Abstract
Today’s exponential advancement of information and communication technologies is reconfiguring
participatory urban development practices. The use of digital technology implies new forms of decentralised
governance, collaborative knowledge production, and social activism. The digital transformation has the
potential to overcome shortcomings in citizen participation, make participatory processes more deliberative,
and enable collaborative approaches for making cities. While digital tools such as digital mapping,
e‐participation platforms, location‐based games, and social media offer new opportunities for the various
actors and may act as a catalyst for renegotiating urban space and collective goods, digitalisation can also
perpetuate or even attenuate existing inequalities and exclusion. This editorial introduces the thematic issue
“Citizen Participation, Digital Agency, and Urban Development” which focuses on the trajectories and
(dis)continuities of citizen participation through digitalisation and elaborates this with examples from Europe
and Asia on how the digital transformation impacts, challenges, or reproduces hegemonic power relations in
urban development.