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April 26, 2012

The concept of data-driven storytelling is now “on the map.” Geospatial data, or simply data concerning a place, is now collected in real time. When geospatial data is animated, we get an interactive visualization that is impressive and can be even more powerful than static data. Andy Kirk, a UK-based data visualization expert, emphasizes that when you plot data onto “the scenery of a map and then create a shifting window into the scene through the sequence of time, you create a data-driven story.”

The concept of data-driven storytelling is now “on the map.” Geospatial data, or simply data concerning a place, is now collected in real time. When geospatial data is animated, we get an interactive visualization that is impressive and can be even more powerful than static data.

April 3, 2012

The 2012 Where Conference begins this week (April 2-4), and EngagingCities is excited to be streaming over 20 sessions to our readers live begining today! So, even if you couldn't attend, you don't need to miss out. Check out the See the full broadcast schedule and view the live broadcasts here. Now in its eighth year, Where Conference: The Art and Business of Location, is where the grassroots and leading-edge developers building location-aware technology intersect with the businesses and entrepreneurs seeking out location apps, platforms, and hardware to gain a competitive edge. In the O'Reilly conference tradition, Where Conference presents leading trends rather than chasing them.

The 2012 Where Conference begins this week (April 2-4), and EngagingCities is excited to be streaming over 20 sessions to our readers live begining today! So, even if you couldn't attend, you don't need to miss out. Check out the the full broadcast schedule and view the live broadcasts right here. During O'Reilly Where Conference's scheduled broadcasts (see schedule below), the live presentation will appear automatically below.

March 9, 2012

Imagine a world where city services integrate seamlessly between the web, mobile devices, apps and urban screens...Urbanflow Helsinki shows in this video how the city itself can become more transparent, and reactive to its citizen's needs using data visualizations.

February 23, 2012

The question of how to effectively and appropriately communicate with the public regarding department or organizational planning initiatives and achievements frequently comes up for us with clients. Although some planners may have fine tuned their project communication strategy, it became apparent to us recently, while browsing discussions on Cyburbia.com, that many are still struggling to find some fresh ideas on how to spread the word about what they are actually working on.


February 8, 2012

We see them every day, popping up on our Twitter feeds, filtered through blogs, or even scattered throughout the New York Times: maps portraying not the usual locations or destinations, but data. From people’s kisses in Toronto, to the concentration of pizza joints in New York, to the number of women who ride bikes, to the likelihood of being killed by a car in any given American city, the list of lenses through which we can now view our cities and neighborhoods goes on, thanks to data-mapping geeks.



Editor's Note: Christine McLaren is the resident blogger for the BMW Guggenheim Lab, a mobile think tank investigating solutions to urban problems. In October the project wrapped up its three-month run in New York City, and will travel next to Berlin, and on to Mumbai. This story, titled New cartographers: How citizen mapmakers are changing the story of our lives originally appeared on the Lab's blog.

February 1, 2012

Heading to New Partners, reading the program on the plane. like last year I’m awed by the roll call of speakers and the diversity of projects that are going on. It’s a way of keeping me honest about the role of technology in planning. More reminders that it’s always about people and places first, and tools second.
During the final session at the second Lincoln/Sonoran scenario planning tools get-together in October, I foolishly said that my first follow up from the event would be to go home and write a blog post. And here we are…
So what’s useful about intending to write a blog post? At the time, I thought (and still think) that think greater visibility for the effort was the missing piece. Over two days, we talked about the state of the art in scenario tools — mature desktop GIS-based products, new approaches with video game engines, parcel-based calculation engines, the lot. Proprietary, sort-of open, and completely open, all projects led by really smart people. As a scenario planning dummy myself, all very impressive.
And yet, the mindshare of these tools is still small outside the world of planning. Talking to non-planners (yes, occasionally), the existence, innovation, and value to society of the tools from the workshop is not understood. There are lots of reasons – these tools come to life in the hands of pros, backed by complex data, made sensible by nuances of configuration, informing long-term multi-juristictional other-hyphenated etc-etc etc. All true. We distrust models and modelers for good reasons, and not all large scale planning processes are engaging or convincing. And so on.
Visibility matters, because these tools can work on your phone. In your hand. Maybe not every tool today, but pretty soon. All the existing challenges and realities of scenarios still apply – caring about far horizons is still hard. But the dispersion of computing power and available data are opening a new entry point into this whole world. More interest brings in new skills, new tool builders with different backgrounds and approaches. Disruptive newcomers, or old-timers with new approaches.
Maybe the next generation won’t be building scenario planning tools in any form that we’ll recognize today. But it’ll be the evolution of the processes and tools we spent two fascinating days discussing in Salt Lake City last year.
(hat tip to Jason at PlaceMatters for getting a blog post up within days of the event…)

January 23, 2012

Starting today through January 28, you can visit the White House YouTube channel to submit your video and text questions regarding tomorrow’s scheduled State of the Union Address. on Monday, January 30, President Obama will answer a selection of top-voted questions submitted by the American public in a live-streamed interview.

