
Contents
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1. Investigating How Cultural Discourses around Participation Are Embedded in Historically Specific Political Environments 1. Investigating How Cultural Discourses around Participation Are Embedded in Historically Specific Political Environments
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2. Recontextualizing and Historicizing What Is Really “New” about the New Public Participation 2. Recontextualizing and Historicizing What Is Really “New” about the New Public Participation
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3. Tying the New Public Participation to Larger Trends in the Reinforcement of Inequality in the Present Moment 3. Tying the New Public Participation to Larger Trends in the Reinforcement of Inequality in the Present Moment
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4. Reevaluating the Continuing Promise of Participation Despite Mixed, Complex Results 4. Reevaluating the Continuing Promise of Participation Despite Mixed, Complex Results
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Notes Notes
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13 Realizing the Promise of Public Participation in an Age of Inequality
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Published:January 2015
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Abstract
This concluding chapter reexamines the pitfalls and unrealized promises of public participation in a context of severe structural inequalities. Focusing on remedies suggested in the other chapters of this book, it argues that critical perspectives on participation are necessary in order to leverage the opportunities for challenging inequalities resulting from fiscal and political crises. The chapter outlines four questions that can pave the way for new research on participation and public deliberation: probing how cultural discourses around participation are intertwined with historically specific political environments; recontextualizing and historicizing what is really “new” about the new public participation, including the concepts of participatory budgeting and Asset-Based Community Development; linking the new public participation to larger trends in the reinforcement of inequality in the present moment; and reevaluating the continuing promise of participation, such as in the case of empowerment projects, despite mixed, complex results.
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