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Grounded citizens’ juries: a tool for health activism?

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Grounded citizens’ juries: a tool for health activism? / Kashefi, Elham; Mort, Margaret.
In: Health Expectations, Vol. 7, No. 4, 2004, p. 290-302.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

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Kashefi E, Mort M. Grounded citizens’ juries: a tool for health activism? Health Expectations. 2004;7(4):290-302. doi: 10.1111/j.1369-7625.2004.00295.x

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Kashefi, Elham ; Mort, Margaret. / Grounded citizens’ juries : a tool for health activism?. In: Health Expectations. 2004 ; Vol. 7, No. 4. pp. 290-302.

Bibtex

@article{9b3a0d6e97d64de9b7c3c5201f922098,
title = "Grounded citizens{\textquoteright} juries: a tool for health activism?",
abstract = "Involving the public in decision-making has become a bureaucratic pre-occupation for every health agency in the UK. In this paper we offer an innovative approach for local participation in health decision-making through the development of a {\textquoteleft}grounded{\textquoteright} citizens{\textquoteright} jury. We describe the process of one such jury commissioned by a Primary Care Group in the north-west of England, which was located in an area suffering intractable health inequalities. Twelve local people aged between 17 and 70 were recruited to come together for a week to hear evidence, ask questions and debate what they felt would improve the health and well-being of people living in the area. The jury process acted effectively as a grass-roots health needs assessment and amongst other outcomes, resulted in the setting up of a community health centre run by a board consisting of members of the community (including two jurors) together with local agencies. The methodology described here contrasts with that practiced by what we term {\textquoteleft}the consultation industry{\textquoteright}, which is primarily interested in the use of fixed models to generate the public view as a standardized output, a product, developed to serve the needs of an established policy process, with little interest in effecting change. We outline four principles underpinning our approach: deliberation, integration, sustainability and accountability. We argue that citizens{\textquoteright} juries and other consultation initiatives need to be reclaimed from that which merely serves the policy process and become {\textquoteleft}grounded{\textquoteright}, a tool for activism, in which local people are agents in the development of policies affecting their lives.",
keywords = "citizens' juries, health activism, health inequalities, participation ",
author = "Elham Kashefi and Margaret Mort",
year = "2004",
doi = "10.1111/j.1369-7625.2004.00295.x",
language = "English",
volume = "7",
pages = "290--302",
journal = "Health Expectations",
issn = "1369-6513",
publisher = "Wiley",
number = "4",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Grounded citizens’ juries

T2 - a tool for health activism?

AU - Kashefi, Elham

AU - Mort, Margaret

PY - 2004

Y1 - 2004

N2 - Involving the public in decision-making has become a bureaucratic pre-occupation for every health agency in the UK. In this paper we offer an innovative approach for local participation in health decision-making through the development of a ‘grounded’ citizens’ jury. We describe the process of one such jury commissioned by a Primary Care Group in the north-west of England, which was located in an area suffering intractable health inequalities. Twelve local people aged between 17 and 70 were recruited to come together for a week to hear evidence, ask questions and debate what they felt would improve the health and well-being of people living in the area. The jury process acted effectively as a grass-roots health needs assessment and amongst other outcomes, resulted in the setting up of a community health centre run by a board consisting of members of the community (including two jurors) together with local agencies. The methodology described here contrasts with that practiced by what we term ‘the consultation industry’, which is primarily interested in the use of fixed models to generate the public view as a standardized output, a product, developed to serve the needs of an established policy process, with little interest in effecting change. We outline four principles underpinning our approach: deliberation, integration, sustainability and accountability. We argue that citizens’ juries and other consultation initiatives need to be reclaimed from that which merely serves the policy process and become ‘grounded’, a tool for activism, in which local people are agents in the development of policies affecting their lives.

AB - Involving the public in decision-making has become a bureaucratic pre-occupation for every health agency in the UK. In this paper we offer an innovative approach for local participation in health decision-making through the development of a ‘grounded’ citizens’ jury. We describe the process of one such jury commissioned by a Primary Care Group in the north-west of England, which was located in an area suffering intractable health inequalities. Twelve local people aged between 17 and 70 were recruited to come together for a week to hear evidence, ask questions and debate what they felt would improve the health and well-being of people living in the area. The jury process acted effectively as a grass-roots health needs assessment and amongst other outcomes, resulted in the setting up of a community health centre run by a board consisting of members of the community (including two jurors) together with local agencies. The methodology described here contrasts with that practiced by what we term ‘the consultation industry’, which is primarily interested in the use of fixed models to generate the public view as a standardized output, a product, developed to serve the needs of an established policy process, with little interest in effecting change. We outline four principles underpinning our approach: deliberation, integration, sustainability and accountability. We argue that citizens’ juries and other consultation initiatives need to be reclaimed from that which merely serves the policy process and become ‘grounded’, a tool for activism, in which local people are agents in the development of policies affecting their lives.

KW - citizens' juries

KW - health activism

KW - health inequalities

KW - participation

U2 - 10.1111/j.1369-7625.2004.00295.x

DO - 10.1111/j.1369-7625.2004.00295.x

M3 - Journal article

VL - 7

SP - 290

EP - 302

JO - Health Expectations

JF - Health Expectations

SN - 1369-6513

IS - 4

ER -