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.
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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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Rocco opens with the classic economic definition of public goods through non-excludability and non-rivalrous consumption, using the lighthouse as the textbook case, before complicating it. Drawing on Héritier (2001) and Ostrom, he distinguishes pure public goods from common-pool resources and club goods, and follows Ver Eecke (1999) in treating “public good” as an institutionally and politically negotiated concept rather than a fixed economic category. The chapter closes by separating infrastructure (the means) from public goods (the ends), a distinction the rest of the book depends on.
Guiding Questions
- How do non-excludability and non-rivalrous consumption differ, and why does their combination produce the free-rider problem?
- Why does Ver Eecke insist that public goods are not a fixed economic category but an “ideal concept”? What follows for planning practice if he is right?
- What is lost when infrastructure and public goods are treated as synonyms in planning discourse?
Exercises
- Choose a public space in your own city. Classify it using Ostrom and Héritier’s continuum – pure public good, common-pool resource, or club good – and justify the classification against its actual patterns of access and use, not its formal designation.
- Find a news report from the last five years describing the privatisation or enclosure of a previously public resource in your country. Identify the actor who initiated the change, the legal instrument used, and who lost access as a result.
This chapter argues that publicness is both the justification and the precondition of public goods: public goods create the conditions for a public sphere, and the democratic processes that unfold within that sphere determine how public goods are allocated. Rocco traces this argument back to Aristotle’s distinction between the polis and the oikos, noting that Aristotelian citizenship excluded women, slaves, and foreigners, and forward to Cicero’s res publica, which frames public resources as a collective responsibility rather than a service delivered by the state.
Guiding Questions
- In what sense does publicness function as both the “justification and precondition” of public goods?
- Aristotle’s polis depended on excluding women, slaves, and foreigners from citizenship. What does that exclusion mean for using Aristotle as a normative touchstone for urban publicness today?
- How does Cicero’s res publica reframe public resources as a collective responsibility rather than a state service?
Exercises
- Observe a public space in your city for thirty minutes. Note whether its users behave as Aristotle’s deliberating “political animals”, or whether the space functions mainly as a corridor for passage and consumption.
- Write a 300-word brief applying the principle of res publica to a current planning dispute you are aware of.
The chapter grounds the book in formal economic theory: Samuelson’s The Pure Theory of Public Expenditure (1954) and the Samuelson condition for efficient provision, then Musgrave’s The Theory of Public Finance (1959) and “Provision for Social Goods” (1969), which add a normative case for state intervention. Rocco uses Kotchen and Moore’s (2007) distinction between pure and impure public goods, and Kaul, Hess, and Ostrom’s argument that publicness sits on a continuum, to show why rigid binary classification fails in practice.
Guiding Questions
- What does the Samuelson condition require for efficient provision, and how does it diverge from the efficiency criterion used for private goods?
- How did Musgrave’s normative theory of the public sector extend Samuelson’s formal model?
- Why do Kaul, Hess, and Ostrom argue that publicness exists on a continuum rather than as a fixed binary?
Exercises
- Take a good or service in your local context – a toll road, a public park, a subscription library – and classify it using Musgrave’s distinction between rivalry and excludability, naming any tension between the two criteria.
Following David Harvey (2003), Rocco names the enclosure of the commons as capitalism’s “original sin”, tracing the English enclosure acts of the fifteenth to nineteenth centuries and Marx’s account of primitive accumulation. He then follows Silvia Federici (2004) and Glen Coulthard (2014) in extending enclosure beyond Europe, showing how colonialism reproduced the same dispossession through gendered and racialised violence against Indigenous and non-European peoples. Market failure, in this reading, is not a technical glitch but a symptom of deeper structural inequality.
Guiding Questions
- Why does Rocco, following Harvey, describe enclosure as capitalism’s “original sin” rather than a neutral stage of economic development?
- How do Federici and Coulthard extend the analysis of enclosure beyond the English case?
- What is at stake in reframing “market failure” as a symptom of systemic contradiction rather than a technical malfunction?
Exercises
- Research one documented case of enclosure or dispossession of common land or resources, historical or contemporary, in a region of your choice. Identify the legal instrument used, who benefited, and who was displaced.
Rocco separates human rights, universal and inalienable under instruments such as the 1948 Universal Declaration of Human Rights and the 1966 covenants, from citizen rights, which are conditional on legal status within a given state. He uses the 1951 Refugee Convention, its 1967 Protocol, and the 1990 Migrant Workers Convention to show the persistent gap between international protections and their enforcement, leaving undocumented migrants and refugees disproportionately exposed when access to public goods is gated by citizenship.
Guiding Questions
- What distinguishes citizen rights from human rights, and why does this distinction matter for undocumented migrants’ access to public goods?
- Why does Rocco connect socio-spatial justice directly to the realisation of human rights rather than treating them as separate fields?
- What gap exists between international protections for migrants and their implementation in national practice?
Exercises
- Identify a public service in your city – healthcare, education, social housing – and research whether access depends on citizenship or residency status. Map the legal basis for any restriction you find.
Rocco compares how different legal systems name and enforce the common good: Germany’s constitutional principle of Gemeinwohl, codified in Article 14(2) of the Grundgesetz and extended into the New Leipzig Charter (2020); France’s intérêt général, which underpins services publics and travaux publics; and the United Kingdom’s narrower “public interest” test, used to balance disclosure against other considerations under the Freedom of Information Act.
Guiding Questions
- How does the German constitutional principle of Gemeinwohl condition the use of private property under Article 14(2)?
