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Pillars of Planning A (BPLN0097)

Key information

Faculty
Faculty of the Built Environment
Teaching department
Bartlett School of Planning
Credit value
15
Restrictions
N/A
Timetable

Alternative credit options

This module is offered in several versions which have different credit weightings (e.g. either 15 or 30 credits). Please see the links below for the alternative versions. To choose the right one for your programme of study, check your programme handbook or with your department.

  1. Pillars of Planning (BPLN0002)
  2. Pillars of Planning B (BPLN0041)

Description

This module is a 15 credit module which involves students attending the first half of the lectures for the 30 credit BPLN0002 and completing the associated assessment.

This module aims to stimulate critical thinking about space and place as the basis for action or intervention: one cannot 'plan' or 'develop' cities without first understanding how they work, and the social, political, economic and environmental contexts in which planning operates.

This is achieved through an introduction to relevant concepts, analytical frameworks and theories from across the social sciences:

· urban sociology/urban geography

· urban politics/public policy

· political ecology / environmental studies

in order to understand the spatial dynamics of cities and key processes and actors of urban change and built environment development.

Although a theory led course, introducing the social science knowledges which act as the pillars of planning, it is not a purely 'theoretical' course: we will maintain a focus on the identification of planning problems, and we will critically reflect on the policy challenges, interventions, tensions and trade-offs, which are generated by the combination of processes studied in the module.

Through the module, we expect students to:

- develop a good understanding of key processes and actors of social, political and environmental change in contemporary cities and regions

- and of their interplay;

- acquire a sound working knowledge of key concepts, analytical frameworks and theories that are relevant to understand those processes, drawing from the fields of urban sociology/geography; urban politics/public policy; political ecology;

- develop a sensitive understanding of the social, political, and environmental contexts that shape and influence planning processes, debates and policies, and of the eminently political nature of planning;

- develop a critical appreciation of the policy interventions and mechanisms devised to deal with such processes - more specifically reflecting on the interacting and sometimes conflicting roles of state, market and civil society actors in the development, management, planning, control and regulation of urban space and change in the built environment;

- develop their research, analytical, writing and critical thinking skills by exploiting a variety of sources related to relevant theories and frameworks to understand urban change and associated planning processes and challenges through a variety of assessment methods.

The module is delivered through a series of 10 lectures which interweave theory and knowledges from sociology and political sciences as relevant for urban and environmental planners.

Module deliveries for 2024/25 academic year

Intended teaching term: Term 1 ÌýÌýÌý Postgraduate (FHEQ Level 7)

Teaching and assessment

Mode of study
In person
Methods of assessment
50% In-class activity
50% Coursework
Mark scheme
Numeric Marks

Other information

Number of students on module in previous year
0
Module leader
Dr Ben Clifford
Who to contact for more information
bsp.pgt@ucl.ac.uk

Last updated

This module description was last updated on 8th April 2024.

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