Six reasons to do Citizen Engagement
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Two weeks ago, we launched an exciting new Massive Open Online Course (MOOC) on Citizen Engagement hosted on Coursera and in partnership with the London School of Economics, the Overseas Development Institute, Participedia, and CIVICUS.
To date, over 15,000 people from 192 countries (45% women) have enrolled in the course and our digital footprint continues to be strong: the launch event page has had over 2,500 unique visitors while many continue to use the hashtag #CitizensEngage on Twitter.
These healthy metrics are a strong indication of just how timely and significant this issue has become and is the latest reason why I firmly believe in the power of engaging citizens to build good governance. This MOOC therefore is a key component of the World Bank Group’s commitment to develop a citizen perspective on governance to improve the contribution of institutions to development.
Yet let me offer six compelling reasons why it is necessary, feasible and useful to do it:
1. Although this may seem straightforward, oftentimes governments, international organizations, and academia can be very inward looking, with a focus more on processes, systems and organizational structures rather than the people those institutions and systems are meant to serve.
2. Naysayers think that involving citizens can slow down reform processes, but in my experience, the reverse is true. If citizens are engaged effectively and on a timely basis, such responses may be more predictable, preventing costly mistakes and saving governments a lot of time and money in the long term.
3. Citizen engagement is about collaboration, not opposition. When citizens are included in public policy processes, ordinary citizens and civil servants can work together as partners to solve major development challenges and neutralize the influence of powerful interests.
4. Citizens’ trust in institutions is a huge asset for countries, as this trust enables smooth implementation of public policies and service delivery. When this trust is missing, governments face higher costs and complications as informality becomes generalized and citizens seek services outside of formal public systems.
5. The interaction between citizens and public institutions happen at different levels and in different capacities. Strategic priorities are and should continue being set by the political process. Citizen engagement, in turn, is fundamental to translate such priorities into concrete actions and delivery.
6. In countries all over the world, citizen engagement is taking hold as a critical part of participatory policy-making. With the MOOC, we hope to create a space for the exchange of global knowledge and lessons and look forward to hearing from participants about their local experiences as the online course moves from theoretical frameworks to real-world examples of citizen engagement.
The international community is recognizing the vital importance of engaging citizens with the strong growth of the Open Government Partnership and the active discussion of citizen engagement within the Sustainable Development Goals process.
Please help us connect the dots between all the dimensions of citizen engagement and enroll now in this free, four-week journey into the heart of development.
Join the Conversation
I am a Vietnamese American who would like to learn many good strategies on how to develop and improve a war torn country as Vietnam, and your training courses is valuable and worthy throughout the world. Would you please have my name on your list so I would not miss any opportunity to learn when you launch your training courses. Thank you very much. Sincerely, Tan Nguyen.
A wonderful and exciting opportunity. Congratulations for this initiative. However, I was wondering how do you engage with citizens that can't access a MOCC, or the Internet at all? More generally, is there a way to measure the effectiveness and the impact of the citizen engagement?