Regional and area planning Books
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd The Poverty of Territorialism: A Neo-Medieval
Book SynopsisThis book explores the ways in which the EU features overlapping spheres of authority. Using territorial ideas prevalent in the Medieval Period, Andreas Faludi offers ways to rethink the current debates surrounding territorialism in the EU.Challenging contemporary European spatial planning, this book explores how modern planning puts the democratic control of state territories and their development in question. The notion of democracy in an increasingly interconnected world is a key issue, and as such Faludi advocates a Europe where national borders are questioned, and ultimately transgressed.Progressive and timely, this book is an invaluable read for academic and practicing planners concerned with European planning and co-operation. Critical social and political geographers will also benefit from the revolutionary insights Faludi offers.Trade Review'Andreas Faludi's book is original and inspiring. In his enquiry about ''territorialism'', he develops a concrete pedagogy of the irrelevance of national borders. Andreas, a leading expert in the field of spatial planning, modestly claims to stick to planning as his legitimate field, but has sufficient knowledge to think out of the box, and look at the big picture. Andreas is one of those rare people with the sufficient vision and systemic approach required to plan an interdependent world.' --Jean Peyrony, Mission opérationnelle transfrontalière, France'In his latest book, Andreas Faludi engagingly interweaves an academic discussion on territorialism and its challenges for spatial planning with his personal reflections on the history and possible future of the EU integration project.' --Stefanie Dühr, University of South Australia'In The Poverty of Territorialism Andreas Faludi challenges key concepts that the spatial planning community has come to love. Faludi's thoughts offer highly valuable inspiration to all those dealing with the future of regions, the nation state or even the European Union. Cutting edge planning literature!' --Jörg Knieling, HafenCity University Hamburg, GermanyTable of ContentsContents: Foreword Part I POSITIONING MYSELF 1. Territorialism: A First Approximation 2. Where the Journey Goes PART II TERRITORY AS AN ORDERING PRINCIPLE 3. Territorialism Explained 4. The Case For Territorialism 5. The Case Against Territorialism PART III THE UNION AND ITS TERRITORY 6. Territorialism and European Spatial Planning 7. Territorialism and a Union in Crisis PART IV A UNION WITHOUT A TERRITORY 8. The Union a Neo-medieval Empire 9. The European Archipelago PART V TO CONCLUDE 10. The Valley of Tears 11. Epilogue: Spatial Planning Outside the Box Index
£96.69
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Teaching Urban and Regional Planning: Innovative
Book SynopsisArguing that traditional approaches to planning are insufficient to address the complexities of transforming cities and regions in contemporary society, this innovative book makes the case for training planners in new and creative ways as coordinators, enablers and facilitators.An international range of teaching case studies offer a wide and distinctive set of ideas for the future of planning education along with practical tips to assist in adapting pedagogical approaches to various institutional settings. Additionally, the book promotes a stimulating interdisciplinary dialogue with contributions by leading educational specialists that situate the new and emergent approaches in planning education within the context of urban and regional challenges and the broader framework of contemporary pedagogical debates.This original book will be a valuable resource for academic scholars in urban, regional and spatial planning, and all those concerned with the future of higher education in relevant subjects. Chapters provide food for thought on making responsible choices while training planning professionals to act in a socially responsible manner and to support communities to think, design and deliver change in qualified ways.Trade Review‘This is a well-written international engagement with pedagogical innovation and change in planning education. I agree with the authors that right now, spatial planning is crucial to planetary survival but that there are profound challenges to overcome. The book provides a range of case studies that will provide the planning educator, or any other reader, an opportunity to examine how context interfaces with pedagogical approaches, and ultimately to learn from them.’ -- -- Nancy Odendaal, University of Cape Town, South AfricaTable of ContentsContents: Foreword xv Daniel Galland 1 Introduction: transformational change in planning education pedagogy? 1 Andrea I. Frank and Artur da Rosa Pires PART I PEDAGOGICAL DEBATES 2 Education for 21st century urban and spatial planning: critical postmodern pedagogies 20 Terry Lamb and Goran Vodicka 3 Planning education and planning the university: a becoming-symbiosis 39 Ronald Barnett PART II TEACHING AND LEARNING IN, FOR AND WITH COMMUNITIES 4 Pedagogy built on working with communities: a first semester core course 57 Ayse Yonder, Mercedes Narciso and Juan Camilo Osorio 5 Planning with the community: engaged professional education in ethno-nationally contested city 74 Rachel Kallus 6 Challenges in education of participatory planning: collaborating with patients and physicians to plan mental health facilities 94 Elsa Vivant 7 Beyond the classroom: new skills through community– university outreach 108 Camila D’Ottaviano and João Farias Rovati 8 Collaborative and innovative participatory planning pedagogies: reflections from the Community Participation in Planning project 125 Gavan Rafferty, Grazia Concilio, José Carlos Mota, Fernando Nogueira, Emma Puerari and Louise O’Kane PART III DEVELOPING NEW CLASSROOM-BASED COMPETENCIES 9 Urban design studio as a critical learning space within the architecture curriculum: the evolving pedagogical approach to “PROJECTO 5” 142 Teresa Calix 10 Addressing the interplay of design-based disciplines and social sciences in urban development education 157 Lukas Gilliard, Nadia Alaily-Mattar and Alain Thierstein 11 Using theatre and performance for greater reflexivity in planning and design education 174 Marleen Buizer and Iulian Barba Lata 12 MIKROAKADEMIE: peer learning to enrich the curriculum and enhance participation and self-reflection 188 Andreas Brück and Angela Million PART IV FURTHER EDUCATION AND LIFE-LONG CAPACITY BUILDING 13 Online, but not isolated: addressing a key challenge of digital distance learning 204 Adam Sheppard 14 A problem-based and process-oriented curriculum in continuing education 221 Anita Grams 15 Professional training for social responsibility: fundamentals and practice of a residency programme in architecture and urbanism 236 Maria L. Refinetti Martins and Paula Custódio de Oliveira 16 A student workshop on tactical urbanism: one day to change the 100th year neighbourhood? 251 Duygu Cihanger Ribeiro 17 Conclusion: nurturing new learning landscapes and pedagogies 267 Artur da Rosa Pires and Andrea I. Frank Index 281
£105.00
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Handbook on City and Regional Leadership
Book SynopsisIn this timely Handbook, people emerge at the centre of city and regional development debates from the perspective of leadership. It explores individuals and communities, not only as units that underpin aggregate measures or elements within systems, but as deliberative actors with ambitions, desires, strategies and objectivesDeepening the scholarly debate on leadership in cities and regions, the Handbook combines theoretical discussion and empirical evidence within methodological development to present a state-of-the-art view of a rapidly emerging field of study, highlighting paths for future research. Chapters explore power, politics, policy-making, social corporate responsibility and international city diplomacy through the lens of leadership, covering leadership in different countries from a broad range of theoretical perspectives.This Handbook is a valuable resource for academics and students of regional studies, human and economic geography, and policy studies. The conceptual discussion and case studies from different parts of the world will provide valuable examples for scholars, policy-makers and practitioners seeking a better understanding of what it takes to mobilise and co-ordinate complex multi-actor constellations for improvement of their respective places.Trade Review‘I consider this edited volume to be more than a welcome contribution and a notorious collection for all scholars, keen to understand the theoretical grounding, practices, patterns and types of leadership, as well as the manifestation of that leadership in local and regional socio-economic development and policy.’ -- Eduardo Oliveira, Eurasian Geography and Economics‘The Handbook on City and Regional Leadership is the first comprehensive overview of place leadership in urban and regional research, edited by pioneers of the concept, Markku Sotarauta and Andrew Beer. Publication of the Handbook is very timely with the significant growth of research on the importance of agency in regional development in recent years. The Handbook covers a broad range of topics ranging from theoretical issues and empirical studies to methodological questions. It contains a rich and stimulating compilation of chapters and is a must-read for researchers as well as policy makers interested in promoting place leadership.’Table of ContentsContents: Preface xi PART I THE SETUP AND THE PLOT 1 Introduction to city and regional leadership 2 Markku Sotarauta and Andrew Beer 2 Place, city, regional, rural … leadership: a review 19 Andrew Beer, Markku Sotarauta and Karen Ayles PART II THEORETICAL AND THEMATIC AREAS 3 Old wine in a new bottle: Revisiting organisational conceptions of leadership to understand what place leaders ‘actually’ do to make things happen 41 Alyson Nicholds 4 Place leadership, policy-making and politics 57 Alessandro Sancino, Leslie Budd and Michela Pagani 5 Re-imagining place leadership as social purpose 71 John Gibney and Alyson Nicholds 6 Roles of formal and informal leadership: civil society leadership interaction with political leadership in local development 91 Oto Potluka 7 Place leadership and corporate spatial responsibilities 108 Hans-Hermann Albers and Lech Suwala 8 Place-based leadership ‘beyond place’: the rise of international city diplomacy 131 Robin Hambleton 9 Combinatorial power and place leadership 152 Markku Sotarauta PART III EMPIRICAL STUDIES 10 From coal-mining to data-mining: the role of leadership in the emergence of a regional innovation system in an old industrial region 168 Jiří Blažek and Viktor Květoň 11 The supporting and hampering role of place leadership in Italian industrial districts 187 Marco Bellandi, Monica Plechero and Erica Santini 12 Patterns of place leadership: institutional change and path development in peripheral regions 203 Markku Sotarauta, Heli Kurikka, and Jari Kolehmainen 13 Universities and place leadership: a question of agency and alignment 226 Liliana Fonseca, Lisa Nieth, Maria Salomaa and Paul Benneworth 14 Establishing leadership in a ‘busy’ governance structure 248 Martin Quinn 15 Inclusive leadership and local economic development: perspectives from Latin American peripheral regions 266 Sergio Montero and Andrés M. Medina-Garzón PART IV METHODOLOGY 16 Theory, methods and innovation in the study of place leadership: a review of the opportunity 281 Andrew Beer and Jacob Irving 17 Investigating agency: methodological and empirical challenges 302 Markus Grillitsch, Josephine V. Rekers and Markku Sotarauta 18 Action research as a methodology for the construction of territorial leadership 324 James Karlsen and Miren Larrea 19 Narrative and leadership: lessons for policy and place leadership 343 Helen Dinmore and Andrew Beer Index
£160.00
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Sharing Knowledge for Land Use Management:
Book SynopsisIn Arctic and northern communities, livelihoods and land use depend heavily on natural resources. Decision-making processes around the use of natural resources are often contested and given their importance to these communities the participation of local stakeholders is vital. This timely book presents practices that have been developed with key stakeholders to improve the collection and utilization of locally relevant knowledge in land use planning. Chapters illustrate how indigenous and local knowledge (ILK) can be made spatially explicit by using, for example, participatory GIS. Focusing on countries including Greenland, Iceland, Faroe Islands, Ireland, Finland, Norway and Sweden, this book pays particular attention to the recognized challenges of these regions, including the relationships between local and national actors and indigenous and other local populations.Sharing Knowledge for Land Use Management will be a key resource for students and researchers of geography, planning, regional and tourism studies as well as planning authorities and consultants, offering new ideas and tools for the inclusion of local knowledge in decision making processes.Trade Review‘The importance of public participation in decision-making has for decades been acknowledged, but cost-effective tools are unfortunately still lacking. The book emphasizes opportunities offered by the rapid technical development within geographical information systems (GIS) that greatly facilitate public participation and co-operation between the public, academics and political decision makers. The book is well organized, with easily readable texts for non-experts, and is highly recommended for anyone interested in improving social equity in decision-making.’ -- Guðrún Pétursdóttir, University of Iceland‘Increasingly, researchers working in northern contexts are required to bring different groups and types of knowledge together to better inform policies, practices, and decisions related to natural resource governance. Many efforts thus far have proven unsuccessful. The value of this book is that it demonstrates effective methods for generating shared knowledge, illustrating ways that both western scientists and indigenous peoples can work together using contemporary approaches to foster common interests and advance a sustainable and shared future.’ -- Maureen G. Reed, University of Saskatchewan, Canada‘Lapland in Finland, with Rovaniemi as its capital, has become an important international tourism destination in recent years due to its natural environment, clean air, tourism activities and northern lights. This edited volume is very timely in that it offers great ideas and tools to address the ever more urgent issue of developing tourism in a sustainable way and reconciling it with other land use modes.’ -- Esko Lotvonen, Mayor of Rovaniemi, Lapland, FinlandTable of ContentsContents: Preface xiv 1 Building shared knowledge capital to support natural resource governance in the northern periphery: concepts and challenges 1 John McDonagh, Seija Tuulentie and Ari Nikula 2 Indigenous and local knowledge in land use planning: a comparative analysis 16 Minna Turunen, Inkeri Markkula, Karl Brix Zinglersen, Hans Holt Poulsen, Per Sandström and Stefan Sandström 3 Whose knowledge is it anyway? Apprehensions around sharing knowledge of natural resources in the northern peripheries 29 Seija Tuulentie, Gun Lidestav, Inkeri Markkula, Karl Brix Zinglersen, Marie Søndergaard and Minna Turunen 4 Traditional knowledge and natural resource governance: a gender perspective 42 Gun Lidestav, Ragnhei›ur Bogadóttir, Rannveig Ólafsdóttir, Eva-Lisa Myntti, Per Sandström and Stefan Sandström 5 Who is the public and where is participation in participatory GIS and public participation GIS 55 Stefan Sandström, Per Sandström and Ari Nikula 6 PPGIS for a better understanding of people’s values: experiences from Finland and the Faroe Islands 70 Ari Nikula, Minna Turunen, Ragnhei›ur Bogadóttir, Inkeri Markkula and Sini Kantola 7 The contradictory role of tourism in the northern peripheries: overcrowding, overtourism and the importance of tourism for rural development 86 Rannveig Ólafsdóttir, Seija Tuulentie, Gestur Hovgaard, Karl Brix Zinglersen, Marita Svartá, Hans Holt Poulsen and Marie Søndergaard 8 ‘Nothing is sustainable the way it is’ – reflections on local sustainability perceptions and interpretations 100 John McDonagh, Rannveig Ólafsdóttir, Louise Weir, Marie Mahon, Maura Farrell and Therese Conway 9 ‘There’s no transfer of knowledge, it’s all one way’ – the importance of integrating local knowledge and fostering knowledge sharing practices in natural resource utilisation 116 John McDonagh, Rannveig Ólafsdóttir, Louise Weir, Marie Mahon, Maura Farrell, Johannes Welling and Therese Conway 10 ‘Who knew digitizing and dialogue could change the course of reindeer herding rights? We know, now’: building bridges between knowledge systems and over highways 130 Per Sandström, Eva-Lisa Myntti, Stefan Sandström, Niklas Jonsson, Gun Lidestav and Tobias Jonsson 11 Social licence to operate: is local acceptance of economic development enhancing social sustainability? 144 Leena Suopajärvi, Arvid Viken, Gaute Svensson and Sanna Pettersson 12 Participation, local knowledge and decision-making: challenging the boundaries, realizing the opportunities 160 John McDonagh and Seija Tuulentie Index 171
