Posts Tagged ‘Big Society’

 

NCVO/TSRC Big Society evidence seminar

Monday, November 1st, 2010

On 11 October NCVO and the Third Sector Research Centre jointly organised a seminar that aimed to explore the evidence base for three of the key areas (participation, service delivery and funding) behind the Big Society agenda and examine the implications for the voluntary and community sector and government.

 All the presentations, session outlines and discussion notes are now available via googledocs: http://bit.ly/bigsocietyevidenceseminar 

Unsurprinsingly, I would recommend you reading the documents relating to the session on participation, including Colin Rochester’s outline ‘Participation: how does qualitative help us?’ which focuses on motivations and looks at some of the reasons why people participate.

Also worth a read is John Mohan’s outline ‘What do volunteering statistics tell us about the prospects for the Big Society?’ which further develops some of the ideas he presented in a recent article on the civic core.

Big Society event at Enfield Voluntary Action

Friday, October 22nd, 2010

I attended an event at Enfield Voluntary Action on Wednesday 20th October about the Big Society, and what challenges and opportunities it presents for Enfield’s residents, communities and voluntary and community sector organisations. David Burrowes, the MP for Enfield Southgate and Parliamentary Private Secretary to Oliver Letwin in the Cabinet Office, gave an opening speech before dashing off (I imagine to the Comprehensive Spending Review). He emphasised that the lack of prescription for the Big Society was deliberate; that one size won’t fit all or every community. Recounting that he’d been told that the Big Society was akin to the saying ‘something old, something new, something borrowed, something blue’, he acknowledged that some of the ideas and proposals in the Big Society are a continuation of what has come before but that it is also about changing ‘the DNA of our culture’ and making people freer to get involved.

I facilitated one of the workshop groups that followed the speech through the task of identifying some of the opportunities and challenges that the Big Society presents for Enfield’s residents and organisations. The group thought that the Big Society agenda could encourage groups to collaborate, form partnerships and work together. The potential competition between local organisations for fewer resources and contracts, and with public sector workers who may have lost their jobs, was mentioned as a challenge. The different opportunities for participation that different people and areas have was another potential challenge, including the difficultly of engaging more transient groups such as the temporarily housed population of Enfield. I will look forward with interest to reading the full report of the day.

Interview with Marilyn Taylor

Thursday, August 26th, 2010

Marilyn Taylor (MT), chair of our advisory group, talks to Véronique (VJ) about the project and how it might inform the Big Society agenda.

VJ: Why did you decide to get involved in this project?

MT: Having been involved in many different research projects on participation and governance, I still feel that we don’t understand enough about what participation means to people – why they get involved, why they continue or stop being involved.  Or indeed, its impact on the rest of their lives. So there’s a real need to dig a little deeper. The Pathways through Participation project appealed to me because I felt that was what it was trying to do.

VJ: How do you think the project might inform the Big Society agenda?

MT: It’s not yet clear to me what the Big Society agenda is exactly, but it seems to be based on the assumption that, given the chance, there is an army of people out there who are not involved in community activities at the moment but, if the conditions are right, will want to get involved and volunteer in their communities. And that this will provide what communities need. Before making that assumption we really need to know more about who is already involved, who isn’t, how people engage in different forms of activities, why, at what point in their lives, and what impact it has on them and those around them. All this affects what can be expected of them. We also need to know more about what people do and don’t want to get involved in. I hope the Pathways through Participation project will be able to provide evidence on this.  And that this will inform policy on how best to support community participation so that it works for everybody but does not ask too much of people.

Research suggests that, left to their own devices, it is middle class people who volunteer more and are more likely to want to take up opportunities to run services, challenge planning laws and so on. People from poorer areas have much less of a voice – they have a lot of pressures on them, don’t necessarily know how the system works – and public service cuts are likely to hit them and the support they need hardest, which will add to the pressures. So, if the Big Society is going to work for them, we need to know what they want, what it is realistic to expect and how they can have the same opportunities as other people. 

Another thing is that some of the traditional ways of participating locally are no longer there. Political parties and trade unions no longer have much of a local presence, for example, public spaces are being privatised, pubs and post offices are closing down.  What difference does this make?  And where are the new spaces where people connect with each other? Or is participation more of an individual affair? Of course there’s the internet, so can the project tell us more about how that plays into the picture of participation? Does it complement or replace face-to-face forms of participation, for example? And how does this differ between different population groups?

VJ: What would you like to see come out of the project?

MT: Above all, I’d like the project to provide a more realistic view of participation; what it means to people and how it affects them. Getting involved in your community can be very rewarding but also quite stressful and we need to understand the stresses and strains as well as the undoubted benefits.  I really hope the project can help policy-makers think through some of the complexities of participation, and reflect on what their role might be in promoting opportunities for participation that work for the whole community, and for different communities, not just for the few.

I’d also like to know how different forms of participation interact.  Is it the same people all the time? Or do different people choose different ways to engage?

The Big Society and the Pathways through Participation project

Thursday, August 12th, 2010

There have now literally been thousands of articles/documents/posts on various aspects of this new government agenda. Without wanting to add yet another, we thought it might be useful to list the ones that have refered to this project in one way or another:

For additional and more general information on the Big Society, you may also want to visit NCVO’s dedicated Big Society webpage.

‘Grandmentoring’ scheme launched: teenagers to receive help, support and guidance from older volunteers

Monday, June 21st, 2010

Last week saw the launch of Welfare Minister Lord Freud’s initiative ‘Grandmentoring’; where older volunteers are paired with young people not in employment, education or training to support them in the pathway into adulthood. Nat Wei, the government adviser on the Big Society argues how the scheme, delivered with CSV, can help create new cohorts of people who have seen the benefit of being more socially active, and who feel a desire to give back which helps others but which also energises them.

To find out more see here