/docs-whitepaper

Decidim's project white paper descrives the project principles, theory, and overall detailled description

OtherNOASSERTION

Decidim: political and technopolitical networks for participatory democracy.

White Paper

Decidim [http://decidim.org], from the Catalan for "let’s decide" or “we decide”, is a digital infrastructure for participatory democracy, built entirely and collaboratively as free software. More specifically, Decidim is a web environment (a framework) produced in Ruby on Rails (a programming language) that allows anybody to create and configure a website platform, to be used in the form of a political network for democratic participation. The platform allows any organization (local city council, association, university, NGO, neighbourhood or cooperative) to create mass processes for strategic planning, participatory budgeting, collaborative design for regulations, urban spaces and election processes. It also makes possible to connect traditional in-person democratic meetings (assemblies, council meetings, etc.) with the digital world: sending meeting invites, managing registrations, streaming content, facilitating the publication of meeting minutes, etc. In addition, Decidim enables the structuring of government bodies or assemblies (councils, boards, working groups), the convening of consultations, referendums or channelling citizen or member initiatives to trigger different decision making processes. However, the Decidim project is much more than its technological features. Decidim is in itself a sort of crossroad of the various dimensions of networked democracy and society, a detailed practical map of their complexities and conflicts. We distinguish three general planes or dimensions of the project: the political (focused on the democratic model that Decidim promotes and its impact on public policies and organizations), the technopolitical (focused on how the platform is designed, the mechanisms it embodies, and the way in which it is democratically designed), and the technical (focused on the conditions of production, operation and success of the project: the factory, collaborative mechanisms, licenses, etc.).

This document is part of the Decidim documentation.

Metadata

Title

Decidim: political and technopolitical networks for participatory democracy.

Subtitle

White Paper

Version

0.1

Editors

Xabier E. Barandiaran & Antonio Calleja-López

Authors

Xabier E. Barandiaran &, Antonio Calleja-López

Contributors

Eloy Caloca Lafont, Pablo Aragón, Guillem Marpons

Proofreaders

María Haberer, Ramón Fenstra

Summary

Decidim [http://decidim.org], from the Catalan for "let’s decide" or “we decide”, is a digital infrastructure for participatory democracy, built entirely and collaboratively as free software. More specifically, Decidim is a web environment (a framework) produced in Ruby on Rails (a programming language) that allows anybody to create and configure a website platform, to be used in the form of a political network for democratic participation. The platform allows any organization (local city council, association, university, NGO, neighbourhood or cooperative) to create mass processes for strategic planning, participatory budgeting, collaborative design for regulations, urban spaces and election processes. It also makes possible to connect traditional in-person democratic meetings (assemblies, council meetings, etc.) with the digital world: sending meeting invites, managing registrations, streaming content, facilitating the publication of meeting minutes, etc. In addition, Decidim enables the structuring of government bodies or assemblies (councils, boards, working groups), the convening of consultations, referendums or channelling citizen or member initiatives to trigger different decision making processes. However, the Decidim project is much more than its technological features. Decidim is in itself a sort of crossroad of the various dimensions of networked democracy and society, a detailed practical map of their complexities and conflicts. We distinguish three general planes or dimensions of the project: the political (focused on the democratic model that Decidim promotes and its impact on public policies and organizations), the technopolitical (focused on how the platform is designed, the mechanisms it embodies, and the way in which it is democratically designed), and the technical (focused on the conditions of production, operation and success of the project: the factory, collaborative mechanisms, licenses, etc.).

Keywords

Decidim, participatory democracy, digital platforms, political networks, free software, public-commons partnership, social innovation, democratic innovation

Document history

This document begun to be written in March 2018 by Xabier Barandiaran and Antonio Calleja-López. Both designed the conceptual structure of the document. Then, the former took the lead in writing passages presenting the core elements of Decidim while the latter took the lead in the historical and theoretical passages. Both of them discussed and heavily intervened in each other’s sections. Then, Arnau Monterde carried on a review of and intervened in various sections (specially from 3.4 onward), and was thereby added as co-author. Eloy Caloca contributed to the discussion on datacracy. Pablo Aragón drafted the section on laboratories.

How to cite

Xabier E. Barandiaran & Antonio Calleja-López, 2024, Decidim: political and technopolitical networks for participatory democracy.

Copyleft

Barcelona City Council and the authors of the text, under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International (CC-BY-SA-4.0) license and a GNU Free Documentation (GFDL-1.3-or-later) license.

Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License (CC-BY-SA-4.0)

You are free to copy and redistribute the material in any medium or format, remix, transform and build upon material, for any purpose, even commercially. The licensor may not revoke these freedoms as long as you comply with the licence’s terms. Under the following conditions: a) Attribution: you must provide an appropriate acknowledgement of the authorship, provide a link to the licence and state whether any changes have been made. You may do that in any reasonable way, but not in a way that would suggest you have the licensor’s support or receive it for the use you are making; b) ShareAlike: where you remix change or create from the material, you will have to disseminate your contributions under the same licence as the original. There are no additional restrictions, you may not apply legal terms or technological measures that legally restrict others from doing anything the licence permits. You can find full licences on the following links: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/deed.

GNU Free Documentation Licence (GFDL-1.3-or-later)

You are permitted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation Licence, version 1.3 or any other version subsequently published by the Free Software Foundation; without Invariant Sections or Front-Cover Texts, or Back-Cover Texts either. You can find a copy of the licence on http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/fdl.html.

How to contribute