Counterplotting the Urban: Decolonial Sustainable Urban Development

Overview

Cities around the world still bear a legacy of colonial pasts. Contemporary practices in urban place management, development, and policy often reinforce entrenched narratives that foster inequality and segregation. It is vital to develop approaches that ‘counterplot’ these narratives and help deliver better urban environments for all citizens.

This course unpacks how colonialism continues to shape contemporary urban settings, particularly across the Global South. Participants will critically examine colonial logics embedded in urban development and placemaking that reinforce spatial inequalities, dispossession and exclusion. The course also addresses how practitioners can actively counteract these dynamics.

Key themes that will be covered during the event by expert speakers include path dependency, decolonial practice and counter-plotting. 

Participants will be:

  • Challenged to reimagine urban development through a decolonial lens.
  • Equipped with the knowledge and tools to re-shape systems to address colonial injustice and co-create urban futures that are fair and just.

The course will be delivered online in an interactive, seminar-style format. We begin by establishing a strong foundation, bringing participants up to speed on core concepts and contemporary debates in decolonial theory in the urban. Through a series of case studies interwoven into each session, we will examine how colonial path dependencies continue to shape urban settings together with their social, cultural, and economic implications. In the final breakout session, we will collaboratively explore ways to counterplot against colonial logics in policy and practice, with the aim of advancing fairer and more just urban futures. 

Programme details

09:00 Welcome & Introductions (Dr Desiree Daniel-Ortmann)

09:05 Inherited Paths: A look at Path Dependencies and the Reproduction of Colonial Logics (Dr Francesca Froy & Dr Desiree Daniel-Ortmann)

09:45 Colonial Legacies, Land Governance & Issues of Tenure in West Africa (Dr Timothy Adams)

10:50 Break

11:00  What We Preserve and What We Forget: The Making of Indian Cities, Colonial Heritage and Decolonial Urban Futures (Dr Pooja Rambhakta)

12:20 Break

13:15 The Coloniality of Energy Transitions in Urban Settlements (Dr Idalina Baptista)

14:20: Echoes of Empire: A Caribbean Perspective on Confronting Colonial Path Dependencies in the Contemporary City Through a Decolonial Lens (Ms. Gina Granado)

15:20 Break

15:25 Breakout Session (Dr Francesca Froy & Dr Desiree Daniel-Ortmann & Dr Pooja Rambhakta)

17:00 Close of Session (Dr Desiree Daniel-Ortmann)

 

Digital Certification

Certificate

Upon successful completion of this course, participants will receive a certificate of attendance. 

Digital badge

Upon successful completion of this course, you will be issued with an official digital badge from Oxford Lifelong Learning, University of Oxford. After the course, you will receive an email with a link and instructions on how to download your digital badge. You will be able to add your badge to your email signature and share it on social media if you choose to do so. 

Fees

Description Costs
Online Tuition: 10 June 2026 £160.00

Payment

Payment of fees must be made in full at the time of booking.

Please note that businesses and organisations can be invoiced on provision of a Purchase Order and completed application form. These can be emailed to the CWHE Programme Administrator, email: cultural.heritage@conted.ox.ac.uk.

Tutors

Dr Desiree Daniel-Ortmann (sustainable urban development, Oxford Lifelong Learning)

Dr Francesca Froy (sustainable urban development, Oxford Lifelong Learning)

Dr Idalina Baptista (sustainable urban development, Oxford Lifelong Learning)

Dr Pooja Rambhakta (cultural heritage and spatial planning)

Ms. Gina Granado (international relations, gender and development)

Dr Timothy Adams (land tenure, gender and development) 

Dr Idalina Baptista - Tutor

Keywords: African urbanization, urban planning and governance, energy infrastructure, urban theory.

Idalina Baptista is an Associate Professor in Urban Anthropology, a Fellow of Kellogg College and an Associate Fellow of the Oxford Programme for the Future of Cities at the University of Oxford. She is also the Director of the DPhil in Sustainable Urban Development. Idalina teaches urban theory in the MSc in Sustainable Urban Development and has taught in the past on diverse themes relating to urban planning and environmental management at the University of California, Berkeley, the New University of Lisbon, Universidade Aberta, and Universidade Atlântica, in Portugal. Idalina also held a visiting position at the Institute of Social Sciences, University of Lisbon and collaborated with colleagues at the New University of Lisbon on projects and initiatives involving public participation in urban and environmental planning and policymaking. Her teaching and research is informed by her past experience as an environmental planning consultant and as a volunteer to NGOs in the environmental sector. She holds a PhD in City and Regional Planning (2009) and a Master in Landscape Architecture (Environmental Planning concentration) (1999) from the University of California, Berkeley, USA, and a BEng in Environmental Engineering (1996) from the New University of Lisbon, Portugal.

Idalina's current research focuses on the colonial and post-colonial geographies of urban energy infrastructure and urbanization in African cities, with a special focus on Maputo, Mozambique. Her latest research project, “Electric Urbanism: the Governance of Electricity in Urban Africa”, was funded by Oxford's John Fell Fund. The project uses the case study of the prepaid electricity system in Maputo, Mozambique, to examine the challenges of accessing utility services in the global South. Through her research, Idalina seeks to deepen her understanding of African urbanization and the challenges of governing urban infrastructures in Africa. In particular, she’s interested in understanding how different forms of infrastructure governance emerge and the patterns of urbanization, citizenship and urban livelihoods these engender. Idalina’s work has been published in the International Journal of Urban and Regional Research, Urban Studies, Urban Geography, City & Society and in edited collections.

Dr Desiree Daniel-Ortmann - Course Director

Dr Francesca Froy - Tutor

Gina Granado - Tutor

Ms Gina Granado is an international relations professional with over 15 years of experience. She holds an MPhil in International Relations from the University of the West Indies and works at the intersection of diplomacy, culture and decolonial practice. She contributed to the Cross Rhodes Freedom movement in the Caribbean, advancing renaming initiatives and the removal of colonial monuments in Trinidad and Tobago. Her research interests include post-colonial politics, reparations, race and decolonial movements.

Learning outcomes

The learning outcomes of the course are:

  • To establish a common understanding of coloniality’s role in shaping contemporary urban development and spatial injustice.
  • To establish a common understanding of “post-colonial” vs “decolonial” in theory and practice
  • To critically examine ways of counterplotting against spatial injustices in practice.

Application

Please use the 'Book' or 'Apply' button on this page. Alternatively, please contact cultural.heritage@conted.ox.ac.uk to obtain an application form. Enrolments will close 3 weeks before course start date.

Accommodation

Accommodation is available to book for this course at Rewley House. If you have any questions regarding the accommodation please get in touch with Continuing Education Residential Centre res-ctr@conted.ox.ac.uk.

All bedrooms are modern, comfortably furnished and each room has tea and coffee making facilities, Freeview television, and Free WiFi and private bath or shower rooms.