|
Janis Birkeland, " 'Community participation' in urban project
assessment (an ecofeminist analysis)", with commentaries by
Bronwyn Hayward and Paul Selman and a reply by the author,
in Brian Martin (ed.), Technology and Public Participation
(Wollongong, Australia: Science and Technology Studies, University
of Wollongong, 1999), pp. 113-142.
"Community participation" in urban project assessment
(an ecofeminist analysis)
Janis Birkeland[*]
Abstract
Traditional models of participation are based on abstractions
of society that artificially segregate "experts" from "ordinary
citizens" and implicitly assume agency or wisdom resides in
either professionals or citizens. The corresponding frameworks
for decision making remain sequential and place the parties
in active and reactive roles. As such, these frameworks are
inherently divisive and hierarchical, thereby inhibiting the
kinds of creative, lateral, problem-solving strategies required
for ecologically and socially optimal solutions. In contrast,
feminist models of participation, among others, have promoted
collaborative, interdisciplinary, community-building processes
to empower the community and create better communication structures.
However, these processes have focused on improving the participatory
experience, not changing structures and, therefore, the results
of participation are often nullified by power relations at
the political level. An ecofeminist model provides an analysis
of the operation of power in terms of the hierarchical dualisms
of Western social and intellectual constructs. It also provides
a basis for addressing systems issues and incorporating design-based
strategies that unite both experts and citizens as innovative
actors. The implications for the design of participation processes
in project evaluation systems are explored.
Back to: Table
of Contents
Commentary by:
Bronwyn Hayward
Paul Selman
Response by Author
Footnotes
Introduction
The "problem" in urban planning is often depicted as the
top-down imposition of an ordered environment by technocratic
planners. The "solution" is to achieve more genuine forms
of bottom-up community participation in the evaluation of
development proposals.[1] Based
on many years experience in advocacy planning and participatory
design, I suggest it is not that simple. The failure of urban
management systems to resolve conflict over development proposals
and to achieve optimal projects from a social and environmental
viewpoint cannot be achieved by greater participation
alone. Adding more meaningful forms of community participation
onto existing processes, while important, may only mask the
need for deeper institutional reforms. Moreover, the main
paradigms of participation in development approval processes--technocratic
(top-down), liberal (incremental), and radical (bottom-up)--are
themselves problematic in some respects.
This chapter sets out some of the ways in which traditional
urban management systems (superseded by theory but not in
practice) fail to achieve effective and constructive participation.
These traditional approaches are then contrasted with a feminist
model which reflects recent trends in participatory practice.[2]
The discussion is limited to the design of structures or processes
for participation in project evaluation and approval systems.
It does not discuss the many strategies and practices employed
by progressive planners at the person-to-person level to ascertain
preferences and improve the value of the participatory experience.[3]
These strategies, while valuable, are slow to change the broader
institutional framework of decision making, which can subvert
the positive results gained through participation. In my view,
we cannot rely on the "trickle-up" effect alone to change
institutional systems.
The typology in Table 1 is intended as a communication aid.
As with any typology, it is important to note that it is based
on ideal types. Most people would have a mix of positions.
While Table 1 makes distinctions among the first three models,
it is their similarities that are significant
here. Traditional models of participation are based on abstractions
of society that artificially segregate "experts" from "ordinary
citizens" (i.e. polarising them by emphasising differences).
In fact, the terms "top-down" and "bottom-up" expose a hierarchical
and dualistic social order which belies the myths of pluralism
by which participation is generally legitimised.[4]
That is, there is a misfit between the democratic values espoused
and the dualistic conceptual framework through which they
are meant to be realised.
Table 1: Summary of participatory planning models
| PARTICIPATORY
PLANNING MODELS |
|
. |
TECHNOCRATIC/
COMPREHENSIVE |
LIBERAL/
INCREMENTAL |
RADICAL/
ADVOCACY |
ECOFEMINIST
BIOREGIONAL |
| CONCEPT
OF COMMUNITY |
A
generalised public interest determined by experts |
A
market of individual interests and preferences |
Under-represented
groups threatened by development |
Humans
in complex social and ecological systems |
| FORM
OF PARTICIPATION |
Public
consultation by
experts |
Consumer
choice |
Development
of counter-plans and offers |
Team
design process |
| PLANNER'S
KEY ROLE |
Determine
optimal solutions |
Determine
public preferences |
Ensure
equal access to decision making |
Facilitate
bioregional/global perspective |
| PROCESS |
Scientific
evaluation |
Democratic
representation |
Law-based,
adversarial |
Collaborative |
| FAVOURED
METHODS |
Cost-benefit
based methods,
EIA, etc. |
Voting
analogues e.g. survey, participation |
Educational
and adversarial strategies |
Self-help
and empowerment |
| ETHICAL
BASIS |
Utilitarianism |
Liberalism |
Critical
theory |
Feminist/biocentric |
| KEY
ROLE OF COMMUNITY |
Input
into scientific process |
Input
into pluralist process |
Counter-plans,
protest, obstruction |
Self-determination |
| GOVERNMENT'S
IDEAL ROLE |
Weigh
expertise and
other policies |
Balance
competing interests |
Distribute
wealth; arbitrate |
Meet
basic needs; facilitate |
| PROJECT
INITIATOR |
Private
or public developer |
Private
or public developer |
Private
or public developer |
Community
self-reliance |
| PHILOSOPHICAL
AIM |
Rationality |
Procedural
justice |
Distributive
justice |
Justice;
well-being |
| COMPETING
VALUES |
Majority
wins |
Balance
of interests; trade-offs |
Equal
opportunity; fair game rules |
Design
for many parameters |
| PREFERRED
REFORMS |
Transparency
of
decision making |
Deregulation
and less government |
More
community power and autonomy |
Systems
change |
Frameworks for decision making that are based on myths about
agency or wisdom residing in either professionals or
citizens are inherently divisive and place the parties in
active and reactive roles. It will be shown that the community-expert
dichotomy works to marginalise community interests which,
over the long term, must lose to the increasing power of special
interests. Based on hierarchical/dualistic thinking, these
paradigms of participation may foreclose the kinds of creative,
lateral, problem-solving strategies required for ecologically
and socially optimal solutions. The resultant linear decision-making
processes favour an accountancy, or "bean counting," approach
in decision technologies. It will be suggested that a team-based
design approach is needed to recognise and resolve
the multi-dimensional environmental and social parameters
that development decisions entail. An ecofeminist model would
tend to foster collaborative, interdisciplinary, design-based
strategies that involve the participants as innovative actors.
