This issue of Footprint examines the recent participatory turn in urban planning and urban design. It discusses the co-opting of participatory processes by planning departments, the systematic disregard of inequalities, and the empowering of the market resulting from the ‘anti-statism’ present in many participatory schemes. What is the relationship between the institutionalisation of participation and the practices of autonomy, self-organisation, and inclusion? When and how does genuine empowerment of collectives take place? Does the demand for the empowerment of local organisations and communities strengthen the market forces at the expense of central government? This issue attempts to problematise ‘participation’, to call attentions...
Recent political and economic crises have increased the awareness of the need, challenges and opport...
Neoliberal development has increased spatial inequalities for communities in both urban and peri-urb...
Despite the ambition to involve people on more equal terms, participation often still means that the...
This issue of Footprint examines the recent participatory turn in urban planning and urban design. I...
This issue of Footprint examines the recent participatory turn in urban planning and urban design. I...
This article begins to construct a theory of participation in architecture, urban design and urban p...
Over the recent decades, we have experienced a shift away from technocratic planning towards the ide...
xiii, 312 leaves :ill. ; 30 cm. Includes bibliographical references. "July 2007". University of Otag...
The challenges to public participation in planning are numerous. Inclusive and equitable processes a...
In the fifty years since the Skeffington Committee was formed to investigate how planning might resp...
This paper aims to advance the development of participation in urban design from a substantive stand...
This paper explores the roles and practices of collective citizen engagement in spatial planning. Dr...
A city's public spaces play an integral part in the daily lives of people and, when altered, the cos...
The critical literature on participation warns that a focus on 'consensus' evades the poli...
The involvement of local communities in public space planning and design processes is widely promote...
Recent political and economic crises have increased the awareness of the need, challenges and opport...
Neoliberal development has increased spatial inequalities for communities in both urban and peri-urb...
Despite the ambition to involve people on more equal terms, participation often still means that the...
This issue of Footprint examines the recent participatory turn in urban planning and urban design. I...
This issue of Footprint examines the recent participatory turn in urban planning and urban design. I...
This article begins to construct a theory of participation in architecture, urban design and urban p...
Over the recent decades, we have experienced a shift away from technocratic planning towards the ide...
xiii, 312 leaves :ill. ; 30 cm. Includes bibliographical references. "July 2007". University of Otag...
The challenges to public participation in planning are numerous. Inclusive and equitable processes a...
In the fifty years since the Skeffington Committee was formed to investigate how planning might resp...
This paper aims to advance the development of participation in urban design from a substantive stand...
This paper explores the roles and practices of collective citizen engagement in spatial planning. Dr...
A city's public spaces play an integral part in the daily lives of people and, when altered, the cos...
The critical literature on participation warns that a focus on 'consensus' evades the poli...
The involvement of local communities in public space planning and design processes is widely promote...
Recent political and economic crises have increased the awareness of the need, challenges and opport...
Neoliberal development has increased spatial inequalities for communities in both urban and peri-urb...
Despite the ambition to involve people on more equal terms, participation often still means that the...