2016
DOI: 10.1177/1473095216648185
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Morality, power and the planning subject

Abstract: Ethical issues are at the heart of planning. Thus, planning theory has long displayed an interest in debating both the ethical justification for planning and how the activity of planning can be rendered more ethically sensitive. However, comparatively little attention has been shown to how the very constitution of the planner as a 'moral subject' may be ethically problematic for planning practice. This paper addresses this lacuna through an engagement with the philosophy of Michel Foucault. In contrast to how … Show more

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Cited by 10 publications
(10 citation statements)
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“…It may also mean tackling the normative assumption that planning as a set of practices is doing the ‘right thing’ and coming to the ‘right decision’. Yiftachel (2001) states that ‘the days in which planners and planning were widely regarded as rational and progressive agents of change are well and truly over’ (p. 254; see also Lennon and Fox-Rogers, 2017), and yet normative planning theory continues the search for a normatively better form of planning practice. Drawing inter alia on Foucauldian ideas on power, Davoudi (2015) still finds a way to argue for a planning as a practice of knowing which is essentially positive.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…It may also mean tackling the normative assumption that planning as a set of practices is doing the ‘right thing’ and coming to the ‘right decision’. Yiftachel (2001) states that ‘the days in which planners and planning were widely regarded as rational and progressive agents of change are well and truly over’ (p. 254; see also Lennon and Fox-Rogers, 2017), and yet normative planning theory continues the search for a normatively better form of planning practice. Drawing inter alia on Foucauldian ideas on power, Davoudi (2015) still finds a way to argue for a planning as a practice of knowing which is essentially positive.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The decision also has weight in that regulatory decisions do not occur in isolation but tend to look back at past decisions and forward to future development applications. The institutional norms of regulatory institutions are usually that there should be a degree of consistency in such decisions over time (Lennon and Fox-Rogers, 2017: 375).…”
Section: The Distinctive Nature Of Planning Regulationmentioning
confidence: 99%
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