Planners’ role in accommodating citizen disagreement

The case of Dutch urban planning

Journal Article (2017)
Author(s)

E. Özdemir (TU Delft - OLD Geo-information and Land Development)

M.T. Tasan-Kok (TU Delft - OLD Geo-information and Land Development, Universiteit van Amsterdam)

Research Group
OLD Geo-information and Land Development
Copyright
© 2017 E. Özdemir, M.T. Tasan-Kok
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1177/0042098017726738
More Info
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Publication Year
2017
Language
English
Copyright
© 2017 E. Özdemir, M.T. Tasan-Kok
Research Group
OLD Geo-information and Land Development
Issue number
4
Volume number
56 (2019)
Pages (from-to)
741-759
Reuse Rights

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Abstract

Citizen disagreement on urban policies and planning decisions is both ubiquitous and fundamental to democracy. Post-political debates debunk the ‘consensus approach’, which is grounded in Habermasian communication theory, for circumventing disagreement. This article presents a counter argument. Our analysis of the highly institutionalised and consensus-oriented Dutch planning framework shows that this system does not necessarily prevent effective voicing of disagreement. The empirical material demonstrates that consensus is not a pre-defined and static outcome but a dynamic and sensitive process in which urban planning is an instrument. We conclude that planners could facilitate consensus through accommodative roles that address disagreement by taking an adaptive, proactive and more human stance.