ABSTRACT

A study of particular aspects of the politics of planning a new town, this book, originally published in 1980, covers events from the inception of Stevenage in 1946 up to 1978. As a case study, the focus is on two expansion schemes, which were intended to extend the designated area of the town, and on the public protest that the two schemes engendered. Emphasis is placed on the structure and action of three groups of people: the ‘urban managers’ – the Stevenage Development Corporation; Stevenage industrialists; and local organisations engaged in protest. The theoretical focus is on the thesis of ‘urban managerialism’: the book examines the constraints placed upon both the structure and action of the Stevenage urban managers over the previous thirty years. In showing how matters work in practice, it directs light on issues of theory which other sociologists of planning, such as Pickvance and Castells, had only discussed in the abstract.

The author argues that the experience of Stevenage illustrates a case of urban policy (particularly in housing and employment) being determined by the interests of industry alone, while at the same time pointing to the interrelationship of Stevenage industry and the town’s Development Corporation. He examines the membership, strategies and aims of the various protest groups involved over the years, and casts considerable doubt on the notion that the groups were ‘for democracy’ and ‘against bureaucracy’. Finally, he concludes, controversially, that in Stevenage’s case, public participation and protest were basically irrelevant to the decision-making processes.

part |35 pages

Part one

chapter 1|9 pages

Some themes in urban planning

chapter 2|24 pages

The London new towns

An overview

part |178 pages

Part two

chapter 3|24 pages

Stevenage 1945–60

Beginnings

chapter 4|25 pages

Stevenage 1960–9

Consolidation and contradictions

chapter 5|9 pages

Stevenage 1970–1

Rumours of things to come

chapter 6|27 pages

Stevenage 1972–3

‘Expansion ’73’ — the case is presented

chapter 7|28 pages

Stevenage 1972–4

The struggle begins

chapter 8|23 pages

Stevenage 1974

‘Expansion ’74’, and the struggle continues

chapter 9|33 pages

Stevenage 1974–6

The public inquiry

chapter 10|7 pages

Stevenage 1976–7

Confusion abounds

part |88 pages

Part three

chapter 11|27 pages

Stevenage

Constraints on the urban managers

chapter 12|18 pages

Urban managerialism

chapter 13|26 pages

Public participation in planning

Illusion or reality?

chapter 14|15 pages

Prospects for the new urban managers?