The database takes case studies from countries, which are listed alphabetically. It contains examples of innovation at the neighbourhood or district (also called an "area") levels. There are many neighbourhoods and a number of districts or areas with the city as a whole. A neighbourhood has a history and a logical spatial structure (shops, houses, schools, churches, parks, etc.) and will have a population of something like 3,000 to 10,000 persons. It can be walked across comfortably and will have boundaries recognisable from the point of view of most of its residents. Most people identify most strongly with their neighbourhood and are well aware of the degree of its quality of life. For this reason, local democracy often starts in the neighbourhood. A district or area is an amalgamation of neighbourhoods, either from an historical point of view, as in the west side or logical for service delivery purposes. A district will have roughly between 40,000 and 100,000 residents. The database is also about innovation at the level of the local government as a whole. There are also some brief points of inspiration.
The Literature Review fostered informed discussion over key issues and mechanisms of participation.
An Audit of existing mechanisms and practices for citizen participation in each of the cities/municipalities participating in Demos (Aberdeen, Antwerp, Chios, Edinburgh, Krakow, Turku, Solingen, Utrecht) also provides points of inspiration which can encourage good practice elsewhere, recognising that constitutional and legal arrangements, and local political culture can inhibit direct transfers. The most sustainable innovations build on local culture and preference.
A potential application for the database and the audits of the partner cities (and to a lesser extent the Literature Review) is to provide good examples and "points of inspiration" for local governments wishing to innovate in citizen participation in local governance, either at city-wide level or in neighbourhoods and districts.
Potential end users include local government officers, elected members (politicians), citizens and activists, voluntary organisations and policy makers at all levels of governance concerned with the quality of local democracy.
Main innovative features/benefits:
An exchange of views and experiences in the early stages of the project has built on and increased the innovation element.
The information in the database is deliberately presented in brief and easy to read format to encourage busy officers and elected Members to read it.
There is no critical stance taken in presenting the good practice case studies. That is, no rigorous assessment was made of whether the achievement of participation, from the citizen point of view, matches that claimed. Rather case studies are presented at face value. As the purpose is inspiration, rather than critical analysis, this is in accord with the objectives of this survey. However the case studies being set up and monitored by the Demos Project partners will be subject to critical assessment, which will be published in a report in the year 2004.
Analysis of the market or application sectors:
Demos is responding to concerns about citizen apathy and mistrust of government, but also to many positive opportunities which exist to revitalise local democracy. Many cities across Europe recognise the need for innovative mechanisms for devolved, participatory local governance to achieve more effective local democracy, higher turnout rates at elections and more generally social inclusion and sustainable development.
Potential barriers/obstacles to further dissemination:
Information will have to be presented in a user-friendly, attractive, concise format to encourage busy senior officers, elected members and policy makers that it is essential reading.