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Dear all (and apologies for x-post),
a reminder of the upcoming deadline (March 15) for the pre-AESOP, one-day
seminar on Transformative Knowledge for an Era of Planetary Urbanization we
are organizing in Lisbon. (Call below)
Please share particularly among early career researchers - and don't forget
we'll be able to provide some travel bursaries.
Best wishes,
Simone

*Transformative Knowledge for an era of Planetary Urbanization?*

*Questioning the role of social sciences and humanities from an
interdisciplinary perspective*



*Pre-Association of European Schools of Planning (AESOP) one-day seminar*

*Instituto de Ciências Sociais, Universidade de Lisboa (ICS-ULisboa)*

*An INTREPID Action workshop*



11.00am-5.30pm, 10th July 2017 (followed by drinks/ pre-arranged dinner)



*Submission of motivation letters by 15th March 2017*



*Keynote speaker:*

·         Heather Campbell (University of Sheffield)



*Organisation:*

·         INTREPID COST action (web <http://www.intrepid-cost.eu/>);

·         ICS-ULisboa, research group Environment, Territory, Society (web
<http://www.ics.ulisboa.pt/instituto/?doc=36000000001&ln=e&mm=3&mnid=2&ctmid=2>
);

·         AESOP Young Academics Network (web
<http://www.aesop-youngacademics.net/>).





*The philosophers have only interpreted the world, in so many ways.*

*The point, however, is to change it*

*(Karl Marx, Theses On Feuerbach, XI)*



*[T]he scientific study of and training in creative conceptual and
practical thinking on the relation between society and environment at
various territorial levels and in the search, development and advancement
of opportunities for purposeful intervention in that relation to ensure
sustainable development*

*(AESOP, 1995)*



A few decades ago, Henri Lefebvre (1970) prophesied that human society,
under capitalist organisation, would inevitably become entirely urbanised.
If, as many argue, that moment has arrived and we live an age of ‘planetary
urbanisation’ (Brenner, 2013; Buckley and Strauss, 2016), the problem(s) of
the urban – the ‘urban question’ (Castells, 1972; Merrifield, 2012) – are
amongst the central challenges facing the world. From a different
perspective, the concept of the ‘Anthropocene’, has popularised the idea
that mankind has become a planetary force (Crutzen and Stoermer, 2000).
Given its dominant urban form, the Anthropocene’s sustainability becomes
increasingly a matter of urban sustainability, and that is a major 21st
century challenge. The New Urban Agenda by UN-Habitat (2016) summarises the
main obstacles to sustainable urban development as: ‘the persistence of
multiple forms of poverty, growing inequalities, and environmental
degradation […], with social and economic exclusion and spatial segregation
often an irrefutable reality in cities and human settlements’.



If awareness of ongoing climatic change has generated growing public
concern, there nonetheless seems to be widespread uncertainty that
environmental (and hence social and economic) disasters can be avoided.
Prevailing commitment to increasingly far-reaching ‘techno-fixes’ seem to
either confirm such, potentially dystopian, pessimism (see Klein, 2014), or
appeal to a utopian ideal under the notions of smart and intelligent cities
(de Jong et al., 2015).



This one-day seminar starts from the idea that the Social Sciences and
Humanities (SSH) are crucial to produce and disseminate the knowledge
necessary to envision and collaboratively shape ‘sustainable’ futures,
avoiding the traps of dystopian and anti-utopian developments. However, at
present, mainstream research and education approaches seem ill-equipped to
address the major economic, environmental and societal challenges generated
by contemporary urbanisation. The social sciences, for example, are
dominated by an ‘entrenched empiricism’ (Brenner and Schmid, 2013) that
prevents the production of novel, and theoretically/critically informed,
paradigms. Disciplinary barriers meanwhile stymie the creation of real
inter- and trans-disciplinary knowledge (Harkavy, 2006; Petts et al, 2008;
Davoudi, 2010). All in all, SSH have been too focused on studying the past
and present (Appadurai, 2013; Adam, 2009) and risk missing the opportunity
to shape a ‘sustainable’ future (Bina et al, 2016a).



