Lessons Learned from Belgium MML workshops
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- Focus on making a good enforcement of already existing legislation mechanism rather than reinventing one from scratches;
- Make the high seas more visible to all stakeholders, the benefits for all and the issues at stake;
- Share data for a better cooperation and public engagement on the high seas;
- Empower European citizens, business representatives, researchers and policy makers to take informed decisions on the high seas through science education;
- Provide a quality framework in which all stakeholders can work toward a solution thanks to a good governance;
- Focus the workshop on a topic relevant for the participants and related to their daily lives;
- Hook RRI abstract subjects to a topic related to participants lives and interests;
- Look for participants open to dialogue, but who don't usually interact with each other;
- Use the SMART action format to ease the follow up of the workshop;
- Be careful of possible completion of other events happening as the same time in the same city or on the same topic;
- Send a personalised invitation to ensures a better buy-in of targeted participants;
- Start with a roundtable process so that everybody know each-other, and everyone can share their personal perspective of the subject;
- Have participants rank the priorities and discuss from the highest to the lowest to co-construct a common vision;
- Ensue that all participants stay until the end of the workshop to have coherent results;
- Put in place a mutli-stakeholder dialogue to efficiently reduce plastic pollution;
- Develop messages that make the problem tangible for everybody for instance by translating facts and figures into something simple and impactful.