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(2012) Complexity theories of cities have come of age, Dordrecht, Springer.
Positioning planning in the world of order, chaos and complexity
on perspectives, behaviour and interventions in a non-linear environment
Gert de Roo, Ward S. Rauws
pp. 207-220
Planners have done with the idea that urban and rural landscapes can be shaped, controlled and maintained entirely to their liking. But are we ready to admit that most spatial developments would have occurred even without planners? Could we accept the idea that spatial developments emerge largely autonomously as the result of a mix of factors? If we were to embrace this idea, what implications would it have for the planning discipline, and for the role of the planner? We will address these questions here, incorporating a theoretical perspective that underlines evolutionary growth rather than artificially created space: complexity theory.
Publication details
DOI: 10.1007/978-3-642-24544-2_12
Full citation:
de Roo, G. , Rauws, W. S. (2012)., Positioning planning in the world of order, chaos and complexity: on perspectives, behaviour and interventions in a non-linear environment, in J. Portugali, H. Meyer, E. Stolk & E. Tan (eds.), Complexity theories of cities have come of age, Dordrecht, Springer, pp. 207-220.