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Full Description
Time, Politics and Place critically explores time as a political and strategic resource shaping urban governance, planning processes and planning system reform across the UK and Europe. Bringing together leading researchers, it demonstrates how time has been undervalued in spatial planning and advocates for greater attention to temporalities.
The lens of time highlights how different temporal modalities shape what, how and for whom we plan. Dominant approaches stress speed and growth but these can undermine public trust, system integrity and long-term sustainability. Given the challenges faced in the 21st century, the book asserts the need to refigure the active role of time in shaping futures.
Contents
1. Introduction: Planning in and for Time - Gavin Parker and Mark Dobson
Part 1: Theorising Time in Urban Governance
2. Conceptions of Time and Ideas of Planning - Stefano Moroni
3. Time as a Lens to Inform Critical Planning Research - Thorsten Wiechmann and Gerard Hutter
4. Whose Time Is Valued? Time, Politics and Inclusivity - Simin Davoudi
Part 2: Temporalities and Place in Practice
5. Time and Public Exclusion in Irish Planning - Mick Lennon, Linda Fox-Rogers and Richard Waldron
6. Time, Planning and Participatory Design - Camilo Calderon
7. Time Awareness in More-than-Human Planning - Daniel Galland, Miriam Jensen and Andy Inch
8. Time Bargains in Local Government Planning - Gavin Parker and Mark Dobson
9. Developer Time and Winding Down Regeneration Projects - Mike Raco and Sonia Trigo-Friere
10. Infrastructural Time and the Impact on Future Generations - Dan Durrant
11. How Temporal Analysis of Planning Documents Could Improve Spatial Planning Practice: Three Case-Studies in France, Denmark and Norway - Marius Grønning, Guy Baudelle and Daniel Galland
12. Conclusion: The Temporal Turn In Planning Thought: Implications for Theory and Practice - Mark Dobson and Gavin Parker