Participation models: a primer
The models of participation that are set out in Table 1--technocratic,
liberal and radical--are associated with different philosophies
of planning--comprehensive, incremental and advocacy, respectively.
Because these planning and participation models overlap both
conceptually and historically, a capsule introduction to these
three forms of planning is provided along with its associated
model of participation. For simplicity, the variations between
planning in the Western democracies are disregarded here and
there is a greater focus on the United States which arguably
has had a longer participatory planning experience.[5]
Comprehensive, technocratic or top-down planning
"Comprehensive" planning initially only meant that whole
municipalities were zoned (i.e. certain land uses were restricted
to certain areas). Eventually, however, zoning and other forms
of development control, or "statutory planning," conformed
to simple master plans aimed at distributing land uses to
reduce their impacts on adjacent properties (rather than the
broader impacts of development). These early forms of development
control proved too rigid to accommodate technological and
social change.
In the 1960s and 70s, comprehensive planning evolved to accommodate
other values in master planning, usually through the form
of policy documents. Strategic planning subsequently integrated
the economic dimension into the setting of public planning
goals, reflecting the growing influence of business management
paradigms, language and ethos.
With the rise of economic rationalism and tougher economic
times during the 1980s cold war, planning as a "vision for
the future" succumbed to its rhetorical association with post-war
slum clearance programmes and centrally-planned economies.
These legacies also did much to throw systems thinking or
ecological planning "out with the bath water." However, "bioregional
planning," which attempts to integrate community and ecology
through systems of social organisation tailored to the regional
ecology, is giving comprehensive planning a rebirth in some
circles.
Community participation within the traditional comprehensive
approach to planning was characterised as technocratic and
top-down. Despite references to multiple publics or a multiplicity
of values, the "community" was conceived as a monolith (Figure
1) whose best interests were translated into physical form
by experts. Critics maintained that participation just meant
consultation or "input" in planning and development approval
systems, while experts (or expediency) determined what was
best for the whole community. The government agency (planning
authority or commission) weighed and balanced this advice
with a range of competing policy objectives. Comprehensive
planning presupposed that an optimal result for the community
could be objectively determined, and that planning decisions
flowed directly from information. Hence abstract, "objective"
decision aids developed, such as cost-benefit analysis, risk
analysis and environmental and social impact assessment which,
being highly technical, arguably exclude lay people from genuine
involvement.

Figure 1: Differing models of community
In this tradition, participation is seen as disciplining
the decision-making process. Increasingly, more open procedures
enable the public to oversee the administrative process (e.g.
"transparent" processes, plain language, impact statements,
written decisions and other accountability measures). But
while public hearings allow the general public to express
its views, these need not be acted upon. Objectors must often
find errors in the technical procedures employed by experts
which can be legally challenged, at least for negotiation
purposes.
Faith in the objectivity of decision technologies may mean
that information gleaned from consultation is discredited
where it does not appear "rational" in the eyes of the experts.
For example, the risk of a nuclear power plant meltdown is
theoretically much less likely than that of an earthquake
on the same site. Yet consumers generally "prefer" the risks
of earthquakes to that of nuclear meltdowns. Therefore, their
preferences have been defined as "irrational": a psychological
problem to be overcome or accounted for. Subjective feelings
about security, well-being or a sense of place and community
are thus delegitimised. (In that case it was assumed that
an earthquake on the site would not damage the nuclear power
plant.)
Incremental, liberal or non-planning
Incremental (or liberal) planning came into vogue in the
1960s. It was a pragmatic response to the problems of implementing
comprehensive plans, and was an attempt to fit planning within
liberal ideology.[6] Incremental
decision making is supposed to minimise the risk of big mistakes
by making marginal, tentative adjustments in direction or
approach.[7] In the context of
resource or land use allocation on a finite planet, it is
really "non-planning," because such decisions mask cumulative
effects that are largely irreversible from an ecological perspective.
Case-by-case development decisions convert land and environmental
"goods" to private consumption, thus reducing future public
options, while simultaneously obscuring the cumulative social
and environmental impacts and the opportunity costs of these
resource transfers. Over time, incremental choices form a
"decision tree": at each branch, planning decisions may be
rational, but taken as a whole they may not be, as we could
end up out on a limb. Although many planners subscribed to
a belief in a "public interest," when economics became the
state religion in the 1980s, many redefined their position
as "entrepreneurs," whose role was to attract investment to
the community.
Whereas the comprehensive model has traditionally viewed
society as homogeneous, the liberal model has portrayed society
as an aggregate of individuals (Figure 1). The community ("whole")
is merely the sum of the individuals ("parts"). Because the
community is an aggregate, decision analysis techniques place
an emphasis on various analogues of "voting," such as surveys
or statistical analyses, to determine preferences. It is not
the whole person but their values and preferences that count,
as expressed through the pocket book, survey or vote. That
is, these methods presume to separate interests or values
from their complex individuals in order to measure them.
While the technocratic model of participation can be selective
about public opinion, the "liberal" model presupposes that
consumer preferences and producer needs correspond with optimal
planning decisions. This suggests that the role of planning
is merely to resolve conflict among competing interests when
the market fails to do so. Planning is therefore subservient
to consumption, and the producers and businesses which sustain
consumerism. The consumer or voter is still relatively passive
in this model of participation. The individual expresses wants,
but it is the expert who collates and interprets community
preferences and advises governments (the final arbitrator).
This liberal model obscures the obvious, that as powerful
firms and individuals incrementally acquire more resources
through the planning and resource allocation system, their
influence over decision making grows. Further, critics note,
consumer demand (whether ascertained by research, market or
voting mechanisms) is a function of prior resource allocations,
opportunities and advertising.
The model also perpetuates the sometimes fanciful technical
assumptions of its parent ideology: traditional economics.
For example, the model presumes that the public sector is
blinkered, while the individual voter or consumer (even if
working in the public sector) is omniscient. It
also assumes that, although individuals act selfishly, the
aggregate of their self interested acts will result in optimal
outcomes. Yet a community near a national park or wilderness
area will often support development in their neighbourhood
for financial gain, on the assumption that there will always
be other wilderness areas they can enjoy on holiday. This
is partly because individuals do not have the capacity to
prepare a plan for the region or nation which would reveal
that other places are under similar threat.[8]
Radical, advocacy or bottom-up planning
Comprehensive planning was not designed to consider who gained
at whose expense, or the effect of development on values like
sense of place and community. Jane Jacob's book
on the Death and Life of Cities (like Rachel Carson's
Silent Spring) spurred a countermovement against this
modernist approach. Foreshadowing postmodernism, some planners
and architects began to realise that "ghetto dwellers" (many
of whom were recent migrants) had life styles, value structures
and cultures which needed to be accommodated in the built
environment. The virtue of giving the poor more meaningful
participation was demonstrated by the riots of the 1960s.
