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PUB2622 May/June (Portfolio) Memo | Due 2 June 2026

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PUB2622 May/June (Portfolio) Memo | Due 2 June 2026. All questions fully answered. QUESTION 1 Discuss in detail invited and invented public participation platforms to promote public participation in local government. Make use of examples. [50]

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Introduction to the Assignment Portfolio
Public participation occupies a central, constitutionally mandated position in South African local
governance. The Constitution of the Republic of South Africa, 1996, establishes that local
government must encourage the involvement of communities and community organisations in
municipal affairs, while the Municipal Systems Act No. 32 of 2000 operationalises this requirement
through legally binding mechanisms for community engagement in planning, budgeting, and service
delivery (South African Government, 1996; South African Government, 2000). Despite this robust
legal framework, the practical realisation of meaningful public participation remains deeply
contested. Municipalities frequently treat consultation as a procedural checkbox rather than a
genuine process of power-sharing, producing tokenistic participation that erodes rather than builds
trust between citizens and the state.

This assignment portfolio critically examines two interconnected dimensions of public participation
in local government. The first essay addresses the distinction between invited and invented
participation platforms, drawing on Arnstein’s ladder of citizen participation as an analytical
framework to evaluate how different mechanisms distribute power between government and citizens.
Using international case studies, the essay demonstrates that invited platforms controlled by
government typically occupy only the tokenistic rungs of Arnstein’s ladder, while invented platforms
emerging from civil society have greater potential to achieve genuine citizen power, albeit with
significant sustainability challenges. The essay argues that hybrid approaches, which strategically
combine invited and invented platforms, offer the most promising pathway toward meaningful
participation.

The second essay applies these theoretical insights to the practical context of informal settlement
upgrading in South Africa. Using the fictional case of Hopeville informal settlement in the mid-sized
municipality of Rivertown, the essay analyses how the five-phase Integrated Development Plan (IDP)
cycle can either enable or obstruct meaningful public participation. Each phase of the IDP
cycle—analysis, strategies, projects, integration, and approval—requires distinct forms of
participation and imposes specific responsibilities on municipalities. The essay demonstrates that
when municipalities fulfil these responsibilities, participation produces better information, more
culturally appropriate plans, resident ownership, and restored trust. When municipalities treat
participation as a procedural formality, the predictable outcomes include misallocated resources,
infrastructure vandalism, service delivery protests, and permanent damage to the state-citizen
relationship.

Together, the two essays argue that public participation cannot be reduced to a single public meeting
or comment period. Meaningful participation requires institutional designs that shift power toward
citizens, legal frameworks that mandate genuine engagement rather than mere consultation, and
administrative practices that embed participation throughout planning cycles. Without these
conditions, South Africa’s constitutional commitment to participatory local governance will remain
unrealised, and the country’s deep crises of service delivery and municipal trust will persist.

, 1. Discuss in detail invited and invented public participation platforms to promote public
participation in local government. Make use of examples.

Introduction
The relationship between citizens and local governments stands at a critical juncture in the
twenty-first century. Declining trust in public institutions, increasing demands for government
transparency, and the transformative potential of digital technologies have converged to create both
unprecedented challenges and remarkable opportunities for public participation in local governance
(Bherer, Gauthier and Simard, 2017). Within this context, the distinction between invited and
invented participation spaces has emerged as a crucial analytical framework for understanding how
citizen engagement can be meaningfully advanced. Invited participation platforms refer to
mechanisms created and controlled by governmental authorities to facilitate citizen input within
officially sanctioned channels, while invented platforms emerge from civil society or are co-created
through collaborative processes that shift power dynamics more fundamentally toward citizens
(Cornwall, 2008).

This essay critically examines both invited and invented public participation platforms in local
government, evaluating their respective strengths, limitations, and practical applications through
concrete case studies from diverse international contexts. Drawing on Arnstein’s foundational ladder
of citizen participation as an analytical framework, the discussion demonstrates that meaningful
public participation requires moving beyond tokenistic consultation toward genuine power-sharing
arrangements (Arnstein, 1969). Furthermore, the essay argues that the most effective local
governance systems embrace hybrid approaches that strategically combine invited and invented
platforms, recognising that different participatory mechanisms serve complementary purposes across
the spectrum of democratic engagement.

Theoretical Framework: Understanding Participation Platforms

Arnstein’s Ladder of Citizen Participation
Understanding the distinction between invited and invented participation platforms requires a
theoretically grounded framework for evaluating the quality and authenticity of participatory
processes. Sherry Arnstein’s ladder of citizen participation, first published in 1969, remains one of
the most influential models for conceptualising the degree of citizen power in planning and
governance processes (Arnstein, 1969). The ladder comprises eight rungs grouped into three broad
categories: non-participation (manipulation and therapy), tokenism (informing, consultation, and
placation), and citizen power (partnership, delegated power, and citizen control).

Arnstein’s framework is particularly valuable for analysing invited and invented platforms because it
directs attention to the fundamental question of power distribution. Invited platforms, regardless of
their stated intentions, risk occupying only the lower and middle rungs of the ladder if they merely
inform or consult citizens without granting them genuine decision-making authority (Tritter and
McCallum, 2006). Conversely, invented platforms have greater potential to reach the higher rungs of
partnership and delegated power precisely because they originate outside formal governmental
structures and often explicitly challenge existing power arrangements.

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