- In what ways does the New Leipzig Charter operationalise Gemeinwohl at the European scale?
- How does the French intérêt général differ in legal function from the British “public interest” test?
Exercises
- Compare two national legal traditions of your choosing – Gemeinwohl, intérêt général, “public interest”, or another tradition relevant to your own country – and name one concrete planning instrument each tradition uses to enforce its public-good principle.
Rocco sets Elinor Ostrom’s work on collective management of common-pool resources against Faranak Miraftab’s (2004) critique of public–private partnerships, which she describes as having an “ambivalent and even deceptive core” even when marketed as empowering disadvantaged communities. Robert Dahl’s “The Problem of Civic Competence” (1992) supplies a counterweight to both: participatory governance is only as good as the civic competence of the citizens who take part in it.
Guiding Questions
- Why does Miraftab describe public–private partnerships as having an “ambivalent and even deceptive core”, even when framed as empowering communities?
- How does Dahl’s concept of civic competence complicate an idealised view of participatory governance?
- What conditions, according to Ostrom, make collective community management of common-pool resources more effective than state or market provision?
Exercises
- Investigate a public–private partnership project in your region – infrastructure, transit, or utilities. Identify how risk is allocated in the contract and assess whether oversight mechanisms exist to prevent the exclusionary effects Miraftab describes.
Rocco treats environmental sustainability itself as a public good, not merely a precondition for one, drawing on Julian Agyeman’s concept of “just sustainabilities” (2003, 2010) and Lucas Chancel’s Unsustainable Inequalities (2020) to connect ecological protection to distributive justice. Climate change and biodiversity loss are classified as global public goods, with the Paris Agreement (2015) offered as the clearest example of the international cooperation that classification demands.
Guiding Questions
- Why does Rocco treat environmental sustainability as a public good, rather than simply a precondition for one?
- How does Agyeman’s concept of “just sustainabilities” connect environmental protection to distributive justice?
- Why are climate change and biodiversity loss classified as global public goods, and what governance challenges follow from that classification?
Exercises
- Select an environmental public good in your municipality – air quality, urban tree canopy, a water catchment. Identify the regulatory instrument responsible for protecting it and assess whether enforcement capacity matches the stated policy ambition.
Rosalyn Deutsche’s (1992) critique anchors this chapter: public space is routinely idealised as inherently democratic in discourse around public art, when its governance, especially during redevelopment, typically remains under elite control. Rocco tests this against contrasting cases, from Mural Arts Philadelphia’s community-led murals to Thomas Heatherwick’s Vessel at Hudson Yards and the 2017 controversy between Kristen Visbal’s Fearless Girl and Arturo Di Modica’s Charging Bull, where corporate sponsorship and contested authorship collided in the same public square.
Guiding Questions
- How does Deutsche challenge the assumption that public art automatically signifies democratic, inclusive space?
- What does the Fearless Girl and Charging Bull controversy reveal about the relationship between public art, corporate sponsorship, and contested meaning?
- In what sense does The Vessel at Hudson Yards lend, in Rocco’s words, “a veneer of culture and openness” to privatised space?
Exercises
- Identify a public artwork in your city commissioned by a private developer or corporation. Research who commissioned it, what message it was meant to convey, and whether its setting is genuinely open to all publics.
Rocco reads the redevelopment of London’s Docklands in the 1980s and 1990s (Harvey 2012) and Hudson Yards in New York (Miraftab 2016) as cases where neoliberal urban regeneration intensified inequality rather than mitigating it, against the comparative case of Amsterdam and Copenhagen, where more equitable public goods provision corresponds with less extreme real-estate speculation, even as both cities now face affordability pressure of their own. Lagos’s bus rapid transit system stands as a counter-example: a project with real design flaws that nonetheless delivered a measurable net gain in public goods for its users.
Guiding Questions
- Why does Rocco argue that the Docklands and Hudson Yards developments intensified inequality rather than mitigating it?
- What does the comparison between Amsterdam and Copenhagen, on one hand, and London and New York, on the other, suggest about the relationship between equitable public goods provision and real-estate speculation?
- Why might a project with acknowledged design flaws, such as Lagos’s BRT system, still represent a net positive contribution to public goods?
Exercises
- Choose an urban regeneration project in your own city. Classify it as primarily public sector, private sector, or civic-society led, and assess which group’s interests appear to have shaped the final outcome.
The closing chapter turns to Marilena Chauí’s (2017) definition of ideology, the presentation of a dominant group’s interests as universal and natural, to explain why austerity and privatisation are so often accepted as necessity rather than contested as political choice. Rocco follows Harvey (2005), Wendy Brown (2003, 2015), and Piketty (2020) in insisting that the erosion of public goods is a cross-party, decades-long political project rather than the work of any single administration, and uses Bob Jessop’s “competition state” (2002) to explain why governments of different persuasions converge on similar market-oriented reforms.
Guiding Questions
- How does Chauí’s definition of ideology help explain why austerity is often accepted as necessary rather than contested as a political choice?
- Why does Rocco insist that the neoliberal erosion of public goods predates and outlasts any single government, citing both Piketty and Brown?
- What does Jessop’s “competition state” model suggest about why governments across the political spectrum adopt similar market-oriented reforms?
Exercises
- Identify one policy decision in your own country in the past five years that reduced state investment in a public good – education, healthcare, or infrastructure. Trace the justification the government gave and assess it against Chauí’s account of ideology.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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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.
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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