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Planning Theory, Vol. 5, No. 3, 255-270 (2006)
DOI: 10.1177/1473095206068630

Tyranny of the Median and Costly Consent: A Reflection on the Justification for Participatory Urban Planning Processes

Nikhil Kaza

University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, USA

Wide participation, in the urban planning context, is justified as the means of balancing multiple interests outside the traditional decision-making setup. However, this article argues that the participatory paradigm provides at best inadequate justification to the planning process. Particularly if consensus building is the aim of the participatory process, it suffers from a number of impossibility results well documented in the political economics literature. ‘Lazy deliberators’ will arrive at the acceptance of a priori median preference, and participatory processes necessarily exclude some groups, even under equitable capability and power distribution. This article intends to contribute to the debate on the nature of participatory planning by critically analyzing the motivations of participation and limitation of the participatory planning paradigms, and advocates a temperate view on their efficacy.

Key Words: consensus • consent • participation • persuasion • political economy


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