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Unexpected translations in urban policy mobility. The case of the Acahualinca Development Programme in Managua, Nicaragua

Abstract
Implementation gaps between policy goals and outcomes are of increasing concern in practice and research. We explore the translation chains through which urban policies become mobile and are translated into practice. Informed by the city management and policy mobility literature, we conduct a case study of La Chureca, the rubbish dump and slum of Managua, Nicaragua, and its renewal programme. The Acahualinca Programme was implemented via translation chains enacted by many policy translators. It was translated into residents' and waste collectors' interests, its language packaged in artefacts such as prototypes in order to travel. It was made mobile via relational sites or situations providing safe and accessible connections with Chureca residents. Paradoxically, these places also allowed extraordinary connections between actors located in different scales and spaces, facilitating unexpected local community resistance. Although the Program ultimately remained almost unalterable in content, resistance unexpectedly transformed residents from passive policy transmitters into active policy actors in making the city. We conclude that policy implementation cannot be seen as the scripted translation of plans into reality, but as an uncontrollable process in which multiple translations twist policies and plans from below. The significant question is therefore not whether plans succeed, but how they succeed.
Link to web site
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.habitatint.2014.10.001
Publisher
School of Public Administration/Förvaltningshögskolan
Other description
A revised version of this paper is published in Habitat International
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/2077/37317
Collections
  • Reports and Working papers / Rapporter och arbetspapper
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Article (8.719Mb)
Date
2014
Author
Zapata, Patrik
Zapata Campos, María José
Keywords
Policy mobility
Relational sites
Relational situations
Translations;
City management
Nicaragua
Publication type
preprint
ISSN
1651-5242
Series/Report no.
School of Public Administration Working Papers Series
26
Language
swe
Metadata
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