Ph. D. Thesis.This thesis explores the possibilities and limitations of citizen participation and
collective action for spatial justice across the online and offline spaces of the
everyday. It uses the case study of Manizales, Colombia; a city that proclaims itself
as innovative, socially inclusive and participatory. Two hypotheses informed the
research design. One, that despite city’s efforts on digital innovation, local
government in Manizales had yet to use the collaborative potential of digital media,
in order to improve participatory and collaborative processes of city-making. And
two, that there are significant differences in the perceptions from local government
and social collectives, about the transforming potential of collective action and digital
media uses for inclusion and participation. Consequently, the research questions
explore the relationships between governmental initiatives and the everyday life of
socio-territorial movements seeking spatial justice, as well as the ways in which
citizens mobilise, the local roles of digital media in collective action, and the
implications of the findings to transform debates about spatial justice in Manizales
and beyond.
Drawing on five months of place-based participant observation in Manizales, a year
and a half of netnographic exercises (online participant observation), complemented
by interviews and perception exercises, the thesis provides an empirical analysis that
is grounded in the everyday processes of city-making, from the formal protocols to
the informal and alternative. Three socio-territorial movements in the city served as
the sub-cases of study, which included several individuals and collectives that
became crucial participants in this research.
Overall, this thesis highlights the importance of understanding local socio-political
contexts in relation to processes and efforts around digital innovation for participation
and collective action. Additionally, it argues that the expansion of urban planning, as
a practice that embraces and makes the most of the chaos of participation – both
online and offline, requires recognition and integration of city-making practices
outside of hegemonic structures of power. Moreover, the findings reveal a case of
urban contestation as an exercise of transgressive, rather than insurgent citizenship,
which can enrich current debates about the Right to the City and practical
approaches towards data and spatial justice in the city.Research Excellency Academy, School of Architecture
Planning and Landscape at Newcastle Universit
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