Network society : a new context for planning?
Albrechts, Louis Ed.
Network society : a new context for planning? - London Routledge S.K. Paul 2005 - xvii,347p.
CONTENTS LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONSix NOTES ON CONTRIBUTORS xi PREFACExvii INTRODUCTION A New Context for Planning? 1 Louis Albrechts and Seymour J. Mandelbaum PARTI The Network Society: A New Paradigm? 7 CHAPTER ONE Communicative Action and the Network Society: A Pragmatic Marriage? Niraj Verma and HaeRan Shin9 CHAPTER Two Planning and the Network City: Discursive Correspondences Robert A. Beauregard 24 CHAPTER THREE Escaping the Prison of the Present Place: Can We Plan the Future of Localities in the Context of a Network Society? Dowell Myers 34 CHAPTER FOUR The Discourse Network: A Way of Understanding Policy Formation, Stability, and Change in the Networked Polity Nicholas Low 45 COMMENTARY Networks and Planning Thought 57 Judith E. Innes PART II Organization of Space and Time 63 IMPACT OF PHYSICAL NETWORKS 65 CHAPTER FIVECities and Transport: Exploring the Need for New Planning Approaches Luca Bertolini 67 CHAPTER SixNetworking for Trans-national Missing Links: Tracing the Political Success of European High-speed Rail in the 1990s Deike Peters 81 CHAPTER SEVENStrategies for Networked Cities Stephen Graham 95 CHAPTER EIGHT The Network City: A New Old Way of Thinking Cities in the ICT Age Paul Drewe 110 COMMENTARY Challenging the Old Urban Planning Paradigm: The Network Approach Gabriel Dupuy 120 ORGANIZATION OF SPACE AND TIME: CHALLENGES FOR PLANNING AND PLANNERS 123 CHAPTER NINE Planning as Persuasive Storytelling in the Context of the Network Society James A. Throgmorton 125 CHAPTER TEN Network Complexity and the Imaginative Power of Strategic Spatial Planning Patsy Healey 146 COMMENTARY Imagining Urban Transformation Leonie Sandercock161 PART III Policy Networks and Governance 165 LOCAL NETWORKS AND CAPITAL BUILDING 167 CHAPTER ELEVENWhy Liberal Planning Cannot Manage the Network Society: Lessons from Community Action Howell S. Baum 169 CHAPTER TWELVE ICT-enforced Community Networks for Sustainable Development and Social Inclusion Klaus Frey 183 CHAPTER THIRTEEN Recovery from Disasters: Challenges for Low-income Communities in the Americas William J. Siembieda 197 CHAPTER FOURTEEN The Multicultural City in the Age of Networks Xavier de Souza Briggs 211 COMMENTARY Local Networks and Capital Building Susan S. Fainstein222 GOVERNANCE CAPACITY, POLICY NETWORKS, AND TERRITORIAL SPECIFICITIES 227 CHAPTER FIFTEEN The Global Emergence of Private Planning and Governance Chris Webster and Shin Lee229 CHAPTER SIXTEEN Inter-agency Transport Planning: Cooperation in a Loose Policy Network Tore Sager and Inger-Anne Ravlum 246 CHAPTER SEVENTEENCollaborative Planning, Commitment, and Trust: Dealing with Uncertainty in Networks Ronald G.H. van Ark and Jurian Edelenbos 271 CHAPTER EIGHTEEN Reconnecting Space, Place, and Institutions: Inquiring into Local Governance Capacity in Urban and Regional Research Enrico Gualini 284 COMMENTARY Governance Capacity, Policy Networks, and Territorial Specificities Patsy Healey307 BIBLIOGRAPHY 313 INDEX 339
0415701511
307.76 / ALB
Network society : a new context for planning? - London Routledge S.K. Paul 2005 - xvii,347p.
CONTENTS LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONSix NOTES ON CONTRIBUTORS xi PREFACExvii INTRODUCTION A New Context for Planning? 1 Louis Albrechts and Seymour J. Mandelbaum PARTI The Network Society: A New Paradigm? 7 CHAPTER ONE Communicative Action and the Network Society: A Pragmatic Marriage? Niraj Verma and HaeRan Shin9 CHAPTER Two Planning and the Network City: Discursive Correspondences Robert A. Beauregard 24 CHAPTER THREE Escaping the Prison of the Present Place: Can We Plan the Future of Localities in the Context of a Network Society? Dowell Myers 34 CHAPTER FOUR The Discourse Network: A Way of Understanding Policy Formation, Stability, and Change in the Networked Polity Nicholas Low 45 COMMENTARY Networks and Planning Thought 57 Judith E. Innes PART II Organization of Space and Time 63 IMPACT OF PHYSICAL NETWORKS 65 CHAPTER FIVECities and Transport: Exploring the Need for New Planning Approaches Luca Bertolini 67 CHAPTER SixNetworking for Trans-national Missing Links: Tracing the Political Success of European High-speed Rail in the 1990s Deike Peters 81 CHAPTER SEVENStrategies for Networked Cities Stephen Graham 95 CHAPTER EIGHT The Network City: A New Old Way of Thinking Cities in the ICT Age Paul Drewe 110 COMMENTARY Challenging the Old Urban Planning Paradigm: The Network Approach Gabriel Dupuy 120 ORGANIZATION OF SPACE AND TIME: CHALLENGES FOR PLANNING AND PLANNERS 123 CHAPTER NINE Planning as Persuasive Storytelling in the Context of the Network Society James A. Throgmorton 125 CHAPTER TEN Network Complexity and the Imaginative Power of Strategic Spatial Planning Patsy Healey 146 COMMENTARY Imagining Urban Transformation Leonie Sandercock161 PART III Policy Networks and Governance 165 LOCAL NETWORKS AND CAPITAL BUILDING 167 CHAPTER ELEVENWhy Liberal Planning Cannot Manage the Network Society: Lessons from Community Action Howell S. Baum 169 CHAPTER TWELVE ICT-enforced Community Networks for Sustainable Development and Social Inclusion Klaus Frey 183 CHAPTER THIRTEEN Recovery from Disasters: Challenges for Low-income Communities in the Americas William J. Siembieda 197 CHAPTER FOURTEEN The Multicultural City in the Age of Networks Xavier de Souza Briggs 211 COMMENTARY Local Networks and Capital Building Susan S. Fainstein222 GOVERNANCE CAPACITY, POLICY NETWORKS, AND TERRITORIAL SPECIFICITIES 227 CHAPTER FIFTEEN The Global Emergence of Private Planning and Governance Chris Webster and Shin Lee229 CHAPTER SIXTEEN Inter-agency Transport Planning: Cooperation in a Loose Policy Network Tore Sager and Inger-Anne Ravlum 246 CHAPTER SEVENTEENCollaborative Planning, Commitment, and Trust: Dealing with Uncertainty in Networks Ronald G.H. van Ark and Jurian Edelenbos 271 CHAPTER EIGHTEEN Reconnecting Space, Place, and Institutions: Inquiring into Local Governance Capacity in Urban and Regional Research Enrico Gualini 284 COMMENTARY Governance Capacity, Policy Networks, and Territorial Specificities Patsy Healey307 BIBLIOGRAPHY 313 INDEX 339
0415701511
307.76 / ALB