Mahyar Arefi is International Affiliate Professor of Urban Planning at the University of Tehran and Senior Research Specialist at Huahui Engineering and Design Group, Shaoxing.
The practice and pedagogy of urban design have long skirted the landscapes of abjection - slums and squatter settlements – home of some 1.1 billion population worldwide. In this remarkable book Professor Arefi offers original insights for designers to work with denizens to make such places livable. Drawing from his extensive experience in Iran, Turkey, India and UAE, he offers intriguing insights steeped in humanities, philosophy and practice. This book is an original contribution to the literature in urban design. Tridib Banerjee, Professor Emeritus in Public Policy, Sol Price School of Public Policy, University of Southern California Mahyar Arefi has written an erudite, scholarly and complex text. It challenges the very foundation of planning and urban design orthodoxy as it relates to formal and informal settlements in the Global South. Based on his own impressive empirical research in four countries, Arefi systematically deconstructs Planning and Urban Design fundamentals - the assumptions, terminologies, definitions and thinking in mainstream thought. The ‘shock of the new’ engages on every page. Alexander Cuthbert, Emeritus Professor, University of New South Wales -- .