TY - JOUR
T1 - Premises, practices and politics of co-creation for urban sustainability transitions
AU - Frantzeskaki, Niki
AU - Collier, Marcus
AU - Hölscher, Katharina
AU - Gaziulusoy, Idil
AU - Ossola, Alessandro
AU - Albulscu, Patricia
AU - Bonneau, Marcelline
AU - Borgstrom, Sara
AU - Connop, Stuart
AU - Dumitru, Adina
AU - Geneletti, Davide
AU - Gorissen, Leen
AU - Levin-Keitel, Meike
AU - MacIntyre, Tadhg
AU - Mascinga, Irina
AU - MacQuaid, Siobhan
AU - Tabory, Samuel
AU - von Wirth, Timo
AU - Vandergert, Paula
AU - Vos, Peter
AU - Penha-Lopes, Gil
AU - Säumel, Ina
AU - Wachtel, Thomas
AU - Wittmayer, Julia
PY - 2025/5
Y1 - 2025/5
N2 - Co-creation is becoming a widely used mode of urban governance and research for city-making and city-transitioning being conceptually entangled with experimentation, innovation and collaboration. In this paper, we address three questions to systematize knowledge about and advancing the research and practice of co-creation: Why co-create? How to co-create? With whom to co-create? We first present three distinct premises of co-creation that respond to the question of why to co-create, and mark advantages of co-creation in comparison to participatory processes: bridging and weaving knowledge for place-based urban transitions, emancipating urban policy and planning, and advancing research to transformative and transdisciplinary approaches that are socially relevant. We then present key practices and skills required for engaging in and organizing co-creation processes (i.e., how to co-create). Next to advocacy, communication, leadership, and organizational skills, we identify that creativity, playfulness, emotional intelligence, receptivity, and collaborative learning are important, yet often overlooked, skills and capabilities for co-creation. Finally, we investigate the politics of co-creation through the lens who is included in co-creation and how (i.e., with whom to co-create). We discuss future research on co-creation and its applications centered on measuring its impact against its premises while recognizing the importance of having different metrics and reflexive measures that can evaluate its deep impact and its relation to urban transitions.
AB - Co-creation is becoming a widely used mode of urban governance and research for city-making and city-transitioning being conceptually entangled with experimentation, innovation and collaboration. In this paper, we address three questions to systematize knowledge about and advancing the research and practice of co-creation: Why co-create? How to co-create? With whom to co-create? We first present three distinct premises of co-creation that respond to the question of why to co-create, and mark advantages of co-creation in comparison to participatory processes: bridging and weaving knowledge for place-based urban transitions, emancipating urban policy and planning, and advancing research to transformative and transdisciplinary approaches that are socially relevant. We then present key practices and skills required for engaging in and organizing co-creation processes (i.e., how to co-create). Next to advocacy, communication, leadership, and organizational skills, we identify that creativity, playfulness, emotional intelligence, receptivity, and collaborative learning are important, yet often overlooked, skills and capabilities for co-creation. Finally, we investigate the politics of co-creation through the lens who is included in co-creation and how (i.e., with whom to co-create). We discuss future research on co-creation and its applications centered on measuring its impact against its premises while recognizing the importance of having different metrics and reflexive measures that can evaluate its deep impact and its relation to urban transitions.
U2 - 0.1186/s42854-025-00075-9
DO - 0.1186/s42854-025-00075-9
M3 - Article
SN - 2524-8162
SP - 1
EP - 27
JO - Urban Transformations
JF - Urban Transformations
M1 - 27
ER -