|
The National Civic League (NCL) is America's original advocate
for community democracy. It is a non-profit, non-partisan, membership
organization dedicated to strengthening citizen democracy by transforming
democratic institutions. NCL fosters innovative community building
and political reform, assists local governments, and recognizes
collaborative community achievement. NCL accomplishes its mission
through technical assistance, training, publishing, research,
and the All-America City Awards, America's original and most prestigious
community recognition program.
NCL brings together all sectors of our society - public, private,
and nonprofit - to address our common needs and build a thriving
democracy. NCL envisions a country where citizens are actively
engaged in self-governance and works to create an active civic
culture reflective of the diversity of community voices. Understanding
and supporting effective local government is a significant part
of NCL's overall commitment to the goal of reinvigorating citizen
democracy.
NCL was founded in 1894, when more than 100 educators, journalists,
business leaders, and policy makers met in Philadelphia to discuss
the future of American cities. Those who attended the conference
included Theodore Roosevelt, Louis Brandeis, Marshall Field, and
Frederick Law Olmsted. The gathering was organized in response
to widespread municipal government corruption and served as a
national call to "raise the popular standards of political
morality."
The conference delegates voted unanimously for the formation of
the National Municipal League - later named the National Civic
League - to help answer this call to action. The organization
set out to make city governments more honest and efficient by
creating a national network of local reform groups that could
learn from each other's successes and failures.
The All-America City Awards
program, which since 1949 has recognized the efforts
of extraordinary communities, is perhaps the best known
NCL program. Each year the National Civic League honors
ten communities for effectively addressing their most
critical challenges.
|
|
More About Us
General Information
Outside Resources
|
|
|
Just
as it has since its inception, the National Civic League continues
to serve as a catalyst and convener of nationwide initiatives
to meet the difficult challenges facing America's communities.
In addition to maintaining a national network and sharing news
of cutting-edge approaches to community problem solving, the National
Civic League works directly with communities though the Community
Services Program. This program provides professional
technical assistance to communities that need help in bringing
diverse constituencies together to solve common problems. NCL
facilitators help bridge the sometimes serious gap between elected
and appointed local government officials and community leaders
through an array of services including conflict resolution, strategic
planning, program implementation, performance measurement, charter
reform, and diversity training.
The New Politics Program
recognizes and promotes innovative political reforms implemented
across the country at the state and local level. The first project
for the New Politics Program was to study local campaign finance
reform legislation. From this study, the program developed a menu
of model campaign finance reform measures and began working directly
in communities to catalyze the discussion for political
reform by providing facilitation and education. Since this time,
the New Politics Program has expanded the scope of its work and
begun to focus on other approaches to increasing citizen engagement
in the political process. Recent projects include work on candidate
codes of conduct, revision of the National Civic League's Model
City Charter, use of technology by local governments, and local
government regulation of elected officials through ethics and
lobbying legislation.
In the Spring of 2002, because of NCL's success working with
comprehensive, collaborative driven, multi-year, multi-stakeholder
national demonstrations, The Federal-Community
Partnerships program was established. The Federal-Community
partnerships program serves as an invaluable resource to communities
participating in federal, state, or local partnerships. Acting
as an intermediary, FCP is able to provide high quality services
to communities, while brokering the often complex relationships
that exist within these partnerships. FCP staff is equipped with
the skills necessary to build strong relationships, understand
theory and translate it to diverse audiences, and recognize the
contextual framework in which partnerships operate. FCP accomplishes
the broader mission of the National Civic League by facilitating
stronger democratic processes between multiple diverse stakeholders
through the promotion of stronger collaborative efforts, better
service integration, and the essential systems reform groundwork
to sustain these processes. Federal-Community Partnerships staff
are currently working on two national demonstration projects funded
by the Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention of
the US Dept. of Justice.
Since the release of its first conference proceedings in 1894,
the National Civic League has relied on publications as a principal
means of outreach and education. Over the years, the NCL
Press has published numerous manuals for local governance
and administrative reform, including the Model City Charter,
the Handbook for Council Members, the Guide for Charter
Commissions, the Handbook for Strategic Planning and Visioning,
and the Civic Index: Measuring Your Community's Civic Health,
and continues to publish and distribute resource materials on
a wide variety of topics. In addition, for 90 years, NCL's quarterly
journal, the National Civic Review, has provided thoughtful
commentary and discussion on issues affecting citizen involvement
in government and community problem solving. |