Towards an ethical turn in urban studies

This article explores an ethical approach to urban planning, drawing on Deleuze and Guattari’s philosophy of becoming. A central argument in this study is that the reality policymakers face when deciding how to pursue good (in the moral sense) actions or how to eschew bad ones is ontologically unpr...

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Main Author: Miriam Tedeschi
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: AESOP Association of the European Schools of Planning 2016-04-01
Series:PlaNext
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.aesop-planning.eu/index.php/planext/article/view/71
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author Miriam Tedeschi
author_facet Miriam Tedeschi
author_sort Miriam Tedeschi
collection DOAJ
description This article explores an ethical approach to urban planning, drawing on Deleuze and Guattari’s philosophy of becoming. A central argument in this study is that the reality policymakers face when deciding how to pursue good (in the moral sense) actions or how to eschew bad ones is ontologically unpredictable and unstable. Unpredictability and instability are characteristics of urban assemblages, which compose and decompose affecting each other in a positive or negative way. Following Deleuze and Spinoza, this paper claims that urban composition and decomposition are good (empowering) and bad (harming), respectively, in an ethical and amoral sense. However, moral and fixed values, often left unchallenged in urban planning and policymaking, fail to describe these ethical transitions among assemblages: in fact, urban planning and policies’ unavoidable conatus, namely their survival as rational system, is to avoid direct confrontation with ethical and dangerous happenings and, instead, increase their power of acting so as to make urban bodies docile, controlled and normalised through standardised moral categories and classifications. These categories are but ethically generated information shorn of their situated and eventful role, acquiring the shape of data and transformed into fixed layers of apparently stable and predictable reality.
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spelling doaj.art-fddcecf74f0841e0ac50f88a93485df92024-01-23T05:50:01ZengAESOP Association of the European Schools of PlanningPlaNext2468-06482016-04-012110.24306/plnxt.2016.02.002Towards an ethical turn in urban studiesMiriam Tedeschi0IUAV University of Venice This article explores an ethical approach to urban planning, drawing on Deleuze and Guattari’s philosophy of becoming. A central argument in this study is that the reality policymakers face when deciding how to pursue good (in the moral sense) actions or how to eschew bad ones is ontologically unpredictable and unstable. Unpredictability and instability are characteristics of urban assemblages, which compose and decompose affecting each other in a positive or negative way. Following Deleuze and Spinoza, this paper claims that urban composition and decomposition are good (empowering) and bad (harming), respectively, in an ethical and amoral sense. However, moral and fixed values, often left unchallenged in urban planning and policymaking, fail to describe these ethical transitions among assemblages: in fact, urban planning and policies’ unavoidable conatus, namely their survival as rational system, is to avoid direct confrontation with ethical and dangerous happenings and, instead, increase their power of acting so as to make urban bodies docile, controlled and normalised through standardised moral categories and classifications. These categories are but ethically generated information shorn of their situated and eventful role, acquiring the shape of data and transformed into fixed layers of apparently stable and predictable reality. https://journals.aesop-planning.eu/index.php/planext/article/view/71MoralityAffectAssemblageEthicsPowerInformation
spellingShingle Miriam Tedeschi
Towards an ethical turn in urban studies
PlaNext
Morality
Affect
Assemblage
Ethics
Power
Information
title Towards an ethical turn in urban studies
title_full Towards an ethical turn in urban studies
title_fullStr Towards an ethical turn in urban studies
title_full_unstemmed Towards an ethical turn in urban studies
title_short Towards an ethical turn in urban studies
title_sort towards an ethical turn in urban studies
topic Morality
Affect
Assemblage
Ethics
Power
Information
url https://journals.aesop-planning.eu/index.php/planext/article/view/71
work_keys_str_mv AT miriamtedeschi towardsanethicalturninurbanstudies