Case studies

#MONTHLYMYTH: ACCESSIBILITY IS EASIER IN-PERSON THAN ONLINE

#MONTHLYMYTH: ACCESSIBILITY IS EASIER IN-PERSON THAN ONLINE

Making processes accessible for everyone is something we all strive for in the engagement sector. Most people naturally think that this accessibility is most easily achieved in face-to-face sessions where you can see or hear the interpreters. However, in this blog Q&A, we hear directly from two interpreters and two participants about the many accessibility advantages (and some disadvantages) to online workshops that are worth considering.

CASE STUDY: 11 TRANSFORMATIVE COUNCIL DELIBERATIONS

CASE STUDY: 11 TRANSFORMATIVE COUNCIL DELIBERATIONS

When 10 councils give real influence to their communities, we see real change, real impact and trusted decisions that increase faith in democratic processes.

This case study explores 11 deliberative engagement journeys and the profound impact they have had on councils, communities decision makers and participants.

SPOTLIGHT ON COUNCILS EMPOWERING COMMUNITIES

SPOTLIGHT ON COUNCILS EMPOWERING COMMUNITIES

MosaicLab has had the privilege of working with many Victorian councils over recent months and supporting them to design and deliver deliberative engagement processes. An interesting and exciting element of this experience has been the high level of influence some councils offered to their community around the development of their community visions.

In this article we look at three different approaches. One council that set the level of influence at ‘empower’ from the outset, and two others that accepted their community’s vision statement in full.

MAKING A DECLARATION IS THE EASY PART

MAKING A DECLARATION IS THE EASY PART

Globally, 1,807 local government bodies, such as municipal councils, have declared a climate emergency within the past 5 years. But making a declaration is the easy part. Partnering with the community to come up with responses to such a momentous and complicated challenge is not something that every council is willing to take on. But those who do will be rewarded with ideas and momentum from the community that council cannot possibly achieve on its own.

In this article we share with you a story of a local council in Victoria who has partnered with their community to respond to the climate emergency together.

CASE STUDY: LESSONS LEARNT FROM A FULLY ONLINE DELIBERATIVE PANEL

CASE STUDY: LESSONS LEARNT FROM A FULLY ONLINE DELIBERATIVE PANEL

This case study looks at lessons learned from running a a fully online deliberative panel for Baw Baw Shire Council. The output from the panel is to form the basis of Council decisions about a range of parking matters, which have been a highly contentious issue for a number of years.

CASE STUDY: LESSONS LEARNT MOVING A PANEL FROM IN-PERSON TO ONLINE

CASE STUDY: LESSONS LEARNT MOVING A PANEL FROM IN-PERSON TO ONLINE

The Bayside 2050 Community Vision Panel came together to hold the first of its three full days of deliberations immediately before social isolation came into force in response to COVID-19. The rest of the deliberations were subsequently completed online.

This post explains how MosaicLab moved the panel online and our learnings from the experience.

CASE STUDY: TEAMS IN TRANSITION - SHARED CONVERSATIONS

CASE STUDY: TEAMS IN TRANSITION - SHARED CONVERSATIONS

This case study covers a faciltated, internal strategy session provided by MosaicLab to a group of organisations facing disruption due to COVID-19. There was a clear need to support organisations transitioning to a remote-based workforce and equip them with the tools they needed to collaborate, be productive and keep motivated.

CASE STUDY: DYING WELL COMMUNITY PANEL

CASE STUDY: DYING WELL COMMUNITY PANEL

This case study flashes us back to late 2018 - to a time when we could meet face-to-face. Representatives of groups most impacted by end-of-life care came together to discuss and come to shared agreement over a very complex, challenge issue - what does dying well look like and how can we help people achieve this?

The learnings and insights from this process are as applicable now as they were then, and the participants have shared some wonderfully candid reflections on their deliberative journey.