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Participation: From Tyranny to Transformation: Exploring New Approaches to Participation in Development

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Participation has established itself as a significant approach to project implementation, policy-making and governance in developing and developed countries alike. Recently, however, it has become fashionable to dismiss participation as more rhetoric than substance, and subject to manipulation by agencies and social change agents intent simply on pursuing their own agendas under cover of community consent. In this important new volume, development and other social policy scholars and practitioners seek to rebut this simplistic conclusion, while addressing the problems of power and politics which have beset some approaches to participation. They describe and analyse new experiments in participation from a wide diversity of social contexts that show how, far from being a redundant and depoliticizing concept, participation can -- given certain conditions -- be linked to genuinely transformative processes and outcomes for marginalized communities and people.

This volume is the first comprehensive attempt to evaluate the state of participatory approaches in the aftermath of the 'Tyranny' critique. It captures the recent convergence between participatory development and participatory governance, and spans the range of institutional actors involved in these approaches - the state, civil society and donor agencies. It places participatory interventions in a political context, and links them directly to issues of popular agency. The volume embeds participation within contemporary advances in development theory and proposes theoretical and practical ways forward for relocating participation as a genuinely transformative approach.

Scholars and practitioners alike, and from a diversity of disciplines and community and development agencies, are likely to find this volume a theoretically illuminating and practically useful source of ideas about how participation can achieve concrete liberatory outcomes.

304 pages, Paperback

First published October 1, 2004

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About the author

Giles Mohan

13 books

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121 reviews
December 29, 2021
I read this book as part of a college course over 10 years ago. Having worked in fields adjacent to international development, and now domestic governance and community-based policy work -- these critiques and concepts feel like conversations with an old friend, with new ah-has, laughs, and grimaces built up from first hand experiences 'in the field' / 'on-the-job.'

It's also reminding me that 'participatory design' + 'participatory governance' (something I'm thinking more about, compared to previous explorations of participatory development/entrepreneurship) are not new debates in the field of inclusive/bottom-up social impact work.

Since this book is almost two decades old now, I'm curious about the updated debates on this topic, whether we've moved forward at all. Any recommendations welcome!
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