Abstract

In public planning processes for sustainable urban development, planners and experts often face the challenge of engaging a public that is not familiar with sustainability principles or does not subscribe to sustainability values. Although there are calls to build the public’s sustainability literacy through social learning, such efforts require sufficient time and other resources that are not always available. Alternatively, public participation processes may be realigned with the sustainability literacy the participants possess, and their capacity can modestly be built during the engagement. Asking what tools might successfully align public participation with participants’ sustainability literacy, this article describes and evaluates a public participation process in Phoenix, Arizona, in which researchers, in collaboration with city planners, facilitated sustainability conversations as part of an urban development process. The tool employed for Visually Enhanced Sustainability Conversation (VESC) was specifically designed to better align public participation with stakeholders’ sustainability literacy. We tested and evaluated VESC through interviews with participants, city planners, and members of the research team, as well as an analysis of project reports. We found that the use of VESC successfully facilitated discussions on pertinent sustainability issues and embedded sustainability objectives into the project reports. We close with recommendations for strengthening tools like VESC for future public engagements.

Highlights

  • Both sustainability science and urban planning literature identify public participation as an important decision making procedure [1,2,3,4,5]

  • In planning for sustainable urban development, public participation requires engaged participants, and participants that are literate in sustainability principles, norms, and behaviors [7,8]

  • Engaging with a public that lacks sustainability literacy is a significant challenge for planners and experts working towards sustainable urban development

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Summary

Introduction

Both sustainability science and urban planning literature identify public participation as an important decision making procedure [1,2,3,4,5]. In planning for sustainable urban development, public participation requires engaged participants, and participants that are literate in sustainability principles, norms, and behaviors [7,8]. Engaging with a public that lacks sustainability literacy is a significant challenge for planners and experts working towards sustainable urban development. Cohen and Wiek [9] identify ten ways in which the public participation process (as designed by planners and experts) is often misaligned with the local context. Participants’ sustainability literacy is one key misalignment that can impair the quality of public conversations on urban sustainability and compromise the robustness of sustainability outcomes in project planning and implementation

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