Transactions of the Association of European Schools of Planning is an international peer-reviewed open-access journal, produced and owned by AESOP, Association of European Schools of Planning.

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						View Vol. 9 No. 1 (2025): Volume 9 / Issue 1 / September 2025 / The Future of Spatial Planning in Ukraine

Transactions of the Association of European Schools of Planning is an international, peer-reviewed, open-access journal, produced and owned by the Association of European Schools of Planning (AESOP). It is free of charge to submit a paper and to publish in the Transactions of the Association of European Schools of Planning. Accepted papers are accessible online, to everyone, for free. All papers are subject to a double-blind peer-review process.

Published: 14-11-2025

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Call for papers: Planning for publics: Reconceptualising the governance of the commons in relation to the margins

13-04-2026

Worldwide cities and planners are struggling to find effective ways to manage resources and involve local communities, especially in the margins, in the effort to provide just and sustainable living environments. Within this state, we propose revisiting the commons, with the emphasis on the commoning as a process. This special issue examines planning for the commons by interrogating the gap between aspirational planning, development policy and the practicalities of implementation and management. It analyses how this gap shapes the governance of shared spaces and everyday transactions, with consequences for spatial justice and for resilient, sustainable urban futures. Considering commoning as a process that could counter-balance the planning process towards achieving spatial justice, two levels are addressed regarding planning with publics for just and sustainable futures. 

  • First, while there has been an active debate about managing critical resources, there is room to explore urban commons and common good as part of broader socio-ecological and institutional systems. This would include exploring the role of urban policy and spatial planning in facilitating commoning activities through various local institutions at different scales, to effectively address challenges related to social and economic inequalities, climate change, and access to common goods. 
  • Second, there is abundant literature on the over- or under-management of public space, but less understanding of the connection among governance, planning, and commoning for communal gathering. 

Special issue eds.: Karina Landman, karina.landman@up.ac.za; Christine Mady, christine.mady@aalto.fi

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