It’s so hard to find a parking space in Dulwich Village.
At one of Southwark’s community councils not so long ago, there was some vocal (and visceral) opposition to a modest council proposal to slightly improve cycling provision and safety in a tiny part of the borough.
The residents’ campaign against the proposed change led to it being halted.
You might say that’s pluralism in action. And obviously those people have a right to have their say – even if what is said is not something that you would agree with.
But in the wider scheme of things, how does a bunch of residents in Dulwich Village campaigning to protect the status quo make the world a better place?
Campaigning is under attack from various sources in the UK – and there is a need to defend it.
But the above example illustrates that the basic premise that ‘all campaigning is good’ is not necessarily the right starting point for making the case.
So that leads to the question, (when) is campaigning a good thing?
We might say that campaigning is a good thing because it can help lead to positive social change by:
- supporting better quality policy making
- animating wider and more active participation in decision-making
- encouraging the formation of bonds and bridges between different groups in society
- transcending short-term electoral considerations
- acting as a countervailing force to (often unaccountable) vested interests
- holding decision makers to account and acting as a check on power
- supporting and strengthening the interests and involvement of disadvantaged and traditionally under-represented groups and communities.
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