This brief study critically examines transformations in the planning of space and discusses the different schools of planning and its use as a tool to exercise hegemony over the production of space and regulate land usage to serve the aims of the state. The study addresses transformations in planning as a synthesis that gives expression to existing discussion within Israel. The study depends on analytical, critical narrative, and is part of a broader study on analysis of planning discourse and language and the production of a discourse of planning predictions for Israel's centenary. The study proceeds from the assumption that spatial planning is not a neutral, procedural affair but a realization of geopolitical aims governed by power relations in the allocation of resources.