Culley Marci R, Hughey Joseph
Department of Psychology, Georgia State University, P.O. Box 5010, Atlanta, GA 30302-5010, USA.
Am J Community Psychol. 2008 Mar;41(1-2):99-114. doi: 10.1007/s10464-007-9157-5.
Qualitative case study findings are presented. We examined whether public participation in a hazardous waste dispute manifested in ways consistent with theories of social power; particularly whether participatory processes or participants' experiences of them were consistent with the three-dimensional view of power (Gaventa, Power and powerlessness: quiescence and rebellion in an appalacian valley, 1980; Lukes, Power: A radical view, 1974; Parenti, Power and the powerless, 1978). Findings from four data sources collected over 3 years revealed that participatory processes manifested in ways consistent with theories of power, and participants' experiences reflected this. Results illustrated how participation was limited and how citizen influence could be manipulated via control of resources, barriers to participation, agenda setting, and shaping conceptions about what participation was possible. Implications for community research and policy related to participation in hazardous waste disputes are discussed.
本文呈现了定性案例研究的结果。我们考察了公众在危险废物纠纷中的参与是否以与社会权力理论相一致的方式表现出来;特别是参与过程或参与者对这些过程的体验是否与权力的三维视角相一致(加文塔,《权力与无力:阿巴拉契亚山谷的平静与反抗》,1980年;卢克斯,《权力:一种激进的观点》,1974年;帕伦蒂,《权力与无权者》,1978年)。从3年多时间里收集的四个数据源得出的结果显示,参与过程以与权力理论相一致的方式表现出来,参与者的体验也反映了这一点。结果表明了参与是如何受到限制的,以及公民影响力是如何通过对资源的控制、参与障碍、议程设置以及塑造关于何种参与是可能的观念而被操纵的。文中还讨论了这些结果对与危险废物纠纷参与相关的社区研究和政策的启示。