Provincializing planning: Reflections on spatial ordering and imperial power

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Abstract

This paper takes the development of the British town planning movement as its starting point to explore a series of challenges for the discipline’s historiography. The emergence of the professional field involved the circulation of ideas beyond the metropolitan core to colonial territories with spatial interventions that were deemed both physically and morally beneficial. The paper explores the role played by the discipline in developing spatialized forms of ethnic and racial differentiation within colonial territories. I conclude that British planning has largely ignored its own historiography, including the colonial legacy, enabling the discipline to assert its role as a socially progressive profession.

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APA

Beebeejaun, Y. (2022). Provincializing planning: Reflections on spatial ordering and imperial power. Planning Theory, 21(3), 248–268. https://doi.org/10.1177/14730952211026697

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