Abstract
University–community partnerships have long sought to develop interventions to empower historically marginalized community members. However, there is limited critical attention to tensions faced when community engaged courses support urban planning initiatives in communities of color. This article explores how three Florida State University planning classes sought to engage the predominantly African-American Griffin Heights community in Tallahassee, Florida. Historically, African-American communities have been marginalized from the planning process, undermining community trust and constraining city planning capacity to effectively engage and plan with African-American community members. In this context, there are opportunities for planning departments with relationships in the African-American community to facilitate more extensive community engagement and urban design processes that interface with broader city planning programs. However, mediating relationships between the community and the city within the context of applied planning classes presents unique challenges. Although city planners have increasingly adopted the language of community engagement, many processes remain inflexible, bureaucratic, and under resourced. Reliance on inexperienced students to step in as community bridges may also limit the effectiveness of community engagement. Thus, while community engaged courses create opportunities to facilitate community empowerment, they also at times risk perpetuating the disenfranchisement of African-American community members in city planning processes.
Highlights
University–community partnerships have long sought to develop interventions to empower historically marginalized community members
We describe how students in applied urban planning graduate courses facilitated Griffin Heights community engagement in the planning process and development of an urban design plan
As there is no universal template for how community engagement or planning the built environment should unfold in African-American communities, it is necessary to position interventions within the context of the community and its relation to urban planning processes
Summary
“You can’t talk about Griffin Heights without talking about Springfield, or Frenchtown because it was one. Societies 2020, 10, 61 engage the predominantly African-American Griffin Heights community in urban planning processes in Tallahassee, Florida. City planners have not engaged African-American community members in Griffin Heights. While community engaged courses create unique opportunities to facilitate the empowerment of a historically marginalized community, they are continually challenged by the potential of becoming complicit in perpetuating the disenfranchisement of African-American community members in city planning processes. We develop this argument through the following five sections. We conclude by reiterating our major findings and offering recommendations to foster more empowering university–community partnerships for historically marginalized communities
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