Planning and self-organizing citizens: understanding the position of planners and knowledge in times of new urbanisms. / STREAM C – Cities and urban planning

Organizers: Federico Savini (University of Amsterdam, NL); Mike Raco (University College London, UK)

Contact: f.savini@uva.nl; m.raco@ucl.ac.uk

“The architect is no more miracle-worker than the sociologist. Neither can create social relations […] Only social life (praxis) in its global capacity possesses such powers.” In this way Henri Lefebvre criticized the illusion that planning, among others spatial disciplines, could accurately predict and shape social relationships in space. The modernist myth of technocratic planning has undergone sustained criticism in recent decades. Contemporary spatial policy making appears to have embraced the idea that urban spaces are complex, and that it is impossible to possess adequate knowledge to predict and shape a unitary idea of the future. The role of planners has been more associated with a place-based mobilization of and mediation between different perspectives on cities. The on-going economic crisis and decades of welfare restructuring has been predicated on a new vision for planning in which its position in society is to be redefined and reimagined. New proposals often resonate with a neoliberal individualism, pointing at creative self-organization of citizens or for a ‘big society’. There are calls for devolution and a new localism in planning delivery. Yet, the ideal of the self-organized city entails risks of social exclusion and underestimates some of the broader structural changes that are happening to the planning profession. Critics highlight the depoliticized nature of collaboration and ‘inclusive’ forms of consensus building in urban politics. Others points at the market driven search for delivery-focused urban development. Planners turn respectively into either professional decision-making organizers or private sector consultants for deal making. Others highlight the risks of planning intended as purely regulatory task, lacking the capacity to grasp urgent societal problems and dynamics.

In this session we address changing discourses on the role of planning within new forms of urbanism, and their implications for the development of cites. We are particularly interested in critical reflections on the thinking and practices that shape the behavior of contemporary planners, defined in a broad sense, and on the experimental ways to mobilize and use ‘knowledge’. This should be framed within discussion of new forms of neoliberalism, welfare restructuring and rescaling of state competences in planning.

Papers for this session could address:

  • The role of technical knowledge in the planning process within urban development. What types of new subjects are emerging in the business of city making and according to which logics they operate? What type of new resources do they mobilize?
  • Emerging decision making experiments in neighborhoods, area developments, or broader strategic urban policies. Do citizens organize in a different ways and how does planning try to address new organization dynamics? How discourses on crisis-recovery affect these practices?
  • The implications for new discourses on welfarism, self-organization, deregulation and localism in the practice of urban planning. How are ideals of new localism and new urbanisms now incorporated into broader planning frameworks and with what impacts on urban development? What are the social and spatial implications of the new ‘ideals’ of cities such as smart urbanism, slow and open-source urbanism or do-it-yourself urbanism?

C2.1 Planning and self-organizing citizens: understanding the position of planners and knowledge in times of new urbanisms

Chairs: Federico Savini (University of Amsterdam) Mike Raco (University College London)

Contact: f.savini@uva.nl m.raco@ucl.ac.uk

Giovanni Semi
“I mean, Disney makes places”.Professional boundary-making, (public) place-making and the envisioning power of Urban Design

Davide Ponzini
The transnational circulation of master plans and urban megaprojects: Shortcomings and challenges for local planners and designers

Clair Colomb
The implementation of ‘New Localism’ in the super-diverse metropolis: challenges and limits of Neighbourhood Planning in London (extended abstract)

Distributed Papers

Ruijsink Saskia, Alexander Jachnow et al.
Self-organizing, place-making & urban planning: Critical review of the interrelated activities to improve a city

Korn Miriam S. and Maria Carolina Maziviero
Santa Cecilia, a forgotten district: urban destinations on the basis of planning the city of São Paulo


C2.2 Planning and self-organizing citizens: understanding the position of planners and knowledge in times of new urbanisms

Chairs: Federico Savini (University of Amsterdam) Mike Raco (University College London)

Contact: f.savini@uva.nl m.raco@ucl.ac.uk

Lena Fält
From Poverty Alleviation to Spatial Order: City Ideals and Urban Planning Practices in Ghana

Willemijn Lofver, Tim Devos and Gert-Joost Peek
‘The City as a Classroom’: exploring planners’ role and skills required when involved in alternative area developments.

Samuel Mössner and Catarina Gomes de Matos
The hidden planners? Academic knowledge production and urban planning

Natalia Carolina Villamizar-Duarte
Informalization as a process: theorizing informality as a lens to rethink planning theory and practice

Distributed Papers

González Bracco Mercedes
“Stop demolitions!”: urban heritage as a public problem in buenos aires city

Marianna Monte
In between use as a new tool for urban planning in 21st century

Ted Pride
Community-Based Organizations and Community Conflict in the Age of Neoliberalism: A Case Study of a Detroit Neighborhood


C2.3 Planning and self-organizing citizens: understanding the position of planners and knowledge in times of new urbanisms

Chairs: Federico Savini (University of Amsterdam) Mike Raco (University College London)

Contact: f.savini@uva.nl m.raco@ucl.ac.uk

Lucia Dobrucká
Roles of planners reflect their perception of power

Cansu Civelek
An Anthropological Approach to the Planning Strategies of Two Urban Regeneration Projects from the Center-Left Party in Eskişehir, Turkey

Evangelia Athanassiou, Maria Karagianni, Matina Kapsali
Citizen’s participation in urban governance in crisis-stricken Thessaloniki (Greece): post-political urban project or emancipatory urban experiments?

Paola Alfaro d‘Alençon, Bettina Bauerfeind, Daniela Konrad
In lights of ephemeral urbanism in Germany: Decision making experiments in neighbourhoods between self-organizing citizens and municipalities

Distributed Papers

Dimitris Poulios and Sayas John
Mediterranean urban landscapes from growth to crisis: The case of Barcelona and Athens

Bashar Toriqul
Housing the urban poor in the Neo-liberal Market Economy: Can social capital matter in urban planning?

Gilda Berruti Maria Federica Palestino
Streetwise complicity with community initiatives

Gabriela Christmann
Temporary Uses of Run-Down Urban Places. Creative Citizens’ Acting and the Emergence of Innovative Approaches in Spatial Planning

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