One of the issues that comes up as the multistakeholder increases in use, is that different groups divide stakeholders along different lines.
In one sense, given general categories like:
- government - not government
- government, private sector, civil society
The Categories are so general, that they can't help but include almost everyone. But so many other possible stakeholder groups are aggregated into these very general categories, that once those groups start to function as groups they tend to further subdivide into other stakeholder grouping.
Sometimes stakeholders affiliate into groups that do not map to the more aggregated groups - e.g Users Groups with both private sector and civil society members, in a world split into commercial and non commercial actors. When this happens there is often a panic of exclusion: "We are excluded. We cannot nominate because we are neither fish nor fowl."
I often think that the solution is simple: "nominate people for every category in which it makes sense to nominate someone. There is no rule that says the Users Group cannot send nominees to both the Private Sector Stakeholder groups and also to the Civil Society Stakeholder groups - as long as different people are in each list.
At some point such as group as the Users Group might become a stakeholder at the next level building bottom-up. That can be a very reasonable goal for that group to have. But in the meantime, they can avoid the problem of being excluded from participation by participating in the groups that are being considered.
While this seems so easy to me, it does not seem to happen this way. Why is that, and how do we move beyond those inhibitions?
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Created
5 Feb 2014 -
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10 Feb 2014 -
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