£89.00
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Quantitative Methods for Place-Based Innovation
Book SynopsisBuilding on the experience of more than one hundred innovation strategies for smart specialisation, this book uncovers insights into their recent implementation by regional and national governments in the European Union. Although designed to boost the competitiveness of Europe and its regions, chapters analyse why the implementation of this policy model was much more complicated than expected. Offering an in-depth understanding of territories and their complexity, and highlighting why this is crucial to the topic, this timely book explores the importance of place-based innovation policy instead of a one-size-fits-all variety. It provides new reflections on the conceptual approaches for the identification of innovation priorities, the data required, the methods through which the data can be turned into useful information and the mapping of the information available. This book's insights into how the economic, scientific, innovative and societal potential of cities, regions and countries can be measured will be useful for policy-makers looking to learn from the smart specialisation of Europe. Public policy and economic innovation scholars will appreciate the strong case studies analysed in the book combined with in-depth analysis of different methodologies. Contributors include: R. Capello, A. Conte, N. Cortinovis, T. Dogaru, S. Franco, E. Fuster, C. Gianelle, H. Hollanders, A. Kleibrink, H. Kroll, C. Lenzi, G. Mandras, F.A. Massucci, M. Matusiak, A. Murciego, J. van Haaren, F. van OortTrade Review'Building on the experience of the implementation of smart specialisation in EU regions the book discusses mapping tools that may be used for the design of innovation policies. It proposes a broader way of looking at innovation which requires an in-depth understanding of territories and their complexity. The book is a must read for anyone interested in innovation policy at regional level.' --Donato Iacobucci, Università Politecnica delle Marche, Italy'The book addresses one of the key difficulties in identification of regional innovation priorities, the data required, and methods to map and turn data into useful information. In the time of data proliferation, the volume provides a thorough review of the landscape of data and analytics needed to monitor and answer the most pressing of questions when designing evidence-based smart specialization strategies. An important and timely resource for policy makers and practitioners, especially when designing the next generation of innovation strategies and fulfilling the enabling conditions set by the European Union.' --Anwar Aridi, The World Bank, US'This is a refreshing book on new perspectives for innovation policies. One of the forgotten dimensions in this field has been the significance of regional specificities and territorial constellations for the innovation potential of regions and cities. The novel place-based approach - in relation to a smart specialisation policy - provides a promising scientific signpost for modern spatial innovation policy. This volume contains a great collection of informed, quantitative contributions on place-based innovation strategies.' --Peter Nijkamp, Tinbergen Institute, AmsterdamTable of ContentsContents: Chapter 1: Mapping industrial and territorial dimensions for the design of place-based innovation policies: the rationale of the book Roberta Capello, Alexander Kleibrink and Monika Matusiak PART 1: UNDERSTANDING THE ECONOMIC FABRIC OF TERRITORIES Chapter 2: Establishing the Fundament for RIS3 Regional Innovation Policies - Mapping Economic Specialisation Henning Kroll Chapter 3: Mapping relatedness in European regions Frank van Oort, Nicola Cortinovis, Teodora Dogaru and Jeroen van Haaren Chapter 4: Mapping global value chains Giovanni Mandras and Andrea Conte PART 2: UNDERSTANDING THE TERRITORIAL DIMENSION OF INNOVATION Chapter 5: Mapping regional innovation patterns and their evolution Roberta Capello and Camilla Lenzi Chapter 6: Mapping innovation potential for place-based innovation policies Hugo Hollanders and Monika Matusiak Chapter 7. Learning from Similar Regions: How to Benchmark Innovation Systems Beyond Rankings Susana Franco, Carlo Gianelle, Alexander Kleibrink and Asier Murciego Chapter 8: Identifying specialisation domains beyond taxonomies: mapping scientific and technological domains of specialisation via semantic analysis Enric Fuster, Francesco Massucci and Monika Matusiak Index
£104.00
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Advanced Introduction to Housing Studies
Book SynopsisElgar Advanced Introductions are stimulating and thoughtful introductions to major fields in the social sciences, business and law, expertly written by the world's leading scholars. Designed to be accessible yet rigorous, they offer concise and lucid surveys of the substantive and policy issues associated with discrete subject areas.This timely Advanced Introduction explores the links between housing and households, including the complex process of how people sort themselves into houses and neighborhoods. It covers the choices that households make, why these choices are made, and the constraints faced in achieving housing aspirations, with a particular focus on the contemporary difficulties facing young adults and those unable to buy a house despite a reasonable income.Key features include: using the concept of the life course to analyse residential decisions and choices discussing tenure choice, affordability and social housing, as well as how neighborhoods matter in urban studies reviewing what is known about how the housing market operates, and how families and individuals engage with the process of becoming homeowners providing new information on the urban housing environment in a time of rising inequality, low income growth and extensive regulation in the housing market. Advanced students and professionals of geography, planning, demography and economics will find this an invigorating read on how housing markets operate and the role of individual decisions about homeownership and residential space.Trade Review‘The book's interdisciplinary and multi-country approach to housing studies is a strength. As is its multiscalar understanding of housing access, starting from the individual household through the lens of residential moves, to housing units based on their design and geographic placement, then to neighborhoods as independent social units sorting residents and housing across the urban mosaic, and finally to the institutional and country levels through macro demographic forces and policies shaping housing demand and supply. Written in a clear style, this book is suitable for students and scholars in geography, sociology, urban studies, urban planning, economics, and regional studies.’ -- Noli Brazil, Journal of Urban Affairs'William A.V. Clark shares four decades of wisdom in housing studies to craft a sweeping overview and broad integration of this multi-faceted field. Scholars in urban economics, geography, sociology, and public policy and planning can all profit from this high-level orientation that links supply and demand, markets and institutions, and dynamics of people moving across urban space. Specialists will find new light shed about context and implications, and every chapter features nuggets of deeper insight.' -- - Dowell Myers, University of Southern California, US'Written by one of the leading international housing researchers, this valuable wide ranging introduction covers issues of housing demand and supply, sustainability, social housing and affordability; housing and social life and demography. It provides a stimulating, clearly written and very useful resource.' -- Chris Hamnett, King's College London, UK and Renmin University of China'25 years after the book Households and Housing that he co-authored with the late Frans Dieleman, William A.V. Clark publishes a new book on housing. The book builds on around 40 years of scholarly research from various disciplines by the author himself--a world-leading expert in the field--and many others. Highly recommended!' -- - Clara H. Mulder, University of Groningen, the NetherlandsTable of ContentsContents: Preface PART I HOUSING AND HOUSING MARKETS 1. Interdisciplinary perspectives on housing 2. Housing markets and the housing supply 3. Changing locations: housing choices and housing PART II NEIGHBORHOODS AND SOCIAL LIFE 4. Neighborhood contexts: how they shape where and how we live 5. Housing and social life 6. Housing and sustainable living PART III HOUSING AND POLICY 7. Affordability and inequality in the housing market 8. Social housing and the housing safety net 9. The evolving role of housing studies References Index
£89.00
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Advanced Introduction to Housing Studies
Book SynopsisElgar Advanced Introductions are stimulating and thoughtful introductions to major fields in the social sciences, business and law, expertly written by the world's leading scholars. Designed to be accessible yet rigorous, they offer concise and lucid surveys of the substantive and policy issues associated with discrete subject areas.This timely Advanced Introduction explores the links between housing and households, including the complex process of how people sort themselves into houses and neighborhoods. It covers the choices that households make, why these choices are made, and the constraints faced in achieving housing aspirations, with a particular focus on the contemporary difficulties facing young adults and those unable to buy a house despite a reasonable income.Key features include: using the concept of the life course to analyse residential decisions and choices discussing tenure choice, affordability and social housing, as well as how neighborhoods matter in urban studies reviewing what is known about how the housing market operates, and how families and individuals engage with the process of becoming homeowners providing new information on the urban housing environment in a time of rising inequality, low income growth and extensive regulation in the housing market. Advanced students and professionals of geography, planning, demography and economics will find this an invigorating read on how housing markets operate and the role of individual decisions about homeownership and residential space.Trade Review‘The book's interdisciplinary and multi-country approach to housing studies is a strength. As is its multiscalar understanding of housing access, starting from the individual household through the lens of residential moves, to housing units based on their design and geographic placement, then to neighborhoods as independent social units sorting residents and housing across the urban mosaic, and finally to the institutional and country levels through macro demographic forces and policies shaping housing demand and supply. Written in a clear style, this book is suitable for students and scholars in geography, sociology, urban studies, urban planning, economics, and regional studies.’ -- Noli Brazil, Journal of Urban Affairs'William A.V. Clark shares four decades of wisdom in housing studies to craft a sweeping overview and broad integration of this multi-faceted field. Scholars in urban economics, geography, sociology, and public policy and planning can all profit from this high-level orientation that links supply and demand, markets and institutions, and dynamics of people moving across urban space. Specialists will find new light shed about context and implications, and every chapter features nuggets of deeper insight.' -- - Dowell Myers, University of Southern California, US'Written by one of the leading international housing researchers, this valuable wide ranging introduction covers issues of housing demand and supply, sustainability, social housing and affordability; housing and social life and demography. It provides a stimulating, clearly written and very useful resource.' -- Chris Hamnett, King's College London, UK and Renmin University of China'25 years after the book Households and Housing that he co-authored with the late Frans Dieleman, William A.V. Clark publishes a new book on housing. The book builds on around 40 years of scholarly research from various disciplines by the author himself--a world-leading expert in the field--and many others. Highly recommended!' -- - Clara H. Mulder, University of Groningen, the NetherlandsTable of ContentsContents: Preface PART I HOUSING AND HOUSING MARKETS 1. Interdisciplinary perspectives on housing 2. Housing markets and the housing supply 3. Changing locations: housing choices and housing PART II NEIGHBORHOODS AND SOCIAL LIFE 4. Neighborhood contexts: how they shape where and how we live 5. Housing and social life 6. Housing and sustainable living PART III HOUSING AND POLICY 7. Affordability and inequality in the housing market 8. Social housing and the housing safety net 9. The evolving role of housing studies References Index
£22.95
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Big Data Applications in Geography and Planning:
Book SynopsisThis unique book demonstrates the utility of big data approaches in human geography and planning. Offering a carefully curated selection of case studies, it reveals how researchers are accessing big data, what this data looks like and how such data can offer new and important insights and knowledge.Contributions from key scholars working in the field bring together an international series of case studies on demography and migration, retail and consumer analytics, health care planning, urban planning and transport studies. Chapters also discuss how data sets leveraged from commercial and public agency sources can greatly improve the data traditionally worked with in academic geography, regional science and planning. While addressing the challenges and limitations of big data, the book also demonstrates the usefulness of data sets held by commercial agencies and explores data linkage between big data and traditional public domain data sources.Focusing on the applications of big data to investigate issues in a spatial context, this book will be an essential guide for scholars and students of planning, mobility and human geography, particularly those who specialise in economic and transport geography. Its use of key case studies to demonstrate the applications of big data analytics in planning will also be useful for planners in these fields.Trade Review‘This is a very timely book featuring a collection of contributions from some of the world’s leading scholars working in the equivalent of social science’s ‘‘Wild West‘‘ - the world of Big Data. This book is indeed an essential companion for anyone wishing to understand the breadth of opportunities and challenges presented by data which lie outside of the traditional official statistics disseminated by governments. It will provide inspiration for those willing to take themselves out of their comfort zone and a glimpse of what is possible.‘Table of ContentsContents: 1 Introduction to Big Data Applications in Geography and Planning 1 Mark Birkin, Graham Clarke, Jonathan Corcoran and Robert Stimson 2 Using social media advertising data to estimate migration trends over time 8 Monica Alexander 3 Estimating household mobility using novel big data 25 Nik Lomax 4 Using linked consumer and administrative data to model demographic changes in London’s city fringe 43 Justin van Dijk, Guy Lansley and Paul Longley 5 Combining large linked social service microdata and geospatial data to identify vulnerable populations in New Zealand 52 Lukas Marek, James Greenwell, Matthew Hobbs, John McCarthy, Jesse Wiki, Malcolm Campbell, Simon Kingham and Melanie Tomintz 6 The changing geography of clinical misery in England: lessons in spatio-temporal data analysis 64 Alexis Comber, Chris Brunsdon, Martin Charlton and John Cromby 7 Utilising smartphone data to explore spatial influences on physical activity 78 Francesca Pontin 8 Spatial extent and classification of retail agglomerations 92 Les Dolega 9 Applications of store loyalty card big data in the location planning process 106 Nick Hood, Graham Clarke, Andy Newing and Tim Rains 10 Online content of local interest and how it attracts individuals online 120 Emmanouil Tranos and Christoph Stich 11 Smart cities, big data: an overview 143 Robert Stimson and Chris Pettit 12 Is Sydney a 30-minute city? Big data analytics assisting to bring political rhetoric into practice 168 Simone Leao, Mohammad Hassan, Taha Rashidi and Chris Pettit 13 Data and public participation in national strategic planning 188 Eliahu Stern, Sheizaf Rafaeli and Arza Churchman 14 Goldmine or minefield? The methodological challenges associated with the analysis of the FixMyStreet neighbourhood problems dataset 205 Alasdair Rae and Elvis Nyanzu 15 Big data applications in urban transport research in Chinese cities: an overview 219 Sui Tao, Min Zhang and Jiangyue Wu 16 Unpacking the weather–transit ridership relationship using big data in Brisbane and beyond 244 Ming Wei, Yan Liu, Thomas Sigler and Jonathan Corcoran 17 Spatial microsimulation models for rail travel: a West Yorkshire case study 255 Eusebio Odiari, Mark Birkin, Susan Grant-Muller and Nick Malleson Index