January 9, 2012

The National Coalition for Dialogue and Deliberation (NCDD) and the Deliberative Democracy Consortium (DDC) have put out a joint response to the recent White House call for input.
It’s very solid, so please make sure to read it in full: Strengthening the Public Participation Elements of the Open Government Plan (PDF). Especially noteworthy is a list of resources that show in detail the benefits of “planned, structured participation”, namely:

  • Raising the level of civility and trust in public discourse
  • Reducing government costs through closer public oversight and better understanding of citizen needs and attitudes
  • Creating more realistic budgets, either by raising “tax morale,” building support for spending cuts, or both
  • Generating new policy ideas and tapping the problem-solving capacity of citizens
  • Breaking through legislative gridlock on high-profile policy questions

You are invited to sign the document in support. From the blog post:
Though we didn’t have the time to put a draft out to the whole field before the deadline as we would have preferred, we welcome you to add your feedback here via the comments field. And if you or your organization support what we submitted in the joint statement, please add a comment signing on with your support! We’d love to show the White House that groups in our field are indeed “seconding” the statement.
Sign here.

January 4, 2012

In December, the White House issued a request for input regarding the U.S. Open Government National Action Plan. Their list of seven questions included one on e-participation. To jog your memory, here it is once again:
What are the most effective forms of technology and web tools to encourage public participation, engage with the private sector/non-profit and academic communities, and provide the public with greater and more meaningful opportunities to influence agencies’ plans?
The following response was intended to be a group collaboration between various practitioners, researchers and other thought leaders in the field of e-participation and online engagement, mainly from the U.S. but welcoming contributions from abroad. Despite the very short notice, Intellitics was able to host an informal call on December 16 that drew 14 attendees and expressions of interest from several others. Thank you to everyone who showed up.
We enjoyed a refreshing conversation. Due to the holidays, however, there simply wasn’t enough time to draft and finalize a collective response, especially since some of the people involved were busy preparing statements from their respective organizations, namely the National Coalition for Dialogue and Deliberation (NCDD), the Deliberative Democracy Consortium (DDC) and the International Association for Public Participation–United States of America (IAP2 USA). All in all, the January 3, 2012 deadline was a bit unfortunate, to put it mildly.
Not knowing just how strictly the deadline will be enforced, I have decided to go ahead and submit something now rather than wait for our little group effort to run its course. Below, I provide a few initial thoughts as my personal response to the White House request. I seriously hope that the conversation doesn’t end here and that the White House Open Government team will still be open to receiving input in a few weeks from now when a coordinated group response is more likely.
First off, I think the question is a particularly important one. Why? Because if current trends continue, and there is little reason to doubt that they will, public participation will continue to move onto the web just like everything else: from the way we work, to banking, to commerce, to entertainment, to education, to the way we connect socially. Increasingly, we rely on the web to deliver and receive these important functions in our lives, and I expect the same to hold true for community problem solving and decision making and the many ways people participate in the political process. That’s why this question not only deserves a thorough one-time response now but warrants a continued dialogue and exchange between the administration and the experts and innovators in this emerging field.
One of the insights a continued dialogue might reveal early on is that the question ought to be reframed slightly. There is no one single “most effective” e-participation tool available yet and probably won’t be for the foreseeable future. Rather, there are hundreds of tools — whether built specifically for particular e-participation scenarios or being used simply because they are available — which, by and large, all have their strengths and weaknesses and tend to be more or less appropriate depending on the purpose and the circumstances.
Given that the use of information and communication technology (ICT) in support of public participation is still fairly new, this is hardly surprising.
The key thing to understand here is that the effectiveness and overall benefit of any particular tool depends a lot on the context: the objectives, the immediate project parameters and numerous other factors, many of which have nothing to do with technology. Hence, a better way to frame the question might be to ask for the known or likely success factors for applying technology rather than focusing prematurely on specific tools.
Whether involving the public in person, online or both, the most important thing to get right in public participation is the overall process. Without the basics properly in place, no tool will ever be adequate. Those basics include but obviously aren’t limited to the following items:

  • What are the decisions to be made?
  • To what extent can, should and will the public get to influence the decisions?
  • Who is the public?
  • What is the timeline?
  • Etc.

