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Reconceptualizing Participation for Sustainable Rural Development: Towards a Negotiation Approach
383
Citations
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References
2000
Year
NegotiationRural DevelopmentNegotiation TheorySustainable DevelopmentEducationPublic ParticipationEnvironmental PlanningSustainable Rural DevelopmentParticipatory Decision-makingParticipatory DevelopmentSocial SciencesRural StudiesRural SociologyCultural PlanningCivic EngagementPublic PolicyCommunity EngagementDevelopment ProcessesEquitable DevelopmentCommunity ParticipationParticipatory DesignCommunity DevelopmentCommunity OrganizingGroup Work
In many popular intervention methodologies aimed at stimulating sustainable rural development (in the widest possible sense) the idea of ‘participation’ is a leading principle. This article will demonstrate that the process in which actors are supposed to participate is often thought of as being a process of planning, decision‐making and/or social learning. It will be argued that such an operationalization of development processes is based on inconsistent theoretical assumptions, and can easily lead to unproductive development interventions due to an inability to handle conflicts. As an alternative it is proposed to use negotiation theory as a basis for organizing participatory development efforts. The implications of such a shift in thinking about participation are far‐reaching: it requires new modes of analysis, and different roles, tasks and skills for facilitators of participatory processes.
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