Copy of Life as Practice: Complexity, Entanglement, and Public Policy

Copy of Life as Practice: Complexity, Entanglement, and Public Policy

Overview

Get ready to dive deep into the messy world of public policy - it's all about embracing the chaos and finding beauty in complexity!

We warmly invite you to a two-day workshop jointly organised by the University of Canberra’s Centre for Deliberative Democracy.

The workshop seeks to preview and discuss the forthcoming book Life as Practice: Complexity, Entanglement, and Public Policy (ADD the Press) by Hendrik Wagenaar, Adjunct Professor at the Centre for Deliberative Democracy, University of Canberra, and Fellow at the Centre for the Study of Contemporary Solidarity (CeSCoS), University of Vienna, Austria​.

This workshop reframes policymaking as a set of lived practices and explores how complexity, material entanglement, and ethics shape the way policies are designed, implemented, and experienced.

The workshop will be of particular interest to students and scholars of public policy, as well as policymakers, and practitioners seeking new ways of understanding and engaging with the messy realities of governance.

Location & Programme

Centre for Deliberative Democracy, Ann Harding Conference Centre (Building 24), University Drive South, University of Canberra, ACT 2617, Australia

Time: 10:00 – 14:00

About the Workshop
At the heart of this project is the idea that people engage with the world less through detached knowledge than through action in context. In acting, the world responds—prompting adaptation, learning, and often unintended consequences.

The book and workshop draw on practice theory and extend it in three ways:

· Complexity: Humans act within nested, evolving systems that defy prediction, shaping both risks and opportunities for policy.

· Entanglement: Practices are inseparable from the material world—natural and technological—which has agency of its own.

· Ethics: To act responsibly in such a world requires an ethics of entanglement attuned to human and non-human interdependence.

Through case studies—including the Netherlands’ Room for the River project—the author illustrates what a practice-driven governance might look like in theory and in action.

Who should attend?

· Scholars and students interested in practice theory, governance, and policy analysis

· Policymakers and public servants seeking innovative frameworks for navigating complexity

· Practitioners working at the interface of community, environment, and administration

Join us for lively conversations across disciplinary and professional boundaries as we rethink what it means to make and enact public policy in times of uncertainty.

Category: Government, Non-partisan

Lineup

Good to know

Highlights

  • 4 hours
  • In person

Location

Ann Harding Conference Centre

24 University Drive South

Bruce, ACT 2617 Australia

How do you want to get there?

Frequently asked questions

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Free
Feb 10 · 10:00 AM GMT+11