Under Construction: Making Meaning of Social Sustainability in Strategic Planning Practice
Abstract
While social sustainability is attracting attention in both policy and academia, there are still challenges when turning social sustainability policy into practice. Instead of making cities more socially sustainable, the meaning of social sustainability tends to change, become simplified, or disappear when it is actualized in practice. This thesis aims to better understand how goals of social sustainability become actualized in urban planning by investigating how the practitioners in a Swedish, strategic planning project are constructing, interpreting, and practising the meaning of social sustainability by making and navigating boundaries through the planning process. Through an inductive approach, I build a theoretical framework of situational boundary making and navigation, a composite of the three analytical lenses: conceptual, contextual, and practice-oriented. This framework enables me to approach the different aspects of the planning situation when constructing the meaning of social sustainability. The research was carried out empirically through an exploratory case study of the ongoing planning project Frihamnen. I have followed how the discourse of social sustainability was constructed in the context of strategic planning and shifted due to strategic planning practice. The thesis concludes that the concept of social sustainability is multi-layered, where, in this case, the first layer of meaning remains while the second layer of meaning shifts through the planning process. I explain the shift by pointing to the mutual effect of the ambiguity of the concept of social sustainability, the hybridity of the strategic planning organisation and the enacted authority of the involved participants. In the end, the planning organisation fall back on business-as-usual to determine the meaning of social sustainability, which moves away from the original vision of the socially sustainable city to a less transformative approach. However, as the shift is only seen in the second layer of meaning, the original formulations in the vision still stand.
Parts of work
1. Saldert, Hannah. ‘Social Sustainability For Whom?’ The Role of Discursive Boundary Objects in Swedish Strategic Urban Planning. (unpublished work) 2. Saldert, Hannah. 2021. ‘Spanning Boundaries Between Policy and Practice: Strategic Urban Planning in Gothenburg, Sweden’. Planning Theory and practice, 22(3), 397-413. https://doi.org/10.1080/14649357.2021.1930120 3. Stepanova, Olga & Saldert, Hannah. 2022. ‘Knowledge Use Analysis as a Way to Understand Planning Conflicts. Two Cases from Gothenburg, Sweden’. Cities, 124: 103606. https://doi-org.ezproxy.ub.gu.se/10.1016/j.cities.2022.103606 4. Saldert, Hannah. ‘Becoming Knowledgeable Stakeholders: Enacting Political and Epistemic Authority in a Swedish Strategic Urban Planning Project’. (unpublished work)
Degree
Doctor of Philosophy
University
Göteborgs universitet. Samhällsvetenskapliga fakulteten
University of Gothenburg. Faculty of Social Sciences
Institution
School of Global Studies, Human Ecology Section ; Institutionen för globala studier, avdelningen för humanekologi
Disputation
Fredagen den 16 september 2022, kl. 13.15, Linnésalen, Annedalseminariet, Seminariegatan 1B
Date of defence
2022-09-16
View/ Open
Date
2022-08-21Author
Saldert, Hannah
Keywords
Urban planning
urban sustainability
sustainable development
ambiguous concepts
discourse
situational analysis
Gothenburg
Publication type
Doctoral thesis
ISBN
978-91-8009-891-5 (TRYCK)
978-91-8009-892-2 (PDF)
Language
eng