The US "war on poverty" made possible a spate of advocacy
planning and design agencies organised along the lines of
legal aid offices. Inspired by the civil rights movement,
advocacy planners sought to give disadvantaged communities
a voice in the land use investment and development decisions
that affected them. When external support dried up, a few
offices survived by doing paid consultancies in the public
interest.[9] Many radical planners
dispersed into government planning agencies, where they continued
to advocate social justice issues.[10]
While advocacy and radical planning can be distinguished,
they are both fundamentally concerned with social justice
and meeting the needs of the under-represented, by whatever
avenues the political situation at the time presents.
Advocacy planning was a genuine attempt at bottom-up planning.
Advocacy planners tried to empower the community by providing
technical support and political advice, without imposing their
own values, decisions or strategies on their client groups.
They worked to overcome cultural, class and language barriers
to assist under-represented and under-resourced community
groups in communicating with technocrats and negotiating with
administrators. In this model, the community takes an active
role in planning and design through hands-on involvement,
rather than "consultation." Advocacy may be more likely than
the other participation models to result in conditions being
placed on a development approval, such as more energy-efficient
design, cleaner technology or even a better site for the project.
These modifications, however, are only likely where they cost
little, improve a project's image and deflate public opposition.
In pluralist theory, which legitimises advocacy planning,
the individual is the embodiment of many interests and affiliations
which lead to alliances with different interest groups (Figure
1).[11] Because advocacy makes
claims of being representative, it has been criticised for
assuming that self-selecting participants can truly speak
for the community. This critique assumes numerical "representation"
is the primary objective rather than planning outcomes that
represent community interests.
Perhaps the biggest frustration among advocates is that most
hard-won victories are usually pyrrhic. For example, citizens
spend thousands of hours trying to prevent a fast-food facility
from displacing a local heritage property, while the parent
chain continues to destroy rain forests to supply that chain's
cheap beef. Thus, although many advocacy planners have socialist
values, the praxis and the pluralist interpretation of society
upon which it is based is not necessarily "radical." For example,
many radical planners implicitly accepted the traditional
view of social interaction as a contest among competing interests,
groups, classes or alliances of interests, for political influence
or control of social and natural resources. Great progress
has been made in improving communicative strategies and techniques
among participants, but little has occurred to improve the
effectiveness of participatory processes in changing the resource
transfer process. Whether the advocate works outside the system
or inside a government organisation, the objective is to improve
participation or, at most, reduce the power differentials
between vested interests and community groups, rather than
to change the decision-making system fundamentally.[12]
Problems to be avoided
As illustrated by Table 1, these "ideal" models have many
differences. To take some examples: (a) they portray "their
community" either as a homogeneous whole (monolith), an aggregate
of individuals (market), or victimised group (minority); (b)
the community "participates" either as a passive recipient,
a voter/consumer or an adversary; (c) community interests
are determined either by scientific evaluation with consultation,
democratic representation and choice, or adversarial negotiation.
However, such distinctions conceal other commonalities which
could undermine meaningful participation. Some frequently
encountered problems are set out below.
Marginalisation In these traditional models,
the "community" is often abstracted, pedestalled and set apart,
parallel to the way the "environment" has traditionally been
treated as separate from ourselves and made a ward of the
state. This is more understandable in advocacy planning, because
it comes into play when the life quality of a marginalised
community is threatened by government or corporate action.
However, in representing the subject community as a "minority"
or "noble savage," advocacy planning does little to strengthen
the community's claim. Our society does not respect victims.
While modern participation specialists promote a different
perception of community, this traditional view is still deeply
imprinted in the collective imagination.
Anthropocentrism The first three models are
anthropocentric in that the concept of "community" excludes
nature. Other species and future generations cannot vote,
and models of participation which exclude or invisibilise
natural and social support systems work against rational planning
(because survival is a fundamental goal of rational behaviour,
by definition). A denial of the interdependencies between
human and natural communities also prevents an understanding
of the impediments to social justice and their causes--which
should be a raison d'etre of participatory models.
It is largely the power imbalances that result from the inequitable
distribution and ownership of natural resources, the raw material
of power, that makes participation seem ritualistic.
Objectification Similar to the way that the
community and environment are reified in these models, the
individual is treated as an abstract "unit," whether seen
as part of a whole, aggregate or pluralist group (Figure 1).
That is, people are black boxes- containers of values or preferences
that can be separated from the person. Recent "bottom-up"
models, which draw upon the rhetoric of complex systems theories,
still treat humans as a "node" in a communication network.
Such androcentric oversimplifications can cause planners to
miss the mark. Humans are a complex of emotions, motives and
behaviours that are poorly understood, both by themselves
and by their "interpreters." Feelings are often more relevant
in finding ways to meet basic needs and improve human well-being
than so-called "objective" indicators.[13]
Androcentrism This objectification of the "lay
person" has its counterpart in the casting of the expert as
the archetypal white male of Western mythology. Decision makers
are viewed as rational calculators who optimise public, personal
or class interests (depending on the model). It is assumed
that given sufficient information "input," they will make
an objective decision or bargain. Notions of rationality mask
the personal motives which can unconsciously influence government
officials and experts against ecologically-sound decisions;
for example, frailty in the face of power, the desire to display
tools of the trade regardless of their applicability, the
entrenched faith in objectivity, situational ethics, and loyalty
to the brotherhood.
Dualism These paradigms dichotomise community
and experts; alternatively, we could all be considered both
experts and part of the broader community. Dualisms lead to
"either or" thinking: either centralised top-down or
bottom-up planning; either expert or community-based
decisions. Some call for combining both bottom-up and top-down
systems,[14] but in this case
the transformation of both is required, not just an adding
together of procedures. Binary oppositions can limit choices,
reinforce conflicting positions, create barriers to optimal
solutions and generate opportunities for blaming and buck
passing. For example, professionals can use community participation
to absolve themselves of personal responsibility: i.e. "the
market made me do it." Yet people can hardly choose better
plans and designs when examples of these options do not exist
in the market.
