- Social cohesion and community including identity, sense of belonging, trust etc.
- Diversity and inclusion in communities and institutions
- Equity in access to housing, education, employment, health services, and recreation
- Engagement and governance, that is equal access to decision making processes
- Systematically map and identify all stakeholder groups and pay attention to identifying underserved and minority groups. This will differ from community to community, and from project to project. You might ask yourselves questions like: Are we truly engaging children and youth; elderly and disabled citizens? How do we engage cultural minority groups or different income groups? Who is most like to be most positively and negatively impacted, and have we consulted these groups?
- Make use of different approaches to engagement since citizens experience varying barriers and opportunities to fully contribute to engagement processes. This might be time constraints, language barriers, knowledge and prior experience, lack of trust or self-efficacy. It is vital that each engagement process is designed to ensure accessibility and meaning for all relevant groups of stakeholders. Based on experience, we recommend combining analogue and digital engagement activities and using activities that allow for individual contributions and co-creation.
- Make sure to assess the possible positive and negative, as well as intended and unintended impacts; and make sure to also assess the distribution of these impacts on different subgroups, such as different age groups, cultural minority groups, and economically disadvantaged groups.
- Use accepted, credible, and robust methodology, data and valuation measures and being transparent about the methodological approaches applied and the data sources used – and combine quantitative and qualitative data.
- Focus on valuation of social values that can be directly linked to the investments, since these are the social values, that can be managed and therefore the most likely to be realised. Being able to build a solid case for how your investment has contributed to realising the social return is key to the overall creditability of your valuation.
- Make use of established monetary value for different kinds of social impacts, since this increases the credibility of your valuation, and also ensure comparability between analysis of the social value and social return from different investments.