Recently I was reading a post on David Eaves’ blog about how involved (or uninvolved) today’s youth are in politics. Eaves makes the point that many of the younger generation are not uninvolved, they are simply involved in what he terms “extra political engagement:”
But because the efforts are often invisible, herein lies the real dangers: [...]
Archives for the ‘Citizenship’ Category
On Walking Away
Monday, 17 August 2009
Planning is Communication: 1
Wednesday, 12 August 2009
Planners have what I consider to be one of the toughest jobs in government. They are charged with charting long range courses that are often beyond visualization to all but a few dreamers, and often those very dreamers are either cranks or, well, other planners. (Please hold all cynical remarks, thank you!) But what makes [...]
Understanding perspective and government-citizen communication
Wednesday, 5 August 2009
For those of us who have spent long hard years in public service as citizen activists, it is sometimes hard to understand how government really functions. I don’t mean who reports to whom, but rather why governments act the way they do, and who really makes a given decision, and how they are reached. At [...]
Public outreach: mediate, don’t sell.
Wednesday, 29 July 2009
Public outreach is something that — especially in the Portland region — we talk a good game about, but rarely do we do it well. Sure, we make lots of pretty brochures and web sites, but when it comes time to go out and do some face-to-face with the public time, we tend to become [...]
Public Involvement and Project Outcomes
Wednesday, 15 July 2009
Sometimes the terminology of public participation professions is a complicated word stew. Public involvement, public outreach, public relations, public affairs, community affairs, community relations, community outreach… what the heck are all these terms? Do they all really mean the same thing, or are they all different? if the latter, how can someone make sense of [...]