Habermas and the City: The Unacknowledged Urban Life of his Theory
Tommaso Prof Vitale
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Tommaso Prof Vitale: Sciences Po
No 9b3tj_v1, SocArXiv from Center for Open Science
Abstract:
This short article reconstructs the influence of Jürgen Habermas on urban studies, demonstrating how communicative action theory has shaped communicative planning theory, public sphere debates, and the legal philosophy of urban governance across five decades of European and North American scholarship. His influence has operated largely underground: through the communicative planning tradition of John Forester, Patsy Healey, and Judith Innes; through the vocabulary of deliberation and legitimacy that now pervades urban theory; and through the concept of the colonisation of the lifeworld, which provides researchers the analytical language to name what happens when markets and bureaucracies dismantle the communicative fabric of neighbourhoods. Against the prevailing reception — which treats Habermas as an abstract philosopher requiring translation into urban language — this article argues that he was, at his roots, an empirical and historical thinker of the city. The Structural Transformation of the Public Sphere (1962) is a meticulous historical sociology of how European cities — their cafés, salons, reading clubs, and press — created the institutional conditions for democratic deliberation. The Theory of Communicative Action (1981–84) diagnoses the pathologies of urban modernity through the mechanism of colonisation of the lifeworld, tracing how instrumental rationality erodes the communicative infrastructure of urban life. Between Facts and Norms (1992) advances a constitutional theory of urban governance, specifying what conditions planning and land-use decisions must meet to achieve democratic legitimacy in late-modern democratic cities. The article concludes by examining Habermas's 2022 return to the public sphere in the age of digital platforms — a structural transformation of urban democracy as far-reaching as the one he analysed sixty years earlier — and argues that communicative action theory remains an indispensable analytical resource wherever deliberative urban governance and democratic legitimacy are at stake.
Date: 2026-03-13
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:osf:socarx:9b3tj_v1
DOI: 10.31219/osf.io/9b3tj_v1
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