£164.00
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Elgar Encyclopedia in Urban and Regional Planning
Book SynopsisThis ground-breaking Encyclopedia provides a nuanced overview of the key concepts of urban and regional planning and design. Embracing a broad understanding of planning and design within and beyond the professions, it examines what planners and designers can do in and for a community. Covering both classic and novel planning theories, this Encyclopedia adopts an evolutionary perspective, reflecting on the changing meanings of terms over time. Featuring over 140 contributions drawn from diverse fields, it highlights the cross-disciplinary nature of planning and design. Contributors give practical insight into the field, and advance scientific knowledge and public conversation on planning and design.The Elgar Encyclopedia in Urban and Regional Planning and Design will be an essential resource for students and scholars of planning, design, urban studies and governance. It will also be highly useful for practitioners and civil servants seeking to deepen their understanding of public works, planning and environmental policy.Key Features: Critical perspectives on core concepts and debates Reflection on how to avoid reproducing current power/knowledge relations Explores connections between fields and disciplines in planning and design Extensive cross-referencing between entries Table of ContentsContents: Introduction to the Elgar encyclopedia in urban and regional planning and design: the productive fiction of unity in diversity 1 Kristof Van Assche, Raoul Beunen and Martijn Duineveld 1 Adaptive planning 5 Gert de Roo 2 Adaptive reuse 8 Bie Plevoets and Francesca Lanz 3 Advocacy planning 11 Martijn Duineveld, Raoul Beunen and Kristof Van Assche 4 Affordable housing 13 Alan Mallach 5 Agonism 16 John Erik Pløger 6 Area-based management tools 19 Froukje Maria Platjouw 7 Art: public art and planning 21 Tony Matthews 8 Assemblage 23 Gareth Abrahams 9 Asset and asset-based development 27 Ivis García 10 Autopoietic social systems and planning thought 31 Angelique Chettiparamb 11 Big data and machine learning 35 Lasse Gerrits and Sofia Pagliarin 12 Big Other 38 Elham Bahmanteymouri 13 Biophilic urbanism 40 Timothy Beatley 14 Biopolitics 44 Claudio Minca 15 Blueprint planning 47 Kristof Van Assche, Raoul Beunen and Martijn Duineveld 16 Boundary organisation 49 Daan Boezeman 17 Boundary spanning 52 Daan Boezeman 18 Brownfield development 53 Luís Carlos Loures 19 Central planning, its geographies and scales 56 Barbara Czarniawska 20 Citizen science in spatial and environmental problems 59 Lasse Gerrits, Alexander Los and Sofia Pagliarin 21 Climate change adaptation planning and resilience 63 S. Jeff Birchall and Danielle Koleyak 22 Colonial legacies in planning and design 67 Kristof Van Assche, Martijn Duineveld and Raoul Beunen 23 Commons 69 Stefano Moroni 24 Communicative planning theory and its critiques 71 Raine Mäntysalo 25 Complexity and planning 74 Gert de Roo 26 Conflict and shock 78 Martijn Duineveld, Kristof Van Assche and Raoul Beunen 27 Conservation subdivision design 80 Randall Arendt 28 Corruption 87 Stefano Moroni 29 Creativity 89 Raoul Beunen, Kristof Van Assche and Martijn Duineveld 30 Critical planning 91 Martijn Duineveld, Raoul Beunen and Kristof Van Assche 31 Culture and planning culture 92 Frank Othengrafen 32 Density 96 Jill L. Grant 33 Dependencies in planning and governance 100 Kristof Van Assche, Raoul Beunen and Martijn Duineveld 34 Design: public–private divides in the urban realm 102 Ali Madanipour 35 Design: tensions and ambiguities 104 Ali Madanipour 36 Desire, drive, disavowal 106 Elham Bahmanteymouri 37 Digitalization in planning 111 Anna M. Hersperger, Sofia Pagliarin and Lasse Gerrits 38 Disability and urban planning 115 Lisa Stafford and Matt Novacevski 39 Dispositif 118 John Erik Pløger 40 Downtown development and revitalization 122 Dagney Faulk 41 Earthly attachments in the Anthropocene 125 Edward H. Huijbens 42 Ecosystems-based governance 129 Froukje Maria Platjouw 43 Ecosystems services 132 Davide Geneletti and Chiara Cortinovis 44 Energy and strategic energy planning 134 Martijn Gerritsen 45 Environmental justice 137 Stijn Neuteleers 46 European spatial planning 142 Andreas Faludi 47 Experiment 146 Torill Nyseth 48 Expertise and local knowledge 148 Raoul Beunen, Martijn Duineveld and Kristof Van Assche 49 Foresight and visioning 150 Timothy J. Dixon 50 Fragility, resilience and design 153 Esther Charlesworth and John Fien 51 Garden City and Garden City ideas 157 Christine Garnaut 52 Genius loci and design 160 Randall S. Lindstrom 53 Green activism 165 Michael Hardman 54 Heritage planning 167 Karim van Knippenberg 55 History: learning from urban and environmental history 169 Jill L. Grant 56 Homelessness policy and planning 175 Joshua Evans 57 Identity 179 Martijn Duineveld, Kristof Van Assche and Raoul Beunen 58 Ideology 181 Martijn Duineveld, Kristof Van Assche and Raoul Beunen 59 Inclusion/exclusion 183 Martijn Duineveld, Raoul Beunen and Kristof Van Assche 60 Indigenous planning 185 Theodore Jojola 61 Informal settlements 189 Debadutta Parida 62 Informality 193 Raoul Beunen, Kristof Van Assche and Martijn Duineveld 63 Infrastructure and planning 195 Tim Busscher and Marijn van Geet 64 Innovation 199 Kristof Van Assche, Raoul Beunen and Martijn Duineveld 65 Institutions and institutionalism 201 Kristof Van Assche, Raoul Beunen and Martijn Duineveld 66 Insurgent planning 203 Efadul Huq 67 International and transnational planning 205 Raoul Beunen, Martijn Duineveld and Kristof Van Assche 68 Lacan’s four discourses in planning 207 Mohsen Mohammadzadeh 69 Lacanian approaches to planning 212 Elham Bahmanteymouri 70 Land consolidation 215 Terry van Dijk 71 Legibility 217 Derk Jan Stobbelaar 72 Line of flight 220 Gareth Abrahams 73 Livelihoods, planning for 222 Martijn Duineveld, Raoul Beunen and Kristof Van Assche 74 Long-term perspectives and futures 224 Peter Pelzer and Wieke Pot 75 Master signifiers 228 Mohsen Mohammadzadeh 76 Memory, legacy, history 231 Martijn Duineveld, Kristof Van Assche and Raoul Beunen 77 Methods 233 Kristof Van Assche, Martijn Duineveld and Raoul Beunen 78 Milieu 235 Jean Hillier 79 Mixed-use 239 Markus Moos and Tara Vinodrai 80 Modernism and planning 241 Martijn Duineveld, Raoul Beunen and Kristof Van Assche 81 Multiplicity 243 Freek de Haan 82 Narrative 247 Martijn Duineveld, Kristof Van Assche and Raoul Beunen 83 Neighbourhood design 249 Ali Madanipour 84 Network governance 253 Joop Koppenjan 85 New public management 257 Kris Hartley 86 New urbanism 260 Katherine Perrott 87 Noise and city design 263 Juan Miguel Barrigón Morillas, Guillermo Rey Gozalo and David Montes González 88 Nomocracy 266 Stefano Moroni 89 Object formation 268 Henk-Jan Kooij 90 Organization theory, lessons for the relation between planning and politics 271 Barbara Czarniawska 91 Participation 274 Torill Nyseth 92 Participatory planning and design 277 Jesus J. Lara 93 Place-based development 280 Greg Halseth, Laura Ryser and Sean Markey 94 Place branding in strategic spatial planning 284 Eduardo da Silva Oliveira 95 Policy integration 288 Jeroen J.L. Candel 96 Polycentricity 290 Wil Zonneveld 97 Post-colonialism – and beyond 295 Patrick Devlieger 98 Post-disaster planning 297 Robert Coates and Jeroen Warner 99 Power and planning 301 Raphaël Fischler 100 Power in planning literature 303 Martijn Duineveld, Raoul Beunen and Kristof Van Assche 101 Power/knowledge 305 Raoul Beunen, Martijn Duineveld and Kristof Van Assche 102 Property 307 Benjamin David Davy 103 Property rights and planning 310 Eran S. Kaplinsky 104 Public debate, discussion and dialogue 312 Noelle Aarts 105 Public interest 314 Stefano Moroni 106 Public–private partnerships 316 Stefan Verweij 107 Qualitative comparative analysis in planning studies 320 Lasse Gerrits and Sofia Pagliarin 108 Rationality and planning 324 Gert de Roo 109 Regional design 328 Terry van Dijk 110 Regional planning 330 Raoul Beunen, Martijn Duineveld and Kristof Van Assche 111 Research through design 332 Sanda Lenzholzer 112 Resource towns: mining and social disruption 334 Lochner Marais 113 Rhetoric 336 James Throgmorton 114 Rhythmanalysis in planning 338 Robin A. Chang 115 Rules 341 Stefano Moroni 116 Self-organization 343 Ward Rauws 117 Shrinking cities and urban shrinkage 347 Marjan Marjanović 118 Smart cities: hype and reality 351 Sofia Pagliarin and Lasse Gerrits 119 Smart growth 354 Katherine Perrott 120 Social capital in governance and sustainable development 357 Stefan Partelow 121 Social-ecological systems 362 Fikret Berkes 122 Social innovation and planning 365 Gert Verschraegen and Stijn Oosterlynck 123 Social justice 370 Susan S. Fainstein 124 Spatial planning concepts 373 Wil Zonneveld 125 Sprawl 375 Hans Leinfelder and Edwin Buitelaar 126 Storytelling 377 Terry van Dijk 127 Strata 378 Gareth Abrahams 128 Strategic navigation 380 Jean Hillier 129 Strategic spatial planning 383 Räine Mäntysalo 130 Strategy 387 Raoul Beunen, Kristof Van Assche and Martijn Duineveld 131 Systems thinking 389 Kristof Van Assche, Raoul Beunen and Martijn Duineveld 132 Therapy, planning as 392 Lisa Schweitzer 133 Think tanks 395 Daan Boezeman 134 Transition 396 René Kemp and Patrick Huntjens 135 Transversality 399 Jean Hillier 136 Trust 402 Jasper R. de Vries 137 Urban climate responsive planning and design 404 Sanda Lenzholzer 138 Utopia 406 David Pinder 139 Values and rational judgments: the role of ethics 408 Claudia Basta 140 Verticality 412 Ana Aceska 141 Walkability 415 Katherine Perrott 142 Waste picking 418 Radhika Borde 143 Youthification 420 Markus Moos 144 Zoning 423 Raphaël Fischler
£210.00
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Spatial Inequalities and Wellbeing: A
Book SynopsisSpatial Inequalities and Wellbeing represents a timely contribution to the literature tackling one of the most crucial concerns of modern times: the rise of inequalities and its far-reaching implications for individual wellbeing. Taking a multidisciplinary perspective, the book highlights the different types and sources of inequalities and identifies opportunities for policy action to tackle various inequalities at once.Featuring expert contributions from eminent scholars, this insightful book posits that policies themselves can produce deep inequalities at the spatial level while trying to reduce them and also explores how inequalities and marginalisation depress individual wellbeing and can become a threat to political and institutional stability. Chapters critically analyse the causes of spatial inequalities, ranging from education and housing to location in the largest cities. The book also highlights the negative consequences of these gaps widening, and emphasises how participatory and bottom-up interventions can contribute to narrowing such disparities at the micro-level.Academics, researchers and students in urban and regional studies; human geography; economics and finance; politics and public policy; and sociology and social policy will find this to be an informative read. Policymakers within these fields will equally find this to be a beneficial resource.Trade Review‘The work is presented through up-to-date and scholarly comparative chapters that are immensely topical and timely. Contemporary European societies are facing the twin trends of growing socio-economic disparities between people and places, and the expansion of a regressive political populism that is undermining attempts to foster greater cohesion. This book contributes to the development and re-assertion of progressive agendas founded on social justice and the propagation of well-being.’ -- Mike Raco, University College London, UK‘Spatial Inequalities and Wellbeing: A Multidisciplinary Approach is a brilliant and original contribution to the analysis of the new spatial dimension of social inequalities in EU countries. Through the innovative lens of a multi-scalar perspective, the book deals with different aspects of the challenges related to spatial inequalities and wellbeing, using different disciplinary approaches ranging from regional economics to urban studies, from economic and urban geography to planning.’ -- Gabriele Pasqui, Politecnico di Milano, ItalyTable of ContentsContents: Introduction: the interplay among inequalities, wellbeing and space 1 Camilla Lenzi and Valeria Fedeli 1 Spatial Inequalities in an Era of Modern Reindustrialization 16 Roberta Capello and Silvia Cerisola 2 Left behind places and local democracy: German small towns under the conditions of peripheralisation 33 Thilo Lang, Franziska Görmar, Stefan Haunstein and Martin Graffenberger 3 Resolving the Urban Wellbeing Paradox: The Role of Education and Social Contact 52 Philip S. Morrison 4 Housing and Urban-Rural Differences in Subjective Wellbeing in the Netherlands 95 Marloes Hoogerbrugge and Martijn J. Burger 5 Urbanization and the Geography of Societal Discontent 116 Camilla Lenzi and Giovanni Perucca 6 Regional disparities in the sensitivity of wellbeing to poverty measures 133 Cristina Bernini, Silvia Emili and Maria Rosaria Ferrante 7 Spatial Inequalities and International Cooperation Projects: a Bottom-up Wellbeing Model for Inclusion 155 Daniela De Leo and Valentina Vittoria Calabrese 8 Behind Left and Right – Disentangling the Voting Behaviour of Radical Parties in Europe 173 Luise Koeppen, Dimitris Ballas, Arjen Edzes and Sierdjan Koster 9 Spatial justice: the contemporary uncertainties of the French model 212 Valeria Fedeli
£100.00
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Regional Economic Systems after COVID-19:
Book SynopsisHealing the economic and social wounds inflicted by the COVID-19 pandemic will take time, but the long road to recovery presents a unique opportunity to build back better. To catalyze change and succeed in the post-pandemic era, economic development policy and practice must see the crisis as an opportunity to rethink and redesign regional economic systems. This will involve creating a shared understanding of – and policies to address – the differential impacts of the pandemic across occupations, industries, and socioeconomic groups.Rethinking how existing economic development tools, frameworks, and practices can be optimized has never been more compelling. Special attention must be given to interventions capable of accelerating desirable trends that will shape the next normal in our contemporary discussions on the COVID-19 pandemic. This book explores the challenges and opportunities heralded by the virus in the broadest sense and presents case studies on equitable and inclusive economic recoveries.Regional Economic Systems after COVID-19 offers actionable insights for regional policymakers, business leaders, investment and trade promotion agencies, site selectors, students, scholars, researchers, and organizations involved in tourism, foreign direct investment, and economic development.Table of ContentsContents: PART I THE ECONOMIC REDESIGN IMPERATIVE 1 Introduction: the economic redesign imperative 2 Fred Olayele PART II OCCUPATIONAL IDENTITY, REGIONAL RESPONSES, AND POPULATION DENSITY 2 Striving despite disruption: young people’s occupational identity and economic opportunity during COVID-19 10 Jaclyn Kelly and Anindya Kundu 3 COVID-19 in New Zealand: consequences, policies, and regional responses 41 David Wilson, Patrick McVeigh and Harvey Brookes 4 The overblown role of population density in the COVID-19 pandemic in New York City 67 Yu Zhong and Bertrand Teirlinck PART III EQUITABLE AND INCLUSIVE ECONOMIC RECOVERIES AND CASE STUDIES 5 Gender equality as an economic imperative in a post-pandemic era 94 Bernadette Maria Antão Fernandes and Herb Emery 6 The imperative of childcare provision as critical infrastructure 112 Melissa Pumphrey and Poorvi Goel 7 The future of work and inclusion: case studies and takeaways for economic developers 133 Swati Ghosh and Louise Anderson PART IV FACTOR REALLOCATION AND REGIONAL INNOVATION ECOSYSTEMS 8 Modeling decreased labor access after the COVID-19 pandemic: economic, social, and demographic implications 149 Jeffrey Dykes, Billy Leung and Fred Olayele 9 Neighborhood vulnerability in critical infrastructure and services 168 Kyle Marks and Joyce Jauer 10 Clusters and regional transformation: establishing actionable forward agendas 186 Ifor Ffowcs-Williams 11 The global visitor economy and resilience challenge: Mallorca’s destination resurgence in perspective 203 Fergus T. Maclaren and Bartomeu Deya Canals 12 FDI, innovation superclusters, and value creation in Canada’s ocean sector 225 Fred Olayele Index 236
£100.00
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Megaprojects for Megacities: A Comparative
