Special Issue July 2010 Learning Local Governance: Reimagining Sustainable Communities IN THIS ISSUE: BACKGROUND ............2 WHAT IS LEARNING LOCAL GOVERNANCE? .. 3 OUR CO-APPLICANTS AND PARTNERS ...........4 FIRST COMMUNITY WORKSHOP ................7 WORKSHOP FINDINGS ..................8 NEXT STEPS ...............8 Since CUISR learned that our application for a development grant for a Learning Local Governance (LLG) Community-University Research Alliance (CURA) was approved by the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council (SSHRC), we have been working to prepare the full formal application due September 17, 2010. LLG is a dynamic, exciting project! It is timely and relevant – with importance for all sectors and levels of governance as well as for communities across Canada and elsewhere. Saskatoon is a vibrant, evolving community emerging from ―Saskaboom‖ and struggling to meet the needs of all its residents. Effective models of local governance can ensure that Saskatoon becomes a creative, diverse, inclusive, and sustainable city. LLG will help change the governance landscape engaging with community in a learning process to identify the most effective models to promote and support respectful relations and sustainability. CUISR .... Building Healthy, Sustainable Communities 1|P age Learning Local Governance CUISR July 2010 Special Issue Background What is CUISR? CUISR’s mandate is to facilitate partnerships between the university and larger community to engage in relevant social research that supports a deeper understanding of our communities that reveals opportunities for improving our quality of life. Built upon trust and respect between community and university participants, authentic partnership is central to CUISR. It is reflected in the composition of the board (50% community and 50% faculty) and Co-chairs for the Institute. Our comprehensive intersectoral and interdisciplinary partnership model includes 100 active participants and groups. U of S Williams Building, home to CUISR CUISR provides a forum for faculty, students, and community organizations to shape policy and contribute to the greater good of our community. Early priorities in Community Health Determinants and Health Policy, Community Economic Development, and Quality of Life are retained in current strategic research directions: Saskatoon Community Sustainability, Social What is Governance? Economy, Rural and Urban Community Links, Local Governance refers to the performance of the governing function at the local level (rather than the Indigenous Women’s Community provincial or national level). Development, Partnership Meta-analysis. What is a CURA? CURA is a SSHRC program designed to ―support the creation of alliances between community organizations and postsecondary institutions which, through ongoing collaboration and mutual learning, foster innovative research, training and the creation of new knowledge in areas of importance for the social, cultural, or economic development of Canadian communities.‖ More specifically, it refers to a governance framework that in addition to municipal governments may also involve governmental and nongovernmental authorities, agencies or organizations involved in policy-making and decision-making, including the following: Provincial, federal and Aboriginal governments and agencies Local or regional governing authorities (e.g., health and school boards) Non-profit community based organizations For-profit community organizations Performed in a multiplicity of governance sites, The committee that judged our proposal rather than only one, the local governance function indicated that ―it was well-focussed and had may be performed both through formal and informal clearly demonstrated its links to the CURA interactions among the key persons involved in various policy-making and decision-making program objectives. It also found that the initiatives. proposal contributed significantly to innovative knowledge and practices and that it presented positive outcomes for the stakeholders involved. The committee noted in particular the well-balanced participation between the university and community sectors. Finally, it found that the proposal, most importantly the research plans, were well-structured and well-presented. The committee found the project to be meritorious and worthy of funding.‖ It recommended a grant as requested. 2|P age Learning Local Governance CUISR July 2010 Special Issue What is Learning Local Governance? Why Governance? Why Now? What did we commit to do? Globalization, offloading of The objective is to engage in a governance responsibility, budget learning process to identify the best gaps, slashed services, crumbling ways for communities to develop infrastructure, aggravated local community governance to inequalities, democratic deficits, respond to complex needs. crises of economy, finance, The project is a case study of the environment, and legitimacy Saskatoon city-region, with Citizens demanding participation in relevance for all communities: a local decision-making, leading to study that builds on CUISR’s new forms of engagement foundational work, proven research Opportunity to reimagine ways of capacity, extensive networks, democratically engaging citizens to infrastructure, and governance