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We have revised our proposal in the final chapter of our new book, The Internet and Democratic Citizenship: Theory, Practice, Policy, which will be published by Cambridge University Press later this year. I hope that the digital democracy policy-makers at the BBC will read it.
It would be good to see pilots in which the new BBC projects link citizens directly to the work of their local authorities. Bristol would be ideally placed for this. It's always been a pioneer in the field of intelligent e-participation.
I agree that the BBC is well placed to provide a civic commons, but the problem with iCan (and Action Network) was that it didn't work.
The interface was not intuitive, the user generated content was thin and the (often excellent) BBC generated content was too hard to find. The search interface and the marketing strategy didn't connect with users. There were, in the end, better more relevant tools out there.
Hopefully, these new pilots will get more traction.
The early focus on people and outreach, rather than simply on technology, was an interesting aspect of the Action Network project. I hope the BBC incorporates some of this thinking into the new pilots.
Stephen
I hope that the BBC Trust - who have to agree the plans - will give us a chance to engage with them online as well as running their traditional consultation process. I'm sure Bristol could help ...