Book SynopsisMegaprojects for Megacities is a collection of 14 international case studies of transportation, urban development, and environmental megaprojects completed during the last ten years in North America, Asia and Europe. It goes beyond the previous megaproject literature to look at how and why each project was conceived, planned, engineered, financed, and delivered, and how particular planning and delivery practices shaped successful and unsuccessful outcomes.With individual chapters on high-speed rail, urban metro systems, bus rapid transit, roadway tunnels and bridges, new and improved airports, waterfront redevelopment projects, new towns, urban parks and renewable energy projects, this book is unparalleled in its coverage, depth and takeaways for practice. It incorporates current examples from across the world, including North America, Asia, the UK, and Europe.This collection of case studies is presented in an approachable way that will prove valuable to academics, researchers and students as well as practicing professionals, financiers and senior government officials interested in infrastructure planning, financing, project management and delivery.Table of ContentsContents: Preface xi John D. Landis 1 The megaproject challenge 1 John D. Landis 2 Megaproject milestones 40 John D. Landis 3 Choosing the case study megaprojects 114 John D. Landis 4 Unfinished business—London Crossrail 133 John D. Landis 5 China bends the curve on high-speed rail 167 Ziming Liu and John D. Landis 6 China’s metro explosion: lessons from China’s big four cities 192 Zhong-Ren Peng, Kaifa Lu, Mengyi Jin, Xinghang Zhu and John D. Landis 7 Bus Rapid Transit—the affordable transit megaproject alternative 237 Erik Vergel-Tovar and John D. Landis 8 A tunnel beneath Seattle: the megaproject to replace the Alaskan Way Viaduct 276 Molly Riddle and Jan Whittington 9 A bridge too far? The Hong Kong–Zhuhai–Macau Bridge and economic and regional restructuring in China’s Pearl River Delta region 307 Anthony G.O. Yeh, Fang Bian and Jiangping Zhou 10 Singapore’s Jewel Changi Airport—always raising the bar 326 John D. Landis 11 Epic fail and cautious success—Berlin Brandenburg Airport and New York LaGuardia Terminal B 349 John D. Landis 12 Canary Wharf’s transformation from ‘planning disaster’ to London’s second business district 383 David Gordon and Patricia Warren 13 Urban regeneration meets sustainability—HafenCity, Hamburg 408 John D. Landis 14 A case of hubris—Songdo International Business District 431 John D. Landis 15 Who is in charge here? Brooklyn Bridge Park 456 John D. Landis Oscar Serpell and John D. Landis 16 Powering the future—five clean energy megaprojects Oscar Serpell and John D. Landis 479 17 Improving megaproject practice and performance 506 John D. Landis Index
£161.00
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Handbook of Planning Support Science
Book SynopsisEncompassing a broad range of innovative studies on planning support science, this timely Handbook examines how the consequences of pressing societal challenges can be addressed using computer-based systems. Chapters explore the use of new streams of big and open data as well as data from traditional sources, offering significant critical insights into the field. Contributions from key scholars from around the world demonstrate how mature the field of planning support science has become in providing support for practitioners to confront diverse problems. The Handbook analyses a carefully selected range of case studies looking at digitization, big data, geodesign, applied modelling, smart city instruments and planning support systems. It addresses key urban challenges including traffic congestion, neighbourhood gentrification and urban heat-island formation, providing examples of how planning practitioners can improve modern urban conditions. Scholars of urban and regional studies as well as human geographers will find this to be a critical reference on the topic. With examples of planning applications from across the world, this will also be a key resource for urban and regional planners and policy-makers. Contributors include: J. Barton, R. Behrens, C. Biderman, M. Birkin, S. Blanchard, P. Boden, M. Campagna, Y. Chen, H. Chou, J. Claassens, C. Daniel, C. de Boer, B. Deal, Z. Deng, S. Eagleson, F. Fernandez, F. Figari, J. Flacke, Q.-L. Gao, S. Geertman, X. Goldie, R. Goodspeed, P. Greenwood, Y. Gu, S. Guhathakurta, J.D. Hamerlinck, N. Hood, R. Hughes, W. James, E. Janowicz, R. Janssen, M. Kahila-Tani, R. Kingston, B.W. Koo, E. Koomen, P. Krause, H.R. Kwon, M. Kyttä, S.Z. Leao, J. Li, S. Li, X. Li, S. Lieske, J. Liu, L. Liu, Z. Liu, O. Lock, N. Lomax, Y. Long, R. Lovelace, I. Luque-Martín, J. Martinez, S. Maurer, T. Moyo, W. Musakwa, A. Newing, H. Niu, P. Pelzer, C. Pettit, K. Pfeffer, S. Pinnegar, E. Punt, B. Rijken, R. Sieber, E.A. Silva, A.P. Smith, A. Staffans, I. Sterland, J. Stillwell, B. Stimson, T. Su, D.C. Swiatek, Z. Tomor, F. van den Bosch, V. Vlastaras, P. Waddell, S. Wang, M. Wegener, C. Whitcomb, P. Witte, A.G.O. Yeh, Y. Yue, G. Zhang, X. Zhang, N. Zhao, Z. Zheng, X. Zhou, M. ZuidgeestTrade Review'The editors and authors put together this seminal volume at the cross-roads of geospatial technologies, systems and (big and small) data science. Long-term PSSers and the newly initiated will enjoy this state of the art volume which builds on the past and looks into the future trajectory of PSS.' --Zorica Nedovic-Budic, University of Illinois at Chicago, US, and University College Dublin, Ireland'The Handbook of Planning Support Science provides an important, up-to-date review of innovative methods, tools, techniques, and case studies on the development and use of planning support systems (PSS), computer-based tools that support planning and policy-making. This essential international collection describes state-of-the-art applications using big data and data analytics, smart cities, cloud-based computing, and geodesign.' --Richard E. Klosterman, University of Akron, US'Read on. Enter a cornucopia of intelligent applications and reflections on PSS. Enjoy.' --Michael Batty, University College London, UKTable of ContentsContents: Foreword: planning support systems in a connected world by Michael Batty xiii Preface xix 1 Planning support science: challenges, themes and applications 1 Stan Geertman and John Stillwell PART I DATA INTEGRATION AND LINKAGE 2 Data linkage and its applications for planning support systems 22 Mark Birkin, William James, Nik Lomax and Andrew Smith 3 Hard and soft data integration in geocomputation: mixed methods for data collection and processing in urban planning 37 Elisabete A. Silva, Lun Liu, Heeseo Rain Kwon, Haifeng Niu and Yiqiao Chen 4 Open access, open source and cloud computing: a glimpse into the future of GIS 56 Christopher Pettit, Bob Stimson, Jack Barton, Xavier Goldie, Philip Greenwood, Robin Lovelace and Serryn Eagleson PART II METHODS FOR SPATIAL PLANNING 5 Spatial planning and geodesign 73 Michele Campagna 6 Methodology and application of data augmented design: a case study of urban redevelopment design for the Panyu-Xinhua Area, Shanghai 87 Tianyu Su, Shihui Li, Jing Li, Hungyu Chou and Ying Long 7 Geodesign, resilience and planning support systems: the integration of process and technology 110 Yexuan Gu and Brian Deal 8 Spatial modelling and forecasting 132 Subhrajit Guhathakurta, Ge Zhang and Bon Woo Koo 9 Are urban land-use transport interaction models planning support systems? 153 Michael Wegener 10 Automated monitoring of planning policy: an overview of the journey from theory to practice 161 Claire Daniel PART III PLANNING SUPPORT SYSTEMS AND THE SMART CITY CONCEPT 11 Big data, urban analytics and the planning of smart cities 179 Anthony G.O. Yeh, Yang Yue, Xingang Zhou and Qi-Li Gao 12 Planning support systems and science beyond the smart city 199 Zhibin Zheng and Renée Sieber 13 The achievements and challenges of planning support science in e-planning in China 213 Shifu Wang, Zhaohua Deng, Zheng Liu, Nannan Zhao, Xiaoyang Zhang and Jie Liu 14 Smart governance in the making: integrating ‘smart’ in local spatial planning 226 Patrick Witte, Eline Punt and Stan Geertman 15 The influence of political context on smart governance initiatives in Glasgow, Utrecht and Curitiba 238 Zsuzsanna Tomor and Stan Geertman 16 Challenging the conventional wisdom: the case of MobiLab, S.o Paulo, Brazil 257 Ciro Biderman and Daniela Coimbra Swiatek PART IV PARTICIPATION AND ENGAGEMENT IN PLANNING 17 Transcending the exemplars of utility and implementation in planning support science 270 Scott N. Lieske 18 Limitations and potential of planning support systems application in planning in southern Spain: bridging academia and practice 281 Irene Luque-Martín and Karin Pfeffer 19 Interactive planning support systems with citizens: lessons learned from renewable energy planning in the Netherlands 294 Johannes Flacke, Cheryl de Boer, Frans van den Bosch and Karin Pfeffer 20 Participatory urban planning in the digital era 307 Aija Staffans, Maarit Kahila-Tani and Marketta Kyttä 21 Local government web-based services for neighbourhood planning 323 Richard Kingston and Vasileios Vlastaras 22 Organizing, facilitating, and evaluating planning support system workshops 338 Robert Goodspeed and Peter Pelzer 23 Using geodesign for collaborative planning: development planning in the Lower Zambezi Valley 353 Ron Janssen 24 Perspectives on planning support systems and e-planning in southern Africa: opportunities, challenges and the road ahead 366 Walter Musakwa and Thembani Moyo PART V SUPPORT SYSTEMS FOR LAND-USE AND TRANSPORTATION PLANNING 25 Linking socio-economic and physical dynamics in spatial planning 383 Jip Claassens, Eric Koomen and Bart Rijken 26 Cellular automata modelling for urban planning in fast-growth regions 397 Xia Li and Anthony G.O. Yeh 27 UrbanCanvas: a collaborative platform for informed planning 416 Paul Waddell, Edward Janowicz, Samuel Blanchard and Samuel Maurer 28 The making of a mega-region: evaluating and proposing long-term transport planning strategies with open-source data and transport accessibility tools 442 Oliver Lock, Simon Pinnegar, Simone Z. Leao and Christopher Pettit PART VI SECTORAL PLANNING SUPPORT 29 Planning support systems for retail location planning 459 Andy Newing, Nick Hood and Iain Sterland 30 Planning support systems for school-place forecasting 471 Peter Boden, Rebecca Hughes and John Stillwell 31 Penciler: a web-based affordable housing development feasibility analysis tool 486 Paul Waddell, Christiana Whitcomb, Francisco Figari, Federico Fernandez and Justin Martinez 32 A GIS-based planning support system for inclusionary housing profitability optimization in Cape Town, South Africa 506 Philip Krause, Mark Zuidgeest and Roger Behrens 33 Applying planning support science in rural environments 524 Jeffrey D. Hamerlinck Index 539
£46.50
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd The Globalization of Regional Clusters: Between
Book SynopsisAddressing the role of regional clusters in the context of ongoing globalization, this timely book investigates the two seemingly competing trends of globalization and localization from both quantitative and qualitative perspectives. International case studies offer pioneering insights into the internationalization process of regional clusters and the effect of this on regional as well as firm performance.Chapters discuss the link between localization in a regional cluster in a transition economy and firms’ internationalization, the internal/external relationships of clusters and radical innovations, and internationally organized resilience capacities of industries and regional clusters. The book highlights the role of clusters in wider networks including global value chains and the specific role of migrants in the internationalization patterns of regional clusters.Innovative and forward-looking, this book will be a helpful read for scholars and students of economic geography and innovation. The critical case studies examined will also help public policy and regional policy-makers.Table of ContentsContents: Introduction: regional clusters and internationalization – complementary or contrasting fields of research? xv Nils Grashof, Dirk Fornahl and Julius Becker PART I RETHINKING CLUSTERS: CONCEPTUALIZATION OF CLUSTER INTERNATIONALIZATION 1 Strategic cluster coupling 2 Robert Hassink 2 From the machine learning region to the deep learning region: Tesla, DarkTrace and DeepMind as internationalized local to global cluster firms 20 Philip Cooke 3 Embedding cluster transformation in global sectoral resilience dynamics: conceptual considerations and the example of automotive production 44 Martina Fromhold-Eisebith PART II THE PROCESSES OF CLUSTER INTERNATIONALIZATION AND THEIR IMPLICATIONS 4 Migrants and cluster internationalization: case studies of Antwerp and Tel Aviv 71 Sebastian Henn and Susann Schäfer 5 Regional clusters in transition economies: solving institutional voids to generate internationalization advantages 93 Tine Lehmann and Nobina Roy PART III CLUSTER INTERNATIONALIZATION AND FIRM PERFORMANCE 6 Macroeconomic impacts on firm performance and place-based cluster policies in the Netherlands 116 Jeroen van Haaren, Frank van Oort and Jan-Daan Maasland 7 Knowledge bases, innovation and multi-scalar relationships: which kind of territorial boundedness of industrial clusters? 151 Franz Tödtling and Alexander Auer 8 Radical innovations in clusters: the role of cluster internal and external relationships 177 Nils Grashof and Thomas Brenner Index
£94.00
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd A Research Agenda for Place Branding
Book SynopsisElgar Research Agendas outline the future of research in a given area. Leading scholars are given the space to explore their subject in provocative ways, and map out the potential directions of travel. They are relevant but also visionary.This cutting-edge Research Agenda for Place Branding explores ideas and debates that inform a refreshing take on the future of place branding and marketing. It argues that we are at a juncture where the logical and sensible step is to push the 'reset button' on such activity and fully reconsider its purpose and goals.Chapters span a range of important themes in contemporary place branding and are organised into sections covering place branding governance, contexts, experience and creativity. Drawing on contributions from key international scholars across a variety of academic disciplines, the book showcases an interplay of oppositional perspectives - ranging from those who see place branding as a potential means of improving the economic vitality of places, to others who consider much existing place branding activity exclusionary to certain sectors of society.Providing a wealth of creative and innovative suggestions on how place branding can be done, thought about and researched differently in the future, this Research Agenda will be a key resource for research-oriented academics and students in marketing, geography, planning and tourism.Trade Review'Most key themes of interest to anyone involved in place branding research are covered in the governance, contexts and experiences sections, and along with the key grounding issues, the book contains some very insightful case studies. In the final chapter, Stephen Brown recognises that while place branding may have peaked, we now see more of a focus on destination demarketing. This book is therefore very timely. Since global tourism was devastated in 2020 and places seek to recover from the COVID-19 pandemic, a more considered research agenda as outlined in this book may lead to places being better managed with a focus more on sufficiency than growth, so we do not face a need for destination demarketing again.' -- Heather Skinner, Manchester Metropolitan University, UK'At last, a truly critical book on a highly controversial matter, with a broad range of contributions from geography, marketing, politics and beyond. One of its many merits is the juxtaposition of contrasting perspectives: from those who see place branding as a means of improving places, to others who consider it just another tool of the neoliberal project. This volume is an indispensable reference work for anybody who wants to understand the development, limitations, and potential research agendas of this ''discipline''.' -- Ares Kalandides, Manchester Metropolitan University, UK'A Research Agenda for Place Branding is not only the title of this book - but is also much needed. While in recent decades we created common ground and shared definitions (or at least agreed to disagree), place branding now needs an academic inspiration, some novel ideas and rigorous, impactful contributions. This book combines many of the critical well-known interdisciplinary minds of our field. I invite you to read it and use its ideas to develop bold research ideas and create this necessary new research agenda for place branding.' -- Sebastian Zenker, Copenhagen Business School, DenmarkTable of ContentsContents: 1 Place branding’s present and past realities, and future research agendas 1 Dominic Medway, Gary Warnaby and John Byrom PART I GOVERNANCE 2 Place branding and the neoliberal class settlement 19 Aram Eisenschitz 3 Computational approaches to place branding: A call for a theory-driven research agenda 33 Efe Sevin 4 Demystifying participation and engagement in the branding of urban places 47 Andrea Insch 5 The spatial planning–place branding nexus: A research agenda for spatial development 67 Eduardo Oliveira, Kristof Van Assche and Raoul Beunen PART II CONTEXTS 6 Place branding and locational decisions: Taking a behavioural economics perspective? 87 Aleks Vladimirov and Gary Warnaby 7 Global city branding 101 Adriana Campelo 8 The Nordic wave in place branding: Global implications and relevance 117 Cecilia Cassinger, Andrea Lucarelli and Szilvia Gyimóthy 9 The tale of three cities: Place branding, scalar complexity and football 131 Steve Millington, Chloe Steadman, Gareth Roberts and Dominic Medway 10 Sustainable Development Goals in place branding: Developing a research agenda 151 Anette Therkelsen, Laura James and Henrik Halkier 11 Keeping pace with the digital transformation of place 163 Brendan James Keegan PART III EXPERIENCE 12 Posthuman phenomenology: What are places like for nonhumans? 183 Jack Coffin 13 Co-creation of place brands? 201 Jenny Rowley and Sonya Hanna 14 Tourism, the burden of authenticity and place branding 215 Maria Lichrou and Lisa O’Malley 15 Making ‘sense’ of place branding: Adopting a sensemaking, sensefiltering and sensegiving lens 233 Laura Reynolds and Nicole Koenig-Lewis 16 Considering place and the sensorium through the lens of non-representational theory 247 Simon Cryer PART IV CREATIVITY 17 Illuminating identity: The capacity of light festivals to enhance place? 267 Tim Edensor 18 ‘The artist in you’: Thinking differently about place branding research 283 Mihalis Kavaratzis and Gary Warnaby 19 Peak place marketing: My part in its downfall 301 Stephen Brown Index 313
