Project Details
The making of planners: Subjectivities of planners related to spatial planning at regional level in the context of wind energy in Germany
Applicant
Professor Dr.-Ing. Markus Leibenath
Subject Area
City Planning, Spatial Planning, Transportation and Infrastructure Planning, Landscape Planning
Term
from 2018 to 2022
Project identifier
Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) - Project number 401342127
Subjectivities are a relatively neglected issue in planning theory and research. This is surprising given the fact that planning can hardly be understood without considering planning subjects conceptually, namely those who are involved in planning processes. Planning politics increasingly operates as identity politics, meaning that many voices try to influence planning and its outcomes via the subjectivities of planners. In this project, I conceive of spatial planning as a collective, self-conscious place-shaping practice. When I talk of spatial planning in Germany, I refer to a legally codified type of multi-tiered planning (Raumordnung), which may include informal, participatory elements to varying degrees.The project adopts an integrative perspective on planning subjects and the wider power structures in which they are embedded and which they reproduce. The overall objective is to analyse subjectivities of planners in Germany at the interface of spatial planning at regional level and wind energy developments – given the fact that wind energy has become one of the most prominent, controversial and hence emblematic issues of spatial planning at regional level in Germany. The project draws on poststructuralist – or postfoundational – theories of identity-construction in combination with Foucault’s notion of governmentality. These theories assume that the subject is not the origin of social relations, but to some extent a product of discursively constructed identities and practices. Hence, subjectivities shall be analysed in this project as resulting from the interplay of subjectification, i.e. discursively produced power/knowledge structures that subjugate individuals and transform them into subjects, and subjectivation, i.e. practices by means of which an individual shapes her/himself. The subjectivities of planners are to be interpreted against the backdrop of different arts of government such as sovereignty or neoliberalism. In so doing, the project shall advance planning theory in general.Methodologically, the project relies on textual analyses and narrative interviews with planners in combination with coding techniques. The selection of textual documents and interviewees follows a logic of maximum variation to cover as broad a spectrum of subject positions and forms of subjectivation as possible. The textual analyses are conducted on German-language planning literature as well as guidance documents, handbooks and web portals on public participation and consultation procedures – always in the context of spatial planning at regional level and wind energy. The intention is to interview about 15 individuals. The research design and findings will be presented and discussed at a public conference.
DFG Programme
Research Grants