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Public Participation

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Title: Public Participation


1
Public Participation Community Economic
Development A Model of Participatory Democracy
2
  • Allison Houlihan, PhD Candidate
  • School of Urban Public Affairs
  • Center for Environmental Policy Management
  • University of Louisville
  • Urban Affairs Association Annual Conference
  • Chicago, IL
  • March 6, 2009

3
Introduction
  • Community Economic Development
  • Participatory Democracy
  • Community Economic Development Participatory
    Democracy as Mutually Reinforcing
  • Why Brownfields?

4
community economic developmenttheoretical
traditions
  • Underlying concept of CED incorporates two
    components
  • Community
  • Economic development
  • Seeks to increase capital gains in such a way
    that benefits the entire community
  • Three underlying principles contribute to a logic
    for community action
  • a theory of local economic development
  • a strategy of social policy implementation rooted
    in citizen empowerment
  • a grassroots political orientation

5
community economic developmentpractical
approaches
  • Growth Promotion economic development is
    synonymous with job growth and increased income
    and business activity
  • Structural Change planned growth responds to
    the limitations of investment-seeking and grants
    the need to supplement or replace the goal of
    growth itself emphasis on the quality of the
    economy rather than the quantity of growth
  • Communalization combines the concerns of
    economic growth and stability with a more fair
    production and distribution of wealth the
    primary objective is developing an economy that
    strengthens community

6
community economic developmentdeveloping a
contemporary definition
  • CED occurs when people in a community analyze the
    economic conditions of that community, determine
    its economic needs and unfulfilled opportunities,
    decide what can and should be done to improve the
    economic conditions in that community, and then
    move to achieve agreed-upon economic goals and
    objectives
  • CED is not a rationale for maintaining the status
    quo but is a comprehensive concept for changing
    the economic situation within the community

7
Contemporary economic developmenta new paradigm
  • Economic growth theory has moved through a
    natural progression that can be presented in
    terms of waves
  • 1st wave based on export base theory and the
    attraction of capital resources from other
    locations via tax subsidies, low-rent land and
    training funds
  • 2nd wave focused on the expansion and retention
    of existing business and entrepreneurship
    strategies have included increased investment
    funds for local firms, incubator development,
    technical assistance for local firms and
    revolving loan funds
  • 3rd wave focuses on collaboration and
    partnership building within and across
    communities has been the focus of third wave
    economic development policies
  • It is the third wave of economic growth theory
    that has functioned as the initial bridge between
    economic growth and development and community
    development

8
Community economic development tenets for policy
action programs
  • a community is a logical economic unit that can
    exert some control over its economic future
  • intervention in the form of conscious group
    decisions and actions will affect local economic
    welfare more than the sum of individual actions
  • the action/policy must be comprehensive and
    cannot focus just on economic activity but must
    also include noneconomic dimensions
  • the resources needed will be available or can be
    found to implement the policy (resources are more
    than monetary and include all factors of
    production , especially social capital and
    community assets

9
Community economic development Basic Strategies
  • Work with new and existing business in using
    existing resources differently
  • Increase the flow of dollars into the community
  • Looking beyond traditional extractive industries
    for communities rich in natural amenities
  • Increasing the recirculation of dollars into the
    community,
  • Local factor resources are a critical element of
    CED specifically, increasing the amount of
    resources available
  • Acting smarter translates into how the
    community goes about making decisions and sets up
    and implements strategies
  • Changing (reinterpreting) the rules the
    community seeks a change in rules that would
    benefit the community or seeks a change in
    interpretation of rules

10
participatory democracytheoretical traditions
  • Maximum Self-Development
  • Recognizes political participation as a value
    that, in itself, is necessary to the growth and
    development of its citizens
  • Argues that the provision of political conditions
    which allow for maximum self-development and
    the opportunity to enlarge their vision and
    sense of themselves is compulsory
  • Ordinary citizens are both capable, and
    obligated, to strive to develop an awareness of
    their self-interest and to cultivate an empathy
    with, and a commitment to, the well-being of
    others.

11
Participatory democracy theoretical traditions
  • Against an Elitist Orientation Expanding
    Democracy
  • a common critique of participatory theory and an
    argument of liberal democratic theory, based on
    numerous surveys and empirical studies, suggests
    that large portions of the American public are
    poorly informed and politically passive.
  • Participation Equality
  • participation and equality as mutually
    reinforcing
  • participation translates into power, generating
    greater equality between the classes, which
    functions as a catalyst for subordinate classes
    to continue the struggle for equality.

12
Community economic development participatory
democracy as mutually reinforcing
  • Both address and aspire to reduce inequalities,
    i.e. political, social, and economic
  • Both seek to strengthen democracy
  • Both work to empower citizens
  • Both emphasize community and seek to enhance the
    quality of life
  • Both promote collaboration and partnership
    building
  • Both value inclusive citizen participation and
    encourage all citizens to express their
    preferences
  • Both encourage citizens to develop a an awareness
    of their self-interest as well as a commitment to
    the well-being of others

13
Why brownfields?
  • Brownfield real property, the expansion,
    redevelopment, or reuse of which may be
    complicated by the presence or potential presence
    of a hazardous substance, pollutant, or
    contaminant
  • Successful brownfields redevelopment requires
    (among other things) that public agencies connect
    the reuse to broader community goals, including
    but not limited to, meaningful public
    participation .

14
Why Brownfields?
  • Federal commitment to pursue brownfield
    redevelopment
  • private development opportunities
  • public job creation and increased tax revenues
  • Coinciding federal commitment to increase citizen
    participation in public and governmental
    processes
  • rests on the logic that citizens have the right
    to influence decisions that affect them and
    should, therefore, be included in scientific and
    environmental decisions

15
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