Is true, participatory democracy possible in the world today?
Headlines Theatre and Vancouver City Council think the answer is
YES!
The cuts to welfare policies in BC are having a profound effect
on all people throughout the Province. While these changes are the
jurisdiction of the Provincial Government, the impacts will be felt
locally, in homes, workplaces, schools and on our streets.
Practicing Democracy means making decisions about how we
support those who are most affected. How can the City of Vancouver
and its residents respond to the Provincial policy changes and not
criminalize people in poverty?
This is a chance for people to use theatre to communicate with
Government and define civic law. By putting our ideas into human,
theatrical form, we will affect policy and practice.
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What is Practicing Democracy?
In March of 2004, Headlines will tour an interactive theatre production
exploring how the city can respond to the cuts to welfare. The play
is performed once - showing a series of conflicts. Then, it is performed
a second time and the audience is invited to replace characters
in the play to create solutions. Based on the audience's ideas,
a Legal Expert will create a report for Vancouver City Council.
Using theatre, Practicing Democracy invites Vancouver residents
to create civic legislation!
The show will tour through Vancouver community halls March 3 -
21, 2004. In early April, the Legal Expert's Report will go to Vancouver
City Council, service providers, media and to you via our website.
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How was the topic chosen?
On February 27, 2003 Vancouver City Council unanimously passed
a motion confirming their participation in Practicing Democracy.
In April 2003, Headlines and City Council came up with a short
list of potential topics based on what would be relevant to City
Council in March 2004.
We then held a referendum through the company's extensive local
networks to determine which topic the play will focus on. Here are
the results:
How can a Ward System work?
In a "ward system" the elected person
represents a neighbourhood instead of the entire City. What are
the human mechanisms necessary to help make this work?
39 -- first choice 49 -- second choice total votes = 88
The relationship between youth and the police.
35 -- first choice 45 -- second choice total votes = 80
Seniors and the City.
Seniors are expressing fear about venturing out into the city and
when they do, find difficulty accessing many services. What can
the City do?
35 -- first choice 38 -- second choice total votes = 73
And the topic that Vancouver residents chose:
Results of welfare cuts
Province-wide cuts to welfare will take effect in March 2004, making
tens of thousands of people ineligible. In what ways can the City
of Vancouver respond to the resulting effects?
96 -- first choice 48 -- second choice total votes = 144
Thank you to all who participated! Your continued input is important
to us!
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Why focus on the cuts to welfare?
Of course welfare is the jurisdiction of the Province of British
Columbia not the City of Vancouver, so the first question that comes
up is, why focus on welfare cuts? The practicalities of what will
happen due to the welfare cuts will fall to municipalities and local
service providers. Already, we can see increases in homelessness,
panhandling, shelter and food bank usage, as well as increasing
difficulties for impoverished children, for people with mental health
issues, in policing....the list goes on.
For more detailed information please read, "A Bad Time to
Be Poor: An Analysis of British Columbia's New Welfare Policies"
by Seth Klein and Andrea Long. It was co-published by the Canadian
Centre for Policy Alternatives and the Social Planning and Research
Council of BC in June 2003. You can download
this report from www.policyalternatives.ca.
Although we wish that these problems were not happening, they are.
The challenge for a democratic society is to agree on ways to organize
around solutions for the future while not neglecting the realities
of the present. Legislative Theatre is a dynamic, democratic and
joyful mechanism for problem solving and the creation of community
dialogue. It is a way for people to use the theatre to communicate
with Government!
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How does the play get created?
Our mandate is to create theatre with people in community. What
this means is we will be using theatre games and exercises to explore
how the issues affect the lives of the participants who are living
the issues of the cuts to welfare. It is these points of tension
in the lived experiences of the workshop participants that will
form the subject matter of the play. This ensures that the play
is created by the community and not solely from the 'executive artist's'
perspective.
So how does this happen? From Feb. 1-6 we will gather a group of
30 participants. All participants will be paid to participate in
a week-long THEATRE FOR LIVING workshop, out of which will come
the core material for the Forum Theatre play. No acting or theatre
experience is required.
