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A number of you may be interested in participating in this session. The
usual apologies for cross-posting apply.


*Call for Papers:  RGS-IBG international conference London 26-29 August 2014*



Session title: *Neighbourhood Planning in England: the contested politics
of localism and co-production*

Sponsored by the Planning & Environment Research Group

Session convenors:

Dr Sue Brownill, Oxford Brookes University. Email:  [log in to unmask]

Dr Quintin Bradley, Leeds Metropolitan University. Email:
[log in to unmask]



This session will explore the contested politics of Neighbourhood
Development Plans (NDPs), one of a raft of measures introduced under the
Localism Act (2011) in England. With over 800 Neighbourhood Development
Plans underway, and several already approved by popular referenda, the
initiative is promoted as devolving power to communities and enabling
popular engagement in local decisions, thereby bridging the divide between
participatory and representative democracy, harmonising  the competing
priorities of the strategic and very local, and improving relationships
between local authorities and local people.

As such the emerging experience of NDPs in England and similar initiatives
in other countries speak to some key debates in geography and planning
which this session seeks to address. These include:

   - The contradictory meanings, uses and propositions of localism; as
   Cochrane and Clarke, 2013 and Featherstone et al 2012 argue there are a
   variety of rationales, meanings and claims behind localism in general and
   the form of localism which is emerging within England in particular. Work
   on NDPs has already revealed the value of exploring empirically how these
   play out in practice and the session will add to those studies.
   - The uneven geographies of localism; much of the controversy
   surrounding neighbourhood planning has focused on the uneven distribution
   of the social and economic capital, skills and capacities needed to share
   in the apparent freedoms of localism . Lowndes and Pratchett 2012 argue
   that neighbourhoods will either sink or swim in the tides of localism,
   however there is also value in exploring the potential for how a variety of
   'localisms' are emerging ( or are being assembled) and how NDPs,
   particularly those in urban neighbourhoods may impact on inequalities of
   power and resources.
   - Governance and topographies of power; localism represents the latest
   in a a long line of initiatives aimed at changing the relationship between
   the state and its citizens through the political construction of place and
   neighbourhood.  Debates over the extent to which this represents the
   'soft places of neoliberalism' (Houghton and Allemendinger, 2013) or the
   emergence of a non-scalar topography of power (Allan and Cochrane 2010) can
   be addressed through the study of neighbourhood planning.
   - The potential for a progressive localism; the session will explore
   whether or not within the technologies and infrastructure of localism as
   they are emerging through NDPs and related community rights, more
   progressive forms are emerging. This will draw on experiences from other
   countries within the UK, and wider and will  include exploring the role
   of neighbourhood planning in encouraging co-production and broadening
   knowledge of, or interest in planning decisions

Papers for this session are invited on aspects of neighbourhood planning
that address these broader debates. The convenors welcome either conceptual
or empirically focused papers on the impact of neighbourhood planning on
planning, the environment and the politics of governance and are keen to
extend enquiry beyond England/UK.


Please send abstracts of no more than 300 words, plus title and author
details to Quintin Bradley ([log in to unmask]) *and* Sue Brownill (
[log in to unmask]) by 14 February 2014

[log in to unmask]

[log in to unmask]






Dr Sue Brownill
Reader in Urban Policy and Governance
Department of Planning
Oxford Brookes University
Gipsy Lane
Oxford OX3 0BP


Tel ++44 (0) 1865 483877

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