为纪念活动分配资金:集体记忆、地点感和参与性预算

Hsin-Yi Yeh, Kuo-Ming Lin
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引用次数: 1

摘要

这篇文章将集体记忆(以及身份认同)带回“内部”,以促进我们对记忆、地点和审议项目之间有趣关系的理解。虽然我们观察到对一个地方的记忆赋予了它意义,因此不仅向当地成员灌输了一种“地方感”,而且还影响了审议过程,但我们声称审议过程可以作为自下而上的地方-(重新)创造机会。以台湾的实验性参与式预算(PB)计划为例,我们发现集体记忆对项目的提案、赢得投票以及人们对获胜项目的反应都有影响。在南峰项目中,获奖项目一方面呼应了流行的纪念性叙事;另一方面,投票结果进一步确认、连接和调整了当地的集体记忆。这是一个自我强化的过程。此外,我们还讨论了主流记忆如何因重大事件而发生变化,因此赋予特定地点的意义可能因此发生变化。然而,这并不是说PB只能在记忆强烈的地方进行,因此存在地方感;由于审议过程本身就是一个重新创造机会的机会,我们可以期望PB在其过程中鼓励集体的出现和/或更新。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Distributing Money to Commemoration: Collective Memories, Sense of Place, and Participatory Budgeting
This article brings the aspect of collective memories (and thus identity) back “in” to facilitate our understanding of the intriguing relationship among memories, places, and deliberative projects. While we observe that the memories of a place assign meanings to it and thereby not only imbue a “sense of place” to local members but also influence the process of deliberation, we claim that the process of deliberation can serve as a place-(re)making opportunity in a bottom-up way. Taking an experimental participatory budgeting (PB) program in Taiwan as an example, we find that collective memories play a role to influence what projects are proposed, what projects win the voting, and how people react to winning projects. In the case of South-Peak, on one hand, the winning projects echo aspects of prevailing commemorative narratives; on the other, the voting results further confirm, connect, and align the local collective memories. That is, a self-reinforcing process occurs. Additionally, we discuss how prevailing memories may change due to significant events so the meanings assigned to a specific place may thus change accordingly. Nevertheless, this is not to say that PB can only be conducted in places of strong memories and thus where a sense of place exists; since the deliberation process itself acts as a place-(re)making chance, we can expect PB to encourage the emergence and/or refreshment of collectivity during its own process.
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