18 research outputs found

    Urban commons and public interest coalitions: learning from the restoration of Bangalore’s lakes

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    Jayaraj Sundaresan finds that public interest coalitions help sustain urban commons and can be an effective antidote to policy practices that favour privatisation

    Who plans and who lives? Urban planning lessons from Bangalore – Part One

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    Using the example of the 2005-2015 Bangalore Master Plan, Jayaraj Sundaresan challenges the reliance on international expert knowledge when it comes to planning Indian cities

    Emotions, planning and co-production: distrust, anger and fear at participatory boundaries in Bengaluru

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    Emotions relationally and performatively constitute the very boundaries that distinguish the subject from the other(s). The urban human in India is affectively constituted by many intense emotional experiences of everyday life. Adopting a participation view of planning and drawing from Sarah Ahmed (2014, The cultural politics of emotion. Edinburgh University Press), we examine ‘what emotions do’ in the planning and participatory atmospheres (Buser, 2014, Planning Theory, vol. 13, pp. 227–243) in Bangalore. Tracing emotional content embedded in participations and non-participations, we demonstrate how distrust, anger and fear co-produced the process and outcomes of the 2031 Master Plan of Bangalore. We join the few emerging scholars that call attention to the emotional geographies of planning, particularly to be able to transform the continuing colonial urban management practice in the postcolonial world to that of planning. Planning, we argue, has to involve participation, in which emotions, we demonstrate, are the connective tissue (Newman, 2012, Critical Policy Studies, vol. 6, pp. 465–479

    Urban planning in vernacular governance: land use planning and violations in Bangalore, India

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    This paper examines the relationship between urban planning practice and planning violations in Bangalore. Through ethnography of the practice of planning networks, It demonstrates that the domain of urban planning in Bangalore is shaped by the ethos and practices of mutually contesting Public and Private interest associational networks working to achieve Public and Private interest outcomes respectively. This is demonstrated using ho w private interest networks shape planning through plan violations and planning for violations as well as how public interest networks shape planning through multiple political, legal and administrative interventions, both of which together prevents the formation of any ideal typical planning system for a Comprehensive Master Planning Regime. Rather than a deviation, violations are identified as the outcome of the particular kind of planning practice embedded within the political culture of democratic governance in India. Ethnographies of Indian state constantly points to the blurred boundaries between the categories of state and society in India. Findings from this research conform to this; actors from both inside and outside government rather than act to achieve the cause of their positions act in the interest of the networks within which they are associated with – public or private interest. Therefore, combining lessons from political systems and policy networks studies of the state and governance with ethnographies of the everyday state in India I propose a conceptual language of Vernacular Governance to trace the constantly changing shape of planning practice in Bangalore through its relationship with planning violations. This paper attempts to raise questions on theorizing planning practices as embedded within the political culture of particular contexts, rather than taking for granted dualist conceptualizations of state and society producing on the one hand theorizations of planning failures and on the other, informality, implementation failure and corruption

    Urban planning in vernacular governance land use planning and violations in Bangalore

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    Using a relational state-society framework, this research examines the relationship between land use violations and the urban planning process. This thesis seeks to answer how and why land use violations in the non-poor neighbourhoods of Bangalore are produced, sustained and contested in spite of the elaborate planning, implementation and enforcement mechanisms present in Bangalore. Land use violations are identified as a key geographic site to empirically examine power and politics in urban planning practice in Bangalore. Critiquing the simplified representations often used to explain informality and illegality in the cities of the developing south as deviation, implementation failure and corruption; I propose that violations in Bangalore are an outcome of the planning practice rather than a deviation. In the process, I highlight how particular planning institutional systems operate when located in specific socio-political and governance contexts where vernacular networks of association transform the ‘governmentalised’ state into one that is amenable to specific interests through forging various forms of alliances. Providing evidence from ethnography of planning and violation networks in operation, this thesis argues that planning practice in Bangalore is inhabited by a variety of public and private interest networks. These associational networks, I argue, capture planning power, and prevent the possibility of a planning authority. Various case studies of plan violation, planning for violation, neighbourhood activism along with planning practice narratives, documents, and court cases form the extensive data set analysed in this thesis

