2023 Symposium Citizen Assemblies
Event for organisations in the energy transition dealing with public participation.
About the event
Event for organisations in the energy transition dealing with public participation.
As we are all aware, climate change is affecting our planet’s and our own health. It is inevitable that we need another energy transition just like we experienced years ago when we transitioned from coal to gas. Unfortunately, this is not an easy task, as for instance citizens do not feel their voice is being heard by policy makers. Therefore, we need to establish processes and create opportunities in which citizens can share their ideas and give their advice so policy makers can construct policies that are supported by the public. One way of doing this is by organizing citizen assemblies, in which a representative sample of citizens comes together for multiple days spread among different weeks in order to discuss about acceptable future energy systems. In this symposium three presentations from different perspectives will be given in which the importance of citizen assemblies is accentuated.
Time | Programme |
---|---|
12.30 | Walk-in with welcome drink |
13.00 | Welcome by prof. Lorenzo Squintani, director of the Wubbo Ockels School |
13.15 | Assembly in the format of deliberative discussion rounds, complemented with short presentations by Leah Henderson, Goda Perlaviciute, Wytse Gorter and Eva Rovers, inspired from their experiences with citizen assemblies |
15.00 | Presentation 3 & Discussion Round 3 Eva Rovers |
15.45 | Close-up and drinks |
17.00 | End |
Speakers
Goda Perlaviciute
Goda Perlaviciute is associate professor in Environmental Psychology at the University of Groningen. Her research interests lie in public evaluations and acceptability of energy sources, systems and policies, and which factors influence these evaluations and acceptability judgements.
Wytse Gorter
Wytse Gorter is a junior researcher at the University of Groningen, at the department of Environmental Pshychology. In June 2022 he obtained his Master ’s degree in ‘Environmental Psychology’ and since then he assists in research about increasing and improving public participation processes in future energy systems.
Leah Henderson
Leah Henderson is an Associate Professor in the Department of Theoretical Philosophy at the University of Groningen. Her areas of research expertise are philosophy of science and epistemology. She works on both basic philosophical problems and more applied topics. She is interested in the role that public participation can play in solutions to the climate problem.
Eva Rovers
Eva Rovers is a writer and co-founder of ‘Bureau Burgerberaad’. Her book ‘Nu is het aan ons. Oproep tot echte democratie’ appeared at ‘De Correspondent’ in 2022. In this book Eva pled for national citizen
assemblies focused on climate policy. Eva studied cultural history at the University of Utrecht and obtained her doctorate at the University of Groningen.