Crafting the Public: Grid-Group Cultural Theory and the Mechanisms of Public Participation

Requirements regarding participation by the public in planning and decision making functions of Metropolitan Planning Organizations have become more detailed over the past several decades by adding more groups and individuals to the list of those who should be included in agency planning efforts. Th...

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Main Author: Smith-Walter, Aaron M.
Other Authors: School of Public and International Affairs
Format: Others
Language:en
Published: Virginia Tech 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/75210
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spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-752102021-10-09T05:25:47Z Crafting the Public: Grid-Group Cultural Theory and the Mechanisms of Public Participation Smith-Walter, Aaron M. School of Public and International Affairs Cook, Brian J. Jensen, Laura Smietanka Wolf, James F. Sanchez, Thomas W. Cultural Theory Public Participation Metropolitan Planning Organizations Requirements regarding participation by the public in planning and decision making functions of Metropolitan Planning Organizations have become more detailed over the past several decades by adding more groups and individuals to the list of those who should be included in agency planning efforts. This increased emphasis on public participation in MPOs makes the design and selection of particular participation mechanisms by MPO planning staff an important subject for study. The extant literature on public participation takes a view of the planner as one who is able to interpret the existing technical, social, and political requirements of a planning task and match them with the appropriate public participation mechanism. However, this view of the planner overlooks his or her own understanding of the role of the public in agency decision making. This dissertation employs Grid-Group Cultural Theory to explore how a planner's worldview impacts their selection of particular public participation mechanisms. Data were collected using an online survey instrument and analyzed using multinomial logistic regression. Findings indicate that those planners who held a hierarchist worldview were less likely than egalitarians and individualist planners to select mechanisms that are more intensive (in their requirements for communication). In addition, the research finds that factors internal to the MPO including the budget, project schedule, political priorities, the type of projects, safety issues and agency priorities also have an impact on the mechanisms for public participation selected by MPO planning staff. Ph. D. 2017-03-02T07:00:19Z 2017-03-02T07:00:19Z 2015-09-08 Dissertation vt_gsexam:6241 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/75210 en In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ ETD application/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.wordprocessingml.document application/pdf Virginia Tech
collection NDLTD
language en
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Cultural Theory
Public Participation
Metropolitan Planning Organizations
spellingShingle Cultural Theory
Public Participation
Metropolitan Planning Organizations
Smith-Walter, Aaron M.
Crafting the Public: Grid-Group Cultural Theory and the Mechanisms of Public Participation
description Requirements regarding participation by the public in planning and decision making functions of Metropolitan Planning Organizations have become more detailed over the past several decades by adding more groups and individuals to the list of those who should be included in agency planning efforts. This increased emphasis on public participation in MPOs makes the design and selection of particular participation mechanisms by MPO planning staff an important subject for study. The extant literature on public participation takes a view of the planner as one who is able to interpret the existing technical, social, and political requirements of a planning task and match them with the appropriate public participation mechanism. However, this view of the planner overlooks his or her own understanding of the role of the public in agency decision making. This dissertation employs Grid-Group Cultural Theory to explore how a planner's worldview impacts their selection of particular public participation mechanisms. Data were collected using an online survey instrument and analyzed using multinomial logistic regression. Findings indicate that those planners who held a hierarchist worldview were less likely than egalitarians and individualist planners to select mechanisms that are more intensive (in their requirements for communication). In addition, the research finds that factors internal to the MPO including the budget, project schedule, political priorities, the type of projects, safety issues and agency priorities also have an impact on the mechanisms for public participation selected by MPO planning staff. === Ph. D.
author2 School of Public and International Affairs
author_facet School of Public and International Affairs
Smith-Walter, Aaron M.
author Smith-Walter, Aaron M.
author_sort Smith-Walter, Aaron M.
title Crafting the Public: Grid-Group Cultural Theory and the Mechanisms of Public Participation
title_short Crafting the Public: Grid-Group Cultural Theory and the Mechanisms of Public Participation
title_full Crafting the Public: Grid-Group Cultural Theory and the Mechanisms of Public Participation
title_fullStr Crafting the Public: Grid-Group Cultural Theory and the Mechanisms of Public Participation
title_full_unstemmed Crafting the Public: Grid-Group Cultural Theory and the Mechanisms of Public Participation
title_sort crafting the public: grid-group cultural theory and the mechanisms of public participation
publisher Virginia Tech
publishDate 2017
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/75210
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