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How to engage citizens in shaping Cohesion Policy action

  • 16 Feb 2022
This is the second of the three articles on projects involving citizens in the design, monitoring and assessment of how EU cohesion funds are spent in their region. Discover six more projects, and how you can be among the first to hear about DG REGIO’s next steps to enhance citizen engagement.
How to engage citizens in shaping Cohesion Policy action

The 18 projects in this series were set up under “Engaging Citizens for Good Governance in Cohesion Policy”, an initiative of the EU and the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD). Each project received a grant of up to EUR 25 000 from the European Regional Development Fund (ERDF) to develop their activities. 

 

CEC - Community Engagement Cohesion

The CEC projects invited residents, especially youth, of the small Italian region of Umbria to brainstorm ideas to expand green infrastructure and reduce waste. Events and promotions were mostly on social networks – a major news source in Italy – where they reached over 134 000 people.

The public made suggestions through “Citizens as Policymakers”, a game created by the project. Four citizen focus groups then chose the 24 strongest proposals for public funding.

The final green infrastructure ideas ranged from creating biodiverse parks for urban renewal to wildlife road crossings. Smart organic-waste monitoring and a circular-economy district were among the imaginative waste-management proposals.

Project leader CESAR intends to continue the public engagement, this time for the climate in the Life Clivut project.

 

Closer Europe – Open Platform for Citizen Initiatives

Bulgarian citizens, businesses and civil society organisations (CSOs) have been deciding how to spend EU funds to improve small communities in Lovech municipality. Closer Europe set up the Lovechlab Open Space Platform to map problems, invite solutions and share information about Cohesion Funds.

Online and offline citizen participation directed a EUR 500 budget per action to local needs. For example, one village developed a bus shelter and meeting pavilion, while new infrastructure in another frees a historical monument from parked cars.

Only six of the 19 citizen proposals could receive EU funding. However, enthusiasm was so high that Lovech municipality financed the remaining 13. The platform will be joined by a new citizen-CSO group to maintain the momentum for citizen engagement.

‘When we unite, we can achieve much more. The role of the citizen is fundamental because institutions and politicians cannot do everything. We know best what is needed.’

Desislava, resident of Kakrina village, Bulgaria

 

 

Enhancing Generative Approaches for Gender Equality (ENGAGE)

Gender equality impacts all of society. In ENGAGE, citizens, civil society groups and policymakers co-designed policies for more inclusive services, education and access to jobs in Italy’s Lombardy Region.

Women citizens facilitated the project’s version of “charettes”, a series of meetings to generate and then select ideas. With 53 people in the first charette, 35 in the second – and over 500 people reached through social media – the diverse perspectives led to mould-breaking recommendations. Among these were that public employees should be more representative of women in society and that women should have access to life-long digital training.

Inspired by its success, the region has created a toolkit available to other public bodies to better include grassroots insights in policies on complex topics.

 

Estado de la ciudad /State of the City

Development that is both sustainable and addresses local needs can be tricky to achieve. But this was the goal of the State of the City project in the city of Ferrol in Spain.

The project built an online platform for community groups to analyse problems and propose solutions, guided by information on regulations and local policies. A team of 15-20 young citizens then identified five main issues and organised a City Hack Day where members of the public debated good practice and drafted advice for the city authorities.

Proposals covered issues like bike lanes and green economic growth. A media campaign engaged the municipality with the ideas, which the project founder Xeración is now working to promote.

‘State of the City has been an opportunity for citizens of Ferrol to raise their voice and discuss the future of the city in a constructive way.’

Fran Sequeiro, President, Xeración, Spain

 

GreenMyWay

Young people in northern Portugal have a new resource to contribute to a more circular economy. A website from the GreenMyWay project provides information to school and university students on sustainable economic choices, the circular economy and cohesion policy.

The site includes government, business and civil-society initiatives and best practices for low-waste economic activity. Content aims to inspire youth to develop economic, circular, cooperative and mutually beneficial solutions for communities and individuals. 

The project has also inspired research that can help people to replicate good practices, while GreenMyWay founder Cedes is developing an advisory service for local authorities and companies to step up the transition to a circular economy.

‘We have planted the seed in people´s minds and they now know better what it means to make conscious decisions to make your daily life more sustainable.’

Pedro Soutinho, Team Leader, Cedes

 

Youth in Action for Cohesion Policy (YACOPO)

Young Italians on the island of Sardinia have been learning about cohesion policy and how to influence local decisions that impact their lives.

The YACOPO project surveyed over 200 young people to learn why they might not engage with cohesion policy. They then provided training and information to youth in low-income, isolated and sparsely populated areas through a wide range of social media, as well as broadcast media, newsletters, by telephone and in meetings.

Peer-to-peer learning was an essential component. Photography and video competitions raised awareness of local EU-funded projects and their beneficiaries, volunteers shared information and experts in workshops debated visions of EU policy outcomes. The result? Better-informed youth ready to participate in policymaking and engage with the EU.

FIND OUT MORE

CEC - Community Engagement on Cohesion – https://www.cesarweb.com

Closer Europe – Open Platform for Citizen Initiatives – https://www.asori.org/en/projects

ENhancing Generative Approaches for the Gender Equality (ENGAGE) – https://www.meetcenter.it

Estado de la ciudad – https://xeracion.org/city-hack-day/

GreenMyWay – https://cedes.pt https://observatorio-circular.pt

Youth in Action for Cohesion Policy (YACOPO) – https://youthinactionforcohesionpolicy.wordpress.com

 

Helping everyday public administrations improve their skills:

Managing EU funds for cohesion policy can be difficult, and there are often needs for training and tools to make the work better and faster. The competence centre for “administrative capacity building” at DG REGIO offers tools, training, support and knowledge to help civil servants enhance their skills in topics as specialised as state aid, public procurement and road map for capacity building – and as wide as anti-corruption, fraud and civil society partnerships. 

Visit the following page to know more about all the learning products we offer: Improving how funds are invested and managed.