2011
DOI: 10.1068/d14609
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The Representative Claim of Deliberative Planning: The Case of Isawiyah in East Jerusalem

Abstract: Both advocates and critics of deliberative planning often study deliberative planning processes as if they are real-life approximations of an ideal situation where the only force is the force of the better argument. However, in the course of the last decade democratic theorists came to develop a complex systemic understanding of the role of deliberation in policy making. In this view, legitimate decision making is not a one-time process but an ongoing pattern of interaction between organized institutions and t… Show more

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Cited by 6 publications
(7 citation statements)
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“…The existence o f two planning realities (one for Israeli Jerusalem and another for Arab Jerusalem) deprives Palestinians o f their right to the city, representing another facet o f Israel's ethnonational political agenda in contested territories (Kaminker, 1997;Jabareen, 2010;Ron and Cohen-Blankshtain, 2011;Wari, 2011).…”
Section: Arab Jerusalem: Insurgent Urbanism In An Oppressive Environmentmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…The existence o f two planning realities (one for Israeli Jerusalem and another for Arab Jerusalem) deprives Palestinians o f their right to the city, representing another facet o f Israel's ethnonational political agenda in contested territories (Kaminker, 1997;Jabareen, 2010;Ron and Cohen-Blankshtain, 2011;Wari, 2011).…”
Section: Arab Jerusalem: Insurgent Urbanism In An Oppressive Environmentmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These justifications conceal the real purpose of the Israeli authorities: imposing restrictions on Palestinian development by employing discriminatory planning policies to curb demographic growth and restrict territorial expansion. The existence of two planning realities (one for Israeli Jerusalem and another for Arab Jerusalem) deprives Palestinians of their right to the city, representing another facet of Israel's ethnonational political agenda in contested territories (Kaminker, 1997;Jabareen, 2010;Ron and Cohen-Blankshtain, 2011;Wari, 2011).…”
Section: Arab Jerusalem: Insurgent Urbanism In An Oppressive Environmentmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The case of activist planners offers us yet another example in this respect. As two Israeli researchers observe in their study of Bimkom's deliberative planning initiative in the East Jerusalem Palestinian neighbourhood of Isawiya, ‘Had we chosen to measure Bimkom's planning process against any ideal model of deliberative planning, we would have to deem it a failure' (Ron and Cohen‐Blankshtain, : 646), because of the political limitations inherent in the development of the process and, ultimately, the impossibility of getting any plan approved by hostile local planning commissions. Still, precisely because the chances of achieving tangible results through the planning system remain very low, political mobilization becomes the ultimate goal of planning practices.…”
Section: Planning In Turbulent Timesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Ironically, or perhaps not, the desire to curb Palestinian development has made Israeli authorities come up with ‘creative’ solutions; for example, the designation of unbuilt spaces as national parks was made to prevent their development by Palestinians (Bimkom ). Even in those areas where the maximum height of six storeys is allowed, other bureaucratic limitations and obstacles are imposed, making development a tortuous operation and often a practically impossible mission (Bimkom ; Braier ; Ron and Cohen‐Blankshtain ). There is a double standard in planning for Jewish and Palestinian neighbourhoods, which is hardly challenged in Israeli polity.…”
Section: Revolt Through Visibility: Vertical Geographies In Palestinimentioning
confidence: 99%