    Coordinating density; working through conviction, suspicion and pragmatism

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    Achieving higher density development has become, as part of sustainable development, a core principle of the contemporary planning professional. The appeal of density is its simplicity, it is an independent measurable element to which various separate claims can be and are attached; it achieves greater public transport use, makes it possible to live nearer to work, supports mixed uses providing a more lively street-scene and so on. As the academic literature has shown the reality is much more complex as achieving a positive outcome through adjustments to density may lead to negative outcomes elsewhere; it can allow more people to live near public transport nodes but can be detrimental in terms of housing affordability for example. Given this tension between the simplicity of the claims and the complexity of application we are interested in how planners seek to balance the multiple advantages and disadvantages of density; to what extent do they approach density as a simple variable or as a complex act of balancing. We address this question by looking at four higher density developments in London

    The 2015 Global Climate Legislation Study: a review of climate change legislation in 99 countries: summary for policy-makers

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    This report summarises the main insights from the 2015 Global Climate Legislation Study. It is the fifth edition in a series dating back to 2010 (Townshend et al., 2011). The 2015 edition covers 98 countries plus the EU, up from 66 in 2014, which together account for 93 per cent of global greenhouse gas emissions. The study is intended as a source of information for legislators, researchers and policy-makers. It is hoped that parliaments considering climate change legislation will benefit from the growing body of experience reflected in the study. Facilitating knowledge exchange among parliamentarians was one of the primary motivations behind the Climate Legislation Study when the series was conceived by the Grantham Research Institute, LSE and GLOBE International in 2010. Since then there have been many examples of parliamentarians learning from, and being inspired by, each other through forums such as GLOBE and the Inter-Parliamentary Union – the two co-sponsors of the 2015 study

    Understanding the complexation of aliphatic and aromatic acids guests with octa acid

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    In this study, inclusion of 10 guest molecules, adamantyl and naphthyl carboxylic acids with different structural and electronic properties, within a synthetic cavitand octa acid was probed by isothermal calorimetry, 1D and 2D 1H nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy, and molecular dynamic simulations. Under the condition of the experiments (pH ~ 8.7), the guests were included as carboxylate anions with the polar anionic head group facing water and hydrophobic carbon skeleton buried within the cavitand, forming 1:1 host to guest complexes. Importance of weak interactions between the guest and the cavitand interior is reflected in the measured negative ΔH values. Although ΔH was negative for all guests, ΔS was positive for adamantyl guests and negative for naphthyl guests. Quite likely the difference in hydrophobicity between the 2 sets of molecules and the strength of interaction between the guest and the host are responsible for the sign difference in ΔS between the 2 series. The importance of steric factor during inclusion of naphthyl carboxylic acids within octa acid cavity is brought out by the difference in thermodynamic parameters between the 1‐ and 2‐substituted naphthyl carboxylic acids; 2‐naphthyl carboxylic acids that can penetrate deeply have larger −ΔH and 1‐naphthyl carboxylic acids that can only enter the cavity in an angle have smaller −ΔH. As expected, based on the well‐known concept of “enthalpy‐entropy compensation,” the molecules that have large −ΔH are accompanied by large −ΔS. Steric and hydrophobic features of guest molecules are reflected in the thermodynamic parameters of the host‐guest complexation

    Guest rotations within a capsuleplex probed by NMR and EPR techniques

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    With the help of <SUP>1</SUP>H NMR and EPR techniques, we have probed the dynamics of guest molecules included within a water-soluble deep cavity cavitand known by the trivial name octa acid. All guest molecules investigated here form 2:1 (host/guest) complexes in water, and two host molecules encapsulate the guest molecule by forming a closed capsule. We have probed the dynamics of the guest molecule within this closed container through <SUP>1</SUP>H NMR and EPR techniques. The timescales offered by these two techniques are quite different, millisecond and nanosecond, respectively. For EPR studies, paramagnetic nitroxide guest molecules and for <SUP>1</SUP>H NMR studies, a wide variety of structurally diverse neutral organic guest molecules were employed. The guest molecules freely rotate along their x axis (long molecular axis and magnetic axis) on the NMR timescale; however, their rotation is slowed with respect to that in water on the EPR timescale. Rotation along the x axis is dependent on the length of the alkyl chain attached to the nitroxide probe. Overall rotation along the y or z axis was very much dependent on the structure of the guest molecule. The guests investigated could be classified into three groups: (a) those that do not rotate along the y or z axis both at room and elevated (55 °C) temperatures, (b) those that rotate freely at room temperature, and (c) those that do not rotate at room temperature but do so at higher temperatures. One should note that rotation here refers to the NMR timescale and it is quite possible that all molecules may rotate at much longer timescales than the one probed here. A slight variation in structure alters the rotational mobility of the guest molecules
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