Where we are and what’s happening

This is a post from Andrew Brightwell from the Public i blog.

We Live Here is reaching an important stage – with initial research to map community networks now being played back to people through a series of events.

Now, with all this work bearing fruit, and with We Live Here beginning to feel very real, I thought I’d publish a short interview that I did with Anthony to help people to understand more about the thinking behind the project.

What is We Live Here?

As Anthony explained, We Live Here is a response to a feeling he shares with Catherine and others that we need to make goverments fit better with the way the world is moving. He said government is lagging behind in the changes that are happening to society as a result of the internet and the networking that it is enabling. For government to respond it needs to refocus on the people it serves.

“People are getting much better service from Amazon than they are getting from governments and that’s not just because Amazon are cold, hard capitalists,” he said. “It’s because they have a vision of their customer service that’s very focused and government doesn’t have a vision of its services that’s citizen focused.”

Anthony said We Live Here is the start of a process to “both understand and map social networks in an area and provide the democratic infrastructure for them to have repetitive democratic conversations, rather than a one-off consultation”.

The team, Public-i and the project

Public-i, the company I work for, is the project’s technology partner, which means we’re helping to take the ideas developed by the We Live Here team and make them (digitally) real. With our interest in how the social web can benefit democracy, we fit quite snuggly. As Anthony put it: “Public-i’s commercial activities around webcasting and social uses of technology and Demsoc’s philosophical activites around new models of government in personalised democracy are obviously quite well aligned, so when the opportunity to talk to the council about this came up, it wasn’t too long for us to put We Live Here on the table.”

We’re responsible for the Citizenscapes, the tools we’ve been using to capture the online activity that is taking place within each of the three communities. You can see the Citizenscapes here:-

  • Hangleton and Knoll
  • Brunswick
  • Black and Minority Ethnic

Aside from Public-i, We Live Here has benefited from the talents of Paul Brewer and Nicky Cambridge who both work for Brighton and Hove City Council, as well as Emma Daniel at the Brighton and Hove Community and Voluntary Sector Forum (not to mention the enormous work done by Susie Latta, Demsoc’s tireless project manager). Working as a team, Anthony said We Live Here has gone from a set of aspirations and ideas into a practical, real project. That started by breaking down the project brief into several simple steps: connect, inform, discuss and decide.

It’s that connect phase that the We Live Here team has been busy with recently. This consists of finding out the valuable individuals, organisations and connections that are relied upon by people in each of the communities. “From the council’s perspective, they know about the residents’ associations in Brunswick, the Hangleton and Knoll Partnership and the Black and Minority Ethnic Community Partnership,” Anthony said. “We are asking people who are active in those networks, ‘Who else do you know?, ‘Who else do you trust?’, ‘Who else do you recommend as sources of information about the local area?’”

This physical work has been supplemented by online searches – carried out by Public-i and using our Social Media Audit methodology. At the same time, we’ve been working within communities, with the Social Media Surgeries helping voluntary, community and resident organisations to develop their own online presences.

What’s next?

By feeding back the results of the initial research to those living and working within the communities it will allow the We Live Here team to get a stronger idea of where there are strengths and weaknesses in communities lie and develop a working model of how they function. “The aim is then that we create a kernel of democratic process and a network-finding process that’s replicable elsewhere”, while also ensuring communities are given additional help in different ways where it’s needed. Long term, Anthony said he hopes it leads to a “community that’s more connected, that’s more self aware and has the tools to make it active, democratically.” That should, hopefully, mean that we’ll see communities getting powers, perhaps including community-budgeting powers and Brighton and Hove is planning a set of neighbourhood council pilots elsewhere in the city soon.

We Live Here – BME Community Meeting

This post is by Emma Daniels and from the CVSF Policy Blog

The ‘We Live Here’ project has been trialling additional tools to enhance community connectedness over the last 6 months funded by NESTA. Three pilots were chosen, two were place based and one based on communities of identity or interest, BME (Black and Minority Ethnic).

Tonight, the project team met with some of the BME leaders from the city to discuss the findings so far and next steps. I have in this blog post attempted to capture the meeting honestly but clearly this is from my persepective and isn’t a minute taking exercise. Hopefully people who were there will add their comments to this post!

People were interested in outlining some general challenges for BME community groups and for BME individuals living in the city.

1. That Brighton & Hove does not have any geographical area that has a ‘majority’ BME community. This means that people can feel isolated and lack confidence in getting involved in events. There were comments that even ‘black’ events such as Black History events have more non-BME attendees which is an issue for some people in feeling in a minority constantly. – Positives raised was that potentially the online space created could provide this sense of identity and leadership in a way which is difficult to do in real civic space.

2. That BME population in Brighton and Hove has risen by 16% in 10 years which is really positive and means that people will be less isolated.

3. That ‘Eurozone’ immigrants have a completely different experience than individuals from a non European background in Brighton and Hove.