deliberate, plan, and manage model. diverse community We will adopt new resources models of knowledge Our overarching research impacting quality co-creation, translation, question is: How do we of life and application involving create local community those most affected by governance models that Why Saskatoon? the socioeconomic are comprehensive, problems that are the representative, For well over a research focus and responsive, culturally decade, sensitive to the diversity appropriate, and collaborative, of stakeholders. sustainable? multi-sectoral In strategic case initiatives in studies and research Saskatoon and area—designed to clusters probing comparative models eliminate poverty and track and data in regional, national, and indicators of quality of life—have international settings, we will explore produced evidence-based strategic key factors facilitating or inhibiting the planning and policy. development of local community ―Saskaboom‖ has added incentive governance models for sustainable to build on the multi-sectoral communities. foundation and to learn from successes and failures. What is Research? Saskatoon, CUISR, and its networks ―Research is formalized curiosity. are ready. It is poking and prying with a Quality of Life iterations purpose‖ (Zora Neale Hurston) SSHRC CURA—Linking, Learning, Leveraging: Social Research is asking questions Enterprises, Knowledgeable and listening to stories Economies, and Sustainable Research is learning by Communities observing Building Community: Creating Research is capturing on video or photograph Social & Economic Well-being 3|P age Learning Local Governance CUISR July 2010 Special Issue Newsletter Our LLG Co-applicants and Partners We value the contributions of our dedicated research team of co-applicants and partners. Academic Co-applicants Alan Anderson – Professor Emeritus, Department of Sociology; Principal Investigator and Co-director of the Bridges and Foundations Project on Urban Aboriginal Housing. Alan’s areas of expertise include international development, Indigenous relations, and social constructs. Louise Clarke – Associate Professor, Edwards School of Business and University Codirector, CUISR. She has been with CUISR since its inception. Her specialization is the area of industrial relations and organizational behaviour. Louise has research interest and experience in Aboriginal community economic development. Isobel Findlay – LLG Principal Investigator; Associate Professor, Edwards School of Business; CUISR Co-director, Social Economy; and Scholar, Centre for the Study of Cooperatives. Isobel is committed to participatory action research and is published widely on community, social economy, Aboriginal CED, governance, and justice. She is a member, Canadian Commission for UNESCO. Joseph Garcea – Associate Professor and Head, Political Studies, and CUISR board member. His areas of teaching and research include public management, public administration, public policy analysis, multi-level governance, local governance, the interface of First Nations urban reserves and municipalities, immigration and integration, and multiculturalism/interculturalism. Michael Gertler – Associate Professor, Department of Sociology; CUISR board member; Fellow, Centre for the Study of Co-operatives; and member of the administrative committee for the U of S Regional and Urban Planning program. Michael’s teaching and research interests include community sociology, co-operatives, and sustainable development. Lou Hammond Ketilson – Associate Professor, Edwards School of Business; Director of the Centre for the Study of Co-operatives. Her research interests include management of co-operatives and other democratic organizations, community development, Aboriginal co-operatives, governance bodies, and diversity on boards. Anna Hunter – Assistant Professor, Department of Political Studies and Director of the Aboriginal Public Administration Program. Anna is member of Ktunaxa First Nation in British Columbia. Her specializations include Aboriginal governance, women and politics, and constitutional law. Deborah Lee – Indigenous Studies Portal Librarian. She is of Cree and Mohawk ancestry and has been a librarian for ten years. Deborah has presented widely at conferences and published widely in academic journals and conference proceedings. Deborah is an active member on committees, including the one for Library Services for Saskatchewan Aboriginal Peoples. 4|P age Learning Local Governance CUISR July 2010 Special Issue Newsletter Nazeem Muhajarine – Professor and Head, Community Health & Epidemiology; CUISR board member (founding member and former CUISR University Co-director). Nazeem leads community-university research partnerships for knowledge development, transfer, and application in the areas of child health, health determinants and population health. Elizabeth Quinlan – Assistant Professor, Department of Sociology. She was one of the first graduates of the Interdisciplinary Studies Doctoral Program at the University of Saskatchewan, where she now teaches and researches. Her research interests include health and illness, work organization, and research methods. Community Co-applicants Sue Delanoy – Special projects coordinator, Child and Youth Friendly Saskatoon, kidSKAN, and Kinsmen Activity