations.

Now that Internet video conferencing is more reliable, we can use the same model, distributed across a country or the world, where each group of 10 looks at a presentation to start their discussion, then discusses the issue locally (or with online breakout groups), feeding back ideas.

Who would like to join in setting up an experiment on this model?