£111.00
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Staging Collaborative Design and Innovation: An
Book SynopsisThis stimulating book proposes the concept of staging as a tool for planning and facilitating design and innovation activities. Drawing on a predominantly Scandinavian tradition of participatory design research and sociotechnical perspectives from actor-network theory, it discusses how staging can enable co-design, sustainable transitions and social and radical innovation.Expert researchers and practitioners present in-depth case studies on how staging can be used in practice, including co-design within the health sector, product development in industry, energy practices and urban development. Chapters also explore theoretical and conceptual developments, such as the possible spaces for staging, the role of material objects, travel and circulation of knowledge and the use of spatial and theatrical metaphors. Reflecting on how staging is practiced in a variety of settings, the book illustrates collaborative strategies that shape design and innovation processes.This book is critical reading for academics and students with an interest in public policy, knowledge management and organizational innovation. Providing actionable strategies based on participatory design, shaping technology and organizational theory, it will also be beneficial for design engineers, city planners and technology managers.Trade Review'The authors see designing - urban, systems, and engineering - as performance, an occasion for staging negotiation and exchange among all participants in the process. This metaphor nicely accommodates prototypes and material objects as intermediaries which are made, remade and deployed back and center stage. It validates the proactive work of the anthropologist/design researcher in framing, staging and directing the process, leading participants to act out different scenarios and engaging all with an interest in the design task. Unusual for a collection so varied in the objects of design it explores, the authors hold to the central theme; the result is a refreshing production that shows how designing can be made inclusive of the interests of users of all kinds and persuasions.' -- Louis Bucciarelli, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, US'This book is a significant and original contribution to the field of design and innovation. Drawing on cases from across technology and product development, system transitions, the development of infrastructures and city life and bringing together influences from participatory design with literature from the fields of STS and practice theory, the book offers a coherent framework for conceptualizing actionable approaches to the staging and unfolding of innovation processes, addressing also the complexities inherent in the growing importance of sustainability and co-creation.' -- Thomas Binder, Design School Kolding, DenmarkTable of ContentsContents: Preface xv PART I INTRODUCING STAGING 1 Staging collaborative design and innovation – an introduction 2 Jens Dorland and Dominique Vinck 2 Staging: from theory to action 20 Signe Pedersen, Jens Dorland and Christian Clausen PART II STAGING PARTICIPATORY CO-DESIGN WITH MULTIPLE ACTORS 3 Staging negotiation spaces as a means for co-designing an insulin service system in India 38 Signe Pedersen and Søsser Brodersen 4 Staging co-design within healthcare: lessons from practice 55 Elizabeth B.-N. Sanders 5 Circulating objects between frontstage and backstage: collectively identifying concerns and framing solution spaces 72 Signe Pedersen and Søsser Brodersen PART III STAGING CHANGES IN NETWORKS AND ORGANIZATIONS THROUGH DESIGN OF SPACES AND EVENTS 6 Staging the configuration of organizations for social innovation impacts 87 Jens Dorland 7 Staging participatory innovation as transition design 106 Christian Clausen and Wendy Gunn 8 Staging a circular economy journey 123 Rikke Dorothea Huulgaard, Eva Guldmann and Søren Kerndrup PART IV STAGING INTERACTIONS BETWEEN RESEARCH AND INNOVATION 9 Staging strategic enactment of front-end innovation 137 Louise Brønnum and Christian Clausen 10 Staging referential alignment in industrial–academic collaboration 154 Charles Anthony Bates and Joakim Juhl 11 Staging with objects: translation from technology to product development 170 Charles Anthony Bates PART V STAGING EXPERIMENTATION AND LEARNING 12 Staging interventions in resource-intensive practices and related energy consumption levels 187 Charlotte Louise Jensen 13 Storytelling urban nature: situated intervention as environmental theatre 200 Ask Greve Johansen and Hanne Lindegaard 14 Staging urban design through experimentation 215 Birgitte Hoffmann and Peter Munthe-Kaas PART VI REFLECTIONS – HOW STAGING IS UNDERSTOOD AND USED 15 Taking the metaphor of theatre seriously: from staging a performance toward staging design and innovation 232 Dominique Vinck and Mylène Tanferri 16 Navigating with people and objects – strategic concerns 252 Yutaka Yoshinaka and Christian Clausen Index
£105.00
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Handbook on Planning and Power
Book SynopsisDrawing on research from diverse thinkers in urban planning and the built environment, this Handbook articulates the cutting edge of contemporary understandings about power and its impact on planning. It identifies the current state of knowledge about planning and power, as well as emerging trajectories within this field of research.This comprehensive Handbook examines power relations in late capitalism and provides normative suggestions on how power might be utilised in planning. Chapters analyse the work of fundamental theoretical thinkers, including Marx, Foucault, Deleuze, and Lacan, as well as the history and practice of abolitionist housing justice in the United States, feminist and queer perspectives on planning and power, and the emerging autonomous smart city. It demonstrates the effects of power within planning and the ways in which individuals, communities, and organisations are shaped and impacted positively and negatively by its practices.With case studies from a range of different geopolitical regions, this stimulating Handbook will be essential reading for students and scholars of architecture, community development, geography, urban and regional planning, urban design, and urban studies. It will also be beneficial for practitioners of planning and the built environment.Table of ContentsContents: Introduction to the Handbook on Planning and Power 1 Kristina Grange and Tanja Winkler PART I THEORISING POWER IN PLANNING 1 Marxian understandings of power 12 Enda Murphy and Linda Fox-Rogers 2 Lefebvre’s right to the city and a radical urban citizenship: struggles around power in urban planning 26 Lina Olsson and Elena Besussi 3 Lukes and power: three dimensions and three criticisms 42 Raine Mäntysalo 4 Michel Foucault, power and planning 58 John Pløger 5 Deleuze, Guattari and power 74 Jean Hillier 6 Lacanian perspectives on power in planning 90 Chuan Wang 7 Filling the empty place: Laclau and Mouffe on power and hegemony 104 Nikolai Roskamm 8 The destituent power of Rancière’s radical equality 118 Camillo Boano 9 Communicative planning and the transformative potential of citizen-led participation 134 Crystal Legacy 10 Insurgent planning and power 149 Bjørn Sletto 11 Decolonial approaches to thinking planning and power 165 Libby Porter 12 Questioning the power of normative ethics in planning 181 Katie McClymont PART II SITUATING POWER IN PLANNING 13 The public good and the power of promises in planning 196 Andy Inch 14 ‘Tearing down and building up’: a history, theory and practice of abolitionist housing justice in the US 211 Hilary Malson 15 Planning, informality and power 228 Mona Fawaz 16 Planning, power, and uneven development: a rent gap perspective 243 Ernesto López-Morales 17 Power in planning from a Southern perspective 258 James Duminy and Vanessa Watson 18 Queer perspectives on planning and power 273 Petra Doan and Ozlem Atalay 19 Feminist planning in the face of power: from interests and ideologies to institutions and intersections 289 Leonora C. Angeles 20 Neoliberalism and power 305 Marlyana Azyyati Marzukhi 21 The emerging autonomous smart city and its impacts on planning and power relations in late capitalism 321 Elham Bahmanteymouri and Mohsen Mohammadzadeh 22 Power in regulatory planning processes: searching for the third face of power 339 Yvonne Rydin 23 Power of, on and in planning 354 Kristof Van Assche, Raoul Beunen and Martijn Duineveld 24 A post-postmodernist perspective on power in planning: situating practices and power 367 Ernest R. Alexander 25 Planning, media, and power 381 Jaime Lopez and Lisa Schweitzer 26 Urban planning and the truthiness question 397 Eric Sheppard Index
£200.00
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Property Rights, Planning and Markets: Managing
Book SynopsisThis book represents a major innovation in the institutional analysis of cities and their planning, management and governance. Using concepts of transaction costs and property rights, the work shows systematically how urban order evolves as individuals co-operate in cities for mutual gain. Five kinds of urban order are examined, arising as co-operating individuals seek to reduce the costs of transacting with each other. These are organisational order (combinations of property rights), institutional order (rules and sanctions), proprietary order (fragmentation of property rights), spatial order and public domain order. Property Rights, Planning and Markets also offers an institutional interpretation of urban planning and management that challenges both the view that planning inevitably conflicts with freedom of contract and the view that its function is a means of correcting market failures. Real life examples from countries and regions around the world are used to illustrate the universal relevance of theoretical generalisations, which will be welcomed by a new generation of policymakers and students who take on a world view that goes beyond national boundaries.Trade Review'This is an important book. The authors in effect offer a positive theory of planning and urbanisation. As such, Webster and Lai's model, based on institutional economics, is a vast improvement on some equally ambitious predecessors. The book's insights and clarity make it a must reading for anyone seeking better understanding of how cities evolve as they do, and why planning is an integral part of their evolution.' -- Ernest Alexander, University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, US'A truly remarkable achievement.' -- Mark Pennington, Kings College, London, UK'Chris Webster and Lawrence Lai have created a coherent and insightful integration of concepts such as property rights, organizations, competition, incentives, transaction costs, public goods, and externalities, which will help theorists and urban practitioners analyze and manage city goods and services. An important insight of the authors is the recognition of the interdependencies of people in a neighborhood, which can be efficiently handled with shares in the property value of the neighborhood. There is a constant question of how much markets and how much government should be involved in urban matters, and the authors provide a reasoned, balanced approach which recognizes the vital role of government while appreciating the effectiveness of markets and decentralized decision making, including private institutions or 'clubs' such as homeowners' associations. Their position that governments and markets co-evolve and complement one another is sound, and their conclusions regarding the need to provide clear property rights and efficient rules provide us with theoretical tools to better understand how cities can be improved while being wary of the 'allure of utopia".' -- Fred Foldvary, Santa Clara University, California, US'This is a really important contribution to the planning literature. Beautifully written and clearly structured, it explains the complex relationship between "planning" and "markets" using the economic perspective of transaction cost theory and the "new-institutionalism". This provides a robust way of addressing the old "economic and planning" agenda, which the authors illustrate with references to cases and situations from across the world. Informative and stimulating, this should be included in every planning theory course, and will be helpful to all trying to re-think old debates about planning and markets.' -- Patsy Healey, Newcastle University, UKTable of ContentsContents: Foreword by Yoram Barzel 1. Introduction 2. The Benefits and Costs of Co-operating in Cities 3. Organisational, Institutional and Proprietary Order 4. Spatial Order 5. Public Domain Order 6. Public Domain Order – Public Goods 7. Public Domain Order – Externalities 8. Conclusion Bibliography Index
£45.55
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd The Political Economy of Environmental Regulation
Book SynopsisThis new authoritative collection comprises previously published papers on the political economy of environmental regulation: economic analyses of the processes through which political decisions regarding environmental regulation are made, principally in the institutional context found in the United States. Despite this geographic focus, many of the papers contain analytical models that are methodologically of interest and/or have lessons that are relevant in other parts of the world.In the environmental realm, questions of political economy emerge along three fundamental dimensions, which are closely interrelated but conceptually distinct: (1) the degrees of government activity; (2) the form of government activity; and (3) the level of government that has responsibility. The first three parts of the book deal respectively with these three fundamental dimensions of inquiry. The fourth part of the book examines the use of economic analysis in contemporary environmental policy.The Political Economy of Environmental Regulation will be of significant interest to environmental scholars, students and policy makers alike.Trade Review'In this stimulating compendium, Stavins has assembled many important papers dealing with both positive and normative themes in environmental regulation. The political economy overlay is more than a convenient organizational device, since environmental regulation is both an economic challenge and a target of political opportunity.' -- Kenneth Shepsle, Harvard University, USTable of ContentsContents: Acknowledgements Introduction Robert N. Stavins PART I SETTING THE TARGETS AND GOALS OF ENVIRONMENTAL POLICIES 1. Joseph P. Kalt and Mark A. Zupan (1984), ‘Capture and Ideology in the Economic Theory of Politics’ 2. Maureen L. Cropper, William N. Evans, Stephen J. Berardi, Maria M. Ducla-Soares and Paul R. Portney (1992), ‘The Determinants of Pesticide Regulation: A Statistical Analysis of EPA Decision Making’ 3. Roger D. Congleton (1992), ‘Political Institutions and Pollution Control’ 4. Andrew Metrick and Martin L. Weitzman (1996), ‘Patterns of Behavior in Endangered Species Preservation’ 5. James Murdoch and Todd Sandler (1997), ‘The Voluntary Provision of a Pure Public Good: The Case of Reduced CFC Emissions and the Montreal Protocol’ 6. Toke S. Aidt (1998), ‘Political Internalization of Economic Externalities and Environmental Policy’ PART II CHOOSING THE INSTRUMENTS OF ENVIRONMENTAL REGULATION 7. James M. Buchanan and Gordon Tullock (1975), ‘Polluters’ Profits and Political Response: Direct Controls Versus Taxes’ 8. Michael T. Maloney and Robert E. McCormick (1982), ‘A Positive Theory of Environmental Quality Regulation’ 9. Donald N. Dewees (1983), ‘Instrument Choice in Environmental Policy’ 10. Robert W. Hahn (1989), ‘Economic Prescriptions for Environmental Problems: How the Patient Followed the Doctor’s Orders’ 11. James T. Hamilton (1997), ‘Taxes, Torts, and Toxics Release Inventory: Congressional Voting on Instruments to Control Pollution’ 12. Paul L. Joskow and Richard Schmalensee (1998), ‘The Political Economy of Market-Based Environmental Policy: The U.S. Acid Rain Program’ 13. Nathaniel O. Keohane, Richard L. Revesz and Robert N. Stavins (1998), ‘The Choice of Regulatory Instruments in Environmental Policy’ 14. Marcel Boyer and Jean-Jacques Laffont (1999), ‘Toward a Political Theory of the Emergence of Environmental Incentive Regulation’ 15. Friedrich Schneider and Juergen Volkert (1999), ‘No Chance for Incentive-oriented Environmental Policies in Representative Democracies? A Public Choice Analysis’ PART III SETTING THE LEVEL OF GOVERNMENT TO BE DELEGATED RESPONSIBILITY 16. Per G. Fredriksson and Noel Gaston (2000), ‘Environmental Governance in Federal Systems: The Effects of Capital Competition and Lobby Groups’ 17. John A. List and Shelby Gerking (2000), ‘Regulatory Federalism and Environmental Protection in the United States’ 18. Richard L. Revesz (2001), ‘Federalism and Environmental Regulation: A Public Choice Analysis’ 19. Per G. Fredriksson and Daniel L. Millimet (2002), ‘Strategic Interaction and the Determination of Environmental Policy across U.S. States’ PART IV ASSESSING THE USE OF ECONOMIC ANALYSIS IN ENVIRONMENTAL POLICY 20. Robert W. Hahn (2000), ‘The Impact of Economics on Environmental Policy’ 21. Wallace E. Oates (2000), ‘From Research to Policy: The Case of Environmental Economics’ 22. Robert W. Hahn, Sheila M. Olmstead and Robert N. Stavins (2003), ‘Environmental Regulation in the 1990s: A Retrospective Analysis’ Name Index
