Abstract:
Contemporary urban planning practice often
conceptualize of urban areas as static entities
which could be planned towards certain end
states, and devoid of social, economic, and
political context, within which the spatial form
is produced and reproduced. There have been
many scholarly attempts to fill in this gap. The
main argument put forward in this study is
that the spatial form of an urban area is not a
static neutral entity, as mostly seen in
planning, but a dynamic process that