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@article{ Dean2018,
title = {Counter-Governance: Citizen Participation Beyond Collaboration},
author = {Dean, Rikki John},
journal = {Politics and Governance},
number = {1},
pages = {180-188},
volume = {6},
year = {2018},
issn = {2183-2463},
doi = {https://doi.org/10.17645/pag.v6i1.1221},
abstract = {The theory and practice of urban governance in recent years has undergone both a collaborative and participatory turn. The strong connection between collaboration and participation has meant that citizen participation in urban governance has been conceived in a very particular way: as varying levels of partnership between state actors and citizens. This over-focus on collaboration has led to: 1) a dearth of proposals in theory and practice for citizens to engage oppositionally with institutions; 2) the miscasting of agonistic opportunities for participation as forms of collaboration; 3) an inability to recognise the irruption of agonistic practices into participatory procedures. This article attempts to expand the conception of participatory urban governance by adapting Rosanvallon's (2008) three democratic counter-powers - prevention, oversight and judgement - to consider options for institutionalising agonistic participatory practices. It argues that these counter-governance processes would more fully realise the inclusion agenda that underpins the participatory governance project.},
}