£262.00
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Analysing Strategic Environmental Assessment:
Book SynopsisAnalytical Strategic Environmental Assessment (ANSEA) is an insightful new approach to environmental evaluation, based on decision theory, policy analysis and environmental considerations. These concepts, though not new in their own fields of application, are combined and integrated in an innovative fashion. This book presents recent research on the implementation of the ANSEA approach which aims to ensure environmental values are properly integrated into the decision-making process. ANSEA was developed to contribute to the systematic integration of environmental protection objectives in strategic decision-making which, in turn, will contribute to the promotion of sustainable development. The method can be applied to analyse how environmental and sustainability issues are addressed in decision-making processes at both the national and local level for a variety of different policies. Importantly, the focus is on evaluating the decision-making process itself, rather than the quantitative output of an assessment. With explicatory examples and practical case studies, the distinguished, interdisciplinary authors clearly illustrate how a decision-centred approach to environmental assessment can be successfully achieved. At a time when a new European directive requires the implementation of strategic environmental assessment (SEA) into all relevant decision-making processes, this timely book will be required reading for environmental policymakers in all EU member states. It will also be a valuable source of information and reference for researchers, academics and consultants in the fields of planning, environmental evaluation and environmental management.Trade Review'The book is useful, easy to read and a good addition to the references list of practitioners who use strategic environmental assessment as a day-to-day tool.' -- Eagle Bulletin'The European Directive on strategic environmental assessment requires implementing legislation and guidance in each of the European member states. Other countries worldwide are also establishing procedures for strategic environmental assessment. This very timely book on "analytical strategic environmental assessment" (ANSEA) deals head-on with the decision-making systems that these regulations and guidance documents are supposed to influence. ANSEA focuses on the quality of the decision-making process rather than on the impacts of the decision; on describing the decision process rather than the output of the decisions, and on ensuring full integration of environmental values in decision-making.' -- From the foreword by Riki TherivelTable of ContentsContents: Preface Foreword by Riki Therivel Introduction Part I: ANSEA Theoretical Background 1. Background and Context of a Strategic Environmental Assessment 2. Setting the Ground for a New Approach to SEA 3. SEA and Decision-Making Sciences 4. ANSEA Concepts Part II: The ANSEA Approach 5. ANSEA’s Steps 6. Relating ANSEA to the European Directive on SEA Part III: Illustrating the ANSEA Approach in Practice 7. Practical Illustrations of the ANSEA Approach 8. Case Study – The German Federal Transport Infrastructure Planning (FTIP) 9. Case Study – Urban Planning in Puerto de la Cruz, Tenerife Island, Spain References Index
£96.00
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Planning Models
Book SynopsisWhile planning involves seeking ways of influencing future behavior, it is important to have at the outset an abstraction of the world upon which to base an assessment of outcomes. The papers in this collection represent some of the major works in the field of planning models, with land use planning as a core theme. The collection is divided into several parts:Part 1 focuses on location models and embraces a series of classic survey papers as well as a number of more specific contributions covering such topics as the distribution of residential activities. This is followed in part 2 by papers concerned with spatial interaction and, in particular the gravity model. Part 3 of the collection contains papers on micro-macro models that look at ways of moving from individual to collective behavior, whilst part 4 is concerned with dynamic models. Part 5 of the volume reflects an increasing interest in the role of various networks in the formulation of plans, and finally part 6 completes the volume with a selection of policy-planning models.Trade Review'This book deftly mixes acknowledged classics with new and important work to provide a balanced portrayal of the ways in which modelling has both informed and redefined the practices of planning. It is the indispensable guide to this indispensable area.' -- Nigel Thrift, University of Oxford, UKTable of ContentsContents: Acknowledgements Series Preface Kenneth Button and Peter Nijkamp Introduction Planning Models: Scoping the Scene Aura Reggiani, Kenneth Button and Peter Nijkamp PART I LOCATION MODELS 1. John D. Herbert and Benjamin H. Stevens (1960), ‘A Model of the Distribution of Residential Activity in Urban Areas’ 2. Douglass B. Lee, Jr (1973), ‘Requiem for Large-scale Models’ 3. John Roy, Börje Johansson and Giorgio Leonardi (1985), ‘Some Spatial Equilibria in Facility Investment under Uncertain Demand’ 4. Britton Harris (1985), ‘Urban Simulation Models in Regional Science’ 5. Michael Wegener (1994), ‘Operational Urban Models: State of the Art’ 6. M.E. O’Kelly (2004), ‘Isard’s Contribution to Spatial Interaction Modelling’ PART II SPATIAL INTERACTION MODELS 7. Peter Nijkamp (1975), ‘Reflections on Gravity and Entropy Models’ 8. Eric S. Sheppard (1978), ‘Theoretical Underpinnings of the Gravity Hypothesis’ 9. Ashish Sen and Siim Sööt (1981), ‘Selected Procedures for Calibrating the Generalized Gravity Model’ 10. A. Stewart Fotheringham and Tony Dignan (1984), ‘Futher Contributions to a General Theory of Movement’ 11. John R. Roy and Jean-Claude Thill (2004), ‘Spatial Interaction Modelling’ PART III MICRO-MACRO MODELS 12. Daniel McFadden and Fred Reid (1975), ‘Aggregate Travel Demand Forecasting from Disaggregated Behavioral Models’ 13. Andre De Palma and Claude Lefevre (1983), ‘Individual Decision-Making in Dynamic Collective Systems’ 14. Günter Haag and Wolfgang Weidlich (1984), ‘A Stochastic Theory of Interregional Migration’ 15. Manfred M. Fischer (1985), ‘Changing Modes of Reasoning in Spatial Choice Analysis’ 16. Peter Nijkamp and Aura Reggiani (1988), ‘Entropy, Spatial Interaction Models and Discrete Choice Analysis: Static and Dynamic Analogies’ 17. Bryan Raney, Nurhan Cetin, Andreas Völlmy, Milenko Vrtic, Kay Axhausen and Kai Nagel (2003), ‘An Agent-Based Microsimulation Model of Swiss Travel: First Results’ PART IV DYNAMIC MODELS 18. P.M. Allen and M. Sanglier (1981), ‘A Dynamic Model of a Central Place System – II’ 19. Demitrios S. Dendrinos and Michael Sonis (1986), ‘Variational Principles and Conservation Conditions in Volterra’s Ecology and in Relative Urban Relative Dynamics’ 20. Michael Batty and Paul A. Longley (1987), ‘Urban Shapes as Fractals’ 21. Peter Nijkamp and Aura Reggiani (1995), ‘Non-linear Evolution of Dynamic Spatial Systems: The Relevance of Chaos and Ecologically-based Models’ 22. Jean-Claude Thill and Aaron K. Wheeler (1995), ‘On Chaos, Continuous-Time and Discrete-Time Models of Spatial Systems Dynamics’ 23. Kieran P. Donaghy (2002), ‘The “Green Book” Twenty Years On: A New Look at the Research Program of Isard and Liossatos “Spatial Dynamics and Optimal Space-Time Development”’ PART V NETWORK MODELS 24. Roberto Camagni, Lidia Diappi and Giorgio Leonardi (1986), ‘Urban Growth and Decline in a Hierarchical System: A Supply-orientated Dynamic Approach’ 25. Paul Krugman (1994), ‘Complex Landscapes in Economic Geography’ 26. John R. Roy (1999), ‘Areas, Nodes and Networks: Some Analytical Considerations’ 27. Albert-László Barabási and Réka Albert (1999), ‘Emergence of Scaling in Random Networks’ 28. Manfred M. Fischer, Martin Reismann and Katerina Hlavackova-Schindler (2003), ‘Neural Network Modeling of Constrained Spatial Interaction Flows: Design, Estimation and Performance Issues’ PART VI POLICY-PLANNING MODELS 29. P. Nijkamp and P. Rietveld (1976), ‘Multiobjective Programming Models: New Ways in Regional Decision-Making’ 30. Folke Snickars and Jörgen W. Weibull (1977), ‘A Minimum Information Principle: Theory and Practice’ 31. Tschangho John Kim, David E. Boyce and Geoffrey J.D. Hewings (1983), ‘Combined Input-Output and Commodity Flow Models for Interregional Development Planning: Insights from a Korean Application’ 32. Sergio J. Rey (2000), ‘Integrated Regional Econometric+Input-Output Modeling: Issues and Opportunities’ Name Index
£250.00
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Planning History and Methodology
Book SynopsisPlanning as deliberate preparation for future action is as old as human history. Agricultural land allocation and cities were always planned, as were military warfare and defence. With the growing complexity of society in the 19th century, however, planning became a discipline and profession. Since then, not only has the perception of planning and its role in society undergone significant change, but its instruments and methods have also evolved. This collection of classic papers by leading individuals of their day reflects how thinking about planning has changed over time. It also includes seminal papers on the methodology of planning to show how sophisticated techniques have been developed to meet the diverse demands of planning in a rapidly changing world.Table of ContentsContents: Acknowledgements Series Preface Kenneth Button and Peter Nijkamp Introduction Planning History and Methodology: Scoping the Scene Michael Wegener, Kenneth Button and Peter Nijkamp PART I PLANNING HISTORY 1. Karl Mannheim ([1935] 1954), ‘The Concept of Social Control: Planning as the Rational Mastery of the Irrational’ 2. Herbert A. Simon (1955), ‘A Behavioral Model of Rational Choice’ 3. Charles E. Lindblom (1959), ‘The Science of “Muddling Through”’ 4. Paul Davidoff and Thomas A. Reiner (1962), ‘A Choice Theory of Planning’ 5. Amitai Etzioni (1967), ‘Mixed-Scanning: A “Third” Approach to Decision-Making’ 6. J. Brian McLoughlin (1969), ‘The Guidance and Control of Change: Physical Planning as the Control of Complex Systems’ 7. J.K. Friend and W.N. Jessop (1969), ‘The Nature of Planning’ 8. Shoukry T. Roweis and Allen J. Scott (1981), ‘The Urban Land Question’ 9. John Forester (1982), ‘Planning in the Face of Power’ 10. Niklas Luhmann ([1986] 1989), ‘Complexity and Evolution’ 11. John Friedmann (1989), ‘Planning in the Public Domain: Discourse and Praxis’ 12. Patsy Healey (1998), ‘Collaborative Planning in a Stakeholder Society’ 13. Andreas Faludi and Arnold van der Valk (1994), excerpts from ‘Part I: Background’ and ‘Part 6: Conclusions’ 14. Peter Calthorpe (1993), ‘The Next American Metropolis’ PART II PLANNING METHODOLOGY 15. Patrick Geddes ([1915] 1968), ‘City Survey for Town Planning Purposes, of Municipalities and Government’ 16. Walter G. Hansen (1959), ‘How Accessibility Shapes Land Use’ 17. Christopher Alexander (1965), ‘A City is not a Tree. Parts 1 and 2’ 18. Britton Harris (1965), ‘New Tools for Planning’ 19. Ira S. Lowry (1965), ‘A Short Course in Model Design’ 20. A.G. Wilson (1967), ‘A Statistical Theory of Spatial Distribution Models’ 21. William Alonso (1968), ‘Predicting Best with Imperfect Data’ 22. Jay W. Forrester (1969), ‘Notes on Complex Systems’ 23. Horst W.J. Rittel and Melvin M. Webber (1973), ‘Dilemmas in a General Theory of Planning’ 24. Torsten Hägerstrand (1970), ‘What about People in Regional Science?’ 25. Alex Anas (1983), ‘Discrete Choice Theory, Information Theory and the Multinomial Logit and Gravity Models’ 26. Ajit K. Dasgupta and D.W. Pearce (1972), ‘Social Welfare Functions’ 27. Ralph L. Keeney and Howard Raiffa (1976), ‘The Problem’ 28. Richard E. Klosterman (1997), ‘Planning Support Systems: A New Perspective on Computer-Aided Planning’ 29. Ian Masser and Henk Ottens (1999), ‘Urban Planning and Geographic Information Systems Name Index
£200.00
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd New Directions in Economic Geography
Book SynopsisThis important book explores original and alternative directions for economic geography following the revolution precipitated by the advent of so-called 'new economic geography' (NEG). Whilst, to some extent, the volume could be regarded as part of the inevitable creative destruction of NEG theory, it does promote the continuing role of theoretical and empirical contributions within spatial economic analysis, in which the rationale of scientific analysis and economic logic maintain a central place. With contributions from leading experts in the field, the book presents a comprehensive analysis of the extent to which NEG theory is supported in the real world. By exploring whether NEG theory can be effectively applied to provide practical insights, the authors highlight novel approaches, emerging trends, and promising new lines of enquiry in the wake of advances made by NEG.Rigorous yet engaging, this book will be an essential tool for academics and researchers specialising in regional studies, urban and spatial economics and economic geography. It will also have widespread appeal amongst policymakers involved in planning and land use.Trade Review'This book is a serious attempt to cover all of the relevant subdisciplines in the geographical economics framework. . . I would recommend the book to students of economic geography, regional economics, and related disciplines.' -- Frans Boekema, Journal of Regional Science'. . . this book is empirically and theoretically comprehensive in its scope. The nearly eighteen authors who have contributed to this book present a truly transatlantic perspective on NEG. . . this volume will be extremely useful to those dealing with rigorous modelling to examine spatial issues in economics, geography and planning.' -- Rajiv Thakur, Regional Science Policy and Practice'I recommend the book. . . The papers of a high quality, well written and organized; empirical analyses are based on the most advanced empirical techniques, and the reader enjoys their application.' -- Roberta Capello, Growth and Change'A very interesting volume indeed, recommended reading for everyone interested in theorizing space in economics or working in the empirical spatial-economic research arena.' -- Economic Geography Research GroupTable of ContentsContents: Introduction Bernard Fingleton 1. New Economic Geography: Some Preliminaries Bernard Fingleton 2. Models of ‘New Economic Geography’: Factor Mobility vs. Vertical Linkages Gianmarco I.P. Ottaviano 3. Testing the ‘New Economic Geography’: A Comparative Analysis Based on EU Regional Data Bernard Fingleton 4. From Theory to Estimation and Back: The Empirical Relevance of the New Economic Geography Steven Brakman and Harry Garretsen 5. Agglomeration and Growth in the NEG: A Critical Assessment Fabio Cerina and Francesco Pigliaru 6. Sinking the Iceberg? On the Treatment of Transport Costs in New Economic Geography Bernard Fingleton and Philip McCann 7. Specialization and Regional Size John Dewhurst and Philip McCann 8. A Non-parametric Analysis of Productivity, Efficiency and Technical Change in EU Regional Manufacturing, 1986–2002 Mark Roberts, John S.L. McCombie and Alvaro Angeriz 9. A Methodology for Evaluating Regional Political Economy Paul Plummer and Eric Sheppard 10. FDI: A Difficult Connection between Theory and Empirics Anna Soci 11. Agglomeration and Internet Exchange Points: An Exploration of the Internet Morphology Alessio D’Ignazio and Emanuele Giovannetti 12. Explaining the Scarce Returns of European Structural Policies from a New Economic Geography Perspective Andrés Rodríguez-Pose and Ugo Fratesi Index
