Learning Hub
Public Participation
Public participation means people can comment on proposals before decisions are finalised.
Plain-language explanation
Public participation means people can comment on proposals before decisions are finalised.
Why it matters
Public Participation matters because constitutional language only becomes useful when ordinary people can connect it to real institutions, public services, and personal rights.
Practical example
A draft policy is published, residents submit written comments, and the final version records what changed.
Civic relevance
Participation turns constitutional discussion from a document into a public process.
Public Comments
Participate in the conversation
No approved comments have been published yet.