Title: ARCH 1065 History and Theory of Planning
1ARCH 1065 History and Theory of Planning
- Week Seven
- Social Economic Trends Transition Away from
Liberal Capitalism
2Course Mechanics Break
- No class next week (17 April)
- Theoretical essays that would ordinarily have
been due this Friday, are due next Friday instead
(this is already reflected in the assignment
deadlines as listed in the Course Guide)
3Course Mechanics Missed Classes Tutorial
Sessions
- If you have missed or do miss a class or tutorial
session - Lecture notes and some tutorial notes are posted
to the wiki several days after each class - You are responsible for reading this material,
following up with me if needed, and making
arrangements to hand in any activities you missed - Outside meetings, drafts, etc.
- Meetings time is set aside in most tutorial
sessions for one-on-one support I will schedule
outside meetings only if - you have first tried to resolve issues during the
tutorials, and need more intensive support, or - you need to speak about an intrinsically private
matter - Drafts
- I will read and comment briefly on draft work
posted to the wiki for your individual research
assignment - I will not read draft theoretical essays,
although I will allow submissions of additional
essays, and will count only your highest three
grades
4Course Mechanics Wiki
- From now until 28 April
- Work on individual research
- Log in and contribute to wiki at least once
weekly - Individual assignment due 28 April
- Categories
- Updated to reflect students requested changes
- New Organising Research pages created under
each category, for group discussion - Can also ask individual students questions on
their individual research pages or personal talk
pages - Contribution mark through 28 April
- Post your own draft content, notes and questions
to the wiki - Interact with other students to obtain assistance
or to assist others
5Course Mechanics Individual Research
- Develop a clear outline of what would be required
to write a comprehensive piece on your topic - If the work seems likely to fall short of _at_1500
words, you may need to write more than one
article to the wiki to satisfy the requirements
of this assignment - If writing more than one article, choose
closely-related topics, so that a similar
research strategy will help you write multiple
pieces - If the work seems likely to exceed _at_1500 words,
you can choose - Write a longer piece (1500 words is a guide to
the minimum, not maximum, requirements for the
assignment), or - Write sections of a longer piece, and indicate
clearly which additional sections would be
required for a comprehensive article on your
topic these additional sections can then be
added during the final, collaborative stage, by
you or someone else - It is better to write sections of an article
well, than an entire article poorly - Try to identify all perspectives in the academic
and political debates over your topic - Even if you disagree with a position, summarise
the strongest possible justification for it - You can then summarise the strongest possible
criticisms of all positions - If the weight of the evidence or professional
consensus justifies it, you can conclude that one
or more positions are clearly superior to others
6Course Mechanics Theoretical Essay Feedback
- Essays through 31 March essays marked
- If you submitted an essay by 31 March, and I have
not returned it, speak to me ASAP - General comments
- Write as though your reader is unfamiliar with
the assignment and readings - Guess whos talking??? Pay attention to voice
- Use active voice
- First person OK
- Pay attention to pronouns that could refer to
more than one thing - Be clear about what you think, what an author
thinks, and what an author believes someone else
thinks! - Grammar run-on sentences, sentence fragments,
unclear referents - Structure, structure, structure!
- First paragraph should say why the topic is
interesting/useful/important and how you plan to
address the topic - Group similar points together and ask yourself
what each paragraph contributes to your argument - Conclude by reminding your reader what you have
argued - Learning Skills Unit can assist with grammar,
syntax and structure http//aps.eu.rmit.edu.au/ls
u/index.html
7Course Mechanics Tutorials
- 2 Sessions
- 1100-1230 in this classroom
- 130-300 Bld. 8, lvl. 9, rm. 42
- Student Presentations everyone must register
for one of these - Begin today!
