Local Opportunity Structures for Planning-related Protest in Major German Cities

Urban development in Germany is often challenged by civic protest. This is despite mandatory participation at an early stage of the planning process, a variety of democratic participatory innovations, which differ from one federal state to the other, and informal formats of participation applied at...

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Main Authors: Gerhard Kienast, Grischa Frederik Bertram
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Centre for Economic and Regional Studies Eötvös Lóránd Research Network 2025-04-01
Series:Tér és Társadalom
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Online Access:https://tet.rkk.hu/index.php/TeT/article/view/3566
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author Gerhard Kienast
Grischa Frederik Bertram
author_facet Gerhard Kienast
Grischa Frederik Bertram
author_sort Gerhard Kienast
collection DOAJ
description Urban development in Germany is often challenged by civic protest. This is despite mandatory participation at an early stage of the planning process, a variety of democratic participatory innovations, which differ from one federal state to the other, and informal formats of participation applied at the local level. There is a growing acceptance that protest is a normal form of participation and that planners must extend their repertoire accordingly. In order to identify a typology of planning-related protest based on correlations between different aspects of its framing, its course of action and the planning process to which it relates, the authors undertook a comprehensive survey in major German cities. In this paper, they try to establish, which relations exist between such protest, borough-level representative bodies and direct democratic procedures. Representative bodies and referenda are seen as parts of a local planning-political opportunity structure, a theoretical framework built on Eisinger’s political opportunity structures. This approach remains of great relevance to explain political protests and social movements, and helps to understand the different effects and uneven effectiveness of protest in varying contexts. The paper presents preliminary results from the statistical analysis of the authors’ own database created through protest data mining of newspaper archives, online petitions and other public databases along with quantitative analysis of a public database on local initiatives and referendums. It found substantial but uneven levels of support amongst borough-level representatives for civic protest, and correlation between such support and protest effectiveness. The variation can partly be explained with uneven powers, density of representation and modes of election of sub-local councils. There are large differences with regard to the frequency of initiatives that seek a referendum, which reflect different thresholds and restrictions for direct democracy that are established at state level. Nevertheless, activist groups have used referenda to change or even stop unpopular urban projects, to popularise their own agenda and force decision-makers to prioritise alternative visions for urban development. In some cases they also managed to influence spatial planning’s own political opportunity structure.
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spelling doaj-art-17fd49c169e84ea6885b9f993dbf4d202025-08-20T02:11:54ZengCentre for Economic and Regional Studies Eötvös Lóránd Research NetworkTér és Társadalom0237-76832062-99232025-04-0139110.17649/TET.39.1.3566Local Opportunity Structures for Planning-related Protest in Major German CitiesGerhard Kienast0https://orcid.org/0000-0003-1386-5217Grischa Frederik Bertram1https://orcid.org/0000-0001-7990-013XInstitute for European Urban Studies, Faculty of Architecture and Urbanism, Bauhaus University Weimar, Weimar, GermanyInstitute for European Urban Studies, Faculty of Architecture and Urbanism, Bauhaus University, Weimar, Weimar, Germany Urban development in Germany is often challenged by civic protest. This is despite mandatory participation at an early stage of the planning process, a variety of democratic participatory innovations, which differ from one federal state to the other, and informal formats of participation applied at the local level. There is a growing acceptance that protest is a normal form of participation and that planners must extend their repertoire accordingly. In order to identify a typology of planning-related protest based on correlations between different aspects of its framing, its course of action and the planning process to which it relates, the authors undertook a comprehensive survey in major German cities. In this paper, they try to establish, which relations exist between such protest, borough-level representative bodies and direct democratic procedures. Representative bodies and referenda are seen as parts of a local planning-political opportunity structure, a theoretical framework built on Eisinger’s political opportunity structures. This approach remains of great relevance to explain political protests and social movements, and helps to understand the different effects and uneven effectiveness of protest in varying contexts. The paper presents preliminary results from the statistical analysis of the authors’ own database created through protest data mining of newspaper archives, online petitions and other public databases along with quantitative analysis of a public database on local initiatives and referendums. It found substantial but uneven levels of support amongst borough-level representatives for civic protest, and correlation between such support and protest effectiveness. The variation can partly be explained with uneven powers, density of representation and modes of election of sub-local councils. There are large differences with regard to the frequency of initiatives that seek a referendum, which reflect different thresholds and restrictions for direct democracy that are established at state level. Nevertheless, activist groups have used referenda to change or even stop unpopular urban projects, to popularise their own agenda and force decision-makers to prioritise alternative visions for urban development. In some cases they also managed to influence spatial planning’s own political opportunity structure. https://tet.rkk.hu/index.php/TeT/article/view/3566protestpolitical opportunity structurelocal initiativereferendumborough
spellingShingle Gerhard Kienast
Grischa Frederik Bertram
Local Opportunity Structures for Planning-related Protest in Major German Cities
Tér és Társadalom
protest
political opportunity structure
local initiative
referendum
borough
title Local Opportunity Structures for Planning-related Protest in Major German Cities
title_full Local Opportunity Structures for Planning-related Protest in Major German Cities
title_fullStr Local Opportunity Structures for Planning-related Protest in Major German Cities
title_full_unstemmed Local Opportunity Structures for Planning-related Protest in Major German Cities
title_short Local Opportunity Structures for Planning-related Protest in Major German Cities
title_sort local opportunity structures for planning related protest in major german cities
topic protest
political opportunity structure
local initiative
referendum
borough
url https://tet.rkk.hu/index.php/TeT/article/view/3566
work_keys_str_mv AT gerhardkienast localopportunitystructuresforplanningrelatedprotestinmajorgermancities
AT grischafrederikbertram localopportunitystructuresforplanningrelatedprotestinmajorgermancities