The global application of Enlightenment-derived concepts to create social order through urban form suggests that we believe we know how to create a (future) ordered environment. But these notions of order and disorder need interrogation, especially as the world rapidly urbanises.
Not only have such approaches failed to produce more social order, but it has become clear that the imposition of these ideas in cities of the South cuts across alternative systems of social and cultural order and creates new disorder. Thus, if we are serious about forms of urban order, then it is time to rethink what we mean by order in the first place. As this provocative and timely book shows, what we think of as urban order is partial and restricted, and what we perceive as disorder usually masks underlying orders of social nature.
The book is intended for architects, urban designers, planners and urban scholars but also urban policy makers, managers and residents - to consider a different approach to emerging urban space and form, starting from an understanding of the cultural imaginaries and social constructs that underpin the production of most urban fabric, and engaging with these concepts and organisational forms to improve urban life for the majority.
About the Author: Paul Jenkins is Emeritus Professor of Architecture Research at the University of Edinburgh and Visiting Professor at the University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg - and has also been a Visiting Professor in Sao Paulo and Maputo. He has engaged for five decades on a wide range of aspects of the built environment: architecture, construction, housing, planning, urban design and wider social studies. Much of his work has focused on Sub-Saharan Africa where he has been based for more than half of his working life and he focuses on social engagement and cultural change in the "urban", including the role of different forms of knowledge. He has published extensively, including three prior books with Routledge. Now retired, he lives most of the time in Maputo, Mozambique.
Harry Smith is Professor in Global Urbanism at The Urban Institute, Heriot-Watt University, Edinburgh. He has over 30 years of experience working with urban design and development issues, having worked as an architect and planner in the Global North and then becoming an academic engaging in urban research in Europe, Latin America and Sub-Saharan Africa. Much of his research has focused on issues in so-called 'informal' settlements - ranging from housing, through access to land, to community-based disaster risk management - and often taking an action-research approach linked to achieving changes in policy and practice. He has published previously with Routledge on planning and housing in the rapidly urbanizing world, waterfront regeneration, and place-keeping.