- Students present on a topic related to their
individual research - Depending on topic, may cover entire topic, or
sub-section of topic that can be introduced in a
10-15 minute presentation - Not purely descriptive, but designed to provoke
class discussion/debate - Relate topic back to contemporary planning
practice - Conclude with questions to guide 15-20 minutes of
class discussion - Tutorial Imbalance
- Seeking volunteers to move from morning to
afternoon tutorial - If insufficient volunteers, some students from
the morning tutorial may serve as guest
presenters in the afternoon tutorial
8Lecture Overview
- Last week
- Introduction to the works of a few key figures in
the early planning movement - This week
- Discussion of social and economic trends related
to the decline of liberal capitalism - Next week
- Postwar Planning Theory
- Recommendation
- Commanding Heights the Battle for the World
Economy documentary lots of copies available
from AV section of Swanston library one copy on
2-hour reserve - First two programs good overview of debates
between Hayek and Keynes - AV 338.9 Y47
9Transition from Liberal Capitalism
- Recurrent boom-and-bust economic cycles
- Social unrest and growing perception of a tension
between ability to generate material wealth, and
the living conditions of working poor - Severe economic crisis in 1890s, 1920s
- Contradictory pressures for liberalisation and
centralised management - Critique of liberal economy as irrational
- Argument that we experience recurrent economic
crisis, not because we cant produce material
wealth, but because we cant distribute material
wealth and match production to consumption - Centrally planned economies would be rational
because we could consciously manage production
and consumption - WWI initial experience of wartime centralised
economic planning and mobilisation of civilian
population and industry by the state - Contradictory reactions by Hayek Keynes
- Wartime as demonstration of the ability of the
state to manage production efficiently surely
much more would be possible in peacetime, vs. - Wartime demonstration of the real loss of
personal freedoms associated with state
management surely this loss of freedom cannot
be justified in peacetime
10Urban Planning in the Transitional Period
- Draft and proposed comprehensive plans drawn up
from 1890s-1920s in many cities - Tended to provide a relatively static view of a
desired endpoint to the planning process - As critiques of liberalism grew, it became easier
to believe that centralised planning would be
necessary to achieve desired economic and social
outcomes efficiently - While planning movements began to attract more
mainstream interest, formal city planning
documents were often not adopted or, if adopted,
were not implemented during this period - Plans oriented to major engineering
infrastructure projects were more likely to be
implemented, if funding were available - Economic and social crises exerted conflicting
pressures - Increasing the desire for planning, but also
- Undermining the economic means and political
focus required for implementation waxing and
waning of enthusiasm for planning - In some countries, the Great Depression and, in
others, WWII and its aftermath provided the final
push for serious implementation of urban
planning initiatives
11Great Depression
- Systemic nature of problems made it difficult to
interpret individual outcomes (poverty, wealth)
as the earned result of individual efforts - Right to work movements
- Living wage/family wage movements
- Appealed in many ways to respectable liberal
values, but called into question the
individualist orientation of liberalism - Development of mass-production industries
(Taylorist/Fordist model), dependent on - regular, orderly, standardised, predictable
movement of goods along an assembly line - interruptions from industrial unrest particularly
devastating to these industries, and economies
founded on them - workforce organisation easier in factory context
large numbers of workers brought together in
similar lifeworlds and with similar material
interests - mass consumption economic crises of this time
are often understood as crises of
overproduction e.g., not enough people can
afford to purchase the goods being produced - High capital investment involved in standardised
production dependent on consistent consumption
to absorb goods that are now produced at a higher
volume - Need adequate wages to fulfil social role as
consumers - The role of industry, in addition to the labour
movement, as a driving force behind state
regulation and the provision of social welfare
benefits is often unrecognised - Impact of Great Depression not uniform, however
e.g., Australia reinforced liberal economic
management at a national level as a result, in
spite of early strong embrace of Australian
Settlement values, including pension schemes and
living wage concept
12WWII
- Pushed all involved states into some form of
emergency economic planning - Total war state mobilisation of civilian
populations in war effort - Production of munitions, but also everyday
items like food, clothing, etc. encouragement
of sacrifice (of personal freedom, material
goods, etc.) by everyday citizens in support of
the war effort - State management of industry continuum from
outright nationalisation through to negotiated
arrangements with industry representatives, with
the state as primary, highest-priority consumer,
negotiating payments and production quotas - Need to ensure continuous, predictable, intensive
production for war effort - Concessions to unions to avoid industrial unrest
- Concessions to businesses (monopoly arrangements,
predictable demand, assistance with labour
discipline, etc.) - Emergency planning continues in most countries
during postwar reconstruction - Need to rebuild infrastructure destroyed in the
war - Manage large-scale population shifts refugees,
migrants, returning soldiers - Housing (accentuated by unexpected baby boom)
- Employment need to shift female workforce out
of industry and take other steps to ensure
employment for returning soliders who were to be
employed as part of the reward for their service - Postponed industrial unrest was expected to
