Deconstructing Communicative Rationality: A Critique of Habermasian Collaborative Planning

What has becomes known in recent years as communicative or collaborative planning has forged a new hegemony in planning theory. Described by some as the paradigm of the 1990s, it proposes a fundamental challenge to the practice of planning that seeks both to explain where planning has gone wrong and (more controversially) to identify ways forward. The broad approach itself and advocates of it have lacked the advantage of any critique. This paper provides such an opportunity. Following a brief outline of communicative action, we identify three broad areas of concern that militate against the option of a collaborative planning approach. More specifically, we identify problematic assumptions in Habermas's original theoretical distinction of communicative action as a fourth separate concept of sociological action. Although we accept its useful dissection of planning and the role of values and consensus-building in decision-settings, we consider that collaborative planning theory fails to incorporate adequately the peculiar political and professional nuances that exist in planning practice. We conclude our critique by raising programmatic points for planning theory and practice in general.

[1]  M Tewdwr-Jones,et al.  Collaborative Action in Local Plan-Making: Planners' Perceptions of ‘Planning through Debate’ , 1998 .

[2]  M Tewdwr-Jones,et al.  Mind the Gap: Planning Theory–Practice and the Translation of Knowledge into Action—A Comment on Alexander (1997) , 1997 .

[3]  J. Forester Beyond Dialogue to Transformative Learning: How Deliberative Rituals Encourage Political Judgment in Community Planning Processes , 1997 .

[4]  Tim Richardson,et al.  Foucauldian discourse: power and truth in the policy process , 1996 .

[5]  P. Healey,et al.  Communicative micropolitics: A story of claims and discourses , 1996 .

[6]  M. Tewdwr-Jones Reflective planning theorising and professional protectionism: a reply to Allmendinger , 1996 .

[7]  P. Allmendinger Development control and the legitimacy of planning decisions: a comment , 1996 .

[8]  P. Healey The Communicative Turn in Planning Theory and its Implications for Spatial Strategy Formation , 1996 .

[9]  J. Innes Planning Theory's Emerging Paradigm: Communicative Action and Interactive Practice , 1995 .

[10]  Patsy Healey,et al.  The Communicative Work of Development Plans , 1993 .

[11]  Patsy Healey,et al.  A Planner's Day: Knowledge and Action in Communicative Practice , 1992 .

[12]  F. C. P. Motta The theory of communicative action , 1991 .

[13]  D. Kolb,et al.  Planning in the Face of Power. , 1988 .

[14]  R. Rorty Habermas and Lyotard on postmodernity , 1991 .

[15]  E. Goffman The Presentation of Self in Everyday Life , 1959 .