About Us

  • Gallomanor provides creative audience-led communication solutions and events to local government and other organisations. We specialise in citizen engagement campaigns and e-democracy.
  • Contact Us
    email: info@gallomanor.com
    tel: 01225 869413
    fax: 0870 7627 451
    post:
    31 Silver Street
    Bradford on Avon
    Wiltshire
    BA15 1JX

eDemocracy Calendar

Enter your email address:

Delivered by FeedBurner

Local Democracy

  • Local Democracy Campaign

« Gold Medal Winning Public Sector Blogger | Main | Virtual Worlds & Councils »

August 22, 2008

Seeking international councillors

This May I finished my politics degree at university. I was often awake until dawn, writing essays about politicians and civil society. Now, 'I'm a Councillor' has me chasing the same politicians and contacting grassroots bloggers, looking for volunteer politicians abroad to talk to young people in the UK, and all those high-falutin' theories are making good. It's exciting to play my part.

The international section of 'I'm a Councillor', with five representatives from countries around the world, ran for the first time in 2007. It was such a success that we're recruiting five more volunteers to answer questions this year. It's great to get young Brits connected with real people from other countries.   

The good news: David Bly, from the Minnesota house of Representatives, is on board again. David was very helpful last year, and we look forward to having him back. We think we've found someone in India, thanks to Kris Dev; and I'm waiting for confirmation from one councillor in Tartu, Estonia and one in Malmö, Sweden.

The bad news: Outside of Western Europe, it's difficult to find anyone at the local or regional levels of government. I dig up the civic roots and the media-conscious canopy, but it's very hard to find people with links to local politics. I'll show you what I mean...

That lodestar community of grassroots blogging, Global Voices Online, especially its super-helpful editor Solana Larsen, has provided me with a host of contacts: Hans Blix, the Indian Minister of Railways, a community of Paraguayan presidential candidates, and so on.  In Russia, you can get hold of famous activist Masha Gaidar and the great Evgenii Royzman on their blogs... but where have all the local politicians gone?

Another big problem has been what I consider the "cold call" factor. I write brief and polite emails, and I try to email candidates in their own languages, but my emails often go without acknowledgement or answer. Can anyone suggest ways to sound less like a spam bot? Would it be better to leave comments on blogs than to send emails?

The search continues. Watch this space! Huge thanks to Global Voices Online, who are sending us contacts in Guatemala. We're talking to a mayor in South Africa - updates to come.

A personal note. I missed out on several months of my life, hunched over a computer, making theories about civil society groups like Royzman's 'City without Drugs', citizen journalists like Portnoy Zheng, and (in all modesty) e-Democracy tools like 'I'm a Councillor, Get me out of Here'. It's exhilarating to get my hands dirty, helping out. At once I feel like an office temp (all emails and dusty desks) and Dr. Frankenstein. It's alive, it's moving, it's alive!

TrackBack

TrackBack URL for this entry:
http://www.typepad.com/services/trackback/6a00d834536acd69e200e5540334348833

Listed below are links to weblogs that reference Seeking international councillors:

Comments

Verify your Comment

Previewing your Comment

This is only a preview. Your comment has not yet been posted.

Working...
Your comment could not be posted. Error type:
Your comment has been posted. Post another comment

The letters and numbers you entered did not match the image. Please try again.

As a final step before posting your comment, enter the letters and numbers you see in the image below. This prevents automated programs from posting comments.

Having trouble reading this image? View an alternate.

Working...

Post a comment

From our project blogs

Our projects

  • Life Swap

    LifeSwap helps to bridge the gap between disparate groups such as councillors and young people.

  • I'm a Councillor, Get me out of Here!

    IAC has run for 5 years helping councillors engage with thousands of young people in 63 councils across the country.

  • Local e-Democracy National Project

    Gallomanor has produced the majority of the marketing communication pieces for the Local e-Democracy National Project.

  • CampaignCreator

    CampaignCreator is an online resource that allows grassroots campaigners to create and manage effective and credible campaign communications.

  • Your Say Your Way

    Your Say Your Way was a highly effective voter education campaign used to show residents of two wards in St Albans how to use new electronic voting systems being piloted in 2002.

  • Juror Online


    A virtual walkthrough for Jurors commissioned by the Home Office.