As I pointed out in my brief talk at SXSW 2011: Even the best tools won’t save you if you get the process wrong! Luckily, we have a global community of practice to build on whose countless decades of experience have produced well-established good practice guides and ethics for designing public participation processes, most notably from IAP2 but also other organizations in the field.
Once an e-participation effort has been scoped, during the planning and design stages, it should become more clear which tools or category of tools are potential candidates. Factors to be considered when choosing a tool for, say, a generic ideation or policy deliberation project might include the following (in no particular order):

  • Cost
  • Optimal group size / scalability
  • Multi-language support
  • Facilitation and moderation capabilities
  • Ease of use (participants)
  • Ease of set-up (administrators)
  • Training requirements
  • Maintenance needs
  • Reporting capabilities
  • Proprietary vs. open source software
  • Self-hosted vs. cloud solution
  • Participant acquisition potential
  • Integration with face-to-face processes
  • Integration with other technology
  • Bandwidth requirements
  • Data retention / archiving options
  • Support for (quasi-)anonymous participation
  • Identity support
  • Cross-platform and cross-browser support
  • Support for mobile devices
  • Branding options
  • Customization options
  • Fee structure
  • Contractual aspects
  • Legal aspects
  • Accessibility aspects
  • Etc.

It’s easy to see how any odd combination of the trade-offs inherent in this short list might have a seemingly weaker tool win out over a more robust one under certain conditions.
Another interesting question that should certainly inform the tool selection process is to what extent any of the perceived shortcomings of any given tool might be remedied by applying a certain structure or manual/human interventions, e.g. framing, scheduling, or facilitation. For example:

  • Scalability issues might be overcome by dividing the participants into smaller groups or by breaking up the topic into a series of shorter cycles, each focusing on one sub-topic at a time.
  • Lack of moderation capabilities might be overcome by providing participants with more thorough training upfront and by applying higher levels of hands-on facilitation.
  • Lack of certain critical features might be overcome by using a combination of tools.

In closing, I’d like to point out that despite these caveats I believe a set of tangible guidelines could be produced to inform the administrations e-participation efforts, and we wouldn’t even have to start from scratch. A lot of research is available to inform this discussion. It will be a matter of pulling together the right resources and sufficiently engaging the experts. This will require significantly more time than was given in the original request. However, based on what I’ve been hearing, there seems to be a great deal of interest among this community of e-participation practitioners, researchers and other interested parties to continue the conversation. Let’s see if the White House will take us up on this offer.

January 2, 2012

In a blog post the other week, Code for America helped promote the White House’s most recent request for input, asking: How do you measure participation?
The post approaches this question with an understanding of “participation in its broadest sense”. Not to be too nit-picky, but that’s probably not the focused area of exploration I believe the White House has in mind.
With apologies for being a bit late (the deadline for submitting input ends tomorrow, January 3), here’s the comment I just left:
The White House is asking specifically for input on public participation, not participation in general.
The latter is fairly broad and may include all kinds of citizen activities (e.g. reporting an issue, building an app, doing cool things with data). The former, on the other hand, is a fixed term that’s very narrowly defined in that it always requires a decision making process and a decision maker willing to involve the public in that decision.
My preferred definition explains the term as follows:
“Public participation is the process by which an organization consults with interested or affected individuals, organizations, and government entities before making a decision. Public participation is two-way communication and collaborative problem solving with the goal of achieving better and more acceptable decisions. Public participation prevents or minimizes disputes by creating a process for resolving issues before they become polarized. Other terms sometimes used are ‘public involvement,’ ‘community involvement,’ or ‘stakeholder involvement.’” (James L. Creighton)
This is the specific area for which the White House is trying to identify best practices and metrics.
While public participation and civic engagement share some of the challenges regarding measuring and metrics (e.g. qualitative aspects, long-term impact), some issues matter more to one than the other (e.g. inclusiveness).
Various posts have previously tried to deal with the terminology issue, for example:

Of the few public replies I’ve read so far, this one gets the focus on decision making mostly right: Outcomes First: Best Practices and Metrics for Public Participation
This is not a question about who owns the best terminology (public participation, public involvement, community engagement all work). It’s about being able to clearly understand the scope of the questions the White House is trying to answer. Otherwise, the input won’t be on target.

December 29, 2011

The First International Conference on Architecture and Urban Design will be held at Epoka University in Tirana, Albania on April 19-21, 2012. There will be an expected 150 international academics, practicing architects, urban designers, and planners attending.

Conference organizers are currently calling for expert Abstracts! 
Deadline for papers to be submitted: January 15, 2012.

December 15, 2011

Last week, the White House announced that they are actively seeking input from citizens to help identify best practices for public participation in government and suggest metrics that will allow agencies to assess progress toward the goal of becoming more participatory. The solicitation for input is directly related to the U.S. Open Government National Action Plan which was announced earlier this Fall as a government-wide effort to reform and modernize records management policies and practices.    

