Sustaining community engagement—both digital and offline—requires strategic approaches that foster long-term ownership, meaningful participation, and trust. This article explores the mechanisms that keep communities involved over time, focusing on communication continuity, participatory governance, responsive feedback systems, and gamified engagement models. Drawing from civic technology and participatory governance research, it argues that lasting engagement occurs when communities perceive tangible impact and when participation is embedded in transparent, co-owned structures. Through case studies such as HarassMap in Egypt, e-Estonia, Ushahidi in Kenya, and the Code for America Brigade, the article demonstrates how communication, recognition, and empowerment foster resilience and continuity. The discussion emphasizes balancing intrinsic and extrinsic motivations, integrating recognition with purpose, and designing adaptive systems that evolve alongside communities.
Anna Neya Kazanskaia (Wed,) studied this question.