1 / 14

Making Consultation Meaningful

Making Consultation Meaningful. David Jones Lead Associate, Scotland The Consultation Institute. Getting it right from the start Evaluation of the consultation process Reputational Risk and Integrity Challenges and Barriers The Prize. Consultation.

Download Presentation

Making Consultation Meaningful

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Making Consultation Meaningful David Jones Lead Associate, Scotland The Consultation Institute

  2. Getting it right from the startEvaluation of the consultation processReputational Risk and IntegrityChallenges and BarriersThe Prize

  3. Consultation … is the dynamicprocess of dialoguebetween individuals or groups, based upon a genuine exchange of views, with the objective of influencing decisions, policies or programmes of action Pre consultation Consultation Post Consultation

  4. Consultation Mandate We need to understand the views of concerning so that can on/by so as to accomplish • Identity • Target • Issue • Actor • Action • Date • Wider Aim

  5. Meaningful... Right people Right questions Right methods Right time Right feedback

  6. Getting it right from the startEvaluation of the consultation processReputational Risk and IntegrityChallenges and BarriersThe Prize

  7. Getting it right from the startEvaluation of the consultation processReputational Risk and IntegrityChallenges and BarriersThe Prize

  8. Legal ban on council 'Pravdas' is flawed, LGA claims 8 May, 2013 | By Kaye Wiggins The government’s decision to announce legislation to ban council newspapers - just two days after a consultation about the plans closed - has been denounced as “flawed”. Under the Local Audit and Accountability Bill, announced in today’s Queen’s Speech, rules to limit council publicity will be put on a legal footing. Communities secretary Eric Pickles described the move as a way to end “publicly-funded Pravda-style propaganda”. But councils have complained that their views have not been taken into account because a consultation on the plans, by the Department for Communities & Local Government, closed on 6 May. Sir Merrick Cockell (Con), chair of the LGA, said: “This announcement confirms what councils feared all along, [that] the consultation on whether the publicity code should be made law was flawed both in its central premise and how it was carried out. “Councils have very strong views on these issues which could have a profound impact on how they communicate with and represent their residents, yet they weren’t given the opportunity to fully consider the proposals and have their say.” The LGA had previously raised concerns about the DCLG’s consultation on the ban, because it lasted just four weeks and coincided with the build-up to the local elections, which runs contrary to the government’s consultation principles.   The DCLG has so far not responded to LGC’s request for a comment.

  9. Getting it right from the startEvaluation of the consultation processReputational Risk and IntegrityChallenges and BarriersThe Prize

  10. Getting it right from the startEvaluation of the consultation processReputational Risk and IntegrityChallenges and BarriersThe Prize

  11. The Consultation Institutewww.consultationinstitute.org David Jones e:dsjsolutions@googlemail.com m:07791290079

More Related