December 14, 2011

As you know, the White House is asking for input on public participation best practices and metrics, including for e-participation.
I’m informally pulling together a few fellow IAP2 USA members to discuss how we might want to answer the technology part. We might take this opportunity to kick off our community of practice around online engagement (originally planned for Q2/2012).
We’d like to open it up to others who are interested in the topic, not just IAP2 USA members. Ping me if you’re interested, and I’ll share dial-in information:
Friday, December 16, 2011
at 9am Pacific (60 minutes)
Online note pad
This will be a casual conversation. We’ll do a quick round of comments followed by discussion. Any output will be OK to share and could inform whatever formal or informal responses are being worked on, by individuals or organizations.

December 6, 2011

Back in September, when the United States released its U.S. Open Government National Action Plan (PDF), I listed the initiatives it contains in the area of public participation: Open Government Partnership: Public Participation in the US National Plan
One item I found particularly appealing. Under ”New initiatives”, the plan states that the U.S. will:

  • Develop Best Practices and Metrics for Public Participation. We will identify best practices for public participation in government and suggest metrics that will allow agencies to assess progress toward the goal of becoming more participatory. This effort will highlight those agencies that have incorporated the most useful and robust forms of public participation in order to encourage other agencies to learn from their examples.

In a follow-up post today, United States CTO Aneesh Chopra is asking the public for further assistance on this item and to “provide input and ideas on best practices and metrics for public participation”: Seeking Your Input on the U.S. Open Government National Action Plan
All seven questions are great conversation starters, but one specifically deals with online participation:
What are the most effective forms of technology and web tools to encourage public participation, engage with the private sector/non-profit and academic communities, and provide the public with greater and more meaningful opportunities to influence agencies’ plans?
Plenty to discuss! Deadline for submissions is January 3, 2012.

November 28, 2011

For our friends at MobileActive.org, the idea of using mobile technology to support social change among people and organizations around the world is nothing new. MobileActive.org has long been on a mission of connecting citizens; providing resources to NGOs that will enable them to enrich and serve their communities. Many may be surprised to learn that in today’s technologically advanced world, there are still roughly 5 billion global citizens without reliable internet access. However, as mobile phone usage continues to rise, resources like the MobileActive.org’s new Mobile Media Toolkit, may just be the answer these offline communities need to activate their public engagement efforts. 

November 21, 2011

As cities across the country add more bike lanes and introduce mentoring programs to easing congestion on the streets, and bike-sharing programs are popping up and becoming even more trendy in big cities like Austin, Miami, Philadelphia, Denver, Des Moines, and Washington, D.C., the debate over traffic laws and general etiquette heats up. The overall support of cycling programs in our country is strong, as many Americans understand the positive impacts to air quality, traffic congestion, etc. However, there is also somewhat of an unexpected ‘bikelash’ among some aggravated citizens when it comes to traditional ‘road rules’ vs. bicyclist  courtesy and a cohesive safety standard for all commuters. Should all states operate as Oregon does, with its dedicated biker's section in the driver's manual, or Washington, with its statewide bike-route network? Should there be stricter laws enforcing bikers to stop at traffic lights just as drivers are required to?

October 14, 2011

This Monday, October 17, the Aspen Institute Communications and Society Program and the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation release the final in a series of eight white papers aimed at implementing the recommendations of the Knight Commission on the Information Needs of Communities in a Democracy.  The paper—"Assessing Community Information Needs: A Practical Guide" by Richard C. Harwood—proposes four guideposts and nine strategies for communities to assess and build a healthy information environment.

Monday, October 17  
12:30 p.m. to 3:00 p.m. (ET)
Online

October 10, 2011

Communities across the country are celebrating National Community Planning Month this October. The month long “event”, sponsored by the American Planning Association (APA), its members, chapters, divisions, and professional institute, was developed to recognize the vital role of planners and planning in communities throughout the U.S. At EngagingCities, we have been encouraged historically by the amount of participation we’ve seen with this celebration at a local level here in Colorado. We are excited to see what is in store for 2011’s celebrations around the nation.

October 7, 2011

PARK(ing) Day: User-Generated Urbanism from Brandon Bloch on Vimeo.

This annual event gets citizens from around the globe involved by turn parking spaces into mini-parks for a day to demonstrate the need for more urban green space.

September 23, 2011

Yesterday, the White House unveiled its new e-petitions platform. The online petition system, designed to generate response from the federal government, allows users to trade their name and email address for the chance to create an online petition.

See a step-by-step guided tour of the platform >>

Yesterday, the White House unveiled its new e-petitions platform. The online petition system, designed to generate response from the federal government, allows users to trade their name and email address for the chance to create an online petition.

September 12, 2011

As mutual advocates of issues central to the future of cities, Next American City is just one of the resources that EngagingCities staff refers to from time to time in search of the top trends and tools related to socially and environmentally sustainable economic growth in America’s cities. Recently, Next American City Magazine published a comprehensive list of best apps, websites and software for enhancing and improving urban life. The list included tools affiliated with everything from city governance,  mapping and transportation, to “living well”.  Our favorites are...