Insurgencies and Revolutions
Routledge (Verlag)
978-1-138-68264-1 (ISBN)
Insurgencies and Revolutions brings together former students, close research associates, and colleagues of John Friedmann to reflect on his contributions to planning theory and practice. The volume is organized around five broad themes where Friedmann’s contributions have risen to challenge established paradigms and generated the space for revolutionary thinking and action in urban and regional planning – Theorising hope; Economic development and regionalism; World cities and the Good city; Social learning, empowered communities, and citizenship; and Chinese cities. The essays by the authors reflect their engagement with his ideas and the new directions in which they have taken these in their work in planning theory and practice.
Haripriya Rangan works for the Australia India Institute, and is affiliated with the School of Geography, The University of Melbourne, Australia. Trained as an architect and planner, she studied with John Friedmann at UCLA, and has pursued a research and teaching career in geography in India, USA, Australia and South Africa. Mee Kam Ng is Vice-Chairman of the Department of Geography and Resource Management, Director of the Urban Studies Programme and Associate Director of the Institute of Future Cities at the Chinese University of Hong Kong. She is a member of RTPI, a fellow of HKIP and academic advisor of HKIUD. Jacquelyn Chase is a professor in the Geography and Planning Department at California State University, Chico. She has published articles on urbanization of agricultural regions, rural labor markets, gender, and fertility in Brazil and on county planning in California. She is the editor of the volume Spaces of Neoliberalism (Kumarian). Libby Porter is a scholar in planning and urban geography. Her work focuses on the role that planning and urban development play in dispossession and displacement. She is author of Unlearning the Colonial Cultures of Planning (Ashgate 2010) and with Janice Barry of Planning for Coexistence? (Routledge 2016).
Preface
Leonie Sandercock
Introduction to the Volume
Haripriya Rangan
Theme 1: Practising Hope
Theme introduction
Libby Porter
"Resistance is never wasted": Reflections on Friedmann and hope
Libby Porter
Territoriality: Which way now?
Bishwapriya Sanyal
The difficulties of employing utopian thinking in planning practice: Lessons from the Just Jerusalem Project
Diane E. Davis
Realizing sustainable development goals: The prescience of John Friedmann
Shiv Someshwar
How to prepare planners in the Bologna European education context: Adapting Friedmann’s planning theories to practical pedagogy
Adolfo Cazorla, Ignacio de los Ríos, José M. Díaz-Puente
Theme 2: Economic Development and Regionalism
Theme introduction
Haripriya Rangan
City-regions, urban fields, and urban frontiers: Friedmann’s legacy
Robin Bloch
Periphery, borders and regional development
Chung-Tong Wu
The bioregionalization of survival: Sustainability science and rooted community
Keith Pezzoli
Are social enterprises a radical planning challenge to neoliberal economic development?
Haripriya Rangan
Business in the public domain: The rise of social enterprises and implications for economic development planning
Yuko Aoyama
Theme 3: World Cities and the Good City: Contradictions and Possibilities
Theme introduction
Haripriya Rangan
The urban, the periurban and the urban superorganism
Michael Leaf
The prospect of suburbs: Rethinking the urban field on a planet of cities
Roger Keil
Room for the Good Society? Public space, amenities and the condominium
Ute Lehrer
The escalating privatization of urban space meets John Friedmann’s post-urban landscape
Saskia Sassen
Urban entrepreneurship through transactive planning: The making of Waterfront Toronto
Matti Siemiatycki
From good city to progressive city: Reclaiming the urban future in Asia
Mike Douglass
Transactive planning and the "found space" of Mumbai Port Lands
Hemalata C. Dandekar
Theme 4: Social Learning, Communities, and Empowered Citizenship
Theme introduction
Jacquelyn Chase
Development in Indian country: Empowerment, life Space, and transformative Planning
Michael Hibbard
Operationalizing social learning through empowerment evaluation
Claudia B. Isaac
The 'radical' practice of teaching, learning, and doing in the informal settlement of Langrug, South Africa
Tanja Winkler
Fire, ownership, citizenship and community
Jacquelyn Chase
Meeting the Other: A personal account of my struggle with John Friedmann to enact the radical practice of dialogic inquiry and love in the new millennium
Aftab Erfan
Theme 5: Chinese Urbanism
Theme introduction
Mee Kam Ng
Ignoring the ramparts: John Friedmann’s dialogue with Chinese urbanism and Chinese studies
Timothy Cheek
Challenges of strategic planning in another planning culture: Learning from working in a Chinese city
Klaus R. Kunzmann
Social learning in creative Shanghai
Sheng Zhong
From Xinhai Revolution (1911) to the Umbrella Movement (2014): Insurgent citizenship, radical planning and Chinese culture in the Hong Kong SAR
Mee Kam Ng
Post-script
John Friedmann
Erscheinungsdatum | 24.05.2016 |
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Reihe/Serie | RTPI Library Series |
Zusatzinfo | 4 Tables, black and white; 2 Line drawings, black and white; 6 Halftones, black and white |
Verlagsort | London |
Sprache | englisch |
Maße | 156 x 234 mm |
Gewicht | 612 g |
Themenwelt | Naturwissenschaften ► Geowissenschaften ► Geografie / Kartografie |
Sozialwissenschaften ► Soziologie | |
ISBN-10 | 1-138-68264-0 / 1138682640 |
ISBN-13 | 978-1-138-68264-1 / 9781138682641 |
Zustand | Neuware |
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