References
- Abram, S. (2004). The smell of money: Minor risks and olfactory sensibilities – The anatomy of a protest. In Å. Boholm, & R. Löftstedt (Eds.), Facility siting: Risk, power and identity in land-use planning (pp. 72–88). London: Earthscan.
- Abram, S. (2007). Living through regeneration - Capturing multiple stakeholder perceptions to enrich the qualitative research methods curriculum. CEBE Transactions The Online Journal of the Centre for Education in the Built Environment, 4, 67–84.
- Abram, S. (2011). Culture and planning. Aldershot: Ashgate (now London: Routledge).
- Abram, S. (2014). The time it takes: Temporalities of planning. In L. Bear (Ed.) Doubt, conflict and mediation: The anthropology of modern time. JRAI 20, 129–147.
- Abram, S. & Weszkalnys, G. (Eds.). (2013). Elusive promises: Planning in the contemporary world. Oxford: Berghahn Books.
- Baxstrom, R. (2008). Houses in motion: The experience of place and the problem of belief in urban Malaysia. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press.10.11126/stanford/9780804758918.001.0001
- Boholm, Å. (Ed.). (2000). National objectives, local objections: Railway modernization in Sweden. Goteborg: CEFOS.
- Caldeira, T. P., & Holston, J. (2004). State and urban spaces in Brazil: From modernist planning to democratic intervention. In A. Ong, & S. J. Collier (Eds) Global assemblages: Technology, politics and ethics as an anthropological problem (pp. 393–416). Malden, MA: Blackwell.
- Evans-Pritchard, E. E. (1937). Witchcraft, oracles and magic among the Azande. Oxford: Clarendon Press.
- Favret-Saada, J. (1980). Deadly words: Witchcraft in the Bocage. Cambridge: Cambridge university Press.
- Forde, E. (2015). Planning as a form of enclosure: The ambiguities of nonproductive accumulation in the West Wales countryside. Focaal – Journal of Global and Historical Anthropology, 72, 81–94.
- Forester, J. F. (1989). Planning in the face of power. Oakland: University of California Press.
- Forester, J. F. (1999). The deliberative practitioner. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
- Geschiere, P. (2003). Witch doctors and spin doctors. In B. Meyer, & P. Pels (Eds.), Magic and modernity: Interfaces of revelation and concealment (pp. 159–182). Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press.
- Hyler, S. (2013). Invisible lines crossing the city: Ethnographic strategies for place-making. Culture Unbound, 5, 361–384.
- Inch, A. (2015). Ordinary citizens and the political cultures of planning: In search of the subject of a new democratic ethos. Planning Theory, 14, 404–424.10.1177/1473095214536172
- Murdoch, J., & Abram, S. (2002). Rationalities of planning. Aldershot: Ashgate.
- Othengrafen, F., & Reimer, M. (2013). The embeddedness of planning in cultural contexts: Theoretical foundations for the analysis of dynamic planning cultures. Environment and Planning A, 45, 1269–1284.10.1068/a45131
- Peattie, L. (1987). Planning: Rethinking Ciudad Guayana. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press.
- Peattie, L. (1990). Anthropology and planning. Journal of Planning Education and Research., 9, 101–106.10.1177/0739456X9000900202
- Porter, L. (2010). Unlearning the colonial cultures of planning. London: Routledge.
- Reade, E. (1987). British town and country planning. Milton Keynes: Open University Press.
- Robertson, A. F. (1984). People and the state: An anthropology of planned development. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.10.1017/CBO9780511558122
- Sanyal, B. (Ed.) 2005. Comparative planning cultures. New York & London: Routledge.
- Watson, V. (2003). Conflicting rationalities: Implications for planning theory and ethics. Planning Theory and Practice., 4, 395–407.10.1080/1464935032000146318
- Weszkalnys, G. (2010). Berlin, Alexanderplatz: Transforming place in a unified Germany. Oxford: Berghahn Books.
- Whyte, W. F. (1943). Street corner society. Chicago, IL: Chicago University Press.
- Yiftachel, O. (1998). Planning and social control: Exploring the dark side. Journal of Planning Literature, 12, 395–406.10.1177/088541229801200401