Communicative planning is an approach to
urban planning
Urban planning, also known as town planning, city planning, regional planning, or rural planning, is a technical and political process that is focused on the development and design of land use and the built environment, including air, water, ...
that gathers stakeholders and engages them in a process to make decisions together in a manner that respects the positions of all involved.
It is also sometimes called collaborative planning among planning practitioners or collaborative planning model.
History and theory
Since the 1970s, communicative planning theory has formed based on several key understandings. These key points include the notions that communication and reasoning come in diverse forms, knowledge is socially constructed, and people’s diverse interests and preferences are formed out of their social contexts.
Communicative theory also draws on
Foucauldian
Paul-Michel Foucault (, ; ; 15 October 192625 June 1984) was a French philosopher, historian of ideas, writer, political activist, and literary critic. Foucault's theories primarily address the relationship between power and knowledge, and how t ...
analyses of power in that it recognizes that power relations exist in practice and have the ability to oppress individuals.
Specific to a community and urban planning context, communicative theory acknowledges that planners' own actions, words, lived experiences, and communication styles have an effect on the planning process the planner is facilitating.
Finally, communicative planning theory advances the idea that planning happens in everyday practice and social relations, and consensus-building can be used to organize people's thoughts and move past traditional ways of knowing and decision-making.
In the 1990s, a number of planning scholars began writing about a new orientation to urban planning theory that moved away from the prevalent rational approach to planning.
Judith Innes
Judith E. Innes (1942 – April 14, 2020) was an American academic. She ended her career as professor emerita at the College of Environmental Design at the University of California, Berkeley. Her academic work focused on the areas of public policy ...
is credited with coining the term "communicative planning" in her article ''Planning Theory’s Emerging Paradigm: Communicative Action and Interactive Practice.''
Innes' tries to bridge the gap between planning theories and planning in practice, and offers consensus-building as a tool for urban planners to create collaborative and engaging planning environments that allow different stakeholders to participate.
Around the same time as this article was published, Patsy Healey also published a number of planning theory texts exploring communicative and collaborative planning. Drawing on the theory of
Jürgen Habermas
Jürgen Habermas (, ; ; born 18 June 1929) is a German social theorist in the tradition of critical theory and pragmatism. His work addresses communicative rationality and the public sphere.
Associated with the Frankfurt School, Habermas's wor ...
in particular, Healey's work focuses on the impact that communicative acts (which can be in spoken or written form) have on a community planning process.
Healey also expands on the work of urban planner
John F. Forester
John F. Forester is a planning theorist with a particular emphasis on participatory planning. His scholarship appeals moral philosophy, oral history and ethnographic social science, as well as planning and policy studies. He is the author of ''Cr ...
and economic geographer
Bent Flyvbjerg
Bent Flyvbjerg is a Danish economic geographer. He was the First BT Professor and Inaugural Chair of Major Programme Management at Oxford University's Saïd Business School (retiring from the post in 2021) and is the Villum Kann Rasmussen Profess ...
, both of whom examine Habermasian communication and power structures in their planning work.
The emerging field of therapeutic planning is closely related to communicative planning. Therapeutic planning operates on the basis that communities can experience collective trauma, including from past planning processes, and that carefully facilitated community engagement can act as catalysts for community-wide healing. Some planning practitioners use untraditional planning approaches, such as filmmaking and other artistic media, to engage community members in therapeutic planning processes.
Scholars and texts
This section provides a short list of works written by planning academics on the subject of collaborative planning.
Communicative process and tools
In a communicative planning process, planning practitioners play more of a facilitative role. They often act as a ‘knowledge mediator and broker’
to help reframe problems in order to promote more creative thinking about possible solutions.
Throughout this process, information should be produced collectively by the full range of stakeholders who may be affected by the outcome of the process.
In particular, all of the stakeholders should be involved in negotiating both the problem definition and the solution together.
In doing so, solutions to conflicts amongst stakeholders may be re-framed as ‘win-win’, as opposed to the ‘zero sum’ mindset which occurs when stakeholders are bargaining on the basis of their own fixed interests.
Consensus-building is an important part of this collective meaning-making process, as information is discussed and validated within the group of stakeholders, resulting in information which holds more significance to the group.
To aid in consensus-building efforts, power should be distributed amongst the stakeholders such that they are equals in the process.
Openness and trust are also crucial for building consensus.
The objectives, underlying assumptions, and positions of these stakeholders should be considered along with the uncertainties about future conditions, such as population growth, and decisions which are linked to other decisions.
It is important to have the stakeholders identify this information for themselves, as it will help reduce the biases present in both analyses driven by only one future and position-based discussions, as well as bring to the forefront any conflicts between the underlying values of the stakeholders.
By considering this broad range of information, commonalities between different stakeholders may be identified, which can help build consensus. However, this cannot guarantee consensus, as positions might in fact be too different.
In order to deal with the challenges that arise from positions being very different and the increasing complexity of analysis required, new models of collaboration are needed which build on various principles of conflict management, including engaging early and engaging often.
Case studies
The Neighbourhood Revitalization Program (NRP) - 1990
In 1990, the city of
Minneapolis
Minneapolis () is the largest city in Minnesota, United States, and the county seat of Hennepin County. The city is abundant in water, with thirteen lakes, wetlands, the Mississippi River, creeks and waterfalls. Minneapolis has its origins ...
