Title: Capacity Building for Citizenship
1Capacity Building for Citizenship
- INTRAC
- December 12, 2006
- John Gaventa
- Institute of Development Studies
- (J.Gaventa_at_ids.ac.uk)
- For copies of studies and further materials
- DRC on Citizenship, Participation and
Accountability www.ids.ac.uk/drc-citizen - Logolink (Participation and Local Governance)
www.ids.ac.uk/logolink
2The Context of Participation
- Around the world a key crisis of legitimacy
characterises the relationship between citizens
and institutions that affect their lives - A key challenge therefore is the construction of
new relationships between ordinary citizens -
especially the poor and excluded - and
institutions, especially government. - In both rich and poor countries, a number of
initiatives are seeking new ways of
strengthening citizen participation, on the one
hand, and government responsiveness on the other.
3Democracy on the march Triumph or deficit?
- One view - The democratic century
- 120 electoral democracies with universal suffrage
in place at the end of the century compared with
none at the beginning - Another view - widespread concern with
democratic deficits - Declining political participation
- Failure to meet challenges of poverty and
inequality - Scepticism and distrust
- Hollowed out forms of engagement
- Democracy with adjectives Which democracy are we
talking about?
4Three dimensions of deep democracyadopted from
Fung and Wright
5Constructions of citizenship
- A neo-liberal market approach citizens as
consumers - A state-based approach citizens as users
- A thin democracy approach citizens as voters
- A citizen-centred approach sees citizens as
actors, not as residuals of other institutions.
Puts citizen empowerment at the heart of
democratic process
6Participation extends citizenship and deepens
democracy
The right to participation
Participatory citizenship
Citizenship and rights
Considers citizens as the makers and shapers of
policies, not only the users and choosers of
development, or as clients of others
Moves beyond passive engagement in elections to
engagement in policies and decision-making
- Are seen as attained through action, not only
bestowed by law as actor based, and as
practice based.
7At level of civil society-state - market
Market
8Deepening democracy through building civil
society
- Civil society seen as independent of the state,
adding checks and balances to it - Aiding democracy the democracy template
- free and fair elections
- Democratic institutions
- A strong and active civil society and media, who
serve the role of advocates and watch dogs. - Examples many different civil society campaigns
around human rights, etc.
9Working on both sides of the equation
- Beyond 'civil society' or 'state-based'
approaches, to focus on their intersection,
through new forms of participation,
responsiveness and accountability.
10Orcitizen - civil society organisation -state -
market
Market
Citizens
11Deepening democracy through participatory
governance
- Bringing civil society into the state emergence
of the co-governance approach - Examples
- Joint approaches to planning (Philippines,
Brazil) - Changing forms of accountability (Bolivia)
- Local direct participation India
- Strengthening inclusive representation of
locally-elected bodies India and Uganda
12Deepening democracy through deliberation
- Emphasis on reason and dialogue in public spaces,
not only the state - The quality of public talk - Trade offs of
participation and deliberation - Spawned a host of innovations in practice in both
north and south - Examples
- Deliberative polling, citizen juries, large-scale
consultation, world social forum
13Deepening Democracy through Empowered
Participatory Governance
- Links concerns with participation and
deliberation to a concern with how such spaces
are created and supported by the design of public
institutions - Beyond invitation participation as a legal
right - Examples
- Participatory budgeting and participatory health
councils in Brazil
14Capacities for Citizenship
- To act as a citizen requires (Merrifield 2002)
- Knowledge, both of rights and a broader awareness
of a sense of citizenship. - Abilities the arts of engagement
- Dispositions justice, fairness, democratic
values, etc - How are these learned and sustained?
15An emerging pictureCitizenship as
- Robust not passive
- Multidimensional not only political
- Linked to recognition and identity, and around
concrete issues - Outside the state but with implications for the
state
16Lessons for inclusive participation
- Simply creating new invited spaces for
participation does not mean they will be filled
with new voices - Success involves linking
- institutional design,
- political will,
- civil society mobilisation
- Beyond participation fatigue? Try putting real
power and resources on the table
17Strategies for Accountability
- Multiple citizen - based approaches to
accountability which can interact with and
strengthen state-based approaches - Going beyond technical, accountancy approaches
- Involving empowered citizens as monitors and
watchdogs of public services
18Assessing the outcomes What difference does
citizen participation in local governance make to
social justice?
- From voice to presence to influence
- Measure both developmental and democracy building
outcomes - Combine community empowerment and government
reform approaches
19Results of linking citizen empowerment with local
governance (from six countries)
- Increased action by citizens and by newly elected
leaders and officials for improved services and
accountability - Some examples of redistribution to poorer
communities - New alliances between citizens, officials and
policy makers - Stronger more inclusive civil society
organisations - Broader changes in government policy above the
local level - Increased respect for cultural pluralism and
diversity in political and public life
20Key factors that make a difference
- Start with the participation of socially excluded
groups, and building their awareness, power and
capacities - Build organisations and networks led by those
groups directly affected by exclusion and
inequality - Promote alliances and creating spaces for
interaction with allies - Provide support and accompaniment over time
- Pilot new approaches and spread them
21 Lessons and implications
- Go beyond citizens as residuals
- Put citizens at the centre of the process
- Go beyond the institutional design approach to
empowerment - Recognise the importance of power, identity
and moblisation - Work both sides of the equation
- Link community empowerment and government reform
to strengthen social justice - Understand deepening democracy as constructed
through action from above and below, over time - Find and support the change agents inside and
outside government who will help it emerge