Procedural Participation often becomes the
goal, rather than a means to meet everyone's needs
in the optimal way. The three models of participation are
thus "procedural" in that if the process is right, the outcomes
will presumably take care of themselves. Thus, community participation
debates have often focused on how representative of marginal
perspectives the process is, rather than outcomes.
Cumulative resource transfers will inevitably silence the
"multiplicity of values" which participation seeks to foster.
Participation specialists are developing strategies that enable
"listening" which complement procedures that ensure everyone
can speak.[15] A collaborative,
proactive orientation which can transcend the basic "development
versus environment" conflict is possible if people consider
themselves on the same side. A mutual concentration on design
issues through "charrettes" (community-design workshops)[16]
and other devices (if done properly!) helps to achieve this
common focus, in my experience at least.
Linear Participation is generally only one
step in a linear and sequential decision-making system. A
corporate or government developer initiates a plan or project
for its own purposes, and then the proposal is evaluated with
community input and approved or rejected. Participation is
thus part of a process of evaluating choices that are defined
by proponents or vested (corporate or government) development
interests. Even the "counter-plans" of advocacy planners are
usually responses to threats posed by development proposals.
This sequential process means that unforeseen environmental
impacts may be "approved" in advance when the planning or
building permit is issued (although performance bonds may
be used). Participation often appears to be a stamp of approval.
Reactive In project review, the debate is often
over mitigation measures rather than the best land use. For
instance, more rational land use and healthier, more interesting
jobs might be created by solar, wind or wave energy rather
than by fossil fuels, but there is a developer ready to invest
in a coal-fired plant. The best use of investment capital
and land, therefore, often depends on special interest initiative
and profit, tempered somewhat by political restrictions on
the developer's ability to externalise the costs onto the
wider community. As restrictions are determined politically,
they also reflect the power of development interests. Thus,
present forms of participation can do little more than tax
development by requiring that their adverse impacts be modified.[17]
Quantitative In these models, participation
is often reduced to a debate over the figures in an environmental
impact assessment report, partly because of the unspecified
assumptions and rubbery nature of the figures. Numerical approaches
give preference to quantities over qualities; for instance,
the number instead of the kinds of jobs. Thus, dam construction
will appear to be better for employment than the solar alternative,
because qualitative aspects and "remote" costs are played
down--such as the nature of the work, the social displacement
entailed by a short-term construction project in (often) a
remote area, the value of wilderness, the ecological "services"
provided by nature, and alternative projects foregone.
Bounded Quantitative analysis tends to narrow
the system boundaries, as long-term costs (such as likely
effects on future generations) seem uncertain and difficult
to measure. Moreover, if the benefits to the developer are
deemed merely to "outweigh" environmental risks to the general
public, the project can still be considered a good investment.
Even when the risks are considered, they are "discounted"
or reduced to current values (i.e. the reverse of interest
rates is applied). In fact, however, environmental values
and costs can amplify over time. Also, the equations also
usually omit the indirect subsidies and pre-existing benefits
that the developer receives from being in a community. These
include the contextual factors and conditions that make the
project likely to be profitable in the first place, such as
an adjacent park or lake, and the existing infrastructure
of roads, grants, tax shelters, fast-tracking procedures and
cheap loans. Limited time horizons enhance the bias caused
by narrow system boundaries.
Power-based The realities of power relationships
are generally discounted in the traditional models. In fact,
significant projects are often taken out of the planning system
and fast-tracked through the political process because they
involve powerful interests and controversies. This can mean
that major developments are negotiated with politicians without
public oversight (known as "decision making by brown paper
bag").[18] Even pollution and
health standards (regardless of the validity of methods by
which "acceptable" pollution levels are determined) are negotiated
by politicians, applied by consultants (in the pay of project
proponents) and overseen by bureaucrats. This is hardly a
recipe for confidence.
Accountancy-based The traditional models of
participation are "accountancy-based." The technocratic process
uses quantitative analysis, the liberal process counts preferences
and advocacy planning attacks the figures. Healthy buildings
and environments, however, are not achieved through accountancy
and legalities, but through design. For example, the adverse
impacts of a building or land use greatly depend on the choice
of materials, layout, processes and components.[19]
Good building design can reduce energy consumption
by 90%, while increasing employee productivity and eliminating
the "sick building syndrome."[20]
Means to improve projects at the design stage are therefore
more important than measuring impacts.
Ecofeminist paradigm
More recent work in planning has begun to challenge the traditional
models. The "ecofeminist" paradigm summarised in Table 1 does
not share the "similarities" (above) still often found in
traditional models of participation. Ecofeminism challenges
the androcentric interpretation of humans, nature and society,
the dualistic and linear framework of reason, and the hierarchical
structures of Western society upon which the other models
are based. Space does not permit an exposition of ecofeminism
here, so only a few relevant aspects are set out below. The
general import of the following values is to suggest that
the previous processes should be replaced with a "team-design"
approach to participatory planning and design.
Inclusiveness Ecofeminism calls for inclusiveness:
the integration of voices of women, children, classes, indigenous
cultures and other species--categories marginalised by patriarchy.
The civil rights and feminist movements forced a "postmodern"
perspective which recognises that where one stands is conditioned
by where one sits. A wider range of values and interests is
now acknowledged in planning policy. However, the androcentric
decision theories, processes and technologies remain tailored
around one human stereotype (the self-interested radical individualist
male of Western philosophy) and are, therefore, inherently
exclusionary. This essentialist "model of man" is being dislodged
by a "broader" (feminist) archetypal human that is interdependent
with community and nature. This validates concerns that are
largely disregarded in mainstream planning: the sense of well-being
obtained from belonging to a community, contact with nature,
and a healthy, safe environment.
Ethical discourse In the absence of a culture
of normative debate, the androcentric decision aids and linear,
reactive review processes, though designed merely to "inform"
decision makers, have in fact been deterministic. They have
dictated what kind of future we are creating. Also, much of
the accumulated knowledge about planning is being privatised
in widely dispersed consultancies. An ecofeminist paradigm
would require that decision-making technologies and processes
be redesigned to foster ethics-based decision making rather
than quantitative decision technologies, which tend to count
only those things that can turn a profit or can at least be
represented by numbers. An ecofeminist system would
therefore seek to replace case-by-case decision making with
face-to-face communication and mutual learning.