,
Minnesota
Minnesota () is a state in the upper midwestern region of the United States. It is the 12th largest U.S. state in area and the 22nd most populous, with over 5.75 million residents. Minnesota is home to western prairies, now given over to ...
launched a 20-year program designed to empower residents in local decision making and share community planning responsibilities among residential, government and private stakeholders.
To combat the dwindling standard of living within Minneapolis neighbourhoods, the NRP was conceptualized as a means of involving citizens in the prioritization of revitalization efforts. The Minneapolis government divided 400 million dollars between 81 neighbourhood organizations who utilized the funding over two decades to assess priorities, reach consensus and implement neighbourhood improvement projects.
Within the first decade of the NRP, 48% of funding was used for upgrading housing and 16% went towards job creation and economic developments.
Other priorities included public safety, the preservation of green space and improving transportation infrastructure.
Through the completion and adoption of 66 unique neighbourhood plans, stakeholders from various organizations including the general public,
Minneapolis Public Library
The Minneapolis Public Library (MPL) was a library system that served the residents of Minneapolis, Minnesota in the United States. It was founded in 1885 with the establishment of the Minneapolis Library Board by an amendment to the Minneapolis ...
, Minneapolis Parks and Recreation, Public Works, Housing Inspection and
Hennepin County
Hennepin County ( ) is a county in the U.S. state of Minnesota. Its county seat is Minneapolis, the state's most populous city. The county is named in honor of the 17th-century explorer Father Louis Hennepin. The county extends from Minneapol ...
all came together to articulate and agree upon feasible and mutually beneficial neighbourhood directives.
With emphasis placed on citizen participation, municipal planners took on an advisory role and assisted neighbourhood planning organizations in encouraging participation, engaging a diverse audience and reviewing completed plans through a technical lens.
Despite the creation of Participation Agreements which stood as formal commitments to holding an inclusive engagement process, the NRP has been criticized for a lack of representation from all neighbourhood members.
While the NRP has been applauded for its communicative and collaborative values, critics point to cases of exclusion and the enormous amount of continuous time and energy required for its success as main drawbacks.
Seattle's Neighbourhood Planning Program - 1994
In 1994,
Seattle
Seattle ( ) is a seaport city on the West Coast of the United States. It is the seat of King County, Washington. With a 2020 population of 737,015, it is the largest city in both the state of Washington and the Pacific Northwest regio ...
developed the Neighbourhood Planning Program (NPP) in response to outcry from the general public surrounding a lack of involvement in a recently completed comprehensive plan.
The NPP intended to build a partnership between residents and the local government and provided neighbourhoods with the choice to create their own unique local plan or continue by the comprehensive plan. While these neighbourhood plans had to be consistent with the broad goals of the comprehensive plan, participating neighbourhoods were afforded the opportunity to identify their own priorities and provide a list of recommendations to the city.
Initially, each participating neighbourhood was given 10,000 dollars to begin a communicative engagement process and identify a vision for their local community.
Additional funding for the planning stage would not be rewarded until the City felt as though enough stakeholders and community representatives had been included in the process.
Once the visioning process was deemed to be inclusive and rigorous, the city provided each neighbourhood with between 60,000-100,000 dollars to develop a plan.
In total, 38 neighbourhoods participated and developed their own neighbourhood plan for the municipality to follow.
Before approving each neighbourhood plan, the municipality would hold public hearings in the neighbourhood to share the plan and ensure there was consensus among all the residents in the area.
By 1999, the City had adopted these plans and began implementing the shared visions of each neighbourhood.
Each plan varied significantly as each neighbourhood was afforded the opportunity to hire their own planner or consultants to assist them in the process.
Planning professionals participated in the process mainly as mediators who helped guide participatory sessions and facilitated the consensus-building process.
Between 20, 000 and 30, 000 residents participated directly in the NPP.
The program has been recognized as a successful example of communicative planning and
collaborative governance
Governance is a broader concept than government and also includes the roles played by the community sector and the private sector in managing and planning countries, regions and cities. Collaborative governance involves the government, community an ...
due to the high level of participation and the frequency with which consensus was genuinely reached.
Challenges and critiques
Critiques of Innes, Healey, and communicative planning focus on the planning processes and outcomes.
Older critiques of communicative planning theory question whether the theory they find idealist can translate a consensus-based process into authentic outcomes.
They also question whether consensus is a valuable goal when they see critical planning decisions as being made gradually.
Additional critiques relate to power: who has the power to exclude and include stakeholders and whether stakeholders will use their power to manipulate the consensus building process (given that consensus must be reached).
Older critiques of communicative planning practice also see a lack of real world outcomes from the communicative planning processes because deeper political and institutional change is needed first.
Judith Innes directly responded to these critiques in her article ''Consensus Building: Clarifications for the Critics''.
Additionally, she expanded her description of the consensus building process and communicative planning's roots.
Newer critiques argue collaborative planning is a way to maintain larger political and institutional systems while creating a process that only seems to better represent the public.
They see collaborative planning as a way to keep neoliberals in power and political systems stable, rather than creating real changes to the governing system.
References
External links
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{{Developments
Urban planning
Environmental social science
Urban geography
Human overpopulation
Urban design