About | HeinOnline Law Journal Library | HeinOnline Law Journal Library | HeinOnline

93 Nat'l Civic Rev. 2 (2004)

handle is hein.journals/natmnr93 and id is 1 raw text is: 



INTRODUCTION


Note from the Editor


In cooperation with our publisher, Jossey-Bass, the National
Civic League  undertook the recent redesign of the National
Civic Review as a means of repositioning the journal to play a
more prominent role in the public discourse of civic democracy.
As part of this effort, we continue to seek the most informed,
interesting writing on the important challenges and opportuni-
ties facing our country in the areas of political reform, commu-
nity building, local government, and civic engagement.

As we refine our editorial schedule, readers can look forward
to  upcoming   issues that focus  on  convergent  interests
between  political reform and social justice groups, the status
and future of public journalism, and collaboration as a means
for promoting civic engagement. We will also continue to build
the departments   in the back of  the journal and  use this
resource as a way to feature timely and insightful analyses and
updates on  a number  of topics. We encourage anyone  inter-
ested in contributing to the Review to contact me with your
ideas and suggestions. And as always, we welcome your feed-
back, and we would like to establish an E-Letters to the Editor
section in order to share such comments with our readers.

As part of the redesign of the National Civic Review, the Note
from the Editor will be used in a more deliberate way to artic-
ulate the perspective and communicate  the activities of the
National Civic League to our readership. In general, this page
has introduced readers to the essays of each issue, framing
them  in broader  themes  of civic engagement  and  citizen
democracy.  This practice will be complemented  by periodic
commentary  on  activities of the League that are germane to
the focus of the particular issue of the Review. The intent is
less to blow our own horn than it is to acquaint our audience
with ongoing projects of the organization and encourage dia-
logue on the issues raised in the journal.

The  central focus of the current issue is on organizational
structures, leadership, and new ideas about home  rule. The
three articles by Nicholas P. Bollman, John O'Loooney, and
Mara  A. Marks set up an interesting array of perspectives on
these intersecting topics. Ongoing work by NCL in St. Louis
adds another slant to this mix and warrants a brief mention
here. Since September  2003,  NCL  has been working  with a
stakeholder group in St. Louis that is assessing the structure
of their city's government.

This project, known as Advance Saint Louis, is predicated on
a recent home  rule amendment  to the Missouri state consti-


tution that gave the residents of St. Louis the authority to
restructure parts of the city government that had been under
state mandate.  While  still very much a  work  in progress
(stakeholder meetings  are scheduled  to run through  early
May),  Advance  Saint Louis  is a remarkable  citizen-driven
effort that brings deliberation to bear on structural issues of
local government reform. The stakeholder group is looking at
ways to improve the accountability, effectiveness, efficiency,
equity, and responsiveness  of city government in four key
areas: overall organizational structure, fiscal management,
roles and responsibilities of the Board of Aldermen, and per-
sonnel administration.

These  issues are more commonly   handled by empowering  a
blue-ribbon panel of experts. Advance Saint Louis is a dra-
matic example  of what NCL  considers to be part of the new
role for citizens in a revitalized civic democracy. Citizen-based
deliberative processes hold great promise for creating solu-
tions that are not only efficacious but which also enjoy wide-
spread legitimacy and public support.

Presuming  that this deliberative process results in recom-
mendations  for changing  the city charter, ballot language
would be drafted for a vote in November 2004. A 60 percent
electoral majority is required to approve any changes to the
charter.

Stakeholders are discussing  the trade-offs among different
choices and the tensions between different values. The value
pair of efficiency and equity is most commonly perceived as
involving inherent trade-offs but there are tensions among
the values of accountability, effectiveness, and responsive-
ness as well. As the stakeholders look to ways of finding con-
sensus, they are developing a sophisticated appreciation of
the issues involved. This appreciation will be important in the
process of communicating   to their fellow St. Louisans the
recommendations   that the stakeholders come  up  with and
the rationale for any proposed changes  to the city charter.
Citizen-based deliberation around critical governance issues
such  as home  rule, organizational structures, and political
leadership is likely to be an ever-more important element in
the armamentarium of self-governance. We intend to pay
close and continued  attention to such processes and would
like to highlight developments in other parts of the country as
time goes on.

                                              Robert Loper


2   National Civic  Review

What Is HeinOnline?

HeinOnline is a subscription-based resource containing thousands of academic and legal journals from inception; complete coverage of government documents such as U.S. Statutes at Large, U.S. Code, Federal Register, Code of Federal Regulations, U.S. Reports, and much more. Documents are image-based, fully searchable PDFs with the authority of print combined with the accessibility of a user-friendly and powerful database. For more information, request a quote or trial for your organization below.



Short-term subscription options include 24 hours, 48 hours, or 1 week to HeinOnline.

Contact us for annual subscription options:

Already a HeinOnline Subscriber?

profiles profiles most