£131.00
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Planning Cities for the Future: The Successes and
Book SynopsisPeter Kresl brings unique and invaluable empirical evidence, from the early 1990s through to 2005, to examine the relationship between urban competitiveness and economic-strategic planning for ten internationally networked cities within the EU.Planning Cities for the Future links the study of urban economic competitiveness with urban planning and is able to ascertain the crucial factors for success in this area of public policy. These factors include effective governance, leadership and monitoring of performance. The author also reveals how economic turbulence - macro-economic stagnation, the emergence of competitors such as China and Central Europe and the introduction of the euro for example - all have distinct impacts on the economic development of cities. He also suggests that today's economic strengths may create tomorrow's social pathologies, a fact which city planners must always keep in mind. Peter Kresl's book offers examples of cities that got it right and others that did not.Scholars and researchers interested in public sector economics, urban economic development and planning as well as city planners themselves will find much to interest and stimulate them in this book.Trade Review'The book delivers an inspiring, first-hand insight into the state of urban competitiveness and how cities may make the best use of it. . . Kresl gives a well-informed insight into urban problems and related strategies, based on a carefully deployed comparative approach.' -- Markus Hesse, Growth and Change'This volume delves into issues overlooked in many texts about the EU and will be useful for courses in European and international studies and local government. Recommended.' -- G.T. Potter, ChoiceTable of ContentsContents: Preface 1. The Urban Context and the Need for Economic–Strategic Planning 2. The Literature on Urban Competitiveness and Strategic–Economic Planning 3. The Economic and Geographic Analysis of Urban Competitiveness 4. The Ten Cities and their Planning at the Outset of the 1990s 5. How these Planning Initiatives Fared During 1992–2005 6. The Ten Cities and their Planning for 2005–2015 7. Lessons from the Past and a Look to the Future Bibliography Index
£90.00
CABI Publishing Next Rural Economies: Constructing Rural Place in
Book SynopsisRural policy in industrialized countries is currently undergoing significant change. 'Place-based economies', where the unique attributes and assets of individual places determine their attractiveness for particular types of activities and investments, are increasingly important for rural development. The Next Rural Economies debates the future of rural development and highlights successes and failures to inform research, policy and community action. Case studies present discussions of the current state of rural community and economic restructuring and provide research and policy directions for constructing resilient and sustainable rural economies.Table of Contents1: Introduction: The Next Rural Economies a: Demographics, Migration, and Immigration 2: Something Old, Something New, Something Borrowed Something:::? Rediscovering the Comparative Advantage of the New Pastoral Economies of Northern New South Wales, Australia 3: The US Great Plains, Change, and Place Development 4: A New Rural North Carolina: Latino Place-Making and Community Engagement 5: Connecting Rural and Urban Places: Enduring Migration between Small Areas in England and Wales 6: Ontario’s Greenbelt and Places to Grow Legislation: Impacts on the Future of the Countryside and the Rural Economy b: Emerging Economies 7: Adding Value Locally through Integrated Rural Tourism: Lessons from Ireland 8: Value-Added Agricultural Products and Entertainment in Michigan’s Fruit Belt 9: Rural Restructuring and the New Rural Economy: Examples from Germany and Canada 10: Nurturing the Animation Sector in a Peripheral Economic Region: The Case of Miramichi, New Brunswick c: Rural Policy and Governance 11: Co-Constructing Rural Communities in the 21st Century: Challenges for Central Governments and the Research Community in Working Effectively with Local and Regional Actors 12: Partnerships, People, and Place: Lauding the Local in Rural Development 13: The Political Economies of Place in the Emergent Global Countryside: Stories from Rural Wales d: Rural-Urban Exchange 14: Reviving Small Rural Towns in the Paris Periurban Fringes 15: When Rural-Urban Fringes Arise as Differentiated Place: The Socio-Economic Restructuring of Volvic Sources et Volcans, France 16: Rural Development Strategies in Japan e: Renewal in Resource Peripheries 17: Heroes, Hope, and Resource Development in Canada’s Periphery: Lessons from Newfoundland and Labrador 18: Fly-in, Fly-out Resource Development: A New Regionalist Perspective on the Next Rural Economy 19: Understanding and Transforming a Staples-Based Economy: Place-Based Development in Northern British Columbia, Canada 20: Space to Place: Bridging the Gap
£98.68
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Knowledge Externalities, Innovation Clusters and
Book SynopsisThis book begins with a theoretical examination of regional innovation systems, agglomeration economics and knowledge spillovers, before going on to examine the same concepts within an empirical framework. Special emphasis is given to the importance of proximity in the formation of regional innovation systems. It concludes by considering innovation and human capital as determinants of regional economic growth.The concept of knowledge spillovers is used within the book to explain a number of major economic phenomena, including the geographical clustering of inventions; the social returns to R&D that significantly exceed private returns; and the sizeable disproportions that exist between firms in terms of their R&D inputs and outputs. The contributors identify that small firms are responsible for far more product innovations than large firms relative to their measurable knowledge resources. The book also stresses the importance of a catch-up mechanism that sees technological improvement as the combination of two distinct types of activity: innovation and imitation. In this way, the impact of human capital and other types of knowledge acquisition on economic growth is measured. The conclusions of the contributors are invaluably oriented to policy implications.This book will appeal to researchers and postgraduate students of regional science and innovation and knowledge, as well as policymakers.Table of ContentsContents: Introduction Jordi Suriñach, Rosina Moreno and Esther Vayá PART I: REGIONAL INNOVATION SYSTEMS, AGGLOMERATION ECONOMIES AND KNOWLEDGE SPILLOVERS: THEORETICAL APPROACHES 1. Theorizing Regional Knowledge Capabilities: Economic Geography Under ‘Open Innovation’ Philip Cooke 2. Knowledge Spillovers and Organizational Heterogeneity: An Historical Overview of German Technology Sectors Mark Lehrer 3. The Ambivalent Role of Mimetic Behavior in Proximity Dynamics: Evidence from the French ‘Silicon Sentier’ Jérôme Vicente, Yan Dalla Pria and Raphaël Suire 4. IT Adoption, Industrial Structure and Agglomeration Economies Flora Bellone PART II: REGIONAL INNOVATION SYSTEMS, AGGLOMERATION ECONOMIES AND KNOWLEDGE SPILLOVERS: EMPIRICAL STUDIES 5. Pecuniary and Knowledge Externalities as Agglomeration Forces: Empirical Evidence from Individual French Data Corinne Autant-Bernard and Nadine Massard 6. The Adoption of ICTs – Why Does it Differ Across Regions? Andrea Bonaccorsi, Lucia Piscitello and Cristina Rossi 7. Novel Applications of Existing Econometric Instruments to Analyse Regional Innovation Systems: The Spanish Case Mikel Buesa, Mónica Martínez Pellitero, Thomas Baumart and Joost Heijs 8. Over-embeddedness and Under-exploration Issues in Cohesive Networks: An Application to Territorial Clusters Francesc Xavier Molina-Morales and María Teresa Martínez-Fernández 9. The Regional Dimension of University–Industry Interaction Joaquín M. Azagra Caro 10. Which Factors Underlie Public Selection of R&D Cooperative Projects? Lluís Santamaría Sánchez, Andrés Barge Gil and Aurelia Modrego Rico PART III: REGIONAL ECONOMIC GROWTH AND KNOWLEDGE 11. Convergence Clubs and the Role of Education in Spanish Regional Growth Adriana Di Liberto 12. Non-linearities, Spatial Dependence and Regional Economic Growth in Europe: A Semiparametric Approach Roberto Basile 13. Urban Heterogeneity in Knowledge-related Economic Growth Frank G. van Oort and Otto Raspe Index
£111.00
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Environmental Planning
Book SynopsisThis insightful volume presents a multidisciplinary perspective on environmental planning. Drawing on the most important works in the environmental and social sciences, this collection places special emphasis on spatial dimensions and pure planning and covers such topics as: regulatory instruments and institutions; policy under bounded rationality; urban environmental planning; regulation of diffuse sources and land; location and trade and ex-post evaluation planning. In addition to many classic papers, the editor has included some recent surveys and papers which offer an original viewpoint. The book will be an essential source of reference for scholars and practitioners alike.Trade Review'This volume combines the traditional classics in environmental and resource economics with more recent classics in ecological economics and related fields to define environmental planning in a modern light. It will help researchers judge for themselves how much the field has evolved over the past 40 years. Experts will benefit from having the many important works at their fingertips, while new scholars will benefit from having leading authorities in the field identify an excellent path toward understanding it.' -- Adam Rose, University of California, US'This unique collection of papers represents an excellent resource for both teachers and professionals in the environmental planning field.' -- R. Kerry Turner, University of East Anglia, UKTable of ContentsContents: Acknowledgements Series Preface Kenneth Button and Peter Nijkamp Introduction Jeroen C.J.M. van den Bergh, Kenneth J. Button and Peter Nijkamp PART I FOUNDATIONS 1. Ralph Turvey (1963), ‘On Divergences Between Social Cost and Private Cost’ 2. Colin W. Clark (1973), ‘The Economics of Overexploitation’ 3. Herman E. Daly (1992), ‘Allocation, Distribution, and Scale: Towards an Economics that is Efficient, Just, and Sustainable’ 4. Silvio O. Funtowicz and Jerome R. Ravetz (1993), ‘Science for the Post-Normal Age’ 5. Dustin J. Penn (2003), ‘The Evolutionary Roots of our Environmental Problems: Towards a Darwinian Ecology’ 6. W.J. Mitsch and S.E. Jørgensen (2003), ‘Ecological Engineering: A Field Whose Time Has Come’ PART II REGULATORY INSTRUMENTS AND INSTITUTIONS 7. J.H. Dales (1968), ‘Land, Water, and Ownership’ 8. William J. Baumol and Wallace E. Oates (1971), ‘The Use of Standards and Prices for Protection of the Environment’ 9. Michiel J.F. van Pelt, Arie Kuyvenhoven and Peter Nijkamp (1990), ‘Project Appraisal and Sustainability: Methodological Challenges’ 10. Jonathan M. Harris (1991), ‘Global Institutions and Ecological Crisis’ 11. Paul Slovic, James H. Flynn and Mark Layman (1991), ‘Perceived Risk, Trust, and the Politics of Nuclear Waste’ 12. Clifford S. Russell and Philip T. Powell (1999), ‘Practical Considerations and Comparison of Instruments of Environmental Policy’ 13. Adam Rose and Snorre Kverndokk (1999), ‘Equity in Environmental Policy with an Application to Global Warming’ 14. Adam B. Jaffe, Richard G. Newell and Robert N. Stavins (2002), ‘Environmental Policy and Technological Change’ PART III POLICY UNDER BOUNDED RATIONALITY 15. Arild Vatn and Daniel W. Bromley (1994), ‘Choices Without Prices Without Apologies’ 16. Richard B. Howarth (1996), ‘Status Effects and Environmental Externalities’ 17. David I. Stern (1997), ‘Limits to Substitution and Irreversibility in Production and Consumption: A Neoclassical Interpretation of Ecological Economics’ 18. Elinor Ostrom (2000), ‘Collective Action and the Evolution of Social Norms’ 19. Jeroen C.J.M. van den Bergh, Ada Ferrer-i-Carbonell and Giuseppe Munda (2000), ‘Alternative Models of Individual Behaviour and Implications for Environmental Policy’ PART IV URBAN ENVIRONMENTAL PLANNING 20. K.G. Willis and M.C. Whitby (1985), ‘The Value of Green Belt Land’ 21. Ellen M. Brennan and Harry W. Richardson (1989), ‘Asian Megacity Characteristics, Problems, and Policies’, International Regional Science Review, 12 (2), 117-29 [13] 22. Scott Campbell (1996), ‘Green Cities, Growing Cities, Just Cities? Urban Planning and the Contradictions of Sustainable Development’ 23. Stephen M. Wheeler (2000), ‘Planning for Metropolitan Sustainability’ PART V REGULATION OF DIFFUSE SOURCES AND LAND 24. David M. Newbery (1988), ‘Road User Charges in Britain’ 25. John B. Braden, Gary V. Johnson, Aziz Bouzaher and David Miltz (1989), ‘Optimal Spatial Management of Agricultural Pollution’ 26. Kenneth Button (1990), ‘Environmental Externalities and Transport Policy’ 27. Jeffrey P. Cohen and Cletus C. Coughlin (2005), ‘An Introduction to Two-Rate Taxation of Land and Buildings’ PART VI LOCATION AND TRADE 28. Herman Daly and Robert Goodland (1994), ‘An Ecological-Economic Assessment of Deregulation of International Commerce under GATT’ 29. Jeroen C.J.M. van den Bergh and Harmen Verbruggen (1999), ‘Spatial Sustainability, Trade and Indicators: An Evaluation of the “Ecological Footprint”’ 30. Smita B. Brunnermeier and Arik Levinson (2004), ‘Examining the Evidence on Environmental Regulations and Industry Location’ PART VII FRAGMENTATION, IRREVERSIBILITY AND RESILIENCE 31. John V. Krutilla (1967), ‘Conservation Reconsidered’ 32. Richard C. Bishop (1978), ‘Endangered Species and Uncertainty: The Economics of a Safe Minimum Standard’ 33. Janice M. Lord and David A. Norton (1990), ‘Scale and the Spatial Concept of Fragmentation’ 34. Simon A. Levin, Scott Barrett, Sara Aniyar, William Baumol, Christopher Bliss, Bert Bolin, Partha Dasgupta, Paul Ehrlich, Carl Folke, Ing-Marie Gren, C.S. Holling, Annmari Jansson, Bengt-Owe Jansson, Karl-Göran Mäler, Dan Martin, Charles Perrings and Eytan Sheshinski (1998), ‘Resilience in Natural and Socioeconomic Systems’ PART VIII EX POST EVALUATION OF PLANNING 35. Roger D. Congleton (1992), ‘Political Institutions and Pollution Control’ 36. James T. Hamilton (1995), ‘Testing for Environmental Racism – Prejudice, Profits, Political Power?’ 37. James Hamilton and W. Kip Viscusi (1999), ‘Are Risk Regulators Rational? Evidence from Hazardous Waste Cleanup Decisions’ 38. Marcus B. Lane (2003), ‘Participation, Decentralization, and Civil Society: Indigenous Rights and Democracy in Environmental Planning’ Name Index
£285.00
Policy Press The Purpose of Planning: Creating Sustainable
Book SynopsisPlanning is never far from the top of the policy or media agenda, whether this concerns 'garden-grabbing', the location of wind farms or protests about travellers' sites. The operation of the planning system raises strong views, even passions, and is highly political. Planners have to engage with developers working on multi-million pound schemes and the local communities that will be affected by such schemes. And throughout, they have to work in the public interest, delivering on broad policy goals and meeting the needs of vulnerable communities. This book is about the way that the planning system works, what it can do, what it cannot do and how it should evolve to meet the challenges of the 21st century. It looks at a range of issues to unlock the purpose of planning by being positive about the role of planning while remaining realistic about its achievements and potential. Written in a clear and accessible manner, this book will be essential reading for students studying planning in a variety of disciplines and practitioners engaging with the planning system.Trade Review"A worthy contribution to the planning literature. It is refreshingly short, concise and provides a very accessible reference point and introduction to planning’s purpose in a contemporary context." Housing Studies'...a very clearly written and readable introduction to the planning field.' - Patsy Healey in Journal of Social Policy"This book brings home why planning matters to everyone - it is at the centre of a complex web of politics, culture, economics and technology that create the hard and soft fabric of a community - and as the new government sets out to radically reform the planning system 'The purpose of planning' could not be timelier." Kate Henderson, Chief Executive, Town and Country Planning Association"Professor Rydin sets out a clear case for renewed focus on the quality of our living and working environments and the planning leadership required to achieve sustainability." Jenny Crawford, Head of Research, Royal Town Planning InstituteTable of ContentsWhy plan?; The big picture; Somewhere to lay my hat; Downtown; This green and pleasant land; Not in my back yard; My home is my castle; The good life.
