Does Participatory Planning Promise Too Much? Global Discourses and the Glass Ceiling of Participation in Urban Malawi
Peer reviewed, Journal article
Accepted version
Date
2019-04-29Metadata
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Original version
Planning Theory & Practice. 2019, 20 (2), 241-257. 10.1080/14649357.2019.1606928https://doi.org/10.1080/14649357.2019.1606928
Abstract
This article discusses how global ideas on co-production and citizenship built from below are translated into community mobilization and participatory planning practices in urban Malawi. It shows how limited national and local resources, disconnections from national and urban policies of redistribution, and a local politics shaped by both clientelism and democratic reforms create a glass ceiling for what global models of community mobilization and participation are able to achieve. It calls for a more systematic and empirically diverse research agenda to better understand how participatory discourses and practices embedded in grassroots organizing are transferred and mediated in place.