The project advanced the state of the art in two areas. First, it revealed that supralocal organization of civic initiatives takes diverse forms beyond peer-to-peer networks. The ethnographic study of a multi-site civic operator — coordinating simultaneous temporary urbanism projects across different cities — presented a fundamentally different model from the locally-rooted initiatives assumed in existing scholarship, documenting how this coordination simultaneously enables knowledge transfer and generates tensions between local experimentation and central directives. The identification of three mechanisms of knowledge circulation demonstrates processes of diffusion but also professionalization of civic knowledge.
Second, the concept of "direct civic action" redirects attention from organizational typologies to actions themselves and the dramaturgical processes unfolding in the field, addressing how conflicts arise through contrasting scene styles, how publicization and problematization unfold in the discursive field, and how the hybridization of civic, market, and governmental logics generates specific dilemmas. This contributes to understanding how direct problem-solving operates neither as regulation-determined nor as freely experimental, but as situated negotiation where actors balance social objectives against structural constraints.
These advances have materialized in publications exceeding the original plan: one Routledge monograph (2024), five peer-reviewed journal articles published or in press, one under review, two in preparation for Q1 journals, and one guest-edited special issue, against an original target of three articles. Findings were also shared with civic practitioners through keynote presentations at European networks, festival roundtables, and training sessions.
The project results will be further developed through the final research workshop, bringing together twelve scholars to consolidate research agendas on direct problem-solving. More broadly, the findings provide an evidence base for informed policy design in European urban contexts where civic initiatives increasingly address housing challenges and neighbourhood revitalization, aligned with SDG 11 and the New Urban Agenda.