Ben Davy, University of Johannesburg | 2021 Jammal International Fellow

Memorial of the 1976 students' uprising (Soweto, Johannesburg, South Africa). Photo provided by Ben Davy; memorial commissioned by the Johannesburg Development Agency and created by Stone Mabunda.

Memorial of the 1976 students' uprising (Soweto, Johannesburg, South Africa). Photo provided by Ben Davy; memorial commissioned by the Johannesburg Development Agency and created by Stone Mabunda.

"Random Planning Values?"

Tuesday, March 30, 2021
12 pm - 1:30 pm (EST)

Join us for the 2021 Jammal International Lecture with Ben Davy, visiting professor of law at the University of Johannesburg (South Africa), who will consider the disintegration of key values of urban governance: hope, generosity, self-restraint, justice and simplicity.

Contemporary cities must be sustainable, resilient, carbon-free, and ‘smart’. Davy asks, are these labels empty signifiers? Ben Davy recently retired from the School of Spatial Planning, TU Dortmund University (Germany). He is the immediate Past President of the Association of European Schools of Planning. 

AIA continuing education approved (1 LU)
AICP credits available (1.5 CM), Event #9211682

Presentation abstract

L'Allegoria ed Effetti del Buono e del Cattivo Governo – the Allegory of Good and Bad Government – is a series of three fresco panels painted by Ambrogio Lorenzetti between February 1338 and May 1339. The paintings are located in Siena’s Palazzo Pubblico and were supposed to remind the members of the city council to the key values of urban governance: hope, generosity, self-restraint, justice. What happened to this clarity and simplicity seven centuries later? Contemporary cities must be sustainable, resilient, carbon-free, and ‘smart’. Another type of narrative examines the ‘just city’ (Fainstein, 2010; Soja, 2010). Are these labels empty signifiers?

Upton (2005: 145) notices the ‘unexposed but hugely significant clashing of values in English planning policy’. But apart from few exceptions (Thomas, 1994), little is done to examine planning values as substantial foundation of planning. Rather, planning values and goals are used randomly and oppor- tunistically. Planners’ language sometimes seem to come from ‘buzzword bingo’. Take, for example this statement about food planning: ‘Feeding the city in a sustainable fashion — that is to say, in [a] way that is economically efficient, socially just and ecologically sound — is one of the quintessential challenges of the twenty-first century ...’ (Morgan, 2009: 347). Could this not also be said about transport planning, housing, climate action, or the siting of waste management facilities?

The Jammal International fellow and lecture program ]is named in honor of Ibrahim Jammal, who with his wife, Viviane, established the endowed lecture.  Dr. Jammal founded the University at Buffalo Department of Planning and served on its faculty for more than 30 years.  Dr. Jammal is widely regarded as a major force behind the study of globalization within the field of planning, and the School of Architecture and Planning celebrates this legacy each spring with the Jammal Lecture in planning.

About our presenter

Ben Davy is currently a Visiting Professor in the Faculty of Law at the University of Johannesburg (South Africa) and recently retired from the School of Spatial Planning, TU Dortmund University (Germany). He is the immediate Past President of the Association of European Schools of Planning. Photo provided by Ben Davy

Benjamin Davy shares his current research interests:

"Currently, I'm working on two topics. One is human dignity, transitional justice, and land reform. I am particularly interested in the current debate in South Africa on expropriation without compensation. Since market-oriented land reform did not yield satisfying results, several stakeholders demand that private land be expropriated for purposes of land reform. Since the Apartheid regime took this land from its former owners without compensation, the argument goes, its return does not require compensation of the present owner. The other topic is land use ethics. Based on Aldo Leopold's famous text "A Sand County Almanac", I am considering the moral consequences of thinking like a mountain, like a tree, like a river, like non-human animals. If mountains or trees or cattle were admitted to a Rawlsian constitutional assembly behind the "veil of ignorance", what would the result be? Presently, however, only Amazon and Unilever are admitted ... with horrible results for the environment.

In 2019, I retired as a professor of land policy, land management, and municipal geoinformation at the School of Spatial Planning, TU Dortmund University (Germany), one of AESOP’s founding member schools. Currently, I am (online) visiting professor to the Faculty of Law, University of Johannesburg, and (online) visiting professor to the School of Architecture and Spatial Planning, TU Wien University (Austria)."

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The School of Architecture and Planning is an AIA CES Approved Provider. This course is AIA CES Registered and approved for 1 Learning Unit (LU).

AICP members can earn Certi­fication Maintenance (CM) credits for this activity. When CM credits are available, they are noted at the end of an activity description. More information about AICP’s CM program can be found at www.planning.org/cm. AICP members must be in attendance for the duration of the event in order to receive CM Credit.