Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Planning theory is the body of scientific concepts, definitions, behavioral relationships, and assumptions that define the body of knowledge of urban planning. There is no one unified planning theory but various.
In July 2009, she was awarded Ordinary Fellowship from the British Academy for distinction in Urban planning theory and practice. [2] [4] In October 2006, she received Royal Town Planning Institute’s (RTPI) Gold Medal Award on outstanding achievement in the field of town and country planning. Healey was the first woman ever to receive the ...
The journal was established in 1981 and is published by SAGE Publications in association with the Association of Collegiate Schools of Planning. It focuses on topics such as planning practice, planning theory, and planning pedagogy and publishes articles reporting original and current research, commentaries, and book reviews.
Cities: The International Journal of Urban Policy and Planning; City: analysis of urban change, theory, action; City and Community; Commonwealth Journal of Local Governance; Disasters; Environment and Planning A: Economy and Space; Environment and Planning B: Planning and Design; Environment and Planning C: Politics and Space
A community engaged in a participatory planning project. Participatory planning is an urban planning paradigm that seeks to involve the community of an area into the urban planning of that area. It's a way for communities to work together to identify and address problems, and to create a plan to achieve a desired socio-economic goal.
2012 * Complexity and the Planning of the Built Environment, edited with Gert de Roo, Joris Van Wezemael, Ashgate, Farnham. 2014 * Gilles Deleuze and Félix Guattari for Planners, InPlanning e-book, 2015 * Connections: exploring contemporary planning theory and practice with Patsy Healey, edited with Jonathan Metzger, Ashgate, Farnham.
In the 1990s, a number of planning scholars began writing about a new orientation to urban planning theory that moved away from the prevalent rational approach to planning. Judith Innes is credited with coining the term "communicative planning" in her article Planning Theory’s Emerging Paradigm: Communicative Action and Interactive Practice. [6]
2008. "Global Norms and Urban Forms: The Millennium Development Goals" Planning Theory and Practice 9:2, 251-274. 2008. "Post-Liberalism: On The Ethico-Politics of Planning" Planning Theory 7:1, 92-102. 2007. "The Location of Practice: A Response to John Forester" Development Southern Africa 24:4, 623-628. 2006.