ABSTRACT
In spite of a clear interest in ethnography and institutions, the method of institutional ethnography has been underexplored in the planning field. This paper looks at its critical potential in the renovation process of the high-rise social housing estate of Peterbos, Brussels. By doing, it sheds light on its transformative capacity. Using multiple approaches of institutional ethnography enabled us not only to develop a better understanding of local communities in planning processes, but also to argue for an increased self-reflexivity and responsiveness of institutions, essential for creating a more critical planning practice. We conclude institutional ethnography can inform planning practice in two ways. First, the approach can help planning scholars reveal power relations and explore grounded collaborative practices, based on everyday concerns of inhabitants and institutions. Second, any actor operating within and beyond the institutional field of planning can strive for ways of knowing that are embedded in everyday life experiences. However, this requires to embrace open-minded perspectives and open-ended inquiries in those locations where institutional policies and practices are being felt.
Acknowledgements
The authors wish to thank the institutions mentioned in the paper (the social housing companies Comensia and Foyer Anderlechtois; the municipality of Anderlecht and the SLRB) as well as the residents and frontline workers of the Peterbos neighbourhood for their eagerness to share their views and concerns.
Disclosure statement
No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).
Notes
1 This research was developed as part of the SoHoLab project, an international research project on planning processes in high-rise social estates, based in Brussels, Paris and Milan.
2 As a white young woman, the first author was often regarded as a social worker or an employee of the social housing company, which made it difficult to build relationships of trust and to be invited in one’s apartment, which is often overcrowded and in a bad state. In addition, for many men living in Peterbos, it is seen as inappropriate to invite a woman in the house.