THEMATIC GROUPS
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- Parent Category: THEMATIC GROUPS
- Category: Planning/Conflict
RC 21 Conference 2015
‘The Ideal City: between myth and reality -
Representations, policies, contradictions and challenges for tomorrow's urban life’
Urbino (Italy) 27-29 August 2015
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- Parent Category: THEMATIC GROUPS
- Category: Planning/Conflict
Planning and Condlict discusses the reasons for conflicts around urban developments and analyzes their shape in contemporary cities. It offers an interdisciplinary framework for scholars to engage with the issue of planning conflicts, focusing on both empirical and theoretical inquiry.
By reviewing different perspectives for planners to engage with conflicts, and not simply mediate or avoid them, Planning and Conflict provides a theoretically informed look forward to the future of engaged, responsive city development that involves all its stakeholders.
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- Parent Category: THEMATIC GROUPS
- Category: Public Spaces and Urban Cultures
University of Glasgow is hosting AESOP Thematic Group Public Spaces and Urban Cultures Annual Meeting (4-6 June 2015, Glasgow, Scotland, United Kingdom)
‘Becoming Local’ Series Annual Meeting : The power of places & the places of power
https://becominglocalglasgow.wordpress.com
Contact person: Georgiana Varna at
You are warmly invited to attend the 2015 annual symposium of the AESOP Public Spaces and Urban Cultures group dedicated to discussing place, power and local identity in contemporary cities. It will be held in Glasgow, on the 4th and 5th of June 2015 (with an optional daytrip and workshop on the 6th). The event is meant to run as a combination of presentations, roundtables and panel discussions and invites participants, who are working on public space both in the academia and the practice.
About the Event:
Becoming Local is the working theme of the AESOP thematic group Public Spaces and Urban Cultures for the group’s meetings in the period of 2013-2015. The theme aims to emphasize the contrast between the urban transformation processes that tend to produce visions for the dream cities, comfort zones or security islands and the needs of the vulnerable groups, who are very often excluded from these development schemas.
Within this context, the Becoming Local Glasgow meeting will try to reflect on the impact of the current economic climate for the practice of city building, considering the fact that even through the years of economic boom, debatable results have been seen in Scotland, throughout the UK and in Europe. The first day of the meeting aims to elaborate on the question:
Why does the knowledge on how to create good, successful urban places so rarely translates in the built product?
The second day will be focused on the general issue of the play of power among the different actors involved in placemaking. The focus will lie on trying to answer:
How can we as urban scholars walk the corridors of power and influence urban development towards the creation of more liveable environments?
The third day is optional and it focuses on the practical application of the concepts discussed in the first two days. A fieldtrip along the banks of the ‘regenerated’ waterfront of the Clyde in Glasgow will be followed by a workshop. The event is meant to be an opportunity for sharing ideas and experiences and building new research partnerships. More, we hope that by the end of the second day some (or all) of us can draw a sketch of a joint publication, with the key problems regarding placemaking today and solutions to address them to be circulated around the academic and public sector in UK and Europe.
As this is a symposium, each day’s discussions will be followed up by a dinner in three of Glasgow’s best restaurants. We look forward to welcome you in this great city and welcome you to an event meant to be an opportunity for sharing ideas and for opening up new avenues of good quality research and practice in urban placemaking.
Keynote speakers: Matthew Carmona and Panu Lehtovuori
Matthew Carmona is Professor of Planning and Urban Design at the Bartlett School of Planning, UCL. His research has focused on the policy context for delivering better quality built and natural environments, having worked on a range of research projects examining among others, design policies and guidance, the delivering of urban renaissance, the value of urban and architectural design, managing external public space, London squares and high streets. Matthew is on the editorial board of ‘Urban Design Quarterly’, is European Associate Editor for the ‘Journal of Urban Design’, and edits the ‘Design in the Built Environment’ book series for Ashgate. He is a regular advisor to government and government agencies both in the UK and overseas and writes a column for Town & Country Planning, the journal of the Town & Country Planning Association.
Panu Lehtovuori is Professor of Planning Theory at the Tampere University of Technology, School of Architecture. He is also a co-founder and partner of Livady Architects, a Helsinki-based practice. His doctoral dissertation, Experience and Conflict (2005), presents a new conceptualisation of public urban space, valorises the changes of the use of urban space in Helsinki, and tests a new, experiential approach to planning and urban design. In 2001, Lehtovuori was the visiting research fellow at Manchester Metropolitan University. From 2005 to 2012 he coordinated the module “Urban Interventions” of the international European MA in Urban Cultures (POLIS). He is a member of the editorial board of Yhdyskuntasuunnittelu (The Finnish Journal of Urban Studies) and the Finnish Architectural Review.
Participation and/or abstract submission
Please submit an abstract of 300 words and a short 100 words bio to
Also if you would like to participate without necessary having to present, also please e- mail Dr Varna before 1st of April 2015 so we can confirm the numbers and book the venue.
