AbstractA lot of traditional planning is about maintaining the existing social order rather than challenging and transforming it, and it fails to capture the dynamics and tensions of relations coexisting in particular places. As a result, planning faces major ontological and epistemological challenges. The aim of the paper is to reflect on what can be done to revive planning as a critical theory and praxis. For this reason, the paper first deals with the logic and aims of statutory planning and some critiques and introduces the contours of a more radical planning
This article extends Qviström’s (2007; Geografiska Annaler: Series B, Human Geography 89 (3): 269–28...
What planners should know: revolution and evolution are as real and essential to life as water and a...
Since the 1980s and due to the ongoing complexity and diffuseness of global networked societies, pla...
AbstractA lot of traditional planning is about maintaining the existing social order rather than cha...
Abstract Planning has lost its soul. The ebb and flow of spatial economics, the only determinant of ...
This article starts with an overview of the development of planning theory and ends with a descripti...
While individual accounts vary, most planners would agree that their calling, historically, has...
This thesis is concerned with the theory and practice of planning in Western capitalist societies. S...
Not only in the Netherlands, but also elsewhere, there is stalemate between modern and postmodern/po...
Beyond reductionist thought, looking at a theoretical framework that embrace a complex dimension of ...
The aim of this paper is dealing with the fragile relationship between planning theories and practic...
Much theorising in our field is focused on what planning should do. Such work is generally informed ...
This metareflexive action research starts from the idea that a critical analysis of depoliticized pl...
Since the 1980s and due to the ongoing complexity and diffuseness of global networked societies, pla...
This chapter makes the case for pragmatist philosophy in planning theory and practice. I argue that ...
This article extends Qviström’s (2007; Geografiska Annaler: Series B, Human Geography 89 (3): 269–28...
What planners should know: revolution and evolution are as real and essential to life as water and a...
Since the 1980s and due to the ongoing complexity and diffuseness of global networked societies, pla...
AbstractA lot of traditional planning is about maintaining the existing social order rather than cha...
Abstract Planning has lost its soul. The ebb and flow of spatial economics, the only determinant of ...
This article starts with an overview of the development of planning theory and ends with a descripti...
While individual accounts vary, most planners would agree that their calling, historically, has...
This thesis is concerned with the theory and practice of planning in Western capitalist societies. S...
Not only in the Netherlands, but also elsewhere, there is stalemate between modern and postmodern/po...
Beyond reductionist thought, looking at a theoretical framework that embrace a complex dimension of ...
The aim of this paper is dealing with the fragile relationship between planning theories and practic...
Much theorising in our field is focused on what planning should do. Such work is generally informed ...
This metareflexive action research starts from the idea that a critical analysis of depoliticized pl...
Since the 1980s and due to the ongoing complexity and diffuseness of global networked societies, pla...
This chapter makes the case for pragmatist philosophy in planning theory and practice. I argue that ...
This article extends Qviström’s (2007; Geografiska Annaler: Series B, Human Geography 89 (3): 269–28...
What planners should know: revolution and evolution are as real and essential to life as water and a...
Since the 1980s and due to the ongoing complexity and diffuseness of global networked societies, pla...