ABSTRACT

This book draws on preeminent planning theorist Patsy Healey’s personal experiences as a resident of a small rural town in England, to explore what place and community mean in a particular context, and how different initiatives struggle to get a stake in the wider governance relations while maintaining their own focus and ways of working. Throughout the book, Healey assesses the public value generated by community initiatives and the impact of such activity on wider governance dynamics.

Healey explores the power which small communities are able to mobilise through self-organisation and grassroots activism. Through the lens of Wooler and Glendale as a micro-society, the book centres on a community experiencing an economic and demographic transition. It focuses on three initiatives developed and led by local people – a small community development trust, an informal attentionmobilising network, and a Neighbourhood Plan project which uses an opportunity provided within the formal planning system. It examines how, in such civil society activism, people came together to promote local development in a place and community neglected by the dominant political economy.

The book details the power and force of community initiative and its potential for transforming both the future possibilities for the place and community itself, as well as wider governance relations. Overall, it seeks to enrich academic and policy discussion about how the relations between formal government and civil society energy could evolve in more productive and progressive directions.

chapter 1|18 pages

Civil Society Caring for Place Futures

chapter 2|25 pages

Caring for Place

Three initiatives in an English rural area

chapter 3|19 pages

Placing Wooler and Glendale

Where and what is ‘here’?

chapter 5|37 pages

Engaging with the Agency World

chapter 6|23 pages

Power Relations

Navigating in a dynamic forcefield

chapter 7|23 pages

Framing the Future

Knowledge and narrative in Wooler and Glendale

chapter 9|20 pages

Can we Shape our Future?

The transformative potential of civil society initiative

chapter 10|11 pages

Epilogue

Our locality in lockdown