Ethic of care Ecofeminism calls for an ethic
of care which respects the intrinsic value of other beings
and nature. Instrumentalism would be supplanted by reciprocity
and community building. Instead of "marshalling linear flows
of time, resources and human or natural energy in the service
of a manifest destiny," planning would strive to foster symbioses
with nature and Other. Feminists do not accept the concept
of knowledge as context-free, value-neutral universal ideas.
Knowing is grounded in emotion, experience and values, and
has normative content. A ecofeminist attitude toward participatory
planning would involve learning by immersion with a community,
rather than by eliciting information through empirical questions
and surveys.
Redistribution of wealth Theoretically, neoclassical
economics has sought to ensure that improving the welfare
of a group or individual does not make any others (the whole)
worse off. This means the risks of uncertainty or unforeseen
environmental impacts are borne by (or externalised upon)
the community as a whole or communities in other countries.
The focus on weighing up interests or costs and benefits,
or making trade-offs, in order to choose winners, distracts
attention from questions pertaining to the value of a development
or industry itself, or the best long-term use (or non-use)
of public resources and investments. In contrast, public investments
within an ecofeminist economics would be directed toward restoring
or protecting the whole natural and social support system
in ways that would not make any groups or individuals worse
off. It is often countered that there are insufficient public
resources to solve these big problems. To the contrary, eliminating
"perverse subsidies" through planning would represent a public
investment in ecologically-benign production systems and products.
A fraction of the world military budget could restore air,
soil and water to an adequate standard.
Spiral reason Linear, dualistic and hierarchical
structures of reason create inherent biases against the health
and preservation of natural systems, such as "cause and effect,"
"either or," "them versus us" thinking that fuels mistrust
and hostility. The ecofeminist structure of reason is spiral,
in contrast to the ladder of patriarchy or "great chain of
being."[21] Recently, hyper-abstract
models based on complex systems or chaos theory have been
latched onto as a new model for seeing the world. (The deceptively
value-free, transcendent and detached metaphor of complex
systems may explain their appeal.) In contrast, the ecofeminist
model is self-consciously normative and immersed in real world
issues and, I suggest, provides a better basis for designing
the future. It also means that since expert knowledge and
technologies are not superior by virtue of being (ostensibly)
objective, rational and detached, the expert must become accountable
for outcomes. Mere adherence to the methodology of the brotherhood
will no longer constitute responsible behaviour.
Celebration of diversity Incrementalism is
not a good concept upon which to base an adaptive planning
model, because it is one-dimensional: it is linear in time.
Incremental planning should not be confused with the multi-dimensional
green strategy of "working on all levels whenever and wherever
one can be effective in making positive social change." Instead,
it means taking tentative steps in policy implementation and,
if they are later seen to fail, something else can be tried.
This is reminiscent of the computer game called Lemmings and
not the systems view to which incrementalists sometimes lay
claim. The ecofeminist celebration of biological and cultural
diversity would foster diversity in planning and participation
systems. It would therefore be more "adaptive" than incremental
strategies. As I have explained elsewhere, participation in
an ecofeminist framework would be designed to prevent the
abuse of power and promote decision-making systems that fit
the nature of the particular context or issue.[22]
In this regard, ecofeminism offers a theoretical base for
bioregional planning,[23] which
holds that the social organisation and decision-making structures
of a community should be designed to fit the local ecology.
Design-based approach Measuring, administering,
monitoring and enforcing compliance-based assessment processes
and cross-subsidies should not be the highest goal
of environmental management. Rather than mitigating problems
after the basic decisions have been made and developers have
invested in plan development, waste and pollution
should be prevented where possible. Thus, in an ecofeminist
model of participation, ecodesign (synthesis of imagination
and systems thinking) would replace linear project evaluation
systems (Box 1). Because it focuses attention on joint problem
solving, the design-based approach moves conflict away from
ideological positions towards lateral solutions. Different
strategies and tools can be applied to structure the design
process. Quantitative, mechanistic decision aids would be
applied within, and subsidiary to, an ethics-based framework
for decision making in the (watershed or bioregional) community.
These methods would be expanded to involve an analysis of
industries, urban areas and construction projects as complex
energy and resource metabolisms nested in wider ecologies.[24]
A design-based approach is always contextual and responsive
to the particular site and cultural conditions. Although it
also takes into account general principles of ecological design,
it is geared towards outcomes rather than adherence to a specific
process. The following is an example of how this team-based
concept might be structured in one institutional and geographical
context.
| Box 1: Ecodesign
Ecodesign re-examines needs, ends and means in the
context of the social and ecological systems in which
they function. On the physical plane, ecodesign
involves rethinking the materials, industrial processes,
construction methods, building forms or urban systems
to "close the loops" at both site-specific and regional
levels. On the social plane, it means rethinking
the end uses which products, buildings and systems
serve and how these affect the community, social equity
and environmental ethics. Unlike the environmental
management fields, ecodesign also goes beyond the
physical and social dimensions, acknowledging a spiritual
dimension. This entails rethinking how built environments
can affect our sense of being, belonging and place
in community and nature.[25] |
Design review process
Project assessment (for these purposes) begins after a land
use or development proposal has been deemed permissible in
concept. This should only happen when a project fulfils the
environmental, ethical and economic objectives of a comprehensive
plan and meets other environmental standards and policies.
The purpose of the project review system is to achieve both
the developer's and general public's goals in the optimal
ecological, social and economic way. The particular system
below is simply to illustrate how the above ecofeminist principles
could translate into a pragmatic transitional system.[26]
It has three components: a design competition, impact
assessment and design development stage.
A collaborative (community/expert) team-design approach
would occur in open community workshops in order to
draw upon practical experience in the community. Team members
would represent different forms of knowledge as well as different
areas of expertise. This team-design process would benefit
the developer, since it should increase creative ideas, improve
ecological and cost efficiencies, and reduce conflict by giving
the community a sense of ownership of the planning and design
process. The jury or project assessment and design (PAD) team
would have the support of staff planners and administrative
assistants, as do planning commissions. The PAD team would
not, however, be composed of political appointees or
long-term elected members. Instead, the members would be called
for occasional "jury" service from a revolving list of certified
volunteers (who might receive stipends). They would generally
be expected to have a demonstrable ecological understanding
and experience in both community involvement (activism) and
offer interdisciplinary design knowledge.