Important Deadlines
Call for Abstracts: 6 February 2015
Deadline for abstract submission: 1 April 2015
Invitation for participants: 1 May 2015
Deadline for confirmation by participants to attend to the conference: 10 May 2015
Participation fee
The event is free of charge, however, we kindly ask you to secure your own travel and accommodation arrangements. For help with this, please e-mail Dr Georgiana Varna at
Organization team:
Local organizer /
Georgiana Varna (Scottish Cities Knowledge Center, University of Glasgow, UK)
Aesop Thematic Group Representatives /
Celia Ghyka (Ion Mincu University of Architecture and Urbanism, Bucharest, Romania)
Ceren Sezer (Delft University of Technology, the Netherlands)
Important Links
(For the current event please check: http://www.sckc.org.uk/events)
http://www.becominglocalistanbul.org
http://becominglocalbucharest.ro
https://becominglocalparis.wordpress.com
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- Parent Category: THEMATIC GROUPS
- Category: Ethics, Values and Planning
AESOP 2014 – Track Ethics and Justice in Planning
The Just City: A Roundtable - July 10th, 2014
Moderators:
Claudia Basta, Wageningen University | Stefano Moroni, Milan Technical University
Panel members:
Michael Gunder, University of Auckland | Francesco Lo Piccolo, University of Palermo | Raine Mantysalo, Aalto University | Alan March, University of Melbourne | Tore Sager, Trondheim University of Science and Technology
With The Just City (2010) Susan Feinstein revived the attention on the city as the privileged context where public policy, the market, citizens’ rights and cultural diversity intersect to give form to new challenges for the advancement, or retreat, of social justice. Rooted in the critical social theory tradition, her discourse on urban justice draws on the theoretical reflections of contemporary philosophers like John Rawls and Martha Nussbaum, Peter Marcuse and Michel Foucault. Fainstein’s effort is to retrace, as common ground of their perspectives on justice, the theme of equality. Fainstein’s firmest point is that it is the equality of citizens in terms of fundamental rights – especially regarding the participation in public decision-making - that shall constitute the starting point and the ultimate objective of any just urban policies. In this vein, Fainstein emphasizes how priority should be given to policies aimed at distributing urban resources in such a way to secure a decent living for low-income and disadvantaged citizens. By emphasizing the moral priority to be given to the poor, somehow Fainstein closes the gap between her Marxist background and the accent posed on the most disadvantaged citizens by liberal theorists like Rawls (1971, 2001). Both, essentially, view securing a ‘bottom line’ of means for the most disadvantaged citizens as the primary object, and objective, of any politics of justice.
Without indulging on discussing Fainstein’s conclusions, it shall be mentioned that her final recommendations – extremely relevant to urban development worldwide - revolve around the new balance to be found between market-driven and social-driven urban policies. Regardless of such conclusions, however, the most valuable aspect of her work is having cemented the centrality of the theme of justice in planning. Starting from this renewed centrality, the discussion developed in the Round Table “The Just City”, held in Utrecht as part of the AESOP Congress 2014, revolved around the more general question of what is, and what makes the city of today ‘the just city’ on which philosophers and urban scholars reflected along the past centuries. The main points touched by the discussion and the contributions of the members of the panel are shortly summarized in the sections below.
Pluralism, uncertainty, citizenship and deliberation: a complex discussion
That the contemporary city is the place wherein growing forms of diversity meet and signify each other – both materially and symbolically – is an observation whose banality does not undermine its significance. When looking at cultural diversity, the demographic of Amsterdam – one of the cities studied by Fainstein in her book – offer a good example: according to the Dutch Statistic Bureau, inhabitants of non-Western origin make up approximately one-third of the population and more than 50% of the city' s children (CBS, 2006). After having concentrated in the main cities of the quadrilateral region including The Hague, Rotterdam, Utrecht and Amsterdam, inhabitants of foreign heritage started to move to smaller towns, spreading more homogeneously in a country in which – despite an established framework of social welfare – urban segregation, in the past few decades, became from evident to problematic.
Diversity is not solely – and perhaps not even most importantly – a cultural issue. However, cultural differences do certainly contributes to make of citizenship, cohabitation, representativeness and public deliberation – to mention a few - more complex matters. In Europe, the increasing (and often conflictual) polarization of political debates on welfare and civil rights in conservative and neo-liberal vs. progressive and populist extremes unveils the emergence, whether explicit or implicit, of new perceptions of what
citizenship is, and of what citizenship implies. In the majority of European countries, affected by the same increasing distance between concentrated richness and growing poverty which characterizes the world in the aftermath of the financial crisis erupted in the first decade of the century, the further distance between ‘we’ and ‘the others’ seems to relate not only to the distribution of income (e.g. OECD, 2011), but also to an often unspoken, yet tangible discomfort regarding ‘which rights give right’ to citizenship. The paradox of multicultural cities is precisely that of having connoted the distinction between native vs. foreign and autochthonous vs. allochthonous with a more fundamental distinction between citizens vs. non-citizens. By following current debates on the boundaries between tolerance and integration of different traditions, spread by the media on daily basis, what seems to emerge is a notion of ‘citizenship’ no longer associated to a status obtained by virtue of birth of naturalization, but as something rooted in the cultural heritage one has accumulated throughout generations; somehow, it is only this latter ‘citizenship’ that seems to confer the right to be represented, to participate in political debates and to carry the overall set of rights European democracies have conquered over centuries.
