ABSTRACT

Planning is centrally focused on places which are significant to people, including both the built and natural environments. In making changes to these places, planning outcomes inevitably benefit some and disadvantage others. It is perhaps surprising that Actor Network Theory (ANT) has only recently been considered as an appropriate lens through which to understand planning practice. This book brings together an international range of contributors to explore such potential of ANT in more detail.

While it can be thought of as a subset of complexity theory, given its appreciation for non-linear processes and responses, ANT has its roots in the sociology of scientific and technology studies. ANT now comprises a rich set of concepts that can be applied in research, theoretical and empirical. It is a relational approach that posits a radical symmetry between social and material actors (or actants). It suggests the importance of dynamic processes by which networks of relationships become formed, shift and have effect.

And while not inherently normative, ANT has the potential to strengthen other more normative domains of planning theory through its unique analytical lens. However, this requires theoretical and empirical work and the papers in this volume undertake such work. This is the first volume to provide a full consideration of how ANT can contribute to planning studies, and suggests a research agenda for conceptual development and empirical application of the theory.

part 1|23 pages

Introduction

part 2|132 pages

Using ANT

chapter 2|17 pages

Constructing ‘green building'

Heterogeneous networks and the translation of sustainability into planning in Israel

chapter 3|18 pages

Planned derailment for new urban futures?

An actant network analysis of the ‘great [light] rail debate' in Newcastle, Australia

chapter 4|17 pages

Grants as significant objects in community engagement networks

Kelowna, British Columbia

chapter 5|16 pages

Assembling localism

Practices of assemblage and building the ‘Big Society' in Oxfordshire, England

chapter 6|16 pages

Two exemplar green developments in Norway

Tales of qualculation and non-qualculation

chapter 7|16 pages

Unpacking the Swedish urban sustainable imaginary

At the World Expo, Shanghai, China

chapter 8|15 pages

The king and the square

Relationships of the material, cultural and political in the redesign of Stortorget, Malmö, Sweden

chapter 9|15 pages

Assembling energy futures

Seawater district heating in The Hague, the Netherlands

part 3|88 pages

The way forward

chapter 11|11 pages

‘Emergent places'

Innovative practices in Zurich, Switzerland

chapter 12|17 pages

Planning tactics of undefined becoming

Applications within Urban Living Labs of Flanders' N16 corridor, Belgium

chapter 13|14 pages

Hydro-urbanism in London

Using co-evolutionary Actor Network Theory as a prospective methodology

chapter 14|14 pages

Towards an extended symmetry

Using ANT to reflect on the theory and practice gap

chapter 15|14 pages

‘A grand question of design'

Knowledge, space and difference in early and late Latour