ABSTRACT

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.

chapter |16 pages

Things, rules, and politics

Blurring the boundaries between formality and informality

chapter |14 pages

The pedestrianization of the Naples seafront

Assemblage thinking as a planning tool

chapter |16 pages

Translation

William Vickrey and the remaking of transportation knowledge infrastructure

chapter |14 pages

Re-assembling world and waste

Informal practices of waste picking in Naples

chapter |16 pages

“Recombinant” hybrid ecologies and landscapes

Piana Campana, South Italy

chapter |19 pages

Minutiae

Meeting minutes as actors in participatory planning processes

chapter |11 pages

Mobilizing policy

Microfinance's journey from Bangladesh to Washington, DC