STAFF PROFILE
Professor Jean Hillier
Position:
Emeritus Professor
College / Portfolio:
Design and Social Context
Email:
jean.hillier@rmit.edu.au
Campus:
City Campus
- Enabling social innovation for local climate adaptability. Funded by: ARC Discovery Projects 2015 from (2015 to 2020)
1 PhD Completions
Urban and Planning Theory, Public participation, Cultural Heritage, Decision-making in local government
- Hillier, J.,Metzger, J. (2021). Towns within Towns: From Incompossibility to Inclusive Disjunction in Urban Spatial Planning In: Deleuze and Guattari Studies, 15, 40 - 64
- Hillier, J.,Fu, S. (2021). An Uncanny Architecture of Cultural Heritage: Representations of the Japanese Occupation in Harbin, China In: Visual Histories of Occupation: A Transcultural Dialogue, Bloomsbury , United Kingdom
- Steele, W.,Hillier, J.,MacCallum, D.,Byrne, J.,Houston, D. (2021). Quiet activism: Climate action at the local scale, Sprnger, Switzerland
- Hillier, J. (2021). The “Flatness” of Deleuze and Guattari: Planning the City as a Tree or as a Rhizome? In: DISP, 57, 16 - 29
- Healey, P.,Hillier, J. (2020). Reflecting on the BOM: the transformative potential of neighbourhood initiatives In: Social Innovation as Political Transformation: thoughts for a better world, Edward Elgar, Cheltenham, United Kingdom
- Steele, W.,Hillier, J.,Houston, D.,Byrne, J.,MacCallum, D. (2019). The Climate-Just City In: Routledge Handbook of Climate Justice, Routledge, Oxon, United Kingdom
- Houston, D.,Hillier, J.,MacCallum, D.,Steele, W.,Byrne, J. (2018). Make kin, not cities! Multispecies entanglements and 'becoming-world' in planning theory In: Planning Theory, 17, 190 - 212
- Hillier, J. (2018). Lines of becoming In: The Routledge Handbook of Planning Theory, Routledge, New York
- Fu, S.,Hillier, J. (2018). Disneyfication or self-referentiality: recent conservation efforts and modern planning history in Datong In: China: A Historical Geography of the Urban, Palgrave Macmillan, Cham, Switzerland
- Hillier, J. (2017). Cat-alysing attunement In: Journal of Environmental Policy and Planning, 19, 327 - 344