Relations publiques et gouvernance participative : une vision partagée du « vivre ensemble »?

Since they generally have a questionable reputation, public relations are rarely associated with the notion of participatory governance. Nonetheless, the theoretical developments elaborated over the last twenty-five years are in phase with this emerging field, notably with James E. Grunig’s dialogic...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Stéphanie Yates
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Université du Québec à Montréal 2015-10-01
Series:Communiquer
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.openedition.org/communiquer/1722
Description
Summary:Since they generally have a questionable reputation, public relations are rarely associated with the notion of participatory governance. Nonetheless, the theoretical developments elaborated over the last twenty-five years are in phase with this emerging field, notably with James E. Grunig’s dialogical approach to public relations and Robert L. Heath’s fully functioning society theory. In this perspective, public relations play a conciliatory function that, through dialogue, allows for a better understanding of the positions held by different actors in democratic societies, to a genuine inter-influence between organizations and stakeholders, and ultimately to more harmonious relations. This contribution is thus an attempt to reconcile two worlds that we persist to conceive apart from each other. We conclude by acknowledging that the gap between theoretical models and the actual practice of public relations in contemporary contexts contributes to reduce these activities to the traditional diffusion model. In that sense, the paradigm shift that would put public relations at the core of participatory governance is still in waiting.
ISSN:2368-9587