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Planning theory : planning with contingency Vol.4

By: Series: Critical concepts in built environment Ed. by Rohinton EmmanuelPublication details: New york Routledge 2015Description: xi,531pISBN:
  • 9780415746489
DDC classification:
  • 307.12 MAD
Contents:
Contents Volume IV: Planning with Contingency Acknowledgements ix Part 1: Critical Planning: Power, Conflict, and Social Justice 1 74. Bent Flyvbejrg, Habermas and Foucault: Thinkers for Civil Society? 1 75. Susan Fainstein, New Directions in Planning Theory 28 76. Margo Huxley and Oren Yiftachel, New Paradigm or Old Myopia? Unsettling the Communicative Turn in Planning Theory 56 77. Neil Smith, New Globalism, New Urbanism: Gentrification as Global Urban Strategy 76 78. David Harvey, The Right to the City 99 79. Heather Campbell, Just Planning: The Art of Situated Ethical Judgment 103 80. Vanessa Watson, Deep Difference: Diversity, Planning and Ethics 132 81. John Pløger, Strife: Urban Planning and Agonism 151 82. Michael Gunder, Planning as the Ideology of (Neoliberal) Space 172 Part 2: Deliberative Planning: Participation, Communication and Consensus 191 83. Patsy Healey, The Pragmatic Tradition in Planning Thought 193 84. Charles Hoch, Pragmatic Communicative Action Theory 225 85. John Forester, On the Theory and Practice of Critical Pragmatism: Deliberative Practice and Creative Negotiations 247 86. Stanley Stein and Thomas Harper, Rawls’s ‘Justice as Fairness’: A Moral Basis for Contemporary Planning Theory 316 87. Judith Innes and David Booher, Reframing Public Participation: Strategies for the 21st Century 293 88. Niraj Verma and Haeran Shin, Communicative Action and the Network Society: A Pragmatic Marriage? 316 Part 3: Spatial Planning: Adaptive Systems, Networks, and Strategies 335 89. Michael Batty and Paul Torrens, Modelling and Prediction in a Complex World 337 90. David Byrne, Complexity Theory and Planning Theory: A Necessary Encounter 362 91. Robert Beauregard, Planning and the Network City: Discursive Correspondences 370 92. Michael Hebbert, New Urbanism – The Movement in Context 383 93. Jill Grant, Two Sides of a Coin? New Urbanism and Gated Communities 400 94. Jean Hillier, Plan(e) Speaking: a Multiplanar Theory of Spatial Planning 417 95. Louis Albrechts, Strategic (Spatial) Planning Re-examined 446 96. Klaus Kunzmann, Strategic Planning: A Chance for Spatial Innovation and Creativity 467 97. Luigi Mazza, If Strategic "Planning Is Everything, Maybe It’s Nothing”, comments on Albrechts and Balducci’s article : “Practicing Strategic Planning”
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Holdings
Item type Current library Collection Call number Status Notes Date due Barcode Item holds
Reference Books CEPT Library Reference Faculty of Planning 307.12 MAD Not For Loan GBP 775.00 (Rs.85095.00) for the set of 4 Vols. 026422
Total holds: 0

Contents
Volume IV: Planning with Contingency
Acknowledgements ix
Part 1: Critical Planning: Power, Conflict, and Social Justice 1
74. Bent Flyvbejrg, Habermas and Foucault: Thinkers for Civil Society? 1
75. Susan Fainstein, New Directions in Planning Theory 28
76. Margo Huxley and Oren Yiftachel, New Paradigm or Old Myopia? Unsettling the Communicative Turn in Planning Theory 56
77. Neil Smith, New Globalism, New Urbanism: Gentrification as Global Urban Strategy 76
78. David Harvey, The Right to the City 99
79. Heather Campbell, Just Planning: The Art of Situated Ethical Judgment 103
80. Vanessa Watson, Deep Difference: Diversity, Planning and Ethics 132
81. John Pløger, Strife: Urban Planning and Agonism 151
82. Michael Gunder, Planning as the Ideology of (Neoliberal) Space 172
Part 2: Deliberative Planning: Participation, Communication and Consensus 191
83. Patsy Healey, The Pragmatic Tradition in Planning Thought 193
84. Charles Hoch, Pragmatic Communicative Action Theory 225
85. John Forester, On the Theory and Practice of Critical Pragmatism: Deliberative Practice and Creative Negotiations 247
86. Stanley Stein and Thomas Harper, Rawls’s ‘Justice as Fairness’: A Moral Basis for Contemporary Planning Theory 316
87. Judith Innes and David Booher, Reframing Public Participation: Strategies for the 21st Century 293
88. Niraj Verma and Haeran Shin, Communicative Action and the Network Society: A Pragmatic Marriage? 316
Part 3: Spatial Planning: Adaptive Systems, Networks, and Strategies 335
89. Michael Batty and Paul Torrens, Modelling and Prediction in a Complex World 337
90. David Byrne, Complexity Theory and Planning Theory: A Necessary Encounter 362
91. Robert Beauregard, Planning and the Network City: Discursive Correspondences 370
92. Michael Hebbert, New Urbanism – The Movement in Context 383
93. Jill Grant, Two Sides of a Coin? New Urbanism and Gated Communities 400
94. Jean Hillier, Plan(e) Speaking: a Multiplanar Theory of Spatial Planning 417
95. Louis Albrechts, Strategic (Spatial) Planning Re-examined 446
96. Klaus Kunzmann, Strategic Planning: A Chance for Spatial Innovation and Creativity 467
97. Luigi Mazza, If Strategic "Planning Is Everything, Maybe It’s Nothing”, comments on Albrechts and Balducci’s article : “Practicing Strategic Planning”

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