avatarDavid Brunnen - Editor, Groupe Intellex

Summary

The article discusses the importance of recognizing and harnessing the expertise and wisdom within local communities, known as Community Capacity, for the betterment of society and governance.

Abstract

The concept of 'knowing your place' is reimagined in the context of community empowerment and local governance. The author reflects on the outdated hierarchical organizational structures and advocates for the value of local knowledge and expertise. Community Capacity is identified as a critical asset for the prosperity of local areas, emphasizing that it should not be overlooked or undermined by centralized authority. The article points out that despite the dedication of Council Officers, the current system often limits their effectiveness due to dwindling resources and overarching regulations that lack contextual understanding. It argues for a shift towards community-powered councils, where the active involvement of residents is recognized as essential for challenging flawed policies and commercial interests. The author suggests that investing in and energizing the local wisdom and mature expertise can significantly improve societal outcomes, even in the absence of constitutional municipal autonomy.

Opinions

  • The author critiques the traditional, military-like hierarchical organization for stifling innovation and failing to recognize the value of local expertise.
  • There is a clear frustration with the central high command's tendency to issue edicts without understanding the unique contexts of local communities.
  • The author believes that Community Capacity is a significant factor in the success or decline of places, and it should be treated as an asset rather than an annoyance.
  • Council Officers are seen as dedicated but constrained by diminishing resources and centralized control, which often leads to legal challenges and critical judicial reviews.
  • The article suggests that the 'I was just following the rules' defense is insufficient when laws are misinterpreted and citizens are sufficiently expert and motivated to seek justice.
  • It is argued that local empowerment has decayed to the point where the concept of community-powered councils is treated as novel rather than fundamental to social democracy.
  • The author commends those councils that already recognize the value of Community Capacity and actively engage with their residents to harness their talents and expertise.
  • The author calls for a reevaluation of how communities are governed, advocating for the investment in and encouragement of active residents as a means to correct flawed central policies and balance commercial lobbying pressures.

Blessed Are The Place-makers

Whose place is it anyway?

An urban landscape (source ingimage.com)

I’ve long puzzled over the phrase, ‘knowing your place’ — most frequently deployed to (uh oh, here’s another) ‘put someone in their place’.

Both express a need to assume some authority over those who should be ‘put back in their box’ whilst those in command carry on being commanding despite inconvenient ‘un-called for’ reports.

Having long retired from what was then a deeply hierarchical organization modeled on the military (and one that struggled with innovation), I now much prefer the delight of locally talented pools of people who really do know their places and appreciate their habitats in fine detail. Between them, they also know a thing or three about almost any specialist topic you’d care to mention. This Community Capacity — the resident energy source that sustains the places we inhabit — can be seen as a great asset or an annoyance, but either way, it cannot be ignored. Community Capacity plays a significant role in explaining why some places thrive whilst others decline.

There is no doubt that Council Officers are a dedicated bunch, loyally devoted to their chosen areas of expertise. Nursing a community can be as much a vocation as, well, nursing. There’s also no doubt that they labor under the constraints of dwindling resources and edicts handed down by higher command — moderated or amplified by the local governors, elected Councillors. But the central high command sees only averages with little contextual awareness of the real place-makers or the expertise and wisdom embedded in each community.

The reduction of Local Authorities to some corporate branch office status, with little or no municipal autonomy, completely (and, for the centrists, conveniently) corrupts a fundamental tenet of any social democracy — shared responsibility. No wonder few now bother to vote in local elections. Council Officers, however, know well the risk of ignoring the Community Capacity — as evidenced by a string of deeply critical judicial reviews, painfully expensive legal proceedings, and enforced revisions of central guidance and regulation. To be fair, the ‘I was just following the rules’ defense may seem unchallengeable when misinterpretation of the law is endemic but not when citizens most affected are sufficiently expert and determined to seek justice. But all that takes considerable time and money. Far better, then, to see Community Capacity as an asset to be invested in the correction of flawed central edicts or in moderating the otherwise unequal pressures of commercial lobbyists.

In the jargon of the English Local Government sector, the value of Community Capacity is discussed as ‘community-powered councils— as if this was some sparkling new concept . . . such is the extent of decay in local empowerment. Fortunately, some Councils already know whose place it is and can see great value in investment and encouragement of active residents. Releasing and energising those hidden talents, their local wisdom and mature expertise, can make a massive difference even in societies that, sadly, do not yet have municipal autonomy enshrined in constitutional law.

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This article was written as part of the Groupe Intellex governance series, triggered by the Community Capacity evident within parts of Fareham, Hampshire, and as a response to a New Local project. It was first published in Liberal Democrat Voice on Nov. 25th 2021.

Places
Local Government
Community
Activism
Success
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