Araos Malcolm
Department of Sociology, New York University, New York, NY 10001 USA.
Theory Soc. 2023;52(1):1-34. doi: 10.1007/s11186-021-09459-9. Epub 2021 Nov 9.
This article provides an explanation for how increased public participation can paradoxically translate into limited democratic decision-making in urban settings. Recent sociological research shows how governments can control participatory forums to restrict the distribution of resources to poor neighborhoods or to advance private land development interests. Yet such explanations cannot account for the decoupling of participation from democratic decision-making in the case of planning for climate change, which expands the substantive topics and public funding decisions that involve urban residents. Through an in-depth case study of one of the largest coastal protection projects in the world and drawing on global scholarship on participation, this article narrates the social production of resistance to climate change infrastructure by showing how the state sidestepped public input and exercised authority through appeals to the rationality of technical expertise. After a lengthy participation process wherein participants reported satisfaction with how their input was included in designs, city officials switched decision-making styles and used expertise from engineers to render the publicly-supported plan unfeasible, while continuing to involve residents in the process. As a result, conflict arose between activists and public housing representatives, bitterly dividing the neighborhood over who could legitimately claim to represent the interests of the "frontline community." By documenting the experience of participants in the process before and after the switch in decision-making styles, this article advances a sociological description of public in policy: The ability for participants in a planning process to recognize their own input reflected in finished plans.
本文解释了在城市环境中,公众参与的增加如何自相矛盾地导致民主决策受限。近期社会学研究表明,政府如何能够控制参与性论坛,以限制向贫困社区分配资源,或推进私人土地开发利益。然而,对于气候变化规划中参与与民主决策脱钩的情况,此类解释并不适用,因为气候变化规划扩大了涉及城市居民的实质性议题和公共资金决策范围。通过对世界上最大的海岸保护项目之一进行深入案例研究,并借鉴全球关于参与的学术研究,本文通过展示国家如何避开公众意见并通过诉诸技术专长的合理性来行使权力,叙述了对气候变化基础设施的社会抵制的产生过程。在一个漫长的参与过程中,参与者对他们的意见如何被纳入设计表示满意,但之后城市官员改变了决策方式,利用工程师的专业知识使公众支持的计划变得不可行,同时继续让居民参与这个过程。结果,活动人士与公共住房代表之间产生了冲突,使社区在谁能合法代表“一线社区”利益的问题上产生了严重分歧。通过记录决策方式转变前后参与过程中参与者的经历,本文推进了对政策中公众参与的社会学描述:即规划过程中的参与者能够在最终方案中识别出自己的意见。