Cupum 2013 - Cubo da Participação
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Transcript of Cupum 2013 - Cubo da Participação
The Participatory Cube: A Framework for
Analysis of Online Participation Platforms
Alenka Poplin | HafenCity University Hamburg, Germany
Gilberto Corso Pereira | Federal University of Bahia, Salvador, Brazil
Maria Célia Furtado Rocha | PRODEB, Salvador, Brazil
CUPUM 2013, July 2-5, University of Utrecht
Communication between the planning agencies and citizens:
• Participation as a matter of right since mid-1950s
• Mandate to engage the public | minimum possible effort
• Often complex urban planning projects
• Expert vs. Non-expert
Citizen´s responses:
• Rational ignorance
• Protests
• Increasing lack of trust
Inneficient participatory
processes in urban planning.
The problem of civic engagement in urban planning
Stuttgart: October 2010 |
100.000 people demonstrating
• Town-hall meetings
• Round tables
• Speed-dating
• ….
• Games Abt (1970). Serious Games
Sanoff (1979). Design Games
Dissadvantage:
They require a
physical presence on
a specific day at a
specific time.
Non-digital methods of participation in urban planning
"Good - Let's say we agree."
(Cartoon by Pierre Kroll)
Defined by Habermas as “a realm of our social life, in which
something approaching public opinion can be formed”
(Habermas 1974: 49).
It presents a domain of social life in which public
opinions can be expressed.
Its ultimate goal is public discourse and debate related to
a variety of issues relevant for the society and individuals.
Papacharissi (2009), in a contemporary democracy, the
citizen can act from a private sphere, whereas previously
their engagement would have been activated through the
public sphere.
Internet | Public Sphere
Recent developments in technologies enable citizens to
share their knowledge and information online.
Urban Sensing
Campbell, Eisenman et al. (2006) refer to such processes
as people centric urban sensing in which citizens act as
sensors.
Goldman et al. (2009) defined as “a new collective
capacity…in which people participate in sensing and
analysing aspects of their lives that were previously
invisible.”
Web 2.0 | Citizens as sensors
Volunteered Geographic Information (VGI)
Goodchild (2007a, 2007b) focuses on a particular use of
geographic information and citizens collecting and
contributing geographic information via online platforms.
Examples: Wikimapia and OpenStreetMap
which enable the citizens to create global
network of “mappers”.
Web 2.0 | VGI
Recently, the whole range of various freely available online
participation platforms designed for the citizens or organizations
emerged.
They implement concepts like urban sensing, volunteered
geographic information, crowd-sourcing.
There is a need for a model, which would enable to analyse
their specific characteristics in a systematic way.
Motivation for our research
Built on the models proposed by Fung (2006) and Ferber et al.
(2007)
• Decision power
Capacity to transform opinions into decisions and actions
Lukes (1974) Power a Radical View
Arnstein (1969) Ladder of Citizen Participation
• Interactive communication
Forms of interaction within the community; direction of
communication and ways of communication
• Access to the space of participation
Importance for placing and sharing public opinions through the
democratic exchange of ideas
Framework for the analysis
The Participatory Cube
Examples | Case Studies
Implemented online platforms – examples of volunteered
geographic information, urban sensing, virtual sphere
Examples from Brazil and Germany
Methodology: The Participatory Cube
www.leerstandsmelder.de
Its main goal is to collect the information about empty apartments or offices in Germany.
Leehrstandsmelder
Leehrstandsmelder
http://maerker.brandenburg.de
It aims at getting information about the infrastructure in the commune that needs to be fixed.
Maerker Brandenburg and Berlin
Maerker Brandenburg and Berlin
http://www.elmshorn-klimaanpassung.de
It enables the users to participate in a discussion forum, enter their suggestions for the protection against climate change on the interactive map, and vote for other’s suggestions.
Climate change in Elmshorn
www.urbanias.com.br
The citizen registered on site can report a problem in the city of São Paulo, classify it according to the predetermined themes - transit, transport, garbage, noise, etc. – add a date, address and attach photos, videos.
Urbanias
Urbanias on the Facebook | Urbaville
www.portoalegre.cc
It aims to discuss the history, present and future of the city of Porto Alegre, capital of State of Rio Grande do Sul.
Portoalegre
www.cidadedemocratica.org.br
A platform for political participation, where citizens and organizations can express their opinions and mobilize towards a better city.
Cidade Democrática
Results of the analysis
The Participation Cube concentrates on the aspects of
• interactive communication,
• the ways the users can access the content published on
the platform, and
• the decision power that the users can/or cannot gain
through their online participatory activities.
It enabled to structure the analysis around three suggested
axes and provided the framework for the analysis of the
selected study cases.
Conclusions
• The majority of the platforms enable high level of access
to the content and to the possibilities to participate.
• The use of maps is still very limited; only some of the
platforms included an option of interacting with maps:
Complex
Difficult to implement
• Recent initiatives for free and open data stimulate further
development of participatory platforms.
• There is a growing need for people to express opinions
freely and through the accessible media.
Conclusions | Trends and Issues
I hope you enjoyed my presentation!
Contact: Alenka Poplin, PhD
Democracy Fellow, Harvard Kennedy School, Cambridge, MA
Assoc. Professor at HafenCity University Hamburg
E-Mail: [email protected]