A Spatial Planning Guide to Public Goods

New Textbook · Palgrave Macmillan, 2026

A Spatial Planning Guide to Public Goods

Designing, implementing, and sustaining public goods for equitable cities and communities. A companion for students, instructors, and practitioners working through the book’s eleven chapters.

In 2026, the Centre for the Just City at TU Delft hosted Leilani Farha, then UN Special Rapporteur on the Right to Housing, who posed a deliberately unsettling question to the room: “if someone cannot afford housing, should they be allowed to live in the city?” Roberto Rocco opens this book with that question because it exposes how quickly debates about public goods collapse into debates about who gets to be a citizen at all.

A Spatial Planning Guide to Public Goods equips planning students, instructors, and practitioners with the conceptual and practical tools to advocate for, design, and sustain public goods in real institutions. Across eleven chapters, it moves from the economic theory of non-excludability and non-rivalry, through legal traditions such as German Gemeinwohl and French intérêt général, to governance, environmental, and urban development case studies spanning London’s Docklands, Lagos’s bus rapid transit system, and New York’s Hudson Yards.

This page is a teaching and study companion. It does not host the book itself, in any form, for download. Use the links under “Access the Book” to buy or licence the full text through the publisher.

Track your reading

Chapters, Guiding Questions, and Exercises

Eleven chapters, each with a short orientation, guiding questions for seminar discussion, and one or two exercises that ask you to apply the chapter’s concepts to a real case. Tick a chapter off as you go — your progress is saved in this browser.

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Instructor resources

For Teachers

The book’s chapter structure maps onto a standard seminar calendar. These are starting points, not a fixed syllabus – adapt the sequence and assessments to your own programme and student level.

Course structure

An eleven or six-week module

Run one chapter per week across an eleven-week semester, or pair chapters (1–2, 3–4, 5–6, 7–8, 9–10, 11) for a condensed six-week module. Chapters 1 and 3 are best taught together if students need the economic foundations reinforced before moving to legal and governance material.

Assessment ideas

From case report to policy brief

A comparative case study report (two cities, one public good); a 1,500-word policy brief applying one legal tradition from Chapter 6 to a live local dispute; or a structured debate on public–private partnerships using Ostrom and Miraftab as opposing reference points.

Discussion bank

Cross-cutting prompts

Three prompts that work across multiple chapters: who decides what counts as a public good in your own planning system; what happens to a public good when it is financialised rather than funded; and where does your own city sit on Ostrom’s continuum from pure public good to club good.

Considering this book for adoption? Request an inspection copy or arrange institutional access through the publisher links under “Access the Book” below.

Study resources

For Students

A working glossary of terms used across the book. Click a term to reveal its definition, then test yourself with the self-study questions below before moving on to the next chapter.

Non-excludability
The inability to prevent anyone from accessing or benefiting from a good once it is provided, regardless of whether they contributed to its provision (Chapter 1).
Non-rivalrous consumption
A good’s availability to one person is not diminished by another person’s use of it, as with clean air or a lighthouse signal (Chapter 1).
Free-rider problem
The incentive to enjoy a non-excludable good without contributing to its cost, which undermines voluntary or market-based provision (Chapters 1, 3).
Common-pool resources
Resources that are non-excludable but rivalrous, such as fish stocks or groundwater: hard to keep anyone out, but depleted by use (Chapter 3, after Ostrom).
Club goods
Goods that are excludable but largely non-rivalrous up to a capacity limit, such as toll roads or subscription services (Chapters 1, 3).
Accumulation by dispossession
David Harvey’s term for the ongoing seizure of common resources and public goods under neoliberalism, extending the logic of historical enclosure (Chapter 4).
Gemeinwohl
The German constitutional principle of the “common good”, which conditions the use of private property under Article 14(2) of the Grundgesetz (Chapter 6).
Intérêt général
The French legal principle of “general interest” underpinning public services, public works, and public order (Chapter 6).
Res publica
Cicero’s term for “the public thing”, framing governance and public resources as the responsibility of the community rather than private individuals (Chapter 2).
Counterpublics
Alternative discursive spaces created by marginalised or subordinated groups that contest dominant narratives about public space (Chapter 9).
Just sustainabilities
Julian Agyeman’s concept linking environmental sustainability to the equitable distribution of its benefits and burdens (Chapter 8).
Competition state
Bob Jessop’s model of a state that reorganises governance around market competitiveness rather than social welfare (Chapter 11).

Self-study questions, across chapters:

Trace how the meaning of “the commons” shifts between Chapter 4’s economic history of enclosure and Chapter 7’s discussion of Ostrom’s community governance. Then compare Chapter 6’s legal traditions of Gemeinwohl and intérêt général with the citizen rights framework in Chapter 5: which tradition offers stronger protection to a non-citizen resident, and on what basis? Finally, read the Preface before Chapter 1 – Rocco’s critique of developmentalism there reframes every later chapter’s account of why public goods are underprovided.

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