The scholarly and social debates gravitating around ‘which rights give right’ to citizenship and to participation are of paramount importance for advancing any related discourse on justice. Whether one, or more ideas of social justice can fruitfully cohabit within a society characterized by diversity is, somehow, the most fundamental point of the debate. Whether social justice ought to be advanced through institutional frameworks only, or whether citizens and planners ought to contribute to it (also) through self-organization and activism, is another point which is more and more debated in literature.
Pluralism, participation, citizenship and activism in planning have therefore been the focus of the ideas shared, respectively, by Raine Mantysalo, Francesco Lo Piccolo and Tore Sager.
Another point of attention – and an indicator of social (in)justice of recognized, albeit still poorly documented significance – is the distribution of risks among citizens living in more and more ‘infrastructured’ and complex cities. This has been the focus of the contribution of Alan March. His ideas recall Ulrich Beck’s first formulation of the ‘risk society’ (1992 : 1996), according to which, next to income, the most significant indicator of inequality in post-modern societies is the unequal distribution of man-made risks. Beck’s theory engendered a wide debate among sociologists, economists, risk scholars and ethicists and arrived to contaminate environmental justice and social exclusion literature (e.g. Coenen and Halfrake, 1999). In a similar vein, Alan March considers the inequality of exposure to risks – which, together with technological, include interrelated environmental and social risks like climate change and natural disasters – the main indicator of social injustice. The challenge for urban planning, whose evident constraint is operating in conditions of uncertainty, is striving to promote durable justice across generations by levelling inequality on the one hand, and preventing the consequences of risks on the other one.
Whether and within which margins can social justice – and its various interpretations – constitute a framework for advancing more equal and inclusive urban environments constituted the final theme of discussion proposed by Michael Gunder. Perhaps, the question ‘what is the just city?’ is flawed by the very assumption that one and only idea of justice exists and can be agreed upon, and that no competitive ideas of ‘what is just’ can fruitfully cohabit in pluralistic societies constructing and transforming places and meanings dynamically.
Following Michael Gunder’s contribution, Stefano Moroni suggested the necessity of demarcating more clearly between issues in “institutional ethics” (as regards local government action in particular) and issues in “professional ethics” (regarding certain professions in particular, for instance land-use planners and architects). Ethical questions are quite different in these two cases; however, they all converge towards the establishment of a rigorous line of investigation in the field of ‘ethics in planning’; arguably, the most urgent debate to be advanced, collaboratively, by ethicists and planning scholars.
The just city, or just planning? Some conclusive remarks
In the course of the Round Table what seemed to emerge as the cornerstones of the debate on ‘justice in planning’ can be summarized in three fundamental questions, namely:
- Is it possible – and desirable – to refer to one overarching theory of justice to inform and guide urban planning policies?
- Is promoting social justice the main scope of urban planning, or rather one of the many – often competitive - objectives dictated by its social mandate?
- What is the relation among citizenship, participation, activism and just planning? In particular, ‘which rights give right’ to citizenship, and how can the exertion of citizenship contribute to advance or retreat justice in society?
Regarding the first question, Claudia Basta concluded that an overarching theory of justice, grounded on a shared understanding of equality, is not only necessary, but pre-conditional to the formulation and following evaluation of any public policies; of which, note, urban policy is perhaps the most impacting on the lives of citizens. The question of whether more legitimate ideas of justice exist is, in this sense, misleading; there exist, of course, multiple understandings of justice and of what and how the ‘just city’ ought to be across different continents and cultures, as much as different ideas regarding equality are represented by individuals of the same or different groups within the same culture, nation and city.
Nevertheless, the universality of human rights adopted as moral and legislative guidance by democratic societies worldwide is and must remain the fundamental and unnegotiable guidance of any form of public interventions in and on the lives of individuals and, therefore, in and on spaces and places. Whether or not such individuals are formal citizens, inhabitants, or simply guests of a city in which part of their lives develop, their fundamental liberties – of speech, belief and movement – their rights – whether negative or positive – and their capabilities – such as self-sustainment and social affiliation – remain the foundational principles upon which society ought to be structured, governed and transformed.
It stems from our most deeply-rooted intuitions that human beings share a fundamental form of equality in terms of rights and dignity; and it is such fundamental equality that ought to inform and steer public policies of any nature. The central – and definitely most problematic – points are rather (1) what the ‘indicators’ of such equality are, and (2) whether urban planning has a role to play in advancing it in society. To paraphrase Sen, reasoning on the ‘equality of what?’ and on how advancing such equality in society through just urban planning are therefore the urgent questions to which ethicists and planning scholars are called to give durable answers.
The Round Table ‘The Just City’, held in Utrecht in July 2014, constituted a valuable step in this direction.
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- Parent Category: THEMATIC GROUPS
- Category: Sustainable Food Planning
The 6th Sustainable Food Planning Conference attracted some 120 attendants. The Proceedings have been published on the conference website, check : www.findingspaces.nl/aesop6