Launched in 2017, Decidim ("we decide" in Catalan) is a free and open digital platform for democratic participation , maintained and developed by a community of users, it is also disseminated under terms that allow its use, copying and modification by all.
Its creation was driven by the Barcelona City Council, which wanted to have a digital infrastructure that would allow it to co-construct its actions with citizens at all territorial levels. Today, any organization or group - government, local authority, association, citizen's group, university, company, cooperative, etc. - can freely deploy and configure its own digital infrastructure. - can freely deploy and configure its own platform by adapting it to its needs. Decidim can be used to collectively create action plans, consult the public, manage a community, organize participatory budgets, etc.
Decidim is not only a digital platform: it is above all a social and political project, built on a robust legal foundation in response to the main contemporary crises. Researchers, politicians and citizens have built this common base in a transdisciplinary approach, with the will to propose a framework in which the digital platform could be built in a coherent way. From the outset, it was decided that Decidim would be open source software, with the source code and all the information necessary for its use made public.
Thus, the actors at the origin of the project have, since its inception, designed and organized the project in order to ensure its sustainability by combining an open source distribution and an open and participatory governance.Référence :
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. All of these specificities, as well as the speed with which the project has become established, make it a particularly interesting object of analysis: the digital commons model for responding to new societal challenges, the mutualization in the design of a solution that evolves according to the diversity of its users' needs, the role of the public actor in a collective governance, etc.A. An innovative framework for an ambitious technopolitical project
1. The will to invent new democratic models!
Seize the potential of digital technology to experiment with new forms of participation and collaboration
In May 2015, the list formed by the political party Barcelona en Comu (Barcelona in Common) won the municipal elections with more than 25% of the votes and Ada Colau, the first candidate on the list, became mayor of Barcelona. In a context of crisis, the campaign had the double characteristic of focusing on ultra-localized issues and going beyond the city itself to create links with other related spaces, thus underlining the need for effective means, especially digital ones, to facilitate the exchange of information on a multi-level scale. Once in power, the municipality wished to strengthen this collaborative dynamic by opening up the construction of the city's Municipal Action Plan to everyone, wishing to fully mobilize the opportunities offered by digital technology to create links within a network logic. This is where the Decidim project was gradually born.At the same time, another soil has been conducive to the emergence of Decidim and strongly constitutive of its identity: the growing recognition of new models of organization, production and sharing of knowledge, specific to the digital world. These models, theorized and experimented by certain hacker cultures, digital communities and actors of the commons, strongly inspire the Barcelona City Council team. This human-centered approach has naturally imposed itself on Barcelona, complementing the community's stated focus on Smart City, combining a strong digital component and the Internet of Things.
It is at the crossroads of these two major phenomena (crisis of representative democracy and distrust of digital giants) that Decidim was born, with the will to propose new democratic models thanks to collective intelligence.
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Adopt an open, needs-based digital approach
Conceived as a necessary prerequisite to meet its ambitions, Barcelona designed its project with an open digital approach from the outset. The tools and development methods were a natural fit.- 1. The functional and non-functional needs expressed by the municipal team were mainly to have a tool that was: inclusive, designed to accommodate all types of audiences; modular and adjustable to facilitate implementation by different local levels; standardized to facilitate communication and reuse of information; transparent to build trust throughout the participatory processes; and flexible enough to combine digital and physical participation devices.
- 2. The team considered the use of different digital tools already in use in several European countries (United Kingdom, Iceland, Basque Country) and tested the Consul tool used by the city of Madrid, not excluding the possibility of contributing to an already existing tool in order to bring in the missing functionalities for its own use. However, very quickly, the existing tools were considered insufficient to cover the minimal needs identified as necessary to meet the goals of such a participatory device.
- 3. On this basis, Barcelona City Council decided to invest several million euros to develop a platform that would meet its needs, knowing that this was necessary to achieve its objectives in a sustainable manner. Decidim is therefore a project born in response to specific needs, expressed and analyzed, which has had the advantage of facilitating its adoption by users once it is available.
- 4. Still with the aim of ensuring the sustainability of the project, the public contract published by the City Council was split up in such a way as to call upon several local SMEs to collaborate in an ecosystem to develop the platform. This choice is not insignificant, because it has the advantage of not making the software development rely on a single provider - creating a gap with the other non-selected providers that could have limited their involvement - and of establishing a "by design" collaboration mode for the project.
2. A digital commons for an ethical resource at the service of the general interest
While it could have perfectly well turned to the scalable solutions offered by certain software publishers, or even entrusted the economic players with the responsibility of marketing and developing the solution according to orders, Barcelona remained particularly involved in the project. Such a presence had a double interest: to ensure the adequacy of the solution with its own needs and those of its partners, and to ensure that the development of the platform reflects both the collective interest of the stakeholders (public and private) and the general interest sought by Barcelona.Thinking about the project for the benefit of a community
Another fundamental choice was made during the preparation of the public contract: that of making Decidim an open source software designed as a digital commons (governed collectively by rules that ensure its collective and shared character). In fact, in the introduction to the technical conditions to be met by the platform it wants to set up, the municipality of Barcelona states that "only platforms based on free software that are open, transparent, secure and managed as public-commons offer the guarantees to meet [its] expectations and to build better democratic processes. These same concerns have been reflected in the contract recently published by Barcelona to further develop the tool.
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First of all, Decidim is composed of a set of complementary digital resources, all distributed under a free and open license:
- The software itself and its specifications are available under the GNU Affero GPL ;
- the documentation produced to accompany its installation, its administration, its use;
- design elements that create and recall the identity of the project, help users to orient themselves, contribute to the dissemination of the project outside;
- the data sets ;
- training materials to accompany the use of the software.