1st Edition

The Promise of Planning Global Aspirations and South African Experience Since 2008

By Philip Harrison, Alison Todes Copyright 2025
    296 Pages 39 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    296 Pages 39 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    The Promise of Planning explores the experience of planning internationally since the global financial crisis, focusing on South Africa. The book is a response to a decade-plus in which state-led planning has re-emerged as a putative means for achieving developmental goals (as indicated in global initiatives such as the New Urban Agenda), and where planning in South Africa has consolidated in terms of its legal and policy basis. However, the return of planning is happening in an inauspicious context, with economic fragilities, technological shifts, political populism, institutional complexities, and more, threatening to upturn the ‘new promise of planning’. The book provides a careful analytical account of planning in South Africa and how and why its promises have been difficult to achieve. Building on the authors’ previous book, Planning and Transformation, the book sheds light on planning as an increasingly complex and diverse governmental practice within a perpetually changing world. It can be used as a resource for planners who must make good on the new promise of planning while navigating the risks and threats of the contemporary world, as well as students and faculty interested in international planning debates and the South African case.

    1. INTRODUCTION  2. THE FORCES AT WORK INTERNATIONALLY AND THE NEW PROMISE OF PLANNING  3. THE SOUTH AFRICAN CONTEXT  4. PLANNING ON THE NATIONAL AND PROVINCIAL SCALES  5. MUNICIPAL PLANNING IN SOUTH AFRICA  6. PLANNING AND ORGANISED CIVIL SOCIETY  7. PLANNING AND THE TRANSFORMATION OF THE NATIONAL SPACE ECONOMY  8. PLANNING AND SPATIAL TRANSFORMATION  9. PLANNING AND SOCIETAL TRANSFORMATIONS  10. TOWARDS THE JUST TRANSITION? PLANNING AND THE NATURAL ENVIRONMENT  11. TRANSFORMATION THROUGH CRISIS? LESSONS FROM THE COVID-19 PANDEMIC  12. THE PLANNING PROFESSION IN SOUTH AFRICA  13. PLANNING EDUCATION AND RESEARCH IN SOUTH AFRICAN PLANNING  14. CONCLUSION

    Biography

    Philip Harrison is the South African Research Chair in Spatial Analysis and City Planning funded by the National Research Foundation and hosted by the University of the Witwatersrand, South Africa. He was previously member of South Africa’s National Planning Commission and Executive Director of Development Planning and Urban Management in the City of Johannesburg.

    Alison Todes is Professor Emerita of Urban and Regional Planning at the University of the Witwatersrand. She was previously a Research Director at the Human Sciences Research Council, and a Professor in the School of Architecture, Planning and Housing at the University of KwaZulu-Natal.

    ‘This is the definitive book on planning in South Africa. It provides a comprehensive and insightful analysis of the post-apartheid era, the hopes and disappointments, successes and failures, and the reasons and lessons. In an age of poly-crises, it should be read by those in all countries who are striving to make cities and regions more just, inclusive and resilient.’

    Cliff Hague, Professor Emeritus of Planning and Spatial Development at Heriot-Watt University in Edinburgh. Past President of the Royal Town Planning Institute, and of the Commonwealth Association of Planners

    ‘A classical and critical book of colossal magnitude, written by leading authors from the Global South that paints a vivid portrait of the spatial planning transformation narrative in post-apartheid South Africa, is a must have book that is invaluable for policy makers, decision makers, practitioners, and academics alike.’

    James Chakwizira, Faculty of Science, Engineering and Agriculture, Department of Urban and Regional Planning, Thohoyandou, South Africa

    ‘Situating recent South African planning thought and practice in global context, Harrison and Todes’ critical appraisal of the work of the profession is informed, insightful and even reassuring. Despite evident disappointments of the last 15 years, the imperative of learning from failed plans and planning back better shines through.’

    Sue Parnell, Global Challenges Research Professor in the School of Geography at the University of Bristol and Emeritus Professor at the African Centre for Cities (ACC) at the University of Cape Town