Creative Bureaucracy Festival Award Recipients 2018-2021
Award 2021
As the founder of the diversity network Diplomats of Color, Tiaji Sio is an essential driving force behind the anti-racism discourse in the Foreign Service.
Diplomats of Color currently has 150 members – as well as supporters such as the former Siemens CHRO, Janina Kugel and the German politician Aminata Touré. In 2019, Sio also headed the legal and consular department of the German Embassy in Senegal for two months and was able to enforce the acquittal of two wrongly imprisoned people.
For Tiaji Sio, seeing that her own actions make a difference in society is her greatest achievement.
Hamdan Abdul Majeed is the Managing Director of Think City, a social purpose organisation with the mission of making cities more people-friendly, resilient and liveable. As a regional city making agency, Think City provides urban policy thinking, management and implementation of urban solutions, while advocating change in the way cities are planned, curated, developed, and celebrated. A subsidiary of Khazanah Nasional, the sovereign wealth investment arm of Malaysia, Think City’s work has reversed the decline of George Town, Penang, putting it on the international list of 10 Best Places to Visit. Think City now focuses on four areas of urban rejuvenation: Placemaking, Analytics, Resilience and Conservation encapsulated in Penang 2030, with the vision of a family-oriented, green and smart Penang.
Majeed was formerly an investment banker and has an interest in the
development of civil society in Malaysia, and the political economy of the Third World and Islamic Economics.
The Finnish Government & Demos Helsinki
Finland’s Steering 2020 Initiative and Humble Government approach represent a paradigm shift in developing and implementing policy. It acknowledges the government’s fallibility. It argues that, when dealing with multifaceted problems characterized by uncertainty, we cannot know in advance how differing policy-solutions will play out in the real world. Instead, we must continuously investigate different options, experiment and test them where they will be implemented.
Conventional policy-making requires strong consensus on how or when to start achieving a particular goal. It assumes we can successfully anticipate and steer the future. A humble approach, by contrast, allows actors to begin solving a problem as soon as they have reached a thin consensus on common directions and initial, exploratory approaches. A thin consensus is a shared understanding on the urgency of a particular problem. Agreement of broad goals allows them to be pursued and, circumstances permitting, the core values that underpin them. It requires trust.
Award 2020
Rudi Dicks
We are awarding the Creative Bureaucracy Festival Award 2020 to Rudi Dicks, who is head of the project management office in the private office of the South African president Cyril Ramaphosa. He has shown extra-ordinary dexterity and negotiation skills in brokering solutions by bringing together the country’s multiple partners from the public administration, the business and civic worlds and community. He is a real enabler, a fixer and an unblocker, such as organizing the Jobs Summit that created the country’s employment programme, fast tracking the widening of South Africa’s broadband by a few years, simplifying the water license system that previously had blocked investment and job creation.
Lisa Witter & Robyn Scott
We are awarding the Creative Bureaucracy Festival Award 2020 to Robyn Scott and Lisa Witter who co-founded Apolitical in 2015. This astonishing organization has since created a network of 85,000 public servants from across the globe. Government is critical to solving global challenges and Apolitical seeks to bring 21st century learning and the best skills and solutions into it by helping public servants to connect and share knowledge and by being active in their global learning platform. This can give them a sense that they are part of a wider community of effective change makers working to solve the world’s hardest challenges in the common interest and for the public good.
Christian Drosten
The Creative Bureaucracy Festival Award 2020 is awarded to a highly decorated scientist in public service – but not for his scientific contributions like the development of the first Corona virus testing that deserve highest recognition and certainly represent outstanding creativity. The Berlin virologist and Charité professor Christian Drosten is honoured for his public service in the public. Unlike many academics who shy away from popular media, Christian Drosten explained in great detail and with uttermost patience the details of research on the corona virus. He openly confessed what is still unsolved despite all academic effort and had the boldness to correct his positions in public, when new evidence surfaced. Christian Drosten contributed to a well informed public and trust in public institutions in challenging times.
Award 2019
Amalia Zepou
As a former Deputy Mayor for Civil Society and Innovation in Athens, she built the synAthina platform, which systematically mobilises citizens to participate in public problem-solving processes, initiating a “new era of social innovation,” according to the OECD.
Geoff Mulgan
As a former government advisor and then Chief Executive of NESTA in the UK, he helped initiate and drive forward numerous government innovation projects worldwide. He is considered a leading expert in social and public innovation.
Daniel Zimmermann
At the age of 27, he was elected mayor of the city of Monheim am Rhein in Southwestern Germany. Since he took office, he has become a role model for modern, citizen-centric, and pragmatic public management at the municipal level.
Award 2018
Jutta Weitz
An employee of the housing administration in Berlin-Mitte, Weitz gave vacant commercial spaces around the Auguststrasse area to artists and cultural professionals. Thanks to her commitment and foresight, the neighbourhood has become the art district we know today.
Christian Bason
As director of MindLab, one of the first interministerial innovation labs worldwide, he advised the Danish government on the reform and renewal of the public administration – and has become a thought leader on helping governments better meet the need of their citizens.
Gabriella Gomez-Mont
As head of the Laboratorio para la Ciudad innovation lab in Mexico City, she initiated projects such as “City for Children” in difficult neighbourhoods or crowd sourced a Mexico City constitution. Her experience as artist, documentary filmmaker and journalist helped her work