25/11/2025

Next year's international conference for urban and regional planning, REAL CORP 2026, will be held in Vienna from Monday, 23rd of March, to Wednesday, 25th of March 2026. In cooperation with TU Wien, Institute of Spatial Planning, Research Unit Urban and Regional Research, the CORP initiators are launching a special call for papers on two crucial topics: Governance and Planning Approaches for Transforming Regions and Housing Affordability. There will be special presentation sessions at REAL CORP 2026, to promote these topics. The special call for papers is open until the 5th of December 2025.

Years after the first CORP conference was held in 1996, the theme is still relevant to planners, politicians, and sociologists, as well as technicians. The Austrian-German journalist Andreas Schiller, who published in the field of urbanism, states, euphoric about the conference's realm and visibility, “The website corp.at is neither hip nor the latest trend in digital design, … That offers advantages. Under the “CORP since 1996” button, for example, you’ll find all the papers accepted since the beginning … The spectrum is thematically and geographically extremely extensive, so that this digital archive alone deserves admiration!”

Conference and Call are processed in English. Please submit your abstract by 5 December 2025 23:59 CET (UTC+1). For submission, you are intended to use MY.CORP only.

25/11/2025
©: Redaktion GAT

The REAL CORP 2026 call for papers is very broad and invites for contributions from all areas of expertise dealing with cities, regions and spatial development to gain a holistic and multi-faceted view on challenges and future scenarios in the urban realm. Next to science-based contributions, practise-based reports on short term actions and/or long-term strategies on urban and regional development are also welcomed. Two special Topics may be of interest:

TOPIC 1: Governance and Planning Approaches for Transforming Regions

Achieving transformative change remains one of the most pressing challenges for contemporary governance approaches and spatial planning. As regions across Europe and beyond grapple with the demands of decarbonisation, socio-ecological resilience, and economic restructuring, the question of how to govern transformation processes becomes urgent. Sustainability-oriented policies and associated governance and planning instruments thus provide new directions for regional strategies and local practices. However, their translation into regional and local contexts raises complex issues of power, responsibility, and institutional capacities.

This session invites contributions that critically explore the governance of transformations through regional and place-based perspectives. In this context, the session focuses on the evolving roles of actors and multi-level governance approaches that shape place-making strategies, but also the tools, innovative instruments, and new planning formats that foster transformative change. Of particular interest are contributions addressing how research and practice intersect in the design and implementation of just transition strategies, and how methodological and conceptual innovations can support more inclusive and adaptive governance models.

Theoretical, methodological, and empirical contributions are welcomed, that engage with:

  • Regional governance and planning approaches for just and green transitions
  • Transformative industrial strategies and institutional innovations
  • Actors in transformative regional change and multi-level governance approaches
  • Tools and instruments for regional transition planning and governance
  • Methodological approaches bridging research and practice
  • Practitioner experiences with local and regional transition strategies

By bringing together diverse perspectives from academia and practice, this session (will be held in Englisch) aims to foster dialogue on how to make regional governance more capable, inclusive, and transformative in steering sustainable futures.

 

TOPIC 2: Housing Affordability

Over the last decade, housing affordability has become a key concern for households, policy makers, planners alike.  Escalating housing costs, stagnant real incomes, and structural shifts in housing systems have made access to adequate and affordable housing increasingly unequal. This session invites contributions that explore the drivers of housing (un)affordability, the role of housing policy and planning, and the socio-spatial implications of these dynamics across different urban, regional, and national contexts.

Invited are contributions at multiple spatial scales, from local neighborhood effects to national housing regimes and transnational investment flows. The session seeks to foster dialogue between scholars examining affordability as both an economic and spatial problem, and those addressing how planning interventions and housing policies can mitigate or exacerbate affordability pressures.

CORP further welcomes theoretical, empirical, and methodological contributions that advance understanding of what drives or mitigates housing (un)affordability and how it can be measured. Topics may include, but are not limited to, the influence of market regulation and rent controls, the governance of affordable housing provision, ownership of real estate, financialization and institutional investment, short-term rentals, and gentrification processes.

By integrating insights across disciplines and scales, this session aims to deepen our understanding of the complex relationships between housing markets, planning, and policy. It seeks to advance the debate on how planning and governance can effectively respond to the economic inequality and socio-spatial consequences of affordability crises in contemporary housing systems. 

More details and submission: REAL CORP

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