Decentered Media

Decentered Media

Innovation in Communications for Social Change

  • Home
  • Blog
    • Arts
    • Media
    • Policy Discussion
    • Reviews
    • Travels in Metamodernity
    • Community Media
    • Creative Economy
    • Foundational Media
  • Clients & Offer
    • Offer
    • Community Media
    • Social Media
    • Media Literacies
    • Digital Inclusion
    • Training
    • Media
  • Research
    • Research Ethics
    • Transmit-Transform Internews Research Project
    • Research Themes
    • Research Posts
    • Publications
    • Citations
  • Projects
    • Community Cohesion DRAFT Charter for Community & Local Media
    • Radio Lear
    • Leicester Stories
    • Evington Echo
    • Churchgate Stories
    • Leicester Stories Programmes
    • Womens Voices in Conflict and Peace
    • Y-Heritage Norfolk Draft Media
  • Podcasts
    • Decentered Media Podcast
    • Leicester Stories Podcast
  • Gallery
    • Thailand 2024
    • Civic Media
    • AI Images
    • LCR Awards 2022
    • Community Media 2022
    • LCR Awards 2021
    • Community Media 2021
    • Community Media 2020
    • Covid-19 Symbols
    • Bangkok 2019
    • Siena September 2019
    • Soundart
    • Community Media 2019
    • Community Media 2018
    • Community Media 2016
    • Community Media 2015
    • Podcast Recordings
    • Ghana August 2018
    • Cambodia 2018
  • About
    • Rob Watson
    • My Beliefs
    • Contact
    • Complaints
    • Policies and Safeguarding
      • Freedom of Speech
      • Sex, Gender Identity, and Freedom of Expression
      • Equality of Opportunity
      • Academic Freedom
      • Safeguarding Policy
      • GDPR Policy
    • Community Media Discussion
    • Directory
    • Knowledge Base
  • Newsletter
  • Book a Meeting
  • Better Media
  • Radio Lear
  • Soar Sound
  • Evington Echo
  • Foundational Media

Welcoming the Plan for Neighbourhoods – The Missing Role of Community Media

04/03/2025 Rob Watson Community Media, Policy Discussion, Public Purpose Media 0

Screenshot 2025 03 04 115453

The UK Government’s today announced its Plan for Neighbourhoods. This plan represents a significant step towards addressing long-standing issues of deprivation, social inequality, and community decline. With a commitment of £1.5 billion over the next decade, this initiative is designed to empower seventy-five of the most deprived neighbourhoods by creating Neighbourhood Boards, bringing together local residents, businesses, and service providers to develop and implement tailored Regeneration Plans.

This approach—long-term, place-based, and community-led—rightly acknowledges that the most effective solutions to local challenges come from within communities themselves. However, while the plan outlines an ambitious vision for local engagement, there is a noticeable gap: the role of community media is absent from this framework.

The Plan for Neighbourhoods – A Systemic Approach to Renewal

At its core, the Plan for Neighbourhoods operates on principles of localism, participation, and accountability. Each selected area will establish a Neighbourhood Board, responsible for identifying the priorities of their community and shaping the Regeneration Plan. Unlike previous top-down regeneration schemes, this model hands power to communities, allowing them to decide how best to use government investment to improve housing, employment opportunities, local services, and social infrastructure.

Importantly, this is a long-term commitment. With funding allocated over a ten-year period, the plan seeks to embed sustainable change rather than short-lived interventions. By supporting local leadership and collaborative decision-making, it aims to foster a renewed sense of civic pride and social resilience.

Yet, for this approach to succeed, effective communication, accountability, and public participation are crucial—and this is where community media has a fundamental role to play.

The Missing Element – Community Media as a Tool for Engagement and Accountability

Community media—whether in the form of local radio, podcasts, digital storytelling platforms, or independent journalism—has long been an essential mechanism for informing, engaging, and empowering communities. It provides a vital space for discussion, storytelling, and democratic participation, particularly for those who are often underrepresented in mainstream media. By integrating community media into the Plan for Neighbourhoods, the government and local Neighbourhood Boards can enhance their engagement strategies in several key ways:

Ensuring Transparency and Accountability

Neighbourhood Boards will be responsible for making major decisions about regeneration priorities, resource allocation, and programme implementation. Community media can act as an independent monitor, reporting on Board decisions, scrutinising progress, and ensuring that local voices remain at the heart of the process.