Place; CUISR board member. Sue collaborated as a colead on Understanding the Learning Years, a study that provided the impetus for comprehensive literacy programs. She has contributed to CUISR research collaborations in a myriad of ways. Tanya Dunn-Pierce – Manager of Health Promotion, Saskatoon Health Region. Tanya completed her Master of Science thesis in Facilitating Community Participation in Health Needs Assessment, and has been employed in the areas of health policy and planning as a manager, consultant, and researcher in the Saskatchewan health system for the last decade. Tanya is a partner with CUISR on the Saskatoon Poverty Reduction Partnership. William J. Holden – Senior Planner, City of Saskatoon, CUISR Community Codirector, and founding member of the intersectoral group that established CUISR. He actively provides intellectual direction in past and continuing CUISR research projects, including the Quality of Life Module, as well as the Canadian Index of Wellbeing, and remains committed to the collaboration of university knowledge and community expertise and energy in local governance. Kelley Moore – A principal partner in Prairie Wild Consulting Co. Kelley has worked on projects spanning five levels of government and these fields: town planning; local area planning; inter-municipal planning; international development; social and economic policy development; and human service integration. A full member of the Canadian Institute of Planners, Kelley has been nationally recognized for her comprehensive planning and citizen engagement. She is currently completing an Interdisciplinary Masters in the area of land use development and decision-making. Fred N. Ozirney – Coordinator, Regional Intersectoral Committee. Fred founded the Saskatoon and District Industry-Education Council and the SMART Program (Students Moving Ahead with Real World Training). He is winner of a Saskatchewan Centennial Medal (2005), Broad Community Collaboration Award (2001), and Training for Excellence Award – Educational Partnerships (2000). 5|P age Learning Local Governance CUISR July 2010 Special Issue Newsletter Lenore Swystun – Founder & Principal, Prairie Wild Consulting. Lenore is a community planning and development professional expert in municipal capacity development; comprehensive community planning; local governance; community and civic engagement; facilitation, international development, heritage planning; and related social research. A former elected representative, an awarded community volunteer, and member of local and national boards and commissions, she lectures at the University of Saskatchewan and is a Leadership Saskatoon mentor and member. Christine Thompson - Director of Community Impact, United Way. Christine manages fund investment in the community service sector and works cross-sectorally to address complex community issues. She has over 10 years’ experience in the not-for-profit and health sectors and in facilitating community-university networks for applied research and evaluation. Len Usiskin –Manager, Quint Development Corporation, CUISR board member, and community Co-director, Social Economy. Len oversees several development initiatives and is a founding director, Saskatoon Housing Initiative Partnership. He is expert on social justice and CED. Pamela Woodsworth – Manager of KidsFirst, Saskatoon Health Region, and CUISR board member. Pam has a keen interest in transforming our understanding of how to best work with vulnerable citizens. Pam currently sits on the boards of the White Buffalo Youth Lodge Partnership, the Provincial Respite Review Committee, and the Youth Companion Program. Community Partners are paramount to an effective research alliance that provides meaningful solutions. We are pleased to have the following organizations supporting the Learning Local Governance project: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 6|P age Caledon Institute of Social Policy Canadian Institute of Wellbeing Central Urban Métis Federation, Inc. Centre for the Study of Co-operatives CHEP Good Food Inc. Child and Youth Friendly Saskatoon City of Saskatoon Friends of Kinsmen Activity Place Corp Humanities Research Unit Passion for Action Against Homelessness Quint Development Corporation Rainbow Community Centre 13. Saskatoon Regional Intersectoral Committee 14. Saskatchewan Indian Institute of Technologies 15. Saskatoon Community Youth Arts Programming 16. Saskatoon Food Bank and Learning Centre 17. Saskatoon Health Region KidsFirst 18. Saskatoon Indian & Métis Friendship Centre 19. Spectrum Corp. Community Services Inc. 20. Station 20 West Community Enterprise Centre 21. Student Wellness Initiative Toward Community Health Learning Local Governance CUISR July 2010 Special Issue Newsletter Our First Community Workshop Gathering at White Buffalo Youth Lodge on June 28 for a community workshop were sixty people, many friends of CUISR and all deeply involved in the Saskatoon community. They came to share their experience and expertise and to help us make our submission to SSHRC as meaningful and responsive to the community as possible. For their collective intelligence we are very grateful. Isobel Findlay introduced the project, the CURA program, CUISR, our coinvestigators and partners. She clarified why governance, why