Design competition stage The first stage is
a type of design "competition" (which has a long history in
the design professions). The design jury in this case, however,
is a select cross-section of the community drawn from the
roster. The appropriate number and mix of jurors is determined
through an open scoping process by the responsible planning
authority. For a major project, the jury might include an
ecological economist, environmentalist, engineer, unionist,
landscape planner, psychologist, community group representative,
sociologist and biologist and others. At this stage, their
job as jurors is to evaluate information dispassionately.
Unlike their legal counterparts, however, they would examine
the proposals using environmental and ethical criteria relevant
to their area of expertise, which could be that of a child
carer, immigrant, urban Aboriginal or unemployed youth.
Impact assessment stage The second stage begins
when a "design and construct" team is selected or assembled
by the jury. The jury then becomes an advisory body that assists
in both impact assessment and the search for more creative
solutions to any issues that surface. At all stages, the meetings
would be open to contributions by observers. The assessment
processes are flexible; information and experts can be tested
by inquisitorial or adversarial processes as appropriate to
the circumstances of the case. As is presently the case, the
developers pay social and environmental impact consultants,
but the PAD team and planning staff assess these studies for
reliability and accuracy. By assuming authorship, the planning
agency accepts responsibility for its contents (not presently
the practice in Australia). While technical matters may be
contracted out to specialists, the costs and time involved
in project assessment would be significantly reduced by integrating
impact assessment with project design and development.
Design development stage In the final stage,
the PAD team works with the selected firm in an interactive,
"roundtable" design process that remains open to public input
and involvement. Ecological efficiencies discovered by the
PAD team and planning staff come free to the developer and
mean long-term economic public benefits. The way design competitions
and impact assessments are presently structured means much
valuable information "disappears," because the information
is generated case-by-case and is relatively inaccessible.
Because of the continuity provided by the proposed system,
in contrast, a "learning system" is created. The planning
staff can develop and maintain "evaluation tool kits" for
both assessing and rating future developments proposals. This
community-based team process would enable citizens to take
back some responsibility for the quality of their built environment.
|
Box 2. Further reading
M. Albert and R. Hahnel, "Participatory planning,"
Science and Society, Vol. 56, No. 1, Spring
1992, pp. 39-59.
Douglas Amy, The Politics of Environmental Mediation
(New York: Columbia University Press, 1987).
M. Bamberger, "The importance of community participation,"
Public Administration and Development, Vol.
11, No. 3, May-June 1991, pp. 281-284.
R. Fisher and S. Brown, Getting Together: Building
Relationships as We Negotiate (New York: Penguin,
1988).
Allan D. Heskin, The Struggle for Community
(Boulder, CO: Westview, 1991).
S. Kaplan and R. Kaplan, "The visual environment:
public participation in design and planning," Journal
of Social Issues, Vol. 45, Spring 1989, pp. 59-86.
A. S. Lackey and L. Dershem, "The process is pedagogy--what
does community participation teach?" Community
Development Journal, Vol. 27, No. 3, pp. 220-234.
Wendy Sarkissian and Kelvin Walsh, Community Participation
in Practice (Perth: Institute for Science and
Technology Policy, Murdoch University, 1994).
Carmine Scavo, "The use of participative mechanisms
by large US cities," Journal of Urban Affairs,
Vol. 15, No. 1, 1993, pp. 93-109.
L. Susskind and Jeffrey Cruickshank, Breaking
the Impasse: Consensual Approaches to Resolving Public
Disputes (New York: Basic Books, 1987).
B. West, "Public consultation--is it just a public
relations exercise?" Urban Consolidation and Planning
Conference, Sydney, 16-19 March 1992. |
Conclusion
This chapter has attempted to outline traditional planning
and participation models and contrast these with some features
of an ecofeminist alternative. While other models dichotomise
experts and lay citizens, this model would recognise that
all individuals are a mix of special knowledge, experience
and ignorance. While there is a long history of participation
in planning and design, and substantial progress in the area
of improving participation methods, the translation of those
experiments into government level decision making has been
limited. To direct attention to the structural level, the
chapter has provided a model for a "transitional" or sub-optimal
system, which illustrates how broader feminist principles
can be used to modify the generic project review system in
a practical way.
Acknowledgments I acknowledge and appreciate
the comments on the draft by Pam Kaufman, cultural landscape
consultant, Toronto, Canada; Bruce Goldstein, Program in City
and Regional Planning, University of California at Berkeley;
Stephanie Rixecker, Department of Resource Management, Lincoln
University, Canterbury, New Zealand; and Wendy Sarkissian,
Department of Architecture, University of Sydney.
Commentary by Bronwyn Hayward[*]
There is a growing unease amongst academics, planners, and
community members alike. Despite many laudable attempts to
achieve a more participatory approach to planning, it seems,
as Birkeland argues here, that the introduction of participatory
processes alone has not achieved significant institutional
reform.
Janis Birkeland identifies three schools of planning thought
and explores how each school approaches the issue of public
participation. These schools--technocratic, liberal and radical/advocacy--are
then contrasted with an alternative ecofeminist vision of
participatory planning.
In contrast to the former planning schools, Birkeland argues
that an ecofeminist approach holds the key to effective institutional
reform because it promotes more inclusive public participation
(integrating a wide range of voices), and gives emphasis to
the ethics of discourse, social learning, grounded knowledge
and the "intrinsic value of other beings and nature." Ecofeminism
also encourages a redistribution of wealth (with an emphasis
on restoring nature and social supports), new forms of reasoning
and diversity in design.
This ecofeminist vision is commendable, but will it work?
My initial reaction is to note that ecofeminists are not alone
in articulating new visions for public participation. Planners
working with theories of deliberative democracy share many
of the aspirations outlined above. For example, authors like
Dryzek,[27] Hillier,[28]
Forester[29] and Fischer[30]
have been influenced by Habermasian theories of critical theory
and communicative action. These authors seek practical ways
to create planning forums in which citizens can come together
to discuss issues of concern, in a situation where discussion
is influenced only by the force of the better argument, and
not by power or wealth. Some deliberative democrats like Dryzek
argue that new social movements provide the kind of inclusive
forum we need if we want more voices in planning debate. Others
like Frank Fischer try to help citizens to work on complex
technical issues in team situations with planners and other
"experts."
A second school of thought which shares many of the aspirations
of ecofeminists is that of communicative planning. Authors
like Iris Marion Young[31] and
Patsy Healey[32] are amongst the
foremost authors of this new school of thought. Communicative
planners complain that many approaches to public participation,
including the discursive school, simply end up privileging
those people who feel most comfortable with the western rational
(male) adversarial model of argument. Communicative planners
attempt to achieve a more inclusive public discussion by ensuring
that voices coloured by emotion, rhetoric, and story telling
are recognised as valid and authoritative and that public
participation occurs in forums in which time has been taken
to ensure that participants first know and trust each other.
