That’s a wrap! Engagers connect in Melbourne for IAP2A 2022.
That’s a wrap! Engagers connect in Melbourne for IAP2A 2022. From the 26th to the 28th of October, 380 engagers connected in Melbourne – at the first face-to-face IAP2 Australasia Conference in 3 years. This year, the conference program was given a shakeup by offering...
2022 Core Values Awards Finalists
Can we have a drum roll please…it’s time to announce the 2022 Core Values Awards finalists…
Reflections on the outcomes of a ‘successful’ deliberative process – an ethical dilemma for practitioners
Designing and facilitating deliberative engagement processes have been among our most satisfying professional experiences. Several years ago, we teamed up to work on a very challenging project, with the City of Bayswater Local Authority, not far from Perth Airport.
5th State of Infrastructure and Engagement Survey opens – seeks to explain the impact of politicisation on projects
As Australia’s largest study into community engagement in the infrastructure sector enters its landmark fifth year, it turns the spotlight on the hot topic of project politicisation.
My experience of authenticity
Being authentic in community engagement will require a generation of practitioners to stand for and celebrate truth, transparency and accountability in their work and ultimately themselves. Ironically, these values can not be taught in textbooks or at a conference but rather through personal experience. It is becoming clear that now is the time for a renewal in what matters in infrastructure projects. And it starts with us.
Tools for facilitation, deliberation and life
Home > Resources > Latest News Tools for facilitation, deliberation and life With Kimbra White, Nicole Hunter and Keith Greaves | MosaicLab. When the three directors of MosaicLab sat down during the pandemic to start writing a book about how to “do” deliberative...
How to know what you wish you knew early in your career
Let us face it. There is no one way to get into communication and engagement. For some people, this practice is their defined career. Others just happen to ‘fall into it’. No matter which path was yours, I’m sure you’ve experienced (or will experience) that moment in your career where you thought ”I wish I knew this earlier”.
A renewed hope…
My relationship with community engagement began back in 1998 at the age of 21 when I found myself in a small but mighty heritage, environment and community consultancy named Context. For a bit of ‘context’, our office was originally situated out the back of our manager’s home in Brunswick, Melbourne. I was incredibly lucky to be able to learn and be guided by some pretty amazing women who are still influential today.