Sign-up…

Please send me SCA's fortnightly briefing:

< Back to '3rd April 2019' briefing

April 3, 2019

Civic imagination

Whatever emerges out of the Scottish Government’s Review of Local Governance we can be sure that the way citizens, communities, councils and other public bodies interact with one another will change. At the moment ‘community engagement’ is generally a stop-start, question-answer, exchange of view, top-down participatory process. It is, with the best will in the world, a sterile process that excites little civic passion. Perhaps then, we should look to Bologna where the city administration explicitly aims to boost the level of public imagination across the city.


 

Rob Hopkins, originally published by Rob Hopkins blog

A while ago we met Gabriella Gomez-Mont in Mexico City who has, in effect, created a ‘Ministry of Imagination’ within the city administration. I thought that was the only such example in the world, the only example of city administration seeing the value in explicitly boosting the public imagination across a city. But then I recently came across the story of l’Ufficio Immaginazione Civica, the Civic Imagination Office in Bologna, created by the city municipality, and I was fascinated.

What follows is my conversation with Michele D’Alena, Director of the Civic Imagination Office. It is a multi-professional team working to build a creative bridge between the citizens of Bologna and the administration. Michele has worked for the municipality for the past 6 years, and for the past two years within the Fondazione per l’Innovazione Urbana, in charge of the Civic Imagination Office.

In Bologna, a new approach to engagement and civic action is emerging, rooted in the imagination. One driver for this shift is the realisation we are living in what Michele calls “a distrust era”, where people don’t trust public administrations, NGOs, or private businesses.  The Civic Imagination Office’s approach is towards what Michele calls ‘proximity’ working. As he puts it, “we need people to stay on the ground, to stay with the people”.

And the story that Bologna has to share with the world is, I think, vitally important. I started our chat, via Skype, by asking him how the Civic Imagination Office came to exist?  And what does it do?

Some information about Bologna…  Bologna is a strange city because in Bologna you can find a lot of students and we have got a long tradition in the field of public participation.  You can find high social, economic and cultural impact. You can find the university, you can find Bugatti, Lamborghini, the municipality, but also the Social Street movement on Facebook.  You can find a lot of collaborative spaces.  We have an incredible co-operative movement. In this city you can find a strong dialogue, a strong tension, a strong conflict, between the top-down and the bottom-up.  This is the secret of the city.  In the last four years, Bologna municipality has begun to implement up a new approach about public policy, based on a new paradigm.  The first paradigm, the first shift, is that we cannot rely on long-term investment, and now we have projects on the short and medium terms on investment.  Designing relationships and daily uses of public spaces and urban commons.

Second shift – the distrust era.  The people don’t trust us.  So through this new way to live public policy, the Bologna municipality has begun to design different instruments.  One of the most famous is the ‘regulation on public collaboration between citizens and the city for care and regeneration of urban commons’, the co-operation pact between citizen and communities.

Also through a tender, ‘Incredibol’, to share buildings and resources with the creative communities.  Also through Iperbole, the Civic network. Bologna has an incredible history about the use of the web.  It was the second town in Europe to use the net for the civic impact (Iperbole) in 1985.  So this municipality has begun to design this instrument, to recognise the incredible way to make further chances for creativity from the bottom up.

After this new way in the last two years, before this Foundation we used to use the Urban Centre Bologna.  Two years ago the Urban Centre Bologna became Fondazione per l’Innovazione Urbana, based on Bologna municipality and the University of Bologna.  The mission of this Foundation is to become an urban lab, an urban hub.  Through this foundation we have three missions:

             Urban Centre: activities of information and promotion of the territory and urban culture

             Civic Imagination Office: Activation of participation and co-production paths, a team to link resources and decisions with the capacity and energy and ideas of the communities, enterprises and people

             Mapping the Present: Analysis and documentation of urban transformations, using technology to understand the city.

The city now has a strong vision, on four levels.  In Bologna we want to use a different way to understand the smart city.  We are speaking instead about ‘collaborative city’.  We want to change the way of doing public policy.  Second level, we are organising a new type of instrument.  Bologna regulation, Incredibol, Iperbole, and participatory budgeting and whatever you want.  Third, we create places where people can meet the public policy, the Neighbourhood Lab.  In two years we have organised something like 280 public meetings in Bologna, involving something like 8,000 people.  Every month we organise something like 10 public meetings to share decisions about public spaces, about libraries, about pollution, about mobility, about welfare, about a lot of things.

Fourth level, we organise the Civic Imagination Office to make this process stable.  Before this, the city organised the participation at the moment there is a problem.  There is an objective and the municipality has a budget. The municipality started the participatory process and then municipality arrived at a decision, and then the participatory process stopped until the next participatory process.

In Bologna we have decided to organise a stable participatory process.  Every year we know that we have to organise a Neighbourhood Lab.  At the beginning of every year we design the team, with the resources, and then we go to the neighbourhood to involve the community and enterprises.  We can build up social capital, we can learn new instruments, we can learn with the people how we can do better, and we know every year much more about the city.