Communicative planners, deliberative democrats and ecofeminists
all advocate slightly different approaches to public participation,
but they share a common concern for social justice. All three
planning approaches force planners to revisit questions of
social justice in two ways. First these new approaches challenge
us to consider the justice of decision-making procedures
(how decisions are made, who gets heard and with what authority)
and second we are asked to consider issues of distributive
justice (who benefits and who bears the burden of planning
outcomes). These approaches remind us that if we want to achieve
effective institutional reform in planning it is not enough
to introduce more opportunities for public participation;
we need to ensure that planning outcomes are equitable and
that the participatory procedures are inclusive and just.
Commentary by Paul Selman[*]
At the outset, let me affirm my sympathy with many of the
author's ideas about reconstructing urban planning. Nevertheless,
despite being a supporter of community-based approaches, I
do question their potential to be wholly reconciled with human
(and not just male) nature. On balance, I think that Birkeland's
views provide an interesting basis for debate, but that her
prescriptions are neither definitive nor the exclusive domain
of ecofeminism.
Initially, I must agree that urban planning represents a
patriarchal tradition. This is an observation rather than
a criticism, for I do not believe that one generation should
pass judgement on a previous one. Despite being a staunch
defender of my profession (hopefully, not mere "loyalty to
the brotherhood"), I cannot escape the conclusion that traditional
urban planning is irredeemably a male-oriented product of
twentieth century modernism. My professional institute has
done all the right things--electing women presidents, taking
our daughters to work, supporting "women in planning" groups,
etc.--yet still any gathering of senior planners approximates
to the proverbial smoke-filled room of middle-aged men. This
reinforces my belief that urban planning contains assumptions
about change and progress which appeal to the male psyche,
and I suspect that its traditional conception is nearing the
end of its shelf-life.
However, I believe the author too lightly dismisses and caricatures
past practice, and ignores the positive reasons why "theoretically
superseded" systems prove ineradicable. It is important to
see the different models not as progressive substitutes over
time but as conceptual clusters of imperfect approaches which
contain various workable features. Adversarialism may not
be fashionable, but it is still probably the most satisfactory
way of resolving most planning issues; equally, incrementalism
is an effective way of making decisions in most situations,
whereas mould-breaking "social learning" occurs only intermittently.
The hallmarks of ecofeminism also seem distinctly eclectic
and, whilst it may "reflect recent trends," it cannot lay
more than a partial claim to notions and mechanisms of adaptive
planning, industrial ecology, team-design, roundtables, contextualised
knowledge, inclusiveness or advocacy. Many of the propositions
are thus neither distinctively feminist nor even terribly
contentious.
My main concern is that the chapter reflects an idealised
view of human nature, often found in theories of citizenship,
localism and communitarianism. It may be regrettable that
economics has become a "state religion" since the 1980s (partly
as a result of a certain woman prime minister), but this is
because it provides a depressingly accurate view of human
behaviour, and does help us comprehend the nature, values
and usage of environmental resources. Men and women, given
comparable opportunities, show remarkably similar proclivities
to materialism, mobility and consumption. Even the most laudable
community, team-based designs must take account of this side
of human nature, as well as the increasing atomism of complex
societies. I should like to contend numerous other statements
but, despite my caveats, I find this an optimistic essay,
which signals many features of a re-defined urban planning
in the 21st century.
Response by Janis Birkeland
Selman objects that the participatory processes canvassed
in my chapter are "not the exclusive domain of ecofeminism."
I would hope not, as we inhabit the same social system. When
participation issues are discussed within a "malestream" communitarian,
anarchist, socialist or other paradigm, they do not attract
such dog-in-the-manger retorts. Ecofeminist theory challenges
the dualistic nature of traditional Western thought, so it
would not be consistent to reject all concepts produced in
a male dominant culture (at least since the advent of first-wave
feminism). The traditional defence of patriarchy has been
to regard things associated with the feminine in oppositional
or exclusionary terms, and this ploy still serves to marginalise
feminist thought. Ecofeminism is not an opposition, but an
evolving and creative synthesis which seeks to heal the lobotomy
of patriarchal culture.
This "exclusionary principle" in malestream academia does
harm to its heirs as well as those it serves to dispossess.
Feminists know and understand the malestream culture, but
also read feminist analyses, so they have the benefit of broader
insights and dimensions. Thus, for example, had Selman understood
ecofeminist theory, he might not have such a fatalistic view
of "human nature" embedded in economic rationalism or Thatcherism.
The fact that game theory experiments show that people trained
in neoclassical economics act more selfishly than others demonstrates
that economic rationalism is not biologically preordained.
While women are capable of taking on the most perverse values,
their tradition of care for millions of years has not yet
been annihilated by the economist paradigm. If women's experience
counted, it would belie the universality of patriarchal human
nature.[33]
Selman's complaint that my "prescriptions are not definitive"
seems to be demanding patriarchal outputs from ecofeminist
theory. In an ecofeminist framework which (within the constraints
of language and culture) could be understood as systems design
thinking, terms like "definitive prescriptions" make no sense,
and would certainly be inappropriate criteria for social change.
Patriarchal thinking is also revealed in Selman's projection
that feminism is passing judgement on a "previous" generation.
All the feminists I have known are interested in changing
systems of oppression and exploitation--not "blaming"--yet
blame is all that many men choose to hear.
Selman's lament that his "professional institute has done
all the right things," such as electing women presidents,
would amuse most of its women members. If malestream planners
learned to listen, women's participation in these institutes
might begin to shift paradigms. This is one of those key concepts
of participatory planning that is not the exclusive domain
of ecofeminism, yet has not been taken on board anyway. To
think that tokens in boy's clubs is an answer is also to confuse
gender (a cultural construct) with sex (biology) and reflects
the dominant paradigm of participation discussed in my chapter.
While I do indeed "caricature past practice," I was there,
as a participatory planner in the 1960s. Bronwyn Hayward's
contribution notes that the work of discursive and communicative
planning theorists was not included in my (admittedly broad
and simplistic) overview. While aligned with critical theory,
these theories of participation, last time I looked, were
still not dealing with the structures of power as distinguished
from procedures within those structures, which was the primary
point of my chapter.
