Dealing with discomfort: How the unspeakable confounds wicked planning problems


Autoria(s): Grant-Smith, Deanna; Osborne, Natalie
Data(s)

2016

Resumo

The idea of ‘wicked’ problems has made a valuable contribution to recognising the complexity and challenges of contemporary planning. However, some wicked policy problems are further complicated by a significant moral, psychological, religious or cultural dimension. This is particularly the case for problems that possess strong elements of abjection and symbolic pollution and high degrees of psychosocial sensitivity. Because this affects the way these problems are framed and discussed they are also characterised by high levels of verbal proscription. As a result, they are not discussed in the rational and emotion-free way that conventional planning demands and can become obscured or inadequately acknowledged in planning processes. This further contributes to their wickedness and intractability. Through paradigmatic urban planning examples, we argue that placing their unspeakable nature at the forefront of enquiry will enable planners to advocate for a more contextually and culturally situated approach to planning, which accommodates both emotional and embodied talk alongside more technical policy contributions. Re-imagining wicked problems in this way has the potential to enhance policy and plan-making and to disrupt norms, expose their contingency, and open new ways of planning for both the unspeakable and the merely wicked.

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/93076/

Publicador

Taylor & Francis

Relação

DOI:10.1080/07293682.2015.1135812

Grant-Smith, Deanna & Osborne, Natalie (2016) Dealing with discomfort: How the unspeakable confounds wicked planning problems. Australian Planner, 53(1), pp. 46-53.

Direitos

2016 Taylor & Francis

Fonte

QUT Business School; School of Management

Palavras-Chave #120500 URBAN AND REGIONAL PLANNING #Wicked Problems #Unspeakable Problems #Emotional Geographies #Deathscapes #Sexscapes
Tipo

Journal Article