Co-production and collaboration in planning: the difference

Watson, V. (2014). Co-production and collaboration in planning – The difference. Planning Theory & Practice, 15(1), 62–76. doi:10.1080/14649357.2013.866266

Platform
Cape Town
Publication type
Scientific article (peer-reviewed)
Projects
Contributing to Urban Debates in South Africa
DOI Title
Co-production and collaboration in planning – The difference
Journal
Planning Theory & Practice
ISSN/ISBN
1464-9357 1470-000X
DOI
10.1080/14649357.2013.866266
Author(s)
Vanessa Watson
Published year
Subject
Geography, Planning and Development
Tags
co-production state-society engagement communicative and collaborative planning global south Shack/Slum Dwellers International Asian Coalition for Housing Rights

 

Abstract

Processes of state-society engagement around urban development issues, termed co-production, have been documented in both the Public Administration and Development Studies fields, but until recently have not attracted much attention in planning. Yet, particularly more recent approaches and cases of co-production from global South contexts do offer the possibility of adding to planning debates in this area, by expanding the context which shapes planning ideas beyond the global North, and perhaps shifting planning theory in the direction of becoming truly international. The paper identifies the important differences which underlie various strands of thinking about co-production, and also between these and planning assumptions in the area of collaborative and communicative planning.

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