Let the people decide! Citizen engagement and enfranchisement in the front end of urban development projects




Vuorinen, Lauri; Lehtinen, Jere; Ståhle, Matias

PublisherEMERALD GROUP PUBLISHING LTD

Leeds

2024

International Journal of Managing Projects in Business

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF MANAGING PROJECTS IN BUSINESS

INT J MANAG PROJ BUS

17

8

92

118

27

1753-8378

1753-8386

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1108/IJMPB-01-2024-0009

https://doi.org/10.1108/IJMPB-01-2024-0009

https://research.utu.fi/converis/portal/detail/Publication/457849502



Purpose

Citizen engagement can promote value creation in urban development projects. This potential stems from the granting of decision-making authority to citizens, labeled citizen enfranchisement in this study. Citizens are focal stakeholders of urban development projects and enfranchisement grants them an explicit say on such projects. Despite this potential for enhanced value creation, there remains limited understanding about how project organizations enfranchise stakeholders in the front end of urban development projects.

Design/methodology/approach

In this research, we designed a multiple-case study to analyze two novel citizen engagement processes in Northern-European cities. In these processes, citizens were enfranchised in ideating, designing, and making selections on urban development projects. We followed a multimethod approach to data collection. The collected datasets include document data, interview data and observation data.

Findings

Our findings demonstrated a distribution and redistribution of decision-making authority throughout the phases of the citizen engagement processes. Citizens’ voices were amplified throughout the project front end, although episodes of decision-making authority held by the cities took place periodically as well. By granting explicit decision-making authority to citizens, citizen enfranchisement facilitated a more democratic urban development process, promoting value creation.

Originality/value

In contrast to the earlier research, the findings of our study illustrate citizen engagement taking place at so-called higher levels of stakeholder engagement. In particular, our study reveals a granting of de facto decision-making authority to citizens, also known as citizen enfranchisement. These findings contribute to the earlier research on stakeholder engagement in projects, where the influence of stakeholder engagement has often been considered symbolic or limited.


This research was carried out as part of the Citizens as Pilots of Smart Cities (CaPs) funded by NordForsk (No. 95576).


Last updated on 2025-27-01 at 19:37