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Big Society Ian Dodds Government Office for the North East February 2011
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The Big Society “The Big Society is a society with much higher levels of personal, professional, civic and corporate responsibility; a society where people come together to solve problems and improve life for themselves and their communities; a society where the leading force for progress is social responsibility, not state control”. Big Society: Not Big Government April 2010
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Lack of trust in politics Longstanding social problems Unprecedented challenge to public finances The Big Society is being developed in a three-fold context
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Key themes of the Government’s programme Means Values Freedom Frameworks that support social responsibility and civil liberties Fairness Those who cannot, we always help Responsibility Those who can, do Decentralisation Public Service Reform Political Reform A Smaller State Deficit Reduction and Economic Recovery A successful Big Society will deliver economic prosperity and opportunity for all, strong families and communities, and a thriving democracy characterised by real power in the hands of every citizen. A Big Society matched by Big Citizens
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5 The Big Society moves from a default position of central design and governmental provision to citizen-driven partnership across sectors An “ecosystem” of 3 levels where no one player dominates another... 1 Neighbourhood groups comprise a broad range from those with an explicit social or activism mission to those focused on local participation, engagement and community building whether through informally through sports and interests or more formally in conjunction with local anchor institutions Citizens and neighbourhood groups 1 Social, private and public providers Government more effectively participating in the governance, design and delivery of services in their communities collaborating in the design and delivery of complementary services and initiatives through a spectrum of service models encouraging testing and innovation of different approaches protecting the vulnerable and ensuring essential services facilitating the design and delivery of other services with diverse sector partners An approach to addressing the needs of society Policy designed and delivered in partnership across all 3 levels, with government as the enabler Policy and delivery closer to the issues on the ground and individuals Big Society policy agenda addresses two priorities Building the “ecosystem” Reconfiguring policy design and delivery
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6 There are 3 priorities in building the Big Society ecosystem needed to reconfigure how policy is developed and delivered People more involved in their communities People able to contribute more effectively through a stronger social sector + People better able to shape governmental policy and delivery + 1 2 3 Example focus ▪ Group membership ▪ Mass civic action ▪ Charitable giving ▪ Corporate social activities ▪ Group formation ▪ Leadership and scale ▪ Funding and resources ▪ Organisation and operations ▪ Information provision ▪ Policy formulation ▪ Policy localisation ▪ Policy delivery
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Big Society builds a more productive, responsive government and a more self-reliant participative society Better outcomes ▪ Welfare ▪ Education ▪ Health ▪ Less crime ▪ Cohesion ▪ Democracy People more involved in their communities ▪ Increased participation ▪ Increased well-being from – Reduced isolation – Stronger social ties – Greater self-reliance 1 People able to participate more effectively through a stronger social sector ▪ Increased capacity and capabilities – New groups/enterprises formed – More trained leaders and support networks ▪ More local and national initiatives to address complex local or topical issues 2 People better able to shape government policy and delivery ▪ Increased democratic accountability ▪ Increased citizen-led design/delivery ▪ Increased focus towards the most needy and/or issues with longest payback ▪ More effective and targeted state provision ▪ Increased trust in frontline services 3 Stronger, more resilient society More productive and responsive government
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Building the Big Society (May 2010) The Big Society will: 1. Give communities more power; 2. Encourage people to take active role in communities; 3. Transfer power from central to local government; 4. Support for co-ops, mutuals, charities and social enterprises 5. Publish government data
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People more involved in their communities 9 People better able to shape governmental policy and delivery People able to contribute more effectively through a stronger social sector Initiatives are already planned in the government’s policy agenda for all 3 of the Big Society priority areas to kickstart implementation ▪ Promoting mass social action, inc. ‘Big Society Day’ ▪ Encouraging charitable giving and philanthropy ▪ Creating a flagship National Citizen Service for 16 year-olds ▪ Increasing civil service’s community involvement 1 ▪ Developing a new generation of community leaders and neighbourhood groups ▪ Support the creation and expansion of mutuals, co-operatives, charities and social enterprises ▪ Create the right for public sector workers to form employee-owned co-operatives to operate services ▪ Use funds from dormant bank accounts to establish a Big Society Bank 2 ▪ Promote radical devolution to local government and citizens ▪ Give councils a general power of competence ▪ Abolish Regional Spatial Strategies, and return housing and planning powers to local councils ▪ Create a new ‘right to data’ for public use with regular publication ▪ Oblige the police to publish detailed local crime data statistics every month ▪ Local community powers to run services 3
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Flagship Initiatives Community Organisers National Citizenship Service Big Society Bank Modernising commissioning of public services Vanguard Areas/Barrier Busting Localism Bill – Right to Challenge
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So how will we achieve The Big Society? Big Society: Not Big Government Control Shift: Returning Power to Local Communities (Conservative Party Policy Green Paper 9) A Stronger Society: Voluntary Action in the 21 st Century (Conservative Policy Green Paper 5) Open letter to Voluntary Sector (April 2010) The following documents have given some more detail of how the Big Society might be encouraged:
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