This certainly seems to be true of urban studies, an inherently
interdisciplinary field (AESOP, 2009), but one in which standard practices
fall short of the holistic approaches necessary to equip the next
generation with the methodological and conceptual capacities to shape
sustainable futures (Bina et al, 2016b). Urban disciplines and mainstream
SSH therefore urgently need to develop new approaches if they are to
contribute positively to the creation of just and sustainable urban futures
(Dimitrova, 2014; UN-Habitat, 2009).



This seminar aims to bring together a group of particularly early and
mid-career scholars to discuss the kinds of transformative knowledge,
pedagogy and practice required to achieve sustainable development in an era
of planetary urbanization. We invite scholars from (and beyond) all areas
of urban studies and SSH linked to urban issues, including, but not limited
to, planning, architecture, urban design, urban geography; and economics,
sociology, anthropology, history, philosophy, comparative literature,
cultural studies, to participate.

The session will critically consider the strengths and weaknesses of SSH
approaches, and how they might be reconfigured. Key issues to be
considered will
include at least two of the following themes:



·         challenges and potentials of shaping new interdisciplinary
agendas in research and education (especially from the perspective of early
career researchers);

·         role of theory in the production of the urban, and the value of
critical approaches (cf. Brenner, 2009; Marcuse, 2010);

·         search for new epistemological and methodological approaches –
‘mondialisation’ (Lévy, 2008), beyond divides such as local/global (Healey,
2012), West/South (Santos, 2010) and human/nature (Moore, 2015), and the
potential of comparative studies for the production of new knowledges
(Robinson, 2016);

·         role of SSH in envisioning and shaping futures – including
co-production (Watson, 2014; Palmer and Walasek, 2016; Campbell and
Vanderhoven, 2016), and foresight methods for exploring urban futures
(Güell and Lopez 2016; Hopkins and Zapata, 2007; Freestone, 2012;
Phdungsilp 2011).



*Format and useful information*



The seminar will be participatory in format, with two keynote addresses and
a core discussion in the form of world café. It is intended that discussion
will feed directly into a linked roundtable discussion proposed as part of
the main Association of European Schools of Planning (AESOP) conference
that will run from the 11-14 of July in Lisbon. Building on a brief
Position Paper by the organising team to be circulated in advance to
participants, it is anticipated the session will also generate collective
written outputs in a suitable international journal.



The seminar is free of costs to the participants. To be considered for the
seminar, please submit by 15th March 2017 a letter of motivation (max 2
pages A4) to [log in to unmask] AND [log in to unmask],
stating what your background and researcher/education interests are, as
well as what perspective and topics you want to bring to the discussion. 20
participants will be selected, with priority given to early- and
mid-career, scholars – at least 5 seats will be reserved to YA members.
Notice will be given by early April.



*Travel bursaries*



We will be able to fund up to six bursaries aimed at contributing towards
travel expenses (approximately the cost of travel and one-night
accommodation), with priority given to early-career scholars from
universities in low- and middle-income countries – with a proportion
reserved for YA members. If you want to apply for the scholarship, please
submit a letter stating why you think it should be awarded to you.





*Works cited*

Adam, B.E. (2008). Future matters: Futures known, created and minded
<http://orca.cf.ac.uk/18774>. *Twenty-First Century Society,* 3(2), 111-116.

AESOP (Association of the European Schools of Planning) (1995). Core
requirements for a high quality European planning education. Available at:
www.aesop-planning.eu/en_GB/core-curriculum.

Appadurai, A. (2013). The future as a cultural fact: Essays on the global
condition. London: Verso.

Bina, O., Balula, L., Varanda, M. and Fokdal, J. (2016a). Urban studies and
the challenge of embedding sustainability: A review of international master
programmes. *Journal of Cleaner Production*, 137, 330-346.

Bina, O., Mateus, S., Pereira, L. and Caffa, A. (2016b). The future
imagined: Exploring fiction as a means of reflecting on today’s Grand
Societal Challenges and tomorrow’s options. *Futures*, online first. Doi:
10.1016/j.futures.2016.05.009.

