Abstract

The affective, practical and political dimensions of care are conventionally marginalised in spatial planning in the UK, in which technical evidence and certified expert judgements are privileged. Citizens are encouraged to participate in the planning system to influence how the places where they live will change. But to make the kind of arguments that are influential, their care for place must be silenced. Then in 2011, the Localism Act introduced neighbourhood planning to the UK, enabling community groups to write their own statutory planning policies. This initiative explicitly valorized care and affective connection with place, and associated care with knowledge of place (rather than opposing it to objective evidence). Through long-term ethnographic studies of two neighbourhood planning groups I trace the contours of care in this innovative space. I show how the groups’ legitimacy relies on their enactment of three distinct identities and associated sources of authority. Each identity embodies different objects, methods, exclusions and ideals of care, which are in tension and sometimes outright conflict with each other. Neighbourhood planning groups have to find ways to hold these tensions and ambivalences together, and how they do so determines what gets cared for and how. I describe the relations of care embodied by each identity and discuss the (ontological) politics of care that arise from the particular ways in which different modes of care are made to hang together: how patterns of exclusion and marginalisation are reproduced through a policy which explicitly seeks to undo them, and how reconfiguring relations between these identities can enable different cares to be realised. This analysis reveals care in practices that tend to be seen as antithetical to caring, and enables speculation about how silenced relations could be made visible and how policy could do care better.

Highlights

  • There has been a recent upsurge in Science and Technology Studies (STS) research revolving around the theme of care, understood as “an affective state, a material vital doing, and an ethico-political obligation” (Puig de la Bellacasa, 2011, p. 90), constituted in practices in which non-humans are both objects and active mediators of care (Mol, 2008; Puig de la Bellacasa, 2017; Singleton, 2012)

  • This paper responds to that call by exploring the diverse realisations of care materialised in neighbourhood planning, a form of small-scale, community-led spatial planning introduced to the UK by the Localism Act 2011

  • It is recognised that people care about the places where they live, and are entitled to help shape how they change, so public participation has long been encouraged in planning

Read more

Summary

Introduction

There has been a recent upsurge in Science and Technology Studies (STS) research revolving around the theme of care, understood as “an affective state, a material vital doing, and an ethico-political obligation” (Puig de la Bellacasa, 2011, p. 90), constituted in practices in which non-humans are both objects and active mediators of care (Mol, 2008; Puig de la Bellacasa, 2017; Singleton, 2012). 90), constituted in practices in which non-humans are both objects and active mediators of care (Mol, 2008; Puig de la Bellacasa, 2017; Singleton, 2012). The policy of neighbourhood planning invites communities to articulate their care for and knowledge of place, and give agency to that care and knowledge through the development of statutory planning policies. This was a radical break from previous planning practice, in which public roles were strictly limited to those of consultees. There has been little research on the ways in which communities enact care for place through the practices of spatial planning (Metzger, 2014)

Methods
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call