Open lecture ’Knowledge and Ignorance in Planning for a Post-Growth Future’ Yvonne Rydin 15 May 2025, 13:00-15:00
– Published 14 April 2025

’Knowledge and Ignorance in Planning for a Post-Growth Future’
Yvonne Rydin, University College London
15 May 2025, 13:00-15:00
Världen, Geocentrum I, Sölvegatan 10, Lund University
POST-GROWTH THINKING
has had a recent impetus from both evidence of the immensity of the ecological crisis that we face and the prospects of declining or stagnant economic growth locally. While the outlines of a what a post-growth future at the local scale might look like are emerging, it is much less clear what the role of the planner will be. In particular, given that planning can be considered ”knowledge in action” (following Friedmann), what kinds of knowledge or ways of knowing are implied by working towards a post-growth future?
This lecture explores this question considering typologies of knowledge and knowledge practices. It argues that knowing has to be seen in the context of not-knowing also and that a more strategic approach is needed, rather than aiming for comprehensive synthesis of diverse knowledges. This challenges the Enlightenment roots of the planning profession but suggests an alternative that could build political support for a future less dependent on the pursuit of growth.
Yvonne Rydin is Professor of Planning, Environment and Public Policy in the Bartlett School of Planning, UCL. She specialises in understanding governance for sustainability. Her most recent book is Planning without Growth, published by Policy Press in 2025. Her co-edited collection New Planning Histories is also published in 2025 by Palgrave. Other recent books include Theory in Planning Research (Palgrave) and the co-edited volume Regulation and Planning: Practice, Institutions, Materiality (Routledge).