Amplifying Local Voices and Stories

The plan rightly focuses on community participation, but meaningful involvement requires accessible and inclusive platforms where people can share their experiences, express concerns, and contribute ideas. Community media can provide these platforms, using formats such as call-in radio shows, interviews, podcasts, and digital storytelling projects.

Bridging Information Gaps

Many of the areas targeted by the plan are communities where trust in institutions has eroded. Traditional top-down communication strategies often fail to reach or resonate with local populations. Community media, by contrast, is rooted in trust and familiarity, making it an ideal vehicle for explaining policy changes, highlighting local opportunities, and fostering civic engagement.

Encouraging Active Participation

Participation does not begin and end with attending Neighbourhood Board meetings. Community media can help maintain ongoing engagement by keeping residents informed about upcoming decisions, facilitating debates, and encouraging people to take part in shaping their local area.

Providing Media Training and Capacity Building

The Plan for Neighbourhoods aims to improve local skills and employment prospects. Investing in community media training can provide young people and adults with valuable communication, digital literacy, and media production skills—helping to build community capacity while creating a more informed and engaged public.

Moving Forward – Integrating Community Media into the Regeneration Process

For the Plan for Neighbourhoods to realise its full potential, community media should be formally recognised as a key component of local engagement strategies. This could be achieved through:

  • Dedicated funding to support local media initiatives that report on Neighbourhood Board activities and promote civic dialogue.
  • Partnerships between Neighbourhood Boards and community media organisations, ensuring that information about regeneration efforts reaches a broad audience.
  • Incorporating media training programmes into local skills development initiatives, helping communities develop their own storytelling and reporting platforms.

If the government truly wants to foster sustainable, locally-driven change, it must recognise that independent, accountable, and community-focussed media is a fundamental part of the solution. Without this, there is a risk that the Plan for Neighbourhoods will struggle to engage and mobilise the very communities it seeks to empower.

A Call for Community Media Inclusion

The Plan for Neighbourhoods offers an important opportunity to rebuild local pride, social cohesion, and economic resilience. But for this vision to be realised, the programme must embrace a truly holistic approach to engagement—one that includes independent and community-driven media as a pillar of transparency, participation, and local democracy.

At Decentered Media, we believe that community media is not an afterthought—it is an essential part of strengthening local identity and resilience. We urge policymakers and Neighbourhood Boards to seize this opportunity and embed community media as a core tool for empowering people, strengthening accountability, and sustaining meaningful civic engagement.

If you are involved in community media or a local neighbourhood initiative and want to explore ways to collaborate, get in touch, and support this work by subscribing to Patreon. Decentered Media is self-funded, and every contribution helps our work. Let’s ensure that the voices of communities are not just heard, but actively shape the future of our neighbourhoods.

Share this:

  • Click to share on X (Opens in new window) X
  • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Click to share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window) LinkedIn
  • Click to share on WhatsApp (Opens in new window) WhatsApp
  • Click to print (Opens in new window) Print

Like this:

Like Loading...

Related

  • Civic Engagement
  • community media
  • Neighbourhood Boards
Screenshot 2025 03 04 094316Previous

Community Media – A Security Asset Hiding in Plain Sight

ImageNext

Challenging the ‘Audience’ Concept in UK Media Regulation, Operations, and Development

Become a Patron and support Decentered Media on Patreon
subscribeSubscribe to my channel
«
Prev
1
/
41
Next
»
loading
play
Decentered Media Podcast – Foundational Media and the Problem of Polarisation
play
Decentered Media Podcast – Foundational Media and the Problem of Polarisation
play
Checking in following flu…
«
Prev
1
/
41
Next
»
loading

Get Regular Updates from Decentered Media

Sign up to receive news about community-focussed communication in your inbox, every month.

We don’t spam! Read our privacy policy for more info.

Check your inbox or spam folder to confirm your subscription.

Decentered Media Podcast

Apple PodcastsSpotifyAmazon MusicAndroidby EmailTuneInYoutube MusicMore Subscribe Options
Follow on Instagram
Meta
  • Log in
  • Entries feed
  • Comments feed
  • Powered by WordPress.com.
White trust mark portrait shape
Login with Patreon
Login with Patreon
Latest Listings
  • There are currently no listings to show.
Associations
























PRS Limited Online Music Licence LE-0037601
ORCID iD iconhttps://orcid.org/0000-0002-3856-0391
Mastodon

Copyright © 2026 | WordPress Theme by MH Themes

Discover more from Decentered Media

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading

%d