ABSTRACT

The Routledge Handbook of Planning Theory presents key contemporary themes in planning theory through the views of some of the most innovative thinkers in planning. They introduce and explore their own specialized areas of planning theory, to conceptualize their contemporary positions and to speculate how these positions are likely to evolve and change as new challenges emerge.

In a changing and often unpredictable globalized world, planning theory is core to understanding how planning and its practices both function and evolve. As illustrated in this book, planning and its many roles have changed profoundly over the recent decades; so have the theories, both critical and explanatory, about its practices, values and knowledges. In the context of these changes, and to contribute to the development of planning research, this handbook identifies and introduces the cutting edge, and the new emerging trajectories, of contemporary planning theory. The aim is to provide the reader with key insights into not just contemporary planning thought, but potential future directions of both planning theory and planning as a whole. This book is written for an international readership, and includes planning theories that address, or have emerged from, both the global North and parts of the world beyond.

chapter 1|12 pages

Planning Theory

An Introduction

part I|54 pages

Contemporary Planning Practices

chapter 2|13 pages

Spatial Planning

The Promised Land or Rolled-Out Neoliberalism?

chapter 3|13 pages

Strategic Planning

Ontological and Epistemological Challenges

chapter 4|12 pages

Growth Management Theory

From the Garden City to Smart Growth

chapter 5|14 pages

Planning in the Anthropocene

part II|167 pages

How Meaning/Values Are Constructed in Planning

chapter 6|12 pages

The Public Interest

chapter 8|12 pages

Communicative Planning

chapter 9|13 pages

Neoliberal Planning

chapter 10|12 pages

Neo-Pragmatist Planning Theory

chapter 12|12 pages

The Grassroots of Planning

Poor People’s Movements, Political Society, and the Question of Rights

chapter 13|12 pages

The Dilemmas of Diversity

Gender, Race and Ethnicity in Planning Theory

chapter 15|14 pages

Postpolitics and Planning

chapter 17|14 pages

Countering ‘The Dark Side’ of Planning

Power, Governmentality, Counter-Conduct

chapter 18|13 pages

Co-Evolutionary Planning Theory

Evolutionary Governance Theory and Its Relatives

part III|116 pages

Networks, Flows, Relationships and Institutions

chapter 19|13 pages

The Governance of Planning

Flexibly Networked, Yet Institutionally Grounded

chapter 21|12 pages

Conflict and Agonism

chapter 24|12 pages

Actor-Network Theory

chapter 25|12 pages

Spatial Planning and the Complexity of Turbulent, Open Environments

About Purposeful Interventions in a World of Non-Linear Change

chapter 27|14 pages

Lines of Becoming