Brenner, N. (2009). What is critical urban theory? *City: Analysis of Urban
Trends, Culture, Theory, Policy, Action,* 13(2-3), 198-207.

Brenner, N. (ed.) (2013). *Implosions/explosions. Towards a study of
planetary urbanization*. Berlin: Jovis.

Brenner, N. & Schmid, C. (2013). The ‘urban age’ in question. *International
Journal of Urban and Regional Research*, 38(3), 731-755.

Buckley, M. and Strauss, K. (2016). With, against and beyond Lefebvre:
Planetary urbanization and epistemic plurality. *Environment and Space D*,
34(4), 617-636.

Campbell, H. and Vanderhoven, D. (2016). *Coproduction: Knowledge that
matters*. Manchester: Economic and Social Research Council N8 Research
Partnership.

Castells, M. (1972). *La question urbaine.* Paris: Maspero.

Crutzen, P.G. and Stoermer, E.F. (2000). The ‘Anthopocene’. *IGBP
Newsletter*, 41, 17-18.

Davoudi, S. (2010). Planning and interdisciplinarity. In Geppert, A. and
Cotella, G. (eds.), *Planning education. Quality issues in a changing
European Higher Education Area* (pp. 33-36). Leuven: AESOP.

de Jong, M., Joss, S., Schraven, D., Zhan, C. and Weijnen, M. (2015).
Sustainable-smart-resilient-low carbon-eco-knowledge cities; making sense
of a multitude of concepts promoting sustainable urbanization. *Journal of
Cleaner Production*, 109, 25-38.

Dimitrova, E. (2014). The ‘sustainable development’ concept in urban
planning education: Lessons learned on a Bulgarian path. *Journal of
Cleaner Production*, 62, 120-127.

Freestone, R. (2012) Futures thinking in planning education and
research. *Journal
of Education in the Built Environment*, 7(1), 8-38

Güell, J. M. F. and López, J. G. (2016). Cities futures. A critical
assessment of how future studies are applied to cities. *Foresight*, 18(5)
454-468.

Harkavy, I. (2006). The role of universities in advancing citizenship and
social justice in the 21st century. *Education, Citizenship and Social
Justice*, 1(1): 5–37.

Healey, P. (2012). The universal and the contingent: Some reflections on
the transnational flow of planning ideas and practices. *Planning Theory*,
11(2), 188-207.

Hopkins, L. and Zapata, M. (eds.) (2007). Engaging the future: Forecasts,
scenarios, plans and projects. Cambridge, MA: Lincoln Institute for Land
Policy.

Klein, N. (2014). *This changes everything. Capitalism vs. the climate*.
New York: Simon & Schuster.

Lefebvre, H. (1970). *La révolution urbaine*. Paris: Gallimard.

Lévy, J. (ed.). *L’invention du Monde. Une géographie de la mondialisation*.
Paris: Presses de Sciences Po.

Marcuse, P. (2010). In defense of theory in practice. *City: Analysis of
Urban Trends, Culture, Theory, Policy, Action*, 14(1-2), 4-12.

Merrifield, A. (2014). *The new urban question*. London: PlutoPress.

Moore, J. (2015). *Capitalism in the web of life: Ecology and the
accumulation of capital*. London: Verso.

Palmer, H. and Walasek, H., (2016). Realising just cities: Towards
realising just cities. Gothenburg: Mistra Urban Futures.

Petts, J., Owens, S. and Bulkeley, H. (2008). Crossing boundaries:
Interdisciplinarity in the context of urban environments. *Geoforum*,
39(2), 593-601.

Phdungsilp, A. (2011). Futures studies’ backcasting method used for
strategic sustainable city planning. *Futures*, 43(7), 707-714.

Robinson, J. (2016). Thinking cities through elsewhere: Comparative tactics
for a more global urban studies. *Progress in Human Geography,*  40(1),
3-29.

