6 research outputs found
Evaluation Of The Cross-Border EU Citizens’ Dialogue on December 6, 2018 in Passau
The future of Europe: what holds us together?
Citizens discuss cooperation in the border region, EU refugee policies and EU social policies.
The set-up involved discussions in small groups followed by exchange with Martin Selmayr, Secretary-General
of the European Commission as well as members of the European Parliament and mayors
Paving the Path for Citizen Participation in Infrastructure Projects. Einwurf Future of Democracy 1/2015
As Germany is facing enormous infrastructural challenges, citizens want to have a say and know what will be build and why. If Germany's infrastructure-renewal efforts are to succeed, politicians and public administration needs to find new ways to get citizens fully involved in decision-making processes. To improve participation in practice, there must be a major push toward professionalization, as projects planned without consideration for or input from citizens will fail
Evaluation of the Cross-Border EU Citizens’ Dialogue on May 17, 2019 in The Hague. The Citizens’ Dialogue was conducted by the European Commission in cooperation with the Bertelsmann Stiftung
In cooperation with the Bertelsmann Stiftung, the European Commission staged a
cross-border EU Citizens’ Dialogue in The Hague on May 17, 2019. 120 citizens from the Netherlands, Germany, Belgium, France and Ireland discussed the future
of Europe, focusing mainly on Social, Digital and Global Europ
Shaping European Democracy: Workshop on the future of the European Union with Polish, French and German citizens: 1 and 2 March 2020 in Berlin. Bertelsmann Stiftung June 2020.
In a European Workshop, seventy-five citizens
from Poland, France and Germany developed
ideas and concrete proposals for Europe's future
over two days. They then discussed the results
of this work at the European Conference with
Federal Foreign Minister Heiko Maas and his
Bulgarian colleague Ekaterina Zaharieva
Next level citizen participation in the EU:Institutionalising European Citizens’ Assemblies
Citizens’ assemblies have gained popularity as instruments of effective and meaningful citizen participation. In the complex transnational context of EU policy-making, citizens’ assemblies can bring citizens and policy-makers closer, promote truly transnational political debates and improve the quality of the EU democracy and policies. But how can citizens’ assemblies be introduced into the EU legal and institutional framework, and its policy processes? What functions should citizens’ assemblies perform? And how should their work be organised to ensure they are democratic, well-functioning and effective instruments of policy-making and citizen participation in the EU? This paper provides answers to these questions by introducing a model for the institutionalisation of European Citizens’ Assemblies. It describes the processes, main bodies and institutions that need to be involved and explores how citizens’ assemblies can be integrated into the EU’s institutional and legal set-up. The proposed model has several distinct features. First and foremost, it is citizen-centred. EU institutions put forward their ideas, but it is randomly selected citizens that steer the process. As members of a Citizens’ Board, they define the agenda for a Citizens’ Assembly by selecting topics and questions, organise deliberations and monitor the implementation of results. Second, the model describes how to connect European Citizens’ Assemblies directly to the EU’s policy-making process. It proposes an Interinstitutional Agreement on deliberative law-making between the EU main institutions as the legal foundation of European Citizens’ Assemblies. It also illustrates how the deliberative cycle of European Citizens’ Assemblies can be effectively connected to the EU policy cycle. The model for European Citizens’ Assemblies is a concrete response to the lessons from the Conference on the Future of Europe. It draws on the experience of the Conference’s European Citizens’ Panels and suggests a format that would make this experience permanent and more impactful. The model presents a logical next step forward—a step that is necessary to move onto the next level of EU citizen participation
Next level citizen participation in the EU: Institutionalising European Citizens’ Assemblies
Citizens’ assemblies have gained popularity as instruments of effective and meaningful citizen participation. In the complex transnational context of EU policy-making, citizens’ assemblies can bring citizens and policy-makers closer, promote truly transnational political debates and improve the quality of the EU democracy and policies. But how can citizens’ assemblies be introduced into the EU legal and institutional framework, and its policy processes? What functions should citizens’ assemblies perform? And how should their work be organised to ensure they are democratic, well-functioning and effective instruments of policy-making and citizen participation in the EU? This paper provides answers to these questions by introducing a model for the institutionalisation of European Citizens’ Assemblies. It describes the processes, main bodies and institutions that need to be involved and explores how citizens’ assemblies can be integrated into the EU’s institutional and legal set-up. The proposed model has several distinct features. First and foremost, it is citizen-centred. EU institutions put forward their ideas, but it is randomly selected citizens that steer the process. As members of a Citizens’ Board, they define the agenda for a Citizens’ Assembly by selecting topics and questions, organise deliberations and monitor the implementation of results. Second, the model describes how to connect European Citizens’ Assemblies directly to the EU’s policy-making process. It proposes an Interinstitutional Agreement on deliberative law-making between the EU main institutions as the legal foundation of European Citizens’ Assemblies. It also illustrates how the deliberative cycle of European Citizens’ Assemblies can be effectively connected to the EU policy cycle. The model for European Citizens’ Assemblies is a concrete response to the lessons from the Conference on the Future of Europe. It draws on the experience of the Conference’s European Citizens’ Panels and suggests a format that would make this experience permanent and more impactful. The model presents a logical next step forward—a step that is necessary to move onto the next level of EU citizen participation