The Impact of the Planning system on the Gypsy and Traveller community; counter-mapping, oral histories and housing justice

Camille Rantz-Mc Donald
Camille Rantz-Mc Donald
PhD student
Planning, people and place
Camille Rantz-Mc Donald is a PhD student, currently researching the impact of the planning system on the Gypsy and Traveller community.

I completed my Bachelor's Degree in geography and planning at the Panth茅on-Sorbonne University, France, which included an Erasmus year at Trinity College Dublin, Ireland. Following this I obtained a Masters in Urban and Regional Planning from the University of Amsterdam, Holland. My masters thesis explored the production and liveability of urban space in the only 'eco-village' in Ireland. I went on to work in various planning practitioner roles for local government in the UK. Most recently as senior planner with a focus on policy and project management.


My research will contribute to the reframing and re-historicizing of the UK鈥檚 contemporary 鈥淭raveller problem鈥. Working with the Gypsy and Traveller community, you will harness the tools, techniques and practices of counter-mapping, oral histories and housing justice to challenge racist narratives on accommodating Gypsy and Traveller nomadism. The project will invert established approaches to mapping and oral history to expose the impacts that limiting nomadic practices is having on Gypsy and Traveller communities over time. It will document the decline of official sites, accepted "stopping places," and the gradual criminalisation of nomadism, including the recent criminalisation of trespass. Through a novel lens that centres Gypsies and Travellers in contemporary debates on social exclusion and housing justice, it will challenge their long-standing marginalisation.

The research poses three key questions:

1. How has the provision of Gypsy and Traveller sites and 鈥渟topping places鈥 evolved since the 1960s, and what are the key trends in planning applications and outcomes?

2. What is the long-term impact of the planning system and outcomes on the quality of life of nomadic Gypsies and Travellers?

3. How can hard-to-reach planning data and counter-mapping techniques challenge prevailing narratives and prejudices related to Gypsy and Traveller site provision?


Supervisors: Prof Ryan Powell, Prof Stephen Hincks, Ellie Faro (nee Rogers) CEO, Leeds Gypsy and Traveller Exchange (GATE)

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