
How to inspire people to dress ethically and sustainably?
1,466 proposals 264,859 votes Consultation from 19 February 2026 to 16 April 2026
In a rapidly shifting world, the key to building positive and sustainable change is massive engagement. We empower citizens, employees and stakeholders thanks to online tools and innovative collaboration methodologies

From February 11 to February 22, thousands of citizens from across Europe have contributed their ideas, concerns, and experiences to the dialogue platform supporting the Young Citizens Assembly on Pollinators. Implemented for the Young Citizens Assembly on Pollinators (set up by the European Commission), together with ifok and Missions Publiques, this open online platform allowed citizens to react to questions raised by Assembly members and share their perspectives on how Europe can reverse pollinator decline. The results reveal strong public awareness of the issue and broad support for ambitious action to protect pollinators. Participants highlighted pesticides as the main cause for pollinator decline and identified agriculture and land use as the key levers to reverse this trend.
Read the articleOpen in a new windowIn today’s digital public sphere, institutional engagement is no longer simply about visibility. Messages compete in an environment shaped by fragmented audiences, algorithmic platforms, and rapidly evolving narratives. For European institutions, the challenge is no longer only what to communicate, but how to create meaningful links with citizens. That is why Make.org joined Cronos Europa’s efforts, alongside Communities, and BeInfluence. We developed “The Ripple Effect” - exploring how institutions can adapt to this new environment. We argue that sustainable communication does not come from isolated campaigns but from interconnected waves of engagement, the ripples, that spread through communities, technology, and, curically, dialogue.
Read the articleOpen in a new windowStéphane Garcia and Valentina Holecz (Co-President of “Et Pk Pas”) look back on the success of the consultation that brought together nearly 14,000 Swiss citizens to rethink the civic Service.
Read the articleOpen in a new window