International Journal of Urban and Regional Research
The urban planning of municipal
territory is still a key element of urban politics despite competition from
other types of spatial planning and the influence of supra-local policies such
as those introduced by European institutions. To gauge its importance, I
selected the last two master plans developed in the cities of Vigo (Spain) and
Porto (Portugal) and examined the contributions of urban movements to citizen
participation in these plans. The periods of transition to democracy in both
cities prompted the appearance of important citizen movements, but these have
evolved differently in each city. This article describes the evolution of these
movements in both cities and explains why they culminated in a conflictive
participation model in the master plan of Vigo, while in Porto the
opportunities for citizen participation in the master plan were neutralized. To
conclude, it is argued that this comparison reveals the importance of local
contexts of urban governability shaped by a history of strategic interactions
between urban movements and elites, which reduces the validity of neoliberal
conceptions of governance to explain citizen participation in relation to
spatial planning.