erupt after the patience of union movements
during the war - Postponed material demands of consumers were
also expected to erupt, after years of wartime
deprivation
13Soviet Model
- Serious fear that the west could be at a
competitive disadvantage from the more rational
organisation of production in the Soviet Union - Also, significant fear of significant industrial
unrest, inspired by the potential for worker
control represented by the Soviet model
14Western AlternativesKeynesian Economics,
Bretton Woods
- Both were responses to the experiences of the
interwar period the desire to minimise economic
competition between states as a potential
provocation for war - Keynesian Economics
- Proposed initially in response to WWI experience
- Notion that state could intervene to flatten
the troughs and peaks of the business cycle - Public employment, pensions and other measures
can increase consumption, and thereby support
production, during downturns - Higher taxation during upturns will dampen boom,
and also provide income to pay off debts - Public debt is not intrinsically a problem, as
long as the economy can be managed to sustain
long-term growth - Ideas gain increasing currency in the post-WWII
period, although selectively appropriated - Bretton Woods
- International conference 1944 rules and
institutions governing international financial
system, exchange rates - Nations responsible for adopting a monetary
policy that would peg currencies to US, which
would itself be convertible with gold
compromise between 19th C gold standard and
what was perceived as destabilising experiments
with floating currency - Set up IMF (to assist with temporary balance of
payments issues) and International Bank of
Reconstruction Development (now part of World
Bank) - Intended to provide a more predictable
environment for international exchange
15Cultural Dimensions of the Postwar Period
- Orientation to growth
- Actually culturally continuous (and arguably
definitive of capitalism) - Mediated in this period, however, in an
historically-unique way through state planning - Consumption
- Often explained in terms of the materialism of
the consumers (e.g., arguments about the desire
to keep up with the Joneses, etc.) - Release after wartime deprivation
- Driven by changes to the structure of industry,
as well dependence on steady consumption and on
the turnover to new variations on established
consumer goods as markets saturate - Domesticity
- Return of female workers to home (dilemmas when
gender relations are no longer doxic may
partially explain intensity of postwar private
sphere) - Unexpected baby boom need for rapid creation of
low-cost housing often resulted in dormitory
suburbs and standardised housing design for rapid
construction - Rising tendency to work for large-scale employers
and success of living wage movement strong
separation of workplace from home, male from
female world - Carry over of concern with efficiency rise of
home economics
16Cultural Dimensions of the Postwar Period
- Faith in progress forward-directedness of the
period - Psychological desire to look forward, to build
or rebuild after the destruction of the war - Apparent success in managing nature both
economic and environmental - Scientific (particularly medical) breakthroughs
- Creation of full employment economy in part
through large-scale public works projects, many
of which involved significant interventions into
the natural environment (draining wetlands,
building hydroelectric facilities, etc.) - Rising wages, relatively low industrial unrest,
development of social pension schemes and other
safety nets - Orientation to engineering and applied scientific
knowledge expectation that this type of
expertise could resolve a wider and wider range
of social problems.
17Unexpected Planning ChallengesAutomobiles
Sprawl
- Rapid rise as a result of a push-pull dynamic
- Release of individual consumption
- Rising personal wages
- Industry need for mass market consumption
- Separation of industry from dormitory suburbs
- Rapid creation of new suburbs isolated from
traditional public transport infrastructure - Public works boosted by commitment to full
employment economy road building projects
enabling automobile transport, which then
encourage further road building, which makes
automobiles more useful, etc.
18Unexpected Planning Challenges the Baby Boom
- Pre-War, Several Waves of Population Crisis
- Falling fertility rates worldwide trend related
to industrialisation - Concerns very similar to those currently
expressed how will the economy support an
increasingly ageing population (the shift in the
age profile that occurred from the late 19th
early 20th centuries in many countries was more
drastic than the one currently anticipated) - Expectation was that fertility rates would
continue to fall provided a rational core for
earlier tendency for urban plans to be more
static than postwar plans - Baby boom population increase stress on housing
stock and social infrastructure, particularly
when combined with changing family structure - Ideal of nuclear family parents and children,
rather than extended, multi-generational family - Stark separation of work from home
- Nuclear family model as ideal never
represented all families, but did heavily
influence policy and planning (as well as
regulatory interventions into families that did
not conform to the ideal)
19Last Weeks Activity Postwar Planning
Challenges, Tools, Problems
- Automobiles
- Baby boom
- Focus on physical planning, rather than community
- Focus on planning for automobile, rather than
public transport sprawl - Migration and displacement
- Housing demand migrants, returning soldiers,
new families - Suburbanisation design for private domesticity
- Large-scale urban reconstructions slum
clearance, freeway construction, post-war
reconstruction demolition of heritage areas - High unemployment large-scale public works
projects - Postwar reconstruction
- Engineering infrastructure/social hygiene
projects - Control of nature via large-scale engineering
schemes - Control of economy via Keynesian economics
- Growth as goal of efficient design
20Next Week Preview