Publication | Open Access
Wicked problems and clumsy solutions: Planning as expectation management
118
Citations
23
References
2012
Year
Behavioral Decision MakingWicked ProblemsProject ManagementPublic ParticipationAutonomyCultural TheorySocial SciencesOperations ResearchSpatial PlanningManagementDecision TheoryExpectation ManagementUrban PlanningStrategyWicked ProblemPlanning TheoryCulturePhysical PlanningHeuristic PlanningPlanning PracticeDecision ScienceUrban Space
In 1973, Horst W Rittel and Malvin A Webber introduced the term ‘wicked problem’ in planning theory. They describe spatial planning as dealing with inherent uncertainty, complexity and inevitable normativity. This contribution picks up the concept of wicked problems, reflects on it from a planning-theoretical perspective, and proposes the use of Cultural Theory’s concept of clumsy solutions as a response to wicked planning problems. In discussing public participation processes in spatial planning, it is then shown what clumsy solutions mean for spatial planning. The four rationalities of Cultural Theory are then used to explain why public participation in planning can become wicked, and how these rationalities provide a response that copes with this wickedness.
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