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Cited by 43 publications
(37 citation statements)
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“…This critique is particularly relevant regarding the inability of such approaches to re-negotiate power imbalances in the planning processes and to provide responses to urban challenges in extremely unequal urban contexts. Notions such us insurgent planning (Miraftab, 2009), post-collaborative planning (Brownill and Parker, 2010) movement-initiated co-production (Watson, 2014), socio-spatial learning (Natarajan, 2017), participation as political (Legacy, 2017) and agonistic practices (Gunder, 2003;Mouat et al 2013;Thorpe, 2017;Yamamoto, 2017), are examples of approaches that see participation not only as a 'tool' for the implementation of planning, but as a form of planning itself. In this paper, we want to build upon such debates, exploring the diversity of strategies that people and movements are developing to respond to the limitations of planning disputing the meaning of it, which includes approaches that the referred literature has already captured.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This critique is particularly relevant regarding the inability of such approaches to re-negotiate power imbalances in the planning processes and to provide responses to urban challenges in extremely unequal urban contexts. Notions such us insurgent planning (Miraftab, 2009), post-collaborative planning (Brownill and Parker, 2010) movement-initiated co-production (Watson, 2014), socio-spatial learning (Natarajan, 2017), participation as political (Legacy, 2017) and agonistic practices (Gunder, 2003;Mouat et al 2013;Thorpe, 2017;Yamamoto, 2017), are examples of approaches that see participation not only as a 'tool' for the implementation of planning, but as a form of planning itself. In this paper, we want to build upon such debates, exploring the diversity of strategies that people and movements are developing to respond to the limitations of planning disputing the meaning of it, which includes approaches that the referred literature has already captured.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…We were interested in understanding how local resident groups and metropolitan alliances mobilise and slide between antagonistic and agonistic encounters with government and private sector actors. To date, little empirical research has considered the conditions that might precipitate the transition from antagonism to agonism in the urban politics and praxis of local citizenries (Mouat et al, 2013). The first adds conceptual clarity around Chantal Mouffe's claim that to achieve a productive agonistic politics, the antagonisms that exist in political encounters need to be moderated to more mutable adversarial positions (Mouffe, 1992(Mouffe, , 2005(Mouffe, , 2013.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For such ends, we contrast Mouffe's "politics", which is tied to antagonism and agonism, with what we call the "formal politics" of the planning system. To date, little empirical research has considered the conditions that might precipitate the transition from antagonism to agonism in the urban politics and praxis of local citizenries (Mouat et al, 2013). Therefore, the second task is to add some empirical weight to how local resident groups and urban alliances engage with the post-political city.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…In this spirit, some recent work explores how an agonistic ethos might help productively reframe deliberative debates (e.g. Mouat et al, 2013).…”
Section: Understanding the Demands Of Democratic Citizenship Made By mentioning
confidence: 99%