1st Edition

Women and Planning Creating Gendered Realities

By Clara H. Greed Copyright 1994
    256 Pages
    by Routledge

    256 Pages
    by Routledge

    Planning is currently a male profession, but an analysis of a century of town planning reveals this to be a new development; women have been central to the planning movement since it began. Women and Planning is the first comprehensive history and analysis of women and the planning movement, covering the philosophical, practical and policy dimensions of `planning for women'. Beyond the marginalization of women, modern, scientific planning hides a story of past links with eugenics, colonialism, artistic, utopian and religious movements and the occult. Central to the discussion is the questioning of how male planners have rewritten planning in their own image, projecting patriarchal assumptions in their creation of `urban realities'. Issues of class, sexuality, ethnicity and disability are raised by the fundamental question of `Who is being planned for?'

    1. Introduction: Beliefs and Realities 2. The Planners: Powers and Limitations 3. Woman in the City of Man 4. Planning: The Spirit of the Age 5. Reflections on the History of Planning 6. The Nineteenth Century 7. Professional Power over Private Space 8. Production and Consumption 9. Sociological Pereptions of Women 10. Women into Planning: Ways and Means 11. Planning for Women Bibliography Apendix 1: Representation of Women in the Planning Profession Apendix 2: Key Texts on Women and Built Environment and Planning Apendeix 3: Women and Planning: Policy Proposals and Initiatives

    Biography

    Clara H. Greed