now and why Saskatoon, as well as what we committed to do and how participants could contribute. Joe Garcea’s presentation, Making Sense of Governance, explained key concepts related to an increasingly complex and multi-faceted governance system. It involves many governmental and non-governmental agencies and agents, interests, relationships, roles and responsibilities, capacities, and both formal and informal dimensions. White Buffalo Youth Lodge, Saskatoon It involves extensive intersectorality (immigration, employment, housing, health) It also involves extensive intersectionality (gender, race, religion, language) Michael Gertler’s presentation, Sustaining and Sustainable Communities, stressed the importance of community-based research to address knowledge gaps, divides, disinformation, governance failures, political deskilling. Knowledge privatization, he argued, underlies economic and social inequalities, democratic deficits, and power differentials. Create ―common ground‖ and ―public spaces‖ Promote equitable participation Celebrate shared leadership Each presentation served to engage people in morning and afternoon breakout sessions, before bringing people together in a concluding plenary session. The full presentations can be accessed on CUISR’s website: http://www.usask.ca/cuisr/. ***** In plenary and small group discussions, participants probed and challenged, defined and dreamed, coming up with these themes. Emphasizing knowledge as power, people challenged customary hierarchies, cultures of presumption and paternalism, and widespread Workshop participants enjoying a presentation political deskilling. Literacy, education, access to information are key to meaningful engagement. Recognizing and respecting multiple knowledges can create the conditions for reimagining governance as the exercise of local competency and creativity. The status quo is not ordained, but constructed. Deconstruct in order to reconstruct—and use a gender and cultural lens. Study to transform elite institutions like universities City councillors invoke the will of the people while only 27% vote! Let’s work at real democracy. We need a manifesto. 7|P age Learning Local Governance CUISR July 2010 Special Issue Newsletter Creative cities cannot be divided ones—east-west, urbanrural, Aboriginal-non-Aboriginal, university-community. And we need to go beyond partnerships on paper. Be clear on how we define success. Balance universal standards and community governance. We need to work together in formal and informal settings to reimagine and reconstruct relationships and change the governance landscape for sustainable and sustaining futures. Survey people’s experience of governance Build on past practice (Saskatoon Development Board) Put to work valuable research (St. Denis & Hanson on Increasing Women’s Participation in Municipal Consultations, 2004) Learn from elsewhere (New Zealand) Study Truth and Reconciliation, its processes, protocols, and priorities Nicola Chopin leading a small Explore models like White Buffalo Youth Lodge group discussion Look at multiple models of Aboriginal governance—shared government, self-government, pan government, urban reserves, FNUC Some are too preoccupied with survival or too fearful to go into some neighbourhoods or to cross gang boundaries. Engage those that are most affected, using traditional (face-to-face), less traditional (Facebook), and creative (tell me your story, paint a picture, photo, etc.). Know some fear losing funding and children. Create a safe and welcoming space and focus on youth and the homeless. Demystify research, governance, and policy. Target niche organizations, representatives from all levels of government, business (BIDS, Chamber). Let’s make this happen for the next workshop! Possible Cases/Models: Aboriginal Economic Development organizations, Affinity Credit Union, Affordable Housing Initiative, Casinos, Chamber of Commerce, Child/Youth Initiative, Communities for Children, Community Service Village, Craik, Farmers Market, Gang Strategy, Heifer International, Immigration/Integration/Inclusion Initiative, InterPares, John Howard Society, Labour Boards, Meewasin, Mennonite Central Committee (and other faith based organizations), Municipalities, Poverty Elimination Initiative, Quint, Race Relations Committee, Regional Planning Commissions, Sask Housing, Saskatoon Anti Poverty Coalition, Saskatoon Housing Initiatives Partnership, School Boards, Soccer Association, United Way, Universities, Urban Aboriginal Strategy, Wanuskewin, White Buffalo Youth Lodge, White Dakota First Nation. Next Steps..... The proposal deadline of September 17 is fast approaching! Co-applicants and collaborators are encouraged to enter their first draft CV on the web application by Friday, August 6, and partners to finalize letters confirming participation and contribution. Our next community workshop will be on Wednesday, August 18; location and further details forthcoming. Mark your calendars! For further information on the LLG project, the workshop, or to get involved, please contact the following: Isobel Findlay Principal Investigator findlay@edwards.usask.ca 8|P age Mark Brown CUISR Community-University Research Liaison cuisr.liaison@usask.ca Bonnie Reddekopp LLG Research Assistant blr084@mail.usask.ca