“…To answer these questions, we mainly rely on theories of co-production, planning politics, democracy and governance. Insights from co-production (Albrechts, 2013; Bovaird, 2007; Joshi and Moore, 2004; Mitlin, 2008; Ostrom, 1996; Watson, 2014) and planning politics (Albrechts, 2020; De Blust and Van Den Broeck, 2019; Gualini, 2001; Healey, 1999; Moulaert, 2005; Servillo and Van Den Broeck, 2012; Van Den Broeck, 2008, 2010, 2011; Van Den Broeck and Verachtert, 2016; Wildavsky, 1973) cast light on the agential features of planners and the power dynamics of the wider political context in planning processes. Democracy theoreticians (Galli, 2011; Swyngedouw, 2009; Swyngedouw and Wilson, 2014) elaborate on the political conditions that hinder or foster democratic urban processes, while theories of socially innovative governance (Moulaert, 2020; Moulaert et al, 2019) analyze how new initiatives create the basis for socio-political transformation by activating and further democratizing bottom-linked governance arrangements.…”