open access article
This study is a spin-off from a two year evaluation funded by the AHRC and its partners of citizen participation in the city of Peterborough, as a part of the Research Councils’ Connected
Communities Research Programme in partnership with the RSA. The research for this paper
itself was funded by De Montfort University through an internal Research Investment Fund
award. The author gratefully acknowledges the support of both parties and of all the partners
in the Citizen Power in Peterborough projectThe capacity for resistance is an essential component of the principles and practice of liberal democracy.
Critical policy scholars agree that unwelcome interventions in local communities by the state meet
resistance, but disagree on whether such efforts can be successful in any meaningful sense. This paper
identifies an optimistic turn in the literature, and derives from this a workable definition of successful
resistance, which it then applies to an original piece of research into the ‘Save The Green Backyard’
campaign in Peterborough in the UK. Theory driven, it takes two basic concepts from the new
institutionalism, embeddedness and agency, and demonstrates how a conceptual framework developed
from these can expose the underlying mechanisms driving the successful resistance observed in the case
study. The final section of the paper considers how forms of embeddedness worked together to provide
a context for successful resistance; the nature of the agency in the case study; and how popular and
invited spaces impacted differentially on the community organization in terms of embeddedness and
agency. It also draws out some implications for institutionalist theory and methodologies, and for
community organizations seeking to protect themselves against unwelcome state interference
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