UN-Habitat (2009). Planning sustainable cities, United Nations Human
Settlements Programme (UN-Habitat). London: Earthscan.

UN-Habitat (2016). HABITAT III. New Urban Agenda. Draft outcome document
for adoption in Quito, October 2016. 10 September 2016. Available at
www2.habitat3.org/bitcache/97ced11dcecef85d41f74043195e54728
36f6291?vid=588897&disposition=inline&op=view.

Watson, V. (2014). Coproduction and collaboration in planning: The
difference. *Planning Theory and Practice*, 15(1), 62-76.

-- 
Simone Tulumello
*Post-doc research fellow, **ULisboa, **Instituto de Ciências Sociais*

*latest publications*:

Tulumello S. (2017) *Fear, Space and Urban Planning*. Springer (link
<http://www.springer.com/gp/book/9783319439365>) / Tulumello S. (2016)
Toward a critical understanding of urban security within the institutional
practice of urbanplanning. *JPER *(link
<http://jpe.sagepub.com/content/early/2016/08/20/0739456X16664786.abstract>)
/ Tulumello S. (2016) Multi-level Territorial Governance and Cohesion
Policy. *EJSD* (link
<http://www.nordregio.se/Global/EJSD/Refereed%20articles/Refereed62.pdf>)

webpage <http://www.ics.ulisboa.pt/pessoas/simone.tulumello> / blog
<http://simonetulumello.wordpress.com/> / academia.edu
<http://unipa.academia.edu/SimoneTulumello> / flickr
<http://www.flickr.com/photos/simotulu/> / twitter
<http://twitter.com/SimTulum>



-- 
Simone Tulumello
*Post-doc research fellow, **ULisboa, **Instituto de Ciências Sociais*

*latest publications*:

Tulumello S. (2017) *Fear, Space and Urban Planning*. Springer (link
<http://www.springer.com/gp/book/9783319439365>) / Tulumello S Healey P
(2016) Questioning planning, connecting places and times. *plaNext special
issue* (link <http://journals.aesop-planning.eu/volume-3/>) / Tulumello S.
(2016) Toward a critical understanding of urban security within the
institutional practice of urbanplanning. *JPER *(link
<http://jpe.sagepub.com/content/early/2016/08/20/0739456X16664786.abstract>)
/ Tulumello S. (2016) Multi-level Territorial Governance and Cohesion
Policy. *EJSD* (link
<http://www.nordregio.se/Global/EJSD/Refereed%20articles/Refereed62.pdf>)

webpage <http://www.ics.ulisboa.pt/pessoas/simone.tulumello> / blog
<http://simonetulumello.wordpress.com/> / academia.edu
<http://unipa.academia.edu/SimoneTulumello> / flickr
<http://www.flickr.com/photos/simotulu/> / twitter

<http://twitter.com/SimTulum>



-- 
Simone Tulumello
*Post-doc research fellow, **ULisboa, **Instituto de Ciências Sociais*

*latest publications*:

Tulumello S. (2017) *Fear, Space and Urban Planning*. Springer (link
<http://www.springer.com/gp/book/9783319439365>) / Tulumello S Healey P
(2016) Questioning planning, connecting places and times. *plaNext special
issue* (link <http://journals.aesop-planning.eu/volume-3/>) / Tulumello S.
(2016) Toward a critical understanding of urban security within the
institutional practice of urbanplanning. *JPER *(link
<http://jpe.sagepub.com/content/early/2016/08/20/0739456X16664786.abstract>)
/ Tulumello S. (2016) Multi-level Territorial Governance and Cohesion
Policy. *EJSD* (link
<http://www.nordregio.se/Global/EJSD/Refereed%20articles/Refereed62.pdf>)

webpage <http://www.ics.ulisboa.pt/pessoas/simone.tulumello> / blog
<http://simonetulumello.wordpress.com/> / academia.edu
<http://unipa.academia.edu/SimoneTulumello> / flickr
<http://www.flickr.com/photos/simotulu/> / twitter

<http://twitter.com/SimTulum>

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