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URB-GEOG-FORUM  May 2016

URB-GEOG-FORUM May 2016

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Subject:

Architecture_MPS: Volume 9, issue 3 now available (open access)

From:

Alison Major <[log in to unmask]>

Reply-To:

Urban Geography Discussion and Announcement Forum <[log in to unmask]>

Date:

Tue, 10 May 2016 08:58:38 +0100

Content-Type:

text/plain

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****Apologies for any cross-posting****

UCL Press is delighted to announce the publication of a new issue of the open access journal Architecture_MPS (Architecture_Media, Politics Society), the third in a special series about housing.

Download free: http://bit.ly/amps93

------------------------------------------------------------------------------

One Tool Amongst Many: Considering the Political Potential of Neighbourhood Planning for the Greater Carpenters Neighbourhood, London

Currently within English planning literature there are polarizing debates about whether neighbourhood planning represents a politically useful tool for communities to utilize to challenge and shape top-down government development plans for their neighbourhood. One side of the debate optimistically presents neighbourhood planning as a radical and exciting opportunity for communities who wish to shape development plans for their locality. On the other side of the debate neighbourhood planning is denounced as a post-political governance technology which does not enable communities to meaningfully challenge and shape government development plans for their neighbourhood. This paper will engage with these competing perspectives whilst exploring how the Greater Carpenters Neighbourhood Forum (GCNF) are using neighbourhood planning to try and protect housing on the Carpenters Estate, a council estate in Stratford, east London.

This paper begins by providing a brief introduction to community participation in planning in England. Subsequently, this paper discusses benefits and challenges communities face engaging with formal planning mechanisms before specifically exploring perspectives on the challenges of using neighbourhood planning to realize their development aspirations for their neighbourhood. Drawing from interviews, planning document analysis, and ethnographic research carried out over the last year this paper then reflects on how neighbourhood planning is being deployed by the GCNF within a wider repertoire of community activities aimed at ensuring the protection and refurbishment of housing on the Carpenters Estate. Throughout this paper there will be reflection on whether participation in state planning processes represents a politically effective way for communities to shape development plans and outcomes for their neighbourhood. It will be argued that the political potential of neighbourhood planning for communities may be unlocked when it is pursued strategically in concert with a range of other actions aimed at challenging and shaping state development plans for a community's neighbourhood.

Download free: http://bit.ly/amps93

------------------------------------------------------------------------------

About Architecture_MPS
Architecture_MPS was established as an Open Access journal in 2012 and addresses the growing interest in the social and political interpretation of the built environment from a multi-disciplinary perspective. It draws on experts who can bring emerging issues of international importance to the English-speaking community, and it has published high-profile academics and emerging voices from multiple countries, including notable international figures such as Noam Chomsky and Kenneth Frampton. By linking its publications with a range of research programmes and conferences it further raises awareness of the social importance of architecture. Find out more at http://architecturemps.com/

About AMPS (Architecture, Media, Politics, Society)         
AMPS (Architecture, Media, Politics, Society) is an international nonprofit research organisation. Its journal is Architecture_MPS. The journal is published by UCL Press. Read the current issue here.  The research organisation includes academics and universities internationally. It has two current programmes: 1. Housing-Critical Futures | 2. The Mediated City. Find out more at http://architecturemps.com/

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An urban geography discussion and announcement forum
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Maintained by: RGS-IBG Urban Geography Research Group
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