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This book arose from a conversation between its editors about the transnational character of garden city concepts and their quite unexpected ‘flows’ in our respective areas of expertise, different historical circumstances and colonial situations. The marriage between Africa and Palestine based on colonial experiences and garden city ideas and practices became fascinating, intriguing and challenging the longer the conversation continued. We were also stimulated by the enthusiastic response of each contributor we approached, and we finally decided to initiate this volume –a pioneering work in exposing the extra-European history of European garden city planning, which also addresses areas outside the Western world. Moreover, as a book-length endeavour that focuses on colonial Africa and Palestine, it is unprecedented in the relevant historiography. In fact, it seems that in embracing comparative views and critical approaches concerning the territories chosen, we have not only challenged the more conventional, Eurocentric narrative relating to garden cities, but in many senses have created a subaltern research literature. Of course, illuminating transnational aspects through which planning ideas were transmitted, diffused and modified has meant the blurring of distinctions between this ‘other’ literature on garden cities and the more traditional academic canon on garden city developments in the Global North itself.
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