To Boldly go Where no Planners Have Ever …
- 1 February 1993
- journal article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Environment and Planning D: Society and Space
- Vol. 11 (1), 89-113
- https://doi.org/10.1068/d110089
Abstract
The author presents an empirical example of the systematic distortion of information and the consequent impacts in a particular planning context. In so doing, she raises issues of professionalism, ethics, and democracy, Habermas's consideration of communicative action is of value in such analysis. She further reveals, however, that Habermassian thought tends to demonstrate a significant blindness to the role of power in such interaction. Consideration of Foucault's ideas, with regard to the manifold relations of power which characterise and constitute society, thus add an extra dimension to the work. In a strategic linking of the two the author attempts to demonstrate how communicative action can illuminate the analysis of power relationships in a manner useful to planning theory and practice. The paper concludes with a development of the Habermas-Foucault framework into a proposal for discursive democracy in an attempt to enable achievement of negotiated planning policies through a process of planning through debate.Keywords
This publication has 17 references indexed in Scilit:
- The rhetorics of policy analysisPolicy Sciences, 1991
- Discourses of LocalityEnvironment and Planning A: Economy and Space, 1991
- Behind the Locality Debate: Deconstructing Geography's DualismsEnvironment and Planning A: Economy and Space, 1991
- Discursive DemocracyPublished by Cambridge University Press (CUP) ,1990
- Survey 16; Privatization and the Rhetoric of Planning PracticeEnvironment and Planning D: Society and Space, 1989
- Moral Vision and Professional DecisionsPublished by Cambridge University Press (CUP) ,1989
- Survey 14: The Locally Spoken Word and Local StrugglesEnvironment and Planning D: Society and Space, 1989
- Open moral communitiesSociety, 1988
- The Recent Work of Jürgen HabermasPublished by Cambridge University Press (CUP) ,1988
- If planning is everything, maybe it's nothingPolicy Sciences, 1973