We had over 80 applicants for 30 positions! While this made our
selection process difficult, it demonstrated that many people are
interested in this project. We are grateful to everyone who applied.
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What will happen in this THEATRE FOR LIVING
workshop?
The workshop will use theatre games and exercises to build trust
and explore the experiences and perspectives of participants around
the cuts to welfare. To a large extent these games and exercises
are non-verbal. Participants will be asked to look into moments
of stress, tension, internal and external struggles from their own
lives in order to investigate issues at both a personal and a systemic
level. This will happen through a physical language -- not testimonials.
This workshop does not go to public performance. Its purpose is
to create a mandate for the creation of the Forum Theatre production
that will tour inside Vancouver. The workshop will take place from
February 1-6, 2004.
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What happens in Forum Theatre?
The play is performed once so the audience can see it. Then it
is performed again. This second time, audience members can yell
"Stop!" if they see someone struggling with a problem
and have an idea of how to solve that problem. The "Stop!"
freezes the action. The audience member enters the playing area,
takes the place of the character who is in struggle, and tries his/her
idea, improvising with the other actors. In this way the public
gets to use the theatre as a concrete tool to investigate various
perspectives on a particular issue and to find real solutions to
those problems in the real world. Forum Theatre is a rehearsal for
social change; the theatre becomes a tool for community dialogue.
It is fun, fast paced, meaningful, thought-provoking and always
entertaining.
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How is Legislative Theatre different from Forum
Theatre?
We will engage a legal expert for the project. At every performance,
it will be this person's job to document the ideas that come onto
the stage from the audience, collate them, study them, and translate
the desires at the core of the actions into legal language. This
will become "The Legal Expert's Report".
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What will happen with "The Legal Expert's
Report"?
Once the performances are over, The Legal Expert's Report will
be presented to City Council and participating
agencies as a discussion paper for the creation or revision
of civic legislation around the issues. City Council has agreed
to use the input as a valid part of their deliberations about the
issues at hand. We will also make the report available to service
providers, the media and anyone else who wants it.
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Where did this idea come from?
THEATRE FOR LIVING is based on the work of Augusto
Boal, the Brazilian creator of the "Theatre of the Oppressed".
In 1997, Boal became a Vereador (the equivalent of an MLA in BC)
in the District of Rio de Janeiro. As part of his agreement to run
for office, he took his entire theatre company into office with
him, and together they developed Legislative Theatre. In this system,
Forum Theatre was used to enable groups around Rio to create plays
on issues of importance to them. Through this interactive process,
they had the opportunity to suggest laws that might be passed to
improve their lives. Boal then took these laws to the Chamber and
proposed them. In this way, 22 laws were passed over two years.
As Boal writes in his book, "Legislative Theatre does not
accept that the elector should be a mere spectator to the actions
of the elected official, even when these actions are right: it wants
the electors to give their opinions, to discuss the issues, to put
forward counter-arguments, to share the responsibility for what
their elected official does." (Legislative Theatre: Using Performance
to Make Politics. Augusto Boal. Translated by Adrian Jackson, Routledge,
1999.)
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Has Legislative Theatre ever been done in Canada
before?
Legislative Theatre has never, to our knowledge, been done in Canada.
However, for over two decades Headlines has been a national and
international leader in the development of Boal-based theatre techniques.
We have had numerous successes in creating structural change through
this work. For example, as a result of a play that Headlines created
on refugee issues called ¿SANCTUARY?
(1989) the BC refugee hearing interview seating arrangement was
re-designed in order to create a more equal physical relationship
in the room.
In a more recent project, regarding safety for youth in the streets,
(Squeegee,
in 1999) legal advocate Rina Zweig, BA, and LL.B., created a report
for City Council based on the ideas and desires of audience interventions.
Even though the Council of the day refused to participate in the
project, agencies working with street youth took the recommendations
in it seriously and adapted their programs. Read the Squeegee
Report.
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Read Mayor Campbell's Letter
Read the Mayor's letter, click
here.
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