Planning and the 'stubborn realities' of global south-east cities: some emerging ideas

Watson, V. (2012). Planning and the “stubborn realities” of global south-east cities: Some emerging ideas. Planning Theory, 12(1), 81–100. doi:10.1177/1473095212446301

Platform
Cape Town
Publication type
Scientific article (peer-reviewed)
Projects
Contributing to Urban Debates in South Africa
DOI Title
Planning and the ‘stubborn realities’ of global south-east cities: Some emerging ideas
Journal
Planning Theory
ISSN/ISBN
1473-0952 1741-3052
DOI
10.1177/1473095212446301
Author(s)
Vanessa Watson
Published year
Subject
Geography, Planning and Development
Tags
Global South-East societal conflict insurgent planning coproduction Informality

 

Abstract

Five years ago Yiftachel (2006) called on planning theorists to focus attention on cities of the global ‘South-East’ where issues differ significantly from northern contexts – which currently inform much planning theory work. This article asks if any such new directions have emerged in this period. It first reviews recent writings on socio-political and material conditions in these cities and suggests a set of assumptions to inform thinking about planning in these regions. It then identifies and assesses new strands of planning thought (some with older roots), and considers the project of taking forward planning theory-building in the global South-East.

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