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Across the West Midlands, young changemakers are turning lived experience into policy action. - 💬 Explore their proposals and track their impact here

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Digital safe(r) spaces should seek to expand what becomes possible by increasing equity in who can participate, building trust in how participation is supported, enabling self‑expression beyond dominant norms, and creating moments of joy that make political work livable and sustainable. (Ahmed, 2017; Gumbs, 2016). Intersectional frameworks remind us that if a process only works for the people whose perspective is easily valued and validated, it does not work: design must start from the vantage point of those facing the heaviest layers of discrimination and precarity (Crenshaw, 1991; Collins, 2019). 

Trust grows when participants see their words travel into policy, exhibitions, assemblies, and institutional changes rather than disappearing into opaque systems (Parry & Curato, 2024). Self‑expression and joy show up in games, art‑based methods, memes, food, humour, playlists, and side conversations that refuse to separate “serious” politics from embodied cultural life, making it safer to arrive as a whole person (Brown, 2017). In this sense, digital safe(r) spaces are less a guarantee than an invitation: they create conditions where more people can take risks, say no, say yes, and imagine futures together without being punished for who they are.

  • Assess whether success metrics recognise diverse forms of learning and building trust (between participants, team members, with institutions), not only technical or institutional outputs

  • Include project health indicators on who participates, who remains silent, and who is absent, that can be evaluated periodically

  • Plan moments to reflect on and adapt to evolving participation dynamics

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