| Literature DB >> 26590020 |
Amy S Katz1, Rebecca M Cheff2, Patricia O'Campo3.
Abstract
There is a global trend towards the use of ad hoc participation processes that seek to engage grassroots stakeholders in decisions related to municipal infrastructure, land use and services. We present the results of a scholarly literature review examining 14 articles detailing specific cases of these processes to contribute to the discussion regarding their utility in advancing health equity. We explore hallmarks of compromised processes, potential harms to grassroots stakeholders, and potential mitigating factors. We conclude that participation processes often cut off participation following the planning phase at the point of implementation, limiting convener accountability to grassroots stakeholders, and, further, that where participation processes yield gains, these are often due to independent grassroots action. Given the emphasis on participation in health equity discourse, this study seeks to provide a real world exploration of the pitfalls and potential harms of participation processes that is relevant to health equity theory and practice.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26590020 PMCID: PMC4654839 DOI: 10.1186/s12939-015-0252-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Equity Health ISSN: 1475-9276
Barriers to equitable decision-making and concrete health equity outcomes in the context of participation processes
| Cluster A: Process structure, resourcing and capacity | Cluster B: Stakeholder representation and participation |
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o Process is not binding [ |
o Diversity of grassroots stakeholders not represented, including diversity |
| Cluster C: Information-sharing and gathering | Cluster D: Implementation |
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o Infrequent information sharing (gaps and silences) [ |
o Participatory aspect of process includes planning but not implementation [ |
Grassroots stakeholders do not have sufficient independence and/or capacity to apply pressure to process/organize outside of process
Potential harms of participation
| Cluster A: Delegated control | Cluster B: Demobilization |
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o Behaviour of grassroots stakeholders shaped by process, thereby containing dissent (e.g. grassroots stakeholders positioned to act as ‘gatekeepers’ rather than as community representatives; meeting norms discourage certain types of input; paperwork/reporting begins to shape thinking) [ |
o Participants experience frustration and/or burn-out. [ |
| Cluster C: Contraction of state role in public service delivery/regulation | Cluster D: Sanctions |
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o Success of project relies on free labour of participants. | The broader literature emphasizes that participants resisting or building alternatives to official processes can, in some contexts, face sanctions ranging from loss of paid work [ |