Following Baum’s (1997) proposition that planning be understood as “the organization of hope” there has been limited scholarly engagement with what might be involved in fostering hope through planning practices. Reflecting on three years of participatory action learning and research on a deprived housing estate in Sheffield in northern England, we explore core challenges raised by appealing to hope as an objective of community-led planning. Overall, we argue for further work to explore how the organizational technologies of planning relate to core dimensions of hope, including the ways in which unevenly developed capacities to aspire shape diverse modes of hoping
This article is an extended discussion from the recent opening presentation for the Annual Wincheste...
We articulate a holistic understanding of hope, going beyond the common conceptualization of hope in...
Background: In the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries when city and regional planning bec...
This article, given as the Antipode RGS-IBG Lecture on 28 August 2019, argues that hope can be found...
Planning was born in and of crisis. Given the multiple challenges facing the world, it may rightly b...
Innovations promise a better future, which may generate feelings of hope and inspire advocacy. Some ...
This article argues that recent times have seen a (re)intensification of positivist decision making ...
In considering the position of community engagement within planning in a time of neo-liberalism and ...
Interest in the relationship between storytelling and planning has grown in recent years, drawing on...
Abstract Planning has lost its soul. The ebb and flow of spatial economics, the only determinant of ...
This paper argues that young people need to be given the opportunity to recognise the interaction be...
Why do planners do what planners do? Are they moved by positivistic agendas set in stone in their ma...
The role of a planner as collaborative facilitator has come under renewed criticism, from both plann...
The discipline and practice of regional and town planning is searching uneasily for new directions a...
The paper reflects on different approaches to public participation in the highly complex field ...
This article is an extended discussion from the recent opening presentation for the Annual Wincheste...
We articulate a holistic understanding of hope, going beyond the common conceptualization of hope in...
Background: In the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries when city and regional planning bec...
This article, given as the Antipode RGS-IBG Lecture on 28 August 2019, argues that hope can be found...
Planning was born in and of crisis. Given the multiple challenges facing the world, it may rightly b...
Innovations promise a better future, which may generate feelings of hope and inspire advocacy. Some ...
This article argues that recent times have seen a (re)intensification of positivist decision making ...
In considering the position of community engagement within planning in a time of neo-liberalism and ...
Interest in the relationship between storytelling and planning has grown in recent years, drawing on...
Abstract Planning has lost its soul. The ebb and flow of spatial economics, the only determinant of ...
This paper argues that young people need to be given the opportunity to recognise the interaction be...
Why do planners do what planners do? Are they moved by positivistic agendas set in stone in their ma...
The role of a planner as collaborative facilitator has come under renewed criticism, from both plann...
The discipline and practice of regional and town planning is searching uneasily for new directions a...
The paper reflects on different approaches to public participation in the highly complex field ...
This article is an extended discussion from the recent opening presentation for the Annual Wincheste...
We articulate a holistic understanding of hope, going beyond the common conceptualization of hope in...
Background: In the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries when city and regional planning bec...