The secret of Bologna is that – and this is why I think we have won the Bloomberg prize or the next prize – because we don’t have a platform.  We don’t have a project.  We have a process.  We are designing new instruments right now.  We know that we can design a better city with the people for the next three years.  Now I’m designing the Labs for this year with my team, and my team is a team of 10, 12 persons.  I can decide with them better projects than last year.

And you’ve worked with six different neighbourhoods in the city?  Is there a Lab in six different neighbourhoods?  Can you explain how the relationship works between the Civic Imagination Office and the six different parts of the city?

In 2015 Bologna municipality redesigned the organisation.  Historically Bologna was the first city in Italy to organise the city through neighbourhoods.  The following year the Bologna municipality redesigned the system.  We have six neighbourhoods, with six Presidents elected from the neighbourhood, with six deputies, with six councils.  All the neighbourhoods have to organise the work based on community, like an antenna of the community needs.

The neighbourhoods don’t have the capacity to provide services.  The services are about the municipality, but the neighbourhood have to organise the work on the ground.  We organise our work to support the neighbourhoods.  We are like the bridge between the municipality and the neighbourhood through the people, to the people.

I organise a team with say a Neighbourhood Manager – in close relationship with municipality and neighbourhoods – and with a Methodology Manager, with an Engagement Manager, and Public Space Manager, and a Data Collection Manager.  These four managers have to push forward the six Neighbourhood Managers, and then we got a communication and multimedia team in order to tell the story about our work.

Then those Laboratories in the neighbourhoods, they are very proactive?  They are going out and meeting people and making connections, and they use Open Space as well, did I read that somewhere, to get ideas?

Yeah, exactly.  For example, Frederico is working in the neighbourhood of San Donato – San Vitale, and he’s worked on that territory for two years.  So when he came to San Donato – San Vitale, the people, the associations, the President of that neighbourhood, recognise Frederico.  Somebody invited Frederico to take a coffee because it’s not the municipality, it’s Frederico.

Frederico sends the email to organise the Lab.  When we have to organise a meeting, Frederico know exactly when we can organise the meeting, what time, and when is better to send an email, who is the best community pusher of the neighbourhood, because Frederico has the social capital of that district.  This is our way to build up our proximity approach.

So then those laboratories in the neighbourhoods, they are very proactive?  They are going out and meeting people and making connections, and they use Open Space as well to draw out peoples’ ideas?

Absolutely.  We use all the methods that we have to use.  We use focus groups, focus based technology, questionnaires, online voting, whatever you want.  All the districts are different.  We can organise something for example in Pescarola, which is a zone with a lot of social housing and vulnerable families.  So in that zone we can’t really use Facebook.  We do use Facebook but we also have to go there on Saturday mornings.  We have to go there when the younger boys go to the school, or when the families go to the park.

If we want to speak with those people we have to change our way of working.  And Frederico can know better than me how to do this, because Frederico has spent so much time in that place.

There are many cities in the world who are doing interesting work around climate change and resilience and these kinds of things.  And there are some cities like in Barcelona, Madrid, where they are looking at more neighbourhood democracy, participatory budgeting.  But you are the only city that I ever heard of who says we need to explicitly talk about imagination, and imagination has a role to play in how we connect all of these things.  Why is imagination so important for you?  Why not just say it’s democracy, it’s climate, it’s social justice?  Why do you explicitly talk about imagination?

We need to have more resources.  At the beginning I was very sceptical about this word because I think that we have to have a very practical approach to the people’s problems and needs and capacity.  But after two years of work on the ground, I have learned that ‘imagine’ is one of the most used verbs in the Assemblies.

The people want to imagine a new way to solve problems.  ‘Imagine’ is a very simple word.  Everybody knows and understands how imagination is. It is a clever way to speak about how to solve problems in a new way. It’s a funny word also for marketing!  The secret is that beyond the word imagination is that there is a team.  A team with resources, with a strong political view, to push forward the Bologna municipality approach.

Our secret is that we have people to organise a better way to design public policy.  We can use another word, but the point is that we have a team design to link decisions with a new way to have data about needs and capacity.

If you, rather than just working in Bologna – I know politics in Italy is very complicated at the moment – but if you were the President of Italy and your job was to say we want Italy to be as imaginative as it could possibly be – we want to take this idea of imagination and have it as a national approach, so ‘Make Italy Imaginative Again’ was the slogan when you were elected, how could you take the learnings of what you have done in Bologna and do them for a whole country, do you think?

We need people and organisations that organise mediation with the people.  That use the work on the ground to understand the new needs.  All of our structures, whether welfare, mobility, or whatever you want, were based on the last century, the 19th century.  So we need flexible spaces to allow experimentation, to rethink to work around hierarchical administration.

For a way to understand behind a city with a region, or national approach, we have to open new ways to understand our work, going beyond the way to organise public policy with a team able to manage the public engagement.  This is the secret, with a stable period of work.  We don’t need six months.  We need three years.  We need fifty young managers in Emilia Romagna (the larger region Bologna sits within) to understand what we have to do for a better future.  We need people, managers of proximity and time.