Partnership Grants

Collaborative grant making is at the heart of Participedia’s research network.

Participedia is rooted in collaboration, launched in 2009 by Mark Warren at UBC and Archon Fung at Harvard University. The co-founders connected and fostered a thriving research network that, among many other initiatives, built the worlds largest crowdsourced dataset on democratic innovations: Participedia.net.

To do this work, the network has relied on large scale partnership grants, and since 2015 has been funded by the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada.

Convening, strategizing and co-creating grant making systems that stand the test of time is a core strength of Participedia Centre for Democratic Innovation.

Participedia Phase 2

$2.5 Million CAD

SSHRC Partnership Grant
2021-2026

McMaster University logo with emblem featuring a stylized bird and book.

Participedia Phase 1

$2.5 Million CAD

SSHRC Partnership Grant
2015-2021

UBC logo with waves and leaf design

Participedia Phase 2

2021 - 2026

McMaster University logo with emblem featuring a stylized bird and book.

Participedia Phase 2 is directed by Principle Investigator Dr. Bonny Ibhawoh at McMaster University.

The project is funded by a Canadian Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council (SSHRC) Partnership grant from 2021-2026. Phase 2 aims to promote global cross-sectoral knowledge that supports democratic innovation and resilience. During this project phase, team members will collaborate to produce research and mobilize knowledge to directly address current challenges to democracy and democratization. This new phase of Participedia’s research brings together 63 researchers from 22 universities and 21 organizations across 12 countries.

Read more about the SSHRC Partnership Network grant here.

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Attendees sitting in a conference room, listening attentively, and taking notes.

Participedia Phase 2

Mission Statement

Participedia is a global network and crowdsourcing platform for researchers, educators, practitioners, policymakers, activists, and anyone interested in democratic innovations.

By democratic, we mean practices or institutions that potentially advance ideals of self-government—individually, collectively, and across time, space, and geography. By innovations we mean practices or institutions that are relatively new to a context or place. Our mission is to mobilize knowledge about democracy-enhancing practices and institutions that people are inventing, remolding, protecting, and transferring from other contexts.

Although committed to democratic ideals, Participedia does not advance any ideological, programmatic, institutional, or government agenda. We believe that there are many ways to advance democracy, and that they will differ by place, history, culture, and context-based challenges. We recognize existing inequalities in the collection, theorization, and mobilization of knowledge about non-Western forms of democratic innovations. Participedia is committed to working to address this imbalance. We also recognize that not all cases and methods documented by Participedia will advance democracy, and that impacts will vary by context. “Our mission is to mobilize knowledge about democracy-enhancing practices and institutions that will support answers to the question: What kinds of democratic innovations work best, for what purposes, under what conditions?

Participedia Phase 1 emphasized democratic innovations in participatory governance. Participedia Phase 2, launched in June 2021, is expanding to include a broader range of practices and institutions that potentially support democratic ideals, including innovations in human and political rights, democratic accountability, democratic representation, democracy across borders, and digital communications. Phase 2 recognizes that the democratic project builds on complex ecologies of practices and institutions, and will develop the conceptual infrastructure necessary to capture these broader domains of democratic innovations through crowdsourcing.

Participedia Phase 1

2025 - 2021

UBC logo with waves and leaf design

Participedia Phase 1 was directed by Principle Investigator Mark Warren at the University of British Columbia.

The project, funded by a SSHRC Partnership grant from 2015-2021, addressed the research challenge of curating and mobilizing knowledge associated with thousands of kinds of democratic innovations that are in place in countries all over the world. We did so by digitally crowdsourcing knowledge in an area of research marked by rapid development and highly dispersed knowledge, much of it practical rather than academic.

Participedia.net is an open source online platform for collaborative co-production of knowledge about democratic innovations, with a focus on participatory governance. Its content comprises user-contributed articles and data available in multiple languages. Participedia is now the world’s largest repository of information about participatory governance, and we have built a global network of academics and practitioners who support and use it.

Prior to Phase 1, the Participedia project was founded in 2009 by Archon Fung (Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University) and Mark E. Warren (Department of Political Science, University of British Columbia).


Contact us

info@participedia.net

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