1995
DOI: 10.3362/9781780445649
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Power and Participatory Development

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Cited by 330 publications
(142 citation statements)
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“…Scope of participation 4 categories were defined, based on two broad criteria, namely inclusivity (Kapoor, 2001;Nelson and Wright, 1995;Poolman and Van De Giesen, 2006;Slocum, 1995) and the nature of information flow (Health Canada, 2000; Kapoor, 2001;OECD, 2004;Pretty, 1995;Rowe and Frewer, 2004). Minimal participation involves stakeholders solely for the purpose of obtaining data that is otherwise unavailable/inaccessible, and/or for testing data or methodologies.…”
Section: Participation 2amentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Scope of participation 4 categories were defined, based on two broad criteria, namely inclusivity (Kapoor, 2001;Nelson and Wright, 1995;Poolman and Van De Giesen, 2006;Slocum, 1995) and the nature of information flow (Health Canada, 2000; Kapoor, 2001;OECD, 2004;Pretty, 1995;Rowe and Frewer, 2004). Minimal participation involves stakeholders solely for the purpose of obtaining data that is otherwise unavailable/inaccessible, and/or for testing data or methodologies.…”
Section: Participation 2amentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The challenges for participatory development initiatives, then, can be thought of in these terms, whereby the links between local negotiating capacities and power relations are ®rmly made. This requires an approach to participation which takes the dynamics of power relations between social actors involved in the development process seriously (Nelson and Wright, 1995).…”
Section: Conclusion and Practical Implicationsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Based on important critiques of an undemocratic and unequal development process which had often produced locally unpopular and thus ineffective projects, the involvement of local people was intended to produce betterdesigned projects that had the endorsement of local communities, through an egalitarian and democratic process (Asthana & Oostvogels, 1996;Nelson & Wright, 1995). An optimistic, even utopian discourse ensued (Henkel & Stirrat, 2001), in which the 'last' would be 'put first' (Chambers, 1983), development would be 'people-centred' (Korten, 1990), and communities, which were presumed homogenous, would be engaged.…”
Section: The Disputed Role Of Community Participationmentioning
confidence: 99%