Footnotes
[*] Dr Janis Birkeland was an architect,
lawyer and city planner in San Francisco. Her experience includes
being an advocacy planner in low-income urban areas, conducting
many community-participation-in-design projects, holding positions
in both statutory and comprehensive planning, and heading
the Major Project Review Section of the San Francisco City
Planning Department. She has a PhD in environmental management
and is Co-director of the Centre for Environmental Philosophy,
Planning and Design at the University of Canberra, where she
is a senior lecturer specialising in ecological architecture,
construction ecology, environmental planning, construction
law and ecophilosophy.
[1]. Charlie Pye Smith and Grazia
Borrini Feyerabend with Richard Sandbrook, The Wealth of
Communities (London: Earthscan Publications, 1994); Helen
Forsey (ed.), Circles of Strength: Community Alternatives
to Alienation (Gabriola Island, BC: New Society Publishers,
1993); Christine Meyer and Firth Moosang (eds.), Living
With the Land: Communities Restoring the Earth (Gabriola
Island, BC: New Society Publishers, 1993).
[2]. For a description of ecofeminist
theory, see Janis Birkeland, "Linking Theory & Practice,"
in Greta Gaard (ed.), Ecofeminism: Living Interconnections
with Animals and Nature (Philadelphia: Temple University
Press, 1993), pp. 12-59; Maria Mies and Vandana Shiva, Ecofeminism
(London: Zed Books, 1993).
[3]. See Wendy Sarkissian and Kelvin
Walsh (eds.), Community Participation in Practice: Casebook
(Perth: Institute for Science and Technology Policy, Murdoch
University, 1994) for a comprehensive overview of this area.
[4]. Janis Birkeland, "An ecofeminist
critique of `manstream' planning," The Trumpeter: Journal
of Ecosophy, Vol. 8, No. 2, 1991, pp. 72-84.
[5]. See generally J. Barry Cullingworth,
The Political Culture of Planning: American land Use Planning
in Comparative Perspective (New York: Routledge, 1993).
[6]. Paul Davidoff, "Advocacy and
pluralism in planning," Journal of the American Institute
of Planners, Vol. 1, November 1965, pp. 331-338.
[7]. C. E. Lindblom, "The science
of muddling through," Public Administration Review, Vol.
19, Spring 1959, pp. 79-88.
[8]. Doug Aberley (ed.), Futures
by Design: The Practice of Ecological Planning (Philadelphia:
New Society Publishers, 1994).
[9]. The Community Design Center
still survives in San Francisco.
[10]. John Forester, Planning
in the Face of Power (Berkeley: University of California
Press, 1989).
[11]. Davidoff, op. cit.
[12]. See Forester, op. cit.
[13]. See Clive Hamilton, "Genuine
progress indicators," in Janis Birkeland (ed.), Eco-Logical
Design (Sydney: Allen and Unwin, 1999, forthcoming).
[14]. Mary Ganis, People and
Physical Environment Research, Paper 47, 1995, pp. 3-6.
[15]. See Sarkissian and Walsh,
op. cit.
[16]. Peter Wear, "New age ghetto
blasters," The Bulletin, 23-30 January 1996, pp. 46-48.
[17]. Janis Birkeland, "Redefining
the environmental problem," Environmental and Planning
Law Journal, Vol. 5, No. 2, 1988, pp. 109-133.
[18]. In Australia, whether and
when an EIS is required is ultimately up to ministerial discretion.
[19]. See David Malin Roodman and
Nicholas Lenssen, A Building Revolution: How Ecology and
Health Concerns are Transforming Construction (Washington,
DC: Worldwatch Institute, 1995).
[20]. See Hunter Lovins, "Productivity
and energy efficiency," in Janis Birkeland (ed.), Rethinking
the Built Environment, Proceedings of the Catalyst 95 Conference
(Canberra: Centre for Environmental Philosophy, Planning
and Design, University of Canberra, 1995).
[21]. Patsy Hallen, "Careful of
science: a feminist critique of science," The Trumpeter,
Vol. 6, No. 1, 1989, pp. 3-8.
[22]. See Janis Birkeland, Planning
for a Sustainable Society: Social Transformation and Institutional
Reform, PhD thesis, Department of Geography, University
of Tasmania, 1993, which redesigns the institution along ecofeminist
principles.
[23]. Judith Plant, "Searching for
common ground: ecofeminism and bioregionalism," in Van Andruss,
Christopher Plant, Judith Plant and Eleanor Wright (eds.),
Home! A Bioregional Reader (Philadelphia: New Society
Publishers, 1990), pp. 79-85.
[24]. Birkeland, 1999, op. cit.
[25]. Janis Birkeland, "Responsible
design," Architectural Theory Review, Vol. 2, 1996,
pp. 13-15.
[26]. This example was presented
in Janis Birkeland, "Towards a new project review system",
Bogong, Vol 16, No. 5, 1996, pp. 10-13.
[*] Bronwyn M. Hayward lectures
in public policy in the Department of Human and Leisure Sciences,
Lincoln University, PO Box 84, Lincoln University, Canterbury,
New Zealand. She specialises in public participation research
and teaches a graduate course in theory and practice of public
participation in planning and policy making.
[27]. John S. Dryzek, Discursive
Democracy: Politics, Policy and Political Science (Cambridge:
Cambridge University Press, 1990).
[28]. J. Hillier, "To boldly go
where no planners have ever gone before," Environment and
Planning D Society and Space, Vol 11, 1993, pp. 89-113.
[29]. J. Forester, Critical Theory
Public Policy and Planning Practice (Albany: State University
of New York Press, 1993).
[30]. Frank Fischer, "Citizen participation
and the democratisation of policy expertise," Policy Sciences,
Vol. 26, 1993, pp. 165-187.
[31]. Iris M. Young, "Communication
and the Other: beyond deliberative democracy," in M. Wilson
and A. Yeatman (eds.) Justice and Identity (Wellington:
Bridget Williams Books, 1995).
[32]. Patsy Healey, "Planning through
debate," Town Planning Review, Vol. 63, No. 2, 1992,
pp. 143-163.
[*] Paul Selman is professor of
Environmental Planning at Cheltenham and Gloucester College,
UK. He holds qualifications in environmental science and town
planning, and is a member of the Royal Town Planning Institute.
After a stint in local government, he taught at various universities,
and is the author of several books and editor of the journal
Landscape Research.
[33]. Birkeland, 1993, op. cit.
|