The importance of, and need for, quality open spaces for health and wellbeing, as well as sites for everyday social life, have been foregrounded as a consequence of the COVID19 pandemic.  A recent study, funded by the Department for Environment has also highlighted the £25.6bn annual ‘Welfare Value’ of these spaces in the UK economy. Historically the provision of well designed, accessible, and high quality open and public spaces was a crucial part of a wider concept of economic redistribution. Furthermore, social welfare was a key aspect of design and planning in many Welfare States in the post- second world war period, leading to large scale architectural and planning projects in a variety of socio-political contexts. The design and development of these spaces involved actors both within and beyond the design professions and these visions of welfare were also shaped by the changing role of women in society, including their participation in education and a growing presence in established professions. Policy makers, campaigners, educators, and writers all contributed to shaping the agenda of reconstruction, and creating a more fair, equitable and environmentally viable future.

While previous research has uncovered the work of many individual ‘heroines’ and celebrated iconic design projects by women, this international conference invites abstracts that consider the role of women in creating the spaces of the period of post-war Welfare States internationally with the aim of looking beyond individual achievements and professional boundaries. The organizers aim to build/draw on and further complicate recent, more discursive historiographies that better represents the complexity of how and by whom the built environment is formed and emphasise the diversity of women’s practices.