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In Regulation and Planning, planning scholars from the United
Kingdom, France, Italy, Sweden, Canada, Australia, and the United
States explore how planning regulations are negotiated amid layers
of normative considerations. It treats regulation not simply as a
set of legal guidelines to be compared against proposed actions,
but as a social practice in which issues of governmental
legitimacy, cultural understandings, materiality, and power are
contested. Each chapter addresses an actual instance of planning
regulation including, among others, a dispute about a proposed
Apple store in a public park in Stockholm, the procedures by which
building codes are managed by planners in Napoli, the role that
design plays in regulating the use of public space in a new Paris
neighbourhood, and the influence of plans on the regulation of
development in Malmoe and Cambridge. Collectively, the volume
probes the institutions and practices that give meaning and
consequence to planning regulations. For planning students learning
about what it means to plan, planning researchers striving to
understand the influence of planners on urban development, and
planning practitioners interested in reflecting on practices that
occupy a great deal of their time, this is an indispensable book.
Today, urban scholars think of cities and regions as evolving
through networks of human associations, technologies, and natural
ecologies. This being the case, planners are faced with the task of
navigating a profoundly material world. Planning with and for
humans alone is unacceptable: in the unfolding of urban processes,
non-human things cannot be ignored. This inclusive vision has
consequences for how planners envision the connections among norms,
technologies and life-worlds as well as how they design and
implement their plans. The contributors to this volume utilize a
variety of examples - ecologically-sensitive, regional planning in
Naples (Italy); congestion pricing in New York City; and public
participation in Europe, among others - to explore how planners
engage a heterogeneous and restless world. Inspired by assemblage
thinking and actor-network theory, each chapter draws on this "new
materialism" to acknowledge, in quite pragmatic ways, that spatial
politics is a process of becoming that is inseparable from the
materiality of urban practices.
In Regulation and Planning, planning scholars from the United
Kingdom, France, Italy, Sweden, Canada, Australia, and the United
States explore how planning regulations are negotiated amid layers
of normative considerations. It treats regulation not simply as a
set of legal guidelines to be compared against proposed actions,
but as a social practice in which issues of governmental
legitimacy, cultural understandings, materiality, and power are
contested. Each chapter addresses an actual instance of planning
regulation including, among others, a dispute about a proposed
Apple store in a public park in Stockholm, the procedures by which
building codes are managed by planners in Napoli, the role that
design plays in regulating the use of public space in a new Paris
neighbourhood, and the influence of plans on the regulation of
development in Malmoe and Cambridge. Collectively, the volume
probes the institutions and practices that give meaning and
consequence to planning regulations. For planning students learning
about what it means to plan, planning researchers striving to
understand the influence of planners on urban development, and
planning practitioners interested in reflecting on practices that
occupy a great deal of their time, this is an indispensable book.
Today, urban scholars think of cities and regions as evolving
through networks of human associations, technologies, and natural
ecologies. This being the case, planners are faced with the task of
navigating a profoundly material world. Planning with and for
humans alone is unacceptable: in the unfolding of urban processes,
non-human things cannot be ignored. This inclusive vision has
consequences for how planners envision the connections among norms,
technologies and life-worlds as well as how they design and
implement their plans. The contributors to this volume utilize a
variety of examples - ecologically-sensitive, regional planning in
Naples (Italy); congestion pricing in New York City; and public
participation in Europe, among others - to explore how planners
engage a heterogeneous and restless world. Inspired by assemblage
thinking and actor-network theory, each chapter draws on this "new
materialism" to acknowledge, in quite pragmatic ways, that spatial
politics is a process of becoming that is inseparable from the
materiality of urban practices.
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