Participatory Adaptation in Contemporary Parliamentary Committees in Australia

Date

2018

Authors

Hendriks, Carolyn
Regan, Sue
Kay, Adrian

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Oxford University Press

Abstract

Contemporary parliamentary institutions operate in a dynamic participatory and digital context. Recent studies demonstrate that many parliaments are rethinking how they reach out to the public in this changing environment. This article discusses the findings of empirical research that examined how and why parliamentary committees are adapting their public engagement practices. Parliamentary staff in six Australian parliaments were interviewed about the forms and extent of participatory adaptation in their committee systems. The research finds while committees continue to rely heavily on standard practices, such as written submissions and formal public hearings, many are adapting the way their public outreach and engagement practices. Four common participatory adaptations are identified including: employing new ways to promote and publicise committee work; using digital interfaces to collect and manage public input; increasing accessibility to affected publics; and building participatory capacity of committee members and affected publics. The article argues that in an era of significant political and digital change, parliamentary committees need to adopt a more strategic approach to participatory reform to better connect with, and represent, diverse publics.

Description

Keywords

Legislative committees, Reform, Public engagement, Citizen participation, Public hearings, Digital technology

Citation

Source

Parliamentary Affairs

Type

Journal article

Book Title

Entity type

Access Statement

License Rights

Restricted until

2099-12-31