Research team

Expertise

A new tendency is on the rise in EU urban policy-making: adopting Co-production Arrangements inspired by the paradigm of the Commons (CAC). Some pioneering cases stand out, such as the Urban Commons Regulation in Bologna (2014), the Commons Transition Plan in Ghent (2017) and the Citizen Assets Programme in Barcelona (2017). These cities have been joined by others that either have adopted similar arrangements or are currently considering adopting them. By and large, these arrangements aim to redistribute decision-making power to citizens over services and resources that are considered as essential for urban collective wellbeing (e.g. public buildings and spaces, energy and water utilities) by fostering community self-management. Preliminary and applied research on these arrangements has been carried out, mostly based on single case study analyses. However, scientific, indepth and comparative knowledge on CAC is still scarce. By adopting an urban epistemology to the traditional state-centred political science field, COMMONCITY will produce key, useful and timely knowledge on CAC. It will comparatively analyse the i) policy models, ii) political, social and administrative challenges, iii) impact on urban democracy of recently adopted CAC in the three EU pioneering cities: Barcelona, Bologna and Ghent.

A new frontier in EU urban policy-making: commons-inspired co-production arrangements (COMMONCITY). 01/09/2023 - 31/08/2025

Abstract

A new tendency is on the rise in EU urban policy-making: adopting Co-production Arrangements inspired by the paradigm of the Commons(CAC). Some pioneering casesstand out,such asthe Urban Commons Regulation in Bologna (2014), the Commons Transition Plan in Ghent (2017) and the Citizen Assets Programme in Barcelona (2017). These cities have been joined by others that either have adopted similar arrangements or are currently considering adopting them. By and large, these arrangements aim to redistribute decision making power to citizens over services and resources that are considered as essential for urban collective wellbeing (e.g. public buildings and spaces, energy and water utilities) by fostering community self-management. Preliminary and applied research on these arrangements has been carried out, mostly based on single case study analyses. However, scientific, in-depth and comparative knowledge on CAC is still scarce. By adopting an urban epistemology to the traditional state-centred political science field, COMMONCITY will produce key, useful and timely knowledge on CAC. It will comparatively analyse the i) policy models, ii) political, social and administrative challenges, iii) impact on urban democracy of recently adopted CAC in the three EU pioneering cities: Barcelona, Bologna and Ghent. By adopting a co-production-oriented approach to data collection and analysis that will foster citizen science, it will provide unique empirical data on the varieties, effective functioning and democratising effect of these arrangements. The results of COMMONCITY will contribute to the scientific debate in the broad urban study field and, specifically, in urban democracy, urban governance, urban policy-making and urban participation. It will also provide policy recommendations to various levels of government, in order to foster the adoption of CAC and improve the functioning and democratic impact of existing and under-adoption ones.

Researcher(s)

Research team(s)

Project type(s)

  • Research Project

Enhancing urban democracy through commons-based coproduction arrangements: a three-case comparative study (COMMOCRACY). 24/11/2022 - 30/11/2024

Abstract

European liberal democracies are shaken by a legitimation crisis. Over the last decades, a feeling of distrust has grown among civil society towards state institutions. There is thus an urgent need to enable processes that deepen democracy and increase trust in public institutions. The implementation of an urban collaborative governance based on Coproduction Arrangements inspired by the Paradigm of the Commons (CAPC) is increasingly considered as a means to address this need. The overarching aim of COMMOCRACY is to investigate whether and how CAPC recently adopted in three different European cities can strengthen democracy and help to rearticulate a trustful relationship between civil society and public institutions. It will look at CAPC's democratic qualities and analyse their impact on the rearticulation of civil society/public institutions relationship. The project will pay close attention to the Covid-19 crisis to understand whether and how it has affected this rearticulation. It will use a qualitative-interpretative research methodology based on a three-case comparative study: the Regulation for the Urban Commons (Bologna), the Citizen Heritage (Barcelona) and the Commons Transition Plan (Ghent). COMMOCRACY will produce results which are of high relevance for EU science, society and policy by advancing and bridging knowledge in urban theory and political science debates on democracy.

Researcher(s)

Research team(s)

Project type(s)

  • Research Project