4 That people who have recently arrived might engage more online in relation to search terms to do with their country of origin, and that many people put information online for people in their country of origin about what to expect in Brighton and Hove and how to access information and services.

5. Often women living here are most isolated, having moved with a partner who is out working, lacking language skills or awareness of systems and people they can connect with: For example, a project called Anatolian Friendship Group has been set up by a Turkish woman for other Turkish women to counter this isolation.

The group wanted to know what the project team had found out about BME networks and the results were that BMECP (Black & Minority Ethnic Community Partnership) was a hub for this network but very little connectivity was happening between groups and community leaders directly. Also, many BME groups are linked into any other BME group at all. Why is this a problem? Well because the more messy and complex the connections the more resilient groups and individuals are, always important for good socio-economic and health outcomes but vital at a time of spending cuts and job shortages. Another reason it is important is because it gives a sense of voice, influence and belonging and community confidence. The group felt that the findings were a fair reflection of the situation and some felt that culturally there is a ‘divide and rule’ ethos in society in relation to BME groups and that BME groups can play into this dynamic themselves especially when competing for too scarce resources.

Our project manager felt that the demand from BME communities for social media surgeries was enormous and the appetite from early work demonstrates the potential. In addition, in interviews she had been given ideas such as creating a BME events calendar and business directory. Issues that BME communities do have common ground on is around education and attainment. We were told that 90% of admissions queries were from BME groups who were concerned that their child wasn’t being treated fairly, or achieving what they should. So potentially, this is a discussion topic that could bring different communities together to influence systems and decision making.

Its fair to say that some of the group felt very strongly that the following needed to be considered in taking this work forward:

- BME communities are diverse, will have different priorities and, will want to engage in the project at a different pace for different outcomes

- Their involvement must not be yet another project which raises aspirations of influence but doesn’t invest in the capacity of groups to lead and get involved

- There is a sense of disappointment in past experiences which has made some people quite cynical about being ‘used’ as an experiment

I really enjoyed the debate and the energy of the meeting and I look forward to the discussion on the project team about taking this work forward. Thanks to all for having me along for the We Live Here ride! The good thing is that the project team do Live Here and we are committed to the long term win. Let’s hope NESTA help us to change this dynamic so that the BME community not only ‘Live Here’ but feel that they ‘Belong Here’.

Black and Minority Ethnic Community Meeting – 18th April

For the We Live Here Project, we have met with people from all different parts of the black and ethnic minority community in Brighton and Hove. We have also run social media surgeries helping people with things such as setting up websites, understanding Facebook, and using Twitter.

We would like to show people what we have found and done, and discuss what the next steps should be. We have arranged a meeting for 18th April, from 6-8pm at the BMECP Centre. It is for anyone from the black and ethnic minority community who lives, works or studies in Brighton and Hove.

There are more details here We Live Here Event BME April 2012

Brunswick Community Meeting – 16th April

As part of the We Live Here project we have been meeting people from Brunswick in Hove and doing research into the community. We have also run four social media surgeries to give people help to get more out of social media such as Facebook, Twitter, YouTube and blogging. We want to show people what we have done and found and then have a discussion to decide what we should do next with the We Live Here project in Brunswick. To do this we are having a meeting on Monday 16th April from 6-8pm at Cafe Ekelectica on Western Road, Hove BN3 1AF. It is for anyone who works, lives or studies in Brunswick and who is interested in the project.

There are more details here We Live Here Event Brunswick April 2012

The Hove Kitchen Surgeries

Thank you to Sarah Morgan for this post about the Hove social media surgery

Brighton and Hove’s Social Media Surgeries are informative, relaxed meetings that help voluntary organisations find their feet in the world of web communication. I have attended two so far, and they could not have been more different. With no topic too small, surgery discussions range from joining Facebook to embedding YouTube videos and linking blogposts to Pinterest.

At my first surgery, a representative of a residents’ group wanted to find out about Facebook, so a surgeon showed her what the site looked like and how it could work for her association. Facebook, Twitter, Pinterest and WordPress are a little daunting at first, so a quick tour of the basics is invaluable. New concepts are presented accessibly and discussions are firmly jargon-free. One surgeon described Twitter as a way “to personalise what you read about”, and another called Pinterest “an online noticeboard for all the things you like”. Patients feel a lot less nervous about branching out after a session or two!

And the surgeries aren’t just for first timers. My second session showed that social media is important for networking and expansion and there’s a lot to learn however much you already do online. One guest, who works for mental health charity MindOut, came along with her website up and running. However far along your venture may be, the surgeons can always give you a hand!

Social media surgeon Andrew Brightwell said: “We teach people to tell their own story”. So if you’d like to learn how to share your thoughts, ideas and community organisations with a wider audience, come along to Hove Kitchen on Tuesday April 3rd or April 10th for the next one! You can find more details or sign up at http://socialmediasurgery.com/surgeries/hove

(Sarah Morgan www.brightasabutton.wordpress.com @sarah_morgan90)