1st Edition
Ideological Fantasies in Planning Theories and Practices
1. Editorial Introduction: Ideological Fantasies in Planning Theories and Practices
Elham Bahmanteymouri, Mohsen Mohammadzadeh, and Jean Hillier
Section I: Deconstructing Capitalist Ideological Fantasies
2. Ideology in Systems Theory
Angelique Chettiparamb
3. The Exigency of Alternative Fantasies in Planning Education: A Lacanian Perspective
Mohsen Mohammadzadeh
4. The Parable of the Scapegoat: Active Inertia in Co-Creative Multi-Stakeholder Arenas
Rachel Berglund
5. Mapping Urban Ideology
Lucas Pohl
6. The Levelling Up Fantasy: A Psychoanalytical Exploration
David Webb
Section II: Traversing Capitalist Ideological Fantasies
7. Nature-Based Solutions as Ideological Fantasy
Jean Hillier
8. Reading Planning Fantasies Otherwise: What Can Transformative Planning Theory Learn from the Audacity of YIMBY Desire?
Andy Inch and Crystal Legacy
9. Valuing a Role for Flat Ontological Perspectives and Meta-Ethical Enquiries
Tanja Winkler
10. Community Strategy, Narrative and Working Through Fantasy
Kristof van Assche and Monica Gruezmacher Rosas
Section III: Counter-Hegemonic Approaches from Non-Western Contexts
11. The Urban Domination of the Planet: A Rancièrian Critique
Kristina Grange and Michael Gunder
12. Ideological Fantasy of Totality: Impasse in the Transition to Territorial Spatial Planning in China
Xinhua Li and Chuan Wang
13. Echoes of Truth: Illuminating Planning with Iranian Philosophical Insights
Elham Bahmanteymouri
Biography
Elham Bahmanteymouri is Senior Lecturer in Urban Planning at The University of Auckland. Her research focuses on urban critical theories, incomplete markets, housing markets, economic assessment of urban development policies, spatial inequality, and the implications of digital platforms and AI in planning and governance. She also has extensive professional experience in Urban and Regional Planning across public and private sectors.
Jean Hillier is Professor Emerita of Sustainability and Urban Planning with the Centre for Urban Research at RMIT University, Melbourne, Australia. Her research interests include poststructural planning theory and methodology in times of uncertainty, more-than-human planning, and problematisation of dark cultural heritage in North-East China.
Mohsen Mohammadzadeh is Senior Lecturer in Urban Planning at the School of Architecture and Planning, The University of Auckland. He holds academic qualifications in Urban and Regional Planning, Urban Design, and Civil Engineering. His research and publications focus on planning theory, alternative approaches to planning theory and practice, and the critical examination of disruptive urban technologies and their impacts on cities.
"This is a challenging collection massively demonstrating the interdisciplinary input of bringing together psychoanalytic and planning theory in order to rigorously highlight the ideological fantasies at work in planning practices and their political and spatial implications. Drawing on a multitude of examples and theoretical insights, this volume deserves to be widely read and debated. What better way to celebrate Michael Gunder’s legacy and his enduring impact on the field of planning theory and beyond?"
Professor Yannis Stavrakakis, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki
"Michael Gunder was a distinguished planning theorist with a unique tack on critical planning research, often employing a Lacanian strand of psychoanalytic theory to analyze ideologies and practices related to spatial planning. This commemorative collection shows that Gunder’s approach bears fruit in planning theory. The contributors apply his ideas to current planning issues. The book offers considerable insight into a theory building connecting planners’ interpretation of spatial governance with a main perspective for studying social phenomena."
Professor Emeritus Tore Øivin Sager, Norwegian University of Science and Technology
"This commemorative collection celebrates Michael Gunder’s enduring contribution to planning scholarship and particularly his application of Jacques Lacan’s psychoanalytic approaches to the field of planning. It brings together planning scholars who, inspired by Michale’s works, expand our understandings of the Lacanian concept of ‘fantasy’ and its function in shining lights on the nature of planning practices. Their contributions make the book an essential reading for everyone interested in Michael’s scholarship as well as Lacanian planning theory more broadly."
Professor Simin Davoudi, School of Architecture, Planning and Landscape, Newcastle University, UK






