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Resumo(s)
Michel Foucault’s work explored the ways social practices are shaped by ‘regimes of truth’ that powerfully circumscribe what can and cannot be said, done and considered truthful at different times. In this chapter I explore how powerful truths associated with neoliberal and managerial agendas are transforming the disciplinary field and ‘apparatus’ of planning in Scotland. I go on to argue that a focus on the practices of ‘cultural work’ through which actors variously resist or adapt to change might deepen understanding of the political potential for challenging such processes and their effects on contemporary ideas of planning.
Descrição
Palavras-chave
Cultural work Planning
Contexto Educativo
Citação
Inch, A. (2018). 'Cultural Work' and the Remaking of Planning's Apparatus of Truth. In Gunder, M., Mandanipour, A., Watson, V. (Eds), The Routledge Handbook of Planning Theory, 194-206. Routledge