£17.09
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Regional and Urban Policy and Planning on the
Book SynopsisThe potential for reunification of the two Koreas, whether in the short or long term, argues for a comprehensive look at policy and planning issues that encompass the peninsula as a whole. This book deals with spatial policy issues in both South and North Korea in a broad and non-political way.Part one deals with South Korea, examining cultural changes, the capital city of Seoul, Greenbelt policy, the balanced national (regional) development strategy, and the new mega-regional approach. Part two delves into aspects of development in North Korea, such as the limitations of national statistics, the marketization of the economy, integration with the rest of North East Asia, and the need for a spatial infrastructure strategy. Part three examines the case for reunification in the interests of both the South and North. It argues that a transitional approach would be less costly and less risky than sudden reunification primarily via an early strategy of shifting more capital to the North and later by moderating migration flows to the South. The book also examines whether the capital should remain in Seoul or be relocated elsewhere should reunification occur. Professors, students and public policy officials in the fields of Asian studies, regional economics and planning, urban studies and political science and any reader interested in the future of Korea will find this book very current and enlightening.Trade ReviewChristine Bae and Harry Richardson make an appropriate and significant contribution to understanding the Korean peninsula by dealing with the broader issues there, including reunification and hot spatial policy issues raised in South Korea. . . the contents of the book as a whole are fascinating and insightful. I see it as very helpful to an understanding of spatial policy and planning in the Korean peninsula by both international and Korean readers, and by both academic scholars and general readers. - --Sam Ock Park, Journal of Regional ScienceTable of ContentsContents: Preface PART I: ISSUES AND TRENDS 1. Introduction Chang-Hee Christine Bae and Harry W. Richardson 2. Re-inventing Korea Eric J. Heikkila 3. Demography and Urbanization Chang-Hee Christine Bae and Harry W. Richardson 4. Urban Issues in the Capital Region and South Korea Myung-Jin Jun 5. Seoul Harry W. Richardson and Chang-Hee Christine Bae 6. Quality of Life and Liveable Cities Chang-Hee Christine Bae and Harry W. Richardson PART II: REGIONAL POLICIES IN SOUTH KOREA 7. Greenbelt Policy Chang-Hee Christine Bae, Myung-Jin Jun and Harry W. Richardson 8. Balanced National Development Harry W. Richardson 9. PCRD (Presidential Commission on Regional Development) and the New Regional Policy Harry W. Richardson PART III: NORTH KOREA 10. DPRK Statistics: Availability and Reliability Suk Lee 11. The Role of Markets in North Korea Curtis Melvin 12. Lifting the North Korean Economy Won Bae Kim 13. A Global Business Strategy for North Korea Harry W. Richardson and Chang-Hee Christine Bae PART IV: REUNIFICATION 14. Economic Integration Strategies for Korean Reunification: Lessons from Recent History Jiyoung Park 15. A Spatial Strategy for Korean Reunification Won Bae Kim and Harry W. Richardson 16. Options for the Capital of a Reunified Korea Harry W. Richardson and Chang-Hee Christine Bae References Index
£113.00
Springer-Verlag Berlin and Heidelberg GmbH & Co. KG Stadt, Straße und Verkehr: Ein Einstieg in die
Book SynopsisVerkehrsprobleme werden immer weniger handhabbar, die Verkehrsplanung ist eine Wissenschaft in der Krise. Der massive Straßenbau der sechziger und siebziger Jahre hat die Probleme ebensowenig lösen können wie die Verkehrsberuhigung der Achtziger. In den Neunzigern scheinen Stadt und Land endgültig handlungsunfähig, da die vormals reichlich geflossenen Gelder ausgegangen bzw. ausgegeben sind. Jetzt kann man nicht einmal mehr so tun, als ob man Sinnvolles täte. Immer mehr Menschen fahren Auto. Städte und Landschaften verstopfen, die Umweltbelastungen aus Verkehr nehmen bedrohliche Züge an. In dieser Krise, in der klar und konsequent nach Lösungen gesucht werden müßte, haben Verkehrsplaner ihre Orientierung verloren. Sie resignieren, verstecken ihr Nicht-mehr-weiter-wissen hinter arrogantem Expertengehabe oder flüchten in technische Spielereien. Die Fachwelt ist derart verwirrt, daß sie kaum einen verständlichen Überblick über das Geschehen geben kann. So können sich erst recht Lernende, betroffene Bürger, Journalisten, Politiker oder Planer anderer Fachrichtungen kein Urteil mehr bilden. Die Grundlagen der Verkehrsplanung sind jedoch einfach und klar. "Stadt, Straße und Verkehr" untersucht und erörtert die grundlegenden Zusammenhänge in Text, Skizzen und Überschlagsberechnungen - fachlich kompetent, anschaulich und einleuchtend. Auf der Grundlage des sorgfältig aufbereiteten Materials können Architekten, Planer und Verkehrsplaner eigene Planungen beurteilen bzw. überarbeiten. Ein Handbuch! (...) Füsser erläutert alle verkehrsplanerischen Maßnahmen - auch für Nicht-Fachleute - in klarer und verständlicher Weise.(...) (...) anschaulich und klar insbesondere für Kommunalpolitiker in Planungs- und Verkehrsausschüssen aufschlußreich. (...) Das Parlament Ausgabe Nr. 43, S.19 vpm 17.10.97 Rezension erschienen in ekz-Bibl. Bereich 1998 (...) interessante Details und verständlich geschrieben (...)Table of ContentsDen roten Faden in der Verkehrsplanung finden - Die Entwicklung: Die Geschichte von Städtebau und Verkehr - Lösungsansätze: Erklärungsmodelle und Zukunftsvisionen - Verkehrsmittel: Wieviel Platz braucht Verkehr, wieviel Verkehr vertragen wir? - Verkehr und Nutzung: Wie entsteht Verkehr und wie können wir ihn bewältigen? - Verkehrsverhalten: Warum wir so viel und so schnell unterwegs sind und wie wir das ändern können - Verkehrsplanung: Das Handwerkszeug der Verkehrsplaner - Resümee
£36.09
Springer Fachmedien Wiesbaden Verkehrsplanung für Einzelhandelsstandorte: Ein
Book SynopsisFür eine erfolgreiche Durchführung von Einzelhandelsprojekten stellen die gute Erreichbarkeit sowie die verkehrliche Verträglichkeit zentrale Voraussetzungen dar. Eine umfassende Untersuchung dieser Anforderungen im Rahmen fundierter Verkehrsgutachten entscheidet somit darüber, ob ein Verkehrskonzept dauerhaft tragfähig und wirtschaftlich ist. Dieses Buch liefert einen praxisorientierten und umfassenden Überblick über die einzelnen Arbeitsschritte bei der verkehrlichen Erschließung von Einzelhandelsstandorten. Hierbei wird u.a. für die einzelnen Planungsphasen auf entsprechende zentrale Richtlinien sowie auf Erfahrungen aus der Planungspraxis verwiesen. Es handelt sich um ein übersichtliches Nachschlagewerk für Stadt- und Verkehrsplaner, Architekten sowie alle Akteure, die in die Standortsuche sowie die verkehrliche Erschließung von Einzelhandelsvorhaben eingebunden sind.Table of ContentsEinzelhandel im Wandel – Herausforderungen und Standortanforderungen,- Standortanalyse.- Bestimmung des Verkehrsaufkommens.- Verträglichkeitsprüfung.- Hinweise für die Bemessung und Gestaltung von Außenanlagen.- Literatur.
£67.49
Springer Fachmedien Wiesbaden Regionalentwicklung in Ostdeutschland: Dynamiken,
Book SynopsisDie Entwicklung von ostdeutschen Städten und Regionen ist seit 1990 von vielfältigen Umbrüchen geprägt. Ein Nebeneinander von Schrumpfung und Wachstum, Abriss und Neubau, Strukturproblemen und Entwicklungsimpulsen kennzeichnet die Regionalentwicklung in Ostdeutschland. Die Untersuchung dieser räumlichen Unterschiede und Besonderheiten ist Gegenstand der humangeographischen Forschung an ostdeutschen Hochschulen und außeruniversitären Forschungseinrichtungen. Der Band gibt einen Überblick über Arbeiten zur Politischen Geographie, zum wirtschaftlichen Strukturwandel und dessen politischer Ökonomie, zum sozialen Wandel, zu den Veränderungen ländlicher Räume, zu den Umbrüchen ostdeutscher Städte und zur Transformation von Mensch-Naturverhältnissen in Ostdeutschland. Die Beiträge bieten eine geographische Perspektive auf die verschiedenen Facetten, Entwicklungspfade und Widersprüche der gesellschaftlichen Transformationen in den neuen Bundesländern. Trade Review“... einen breiten Überblick über die Entwicklung und aktuelle Lage in Ostdeutschland aus einer raumbezogenen und rauminteressierten Perspektive ... In seiner Gänze bietet der Band eine Fülle von Material und spannenden Einzelbeiträgen; er richtet sich in erster Linie an raumbezogen arbeitende Wissenschaftler_innen und Studierende, ist aber auch gut lesbar für Interessierte außerhalb des wissenschaftlichen Spektrums ...” (Annegret Haase, in: zeitschrift-suburban.de, Jg. 8, Heft 3, 2020)Table of ContentsRegionalentwicklung in Ostdeutschland – Geographien einer Transformation. Zur Einleitung.- I Die politische Geographie Ostdeutschlands.- Der „Osten“ ist anders!? Anmerkungen zu den Diskursen über die politischen Einstellungen in Ostdeutschland.- Eliten in Ostdeutschland. Repräsentationsdefizit und Entfremdung der Ostdeutschen?.- Die Polizei in Sachsen. Umstrukturierungen und Veränderung polizeilicher Praxis.- Ostdeutsche Grenzregionen. Zwischen Systemtransformation, EU-Osterweiterung und alltäglichem Bordering.- Geographien der Unsicherheit. Bürgerwehren an der ostdeutschen EU-Binnengrenze.- II Wirtschaftlicher Strukturwandel und politische Ökonomie.- Wirtschaftsräumliche Struktur und Entwicklung Ostdeutschlands. Ein Überblick.- Kapitalmangel und Transferabhängigkeit. Zur politischen Ökonomie Ostdeutschlands.- Finanzialisierung in Ostdeutschland.- Finanzbedarfe der Mittelzentren in Ostdeutschland. Fiskalische Herausforderungen für Mittelzentren durch den demographischen Wandel und eine ländlich-periphere Lage.- Internationale Fachkräfte auf dem ostdeutschen Arbeitsmarkt. Ein Beitrag zur Minderung des Fachkräftemangels?.- Kreative Ökonomien in der Hauptstadtregion Berlin-Brandenburg.- Zentralisierung, Suburbanisierung und Filialisierung. Zur Entwicklung des Einzelhandels in Ostdeutschland.- III Sozialer Wandel in Ostdeutschland.- „Mitteldeutschland“. Regionalentwicklung und regionale Identität aus konstruktivistischer Perspektive.- Ostdeutsche Identität im Wandel der Zeiten. 30 Jahre und noch kein Ende.- Wanderungen und Regionalentwicklung. Ostdeutschland vor der Trendwende?.- Migrationsgeschichte Ostdeutschlands I: Von der Zeit der DDR bis in die 1990er-Jahre.- Migrationsgeschichte Ostdeutschlands II: Internationale Migration in Ostdeutschland und ihre gesellschaftliche Wahrnehmung seit der Jahrtausendwende.- Ostdeutschland multikulturell und postmigrantisch.- „Aus der eigenen Sozialisierung kann man so einfach nicht heraus.“ Geographische Lehre und Forschung in und zu „Ostdeutschland“.- IV Ostdeutsche Städte im Umbruch.- Wohnungsmärkte in ostdeutschen Großstädten. Zwischen Schrumpfung und Vermarktlichung.- Vorzeichenwechsel der Stadtentwicklung in Ostdeutschland nach 1989: Sub-/Des-/Reurbanisierung.- Ostdeutsche Großwohnsiedlungen. Zwischen Wohnungsmarktentwicklung und politischen Entscheidungen.- Gentrification in ostdeutschen Städten.- Bodenwertentwicklungen in Wachstumspolen Ostdeutschlands. Eine Untersuchung am Beispiel der Städte Dresden, Erfurt und Jena.- Umkämpfte Internationalisierung in Berlin: Großprojekte, Tourismus, Web-Tech-Branche und Migration.- Städtische Protestbewegungen in Leipzig. Orientierungsversuche innerhalb einer veränderten Marktrealität.- V Ländlicher Wandel in Ostdeutschland.- Zukunftsfähige Agrarstrukturen in Ostdeutschland?.- Daseinsvorsorge in ländlichen Räumen: zwischen Abbau, Umbau und Ausbau.- Sesshaftigkeit in ostdeutschen ländlich-peripheren Räumen. Wie Wanderungen die Bevölkerungsstruktur langfristig verändern.- Alltag in ländlichen Räumen.- „Smart Countryside“ im Osten? Zum Wandel ländlicher Räume und den Herausforderungen der Digitalisierung.- Raumordnung in Ostdeutschland: Labor und Innovator für die Raumentwicklung.- VI Mensch-Natur-Verhältnisse und Infrastrukturen.- Verkehrspolitik und Mobilitätsentwicklung in Ostdeutschland.- Ostdeutsche Kulturlandschaften im Wandel.- Sanierung alter Industrieregionen in Ostdeutschland.- Tourismus und Regionalentwicklung innerhalb und außerhalb ostdeutscher Großschutzgebiete.- Klimapolitik in Dresden – Diskurse um Klimawandel im Kontext von Stadtentwicklungspolitik.
£56.99
Springer Verlag, Singapore Dense and Green Building Typologies: Design
Book SynopsisIn this book, leading architects and landscape architects provide their perspectives on the design of dense and green building types in high-density urban contexts that can support higher population densities, higher standards of environmental sustainability and enhanced liveability in future cities.Table of ContentsCHAPTER 1 Dense and green: definitions CHAPTER 2 The evolution of dense and green in Singapore CHAPTER 3 Dense and green policies URA Landscape Replacement Area (LRA) NParks LEAF BCA Green Mark CHAPTER 4 Dense and green planning processes CHAPTER 5 Dense and green design processes CHAPTER 6 Dense and green buildings CHAPTER 7 Types of greenery CHAPTER 8 Technical aspects and maintenance CHAPTER 9 Dense and green challenges CHAPTER 10 Dense and green benefits Environmental parameters Thermal comfort Solar shading Daylight glare control Mitigation of urban heat island effects Air particles Air pollutants Noise pollution Biodiversity CHAPTER 11 Integration of dense and green within other land uses Hotels Hospitals Office buildings Public housing Private housing Institutional buildings Retail buildings CHAPTER 12 Dense and green post-occupancy studies CHAPTER 13 Dense and green impact on neighbourhoods and parks CHAPTER 14 Dense and green impact on biodiversity CHAPTER 15 Dense and green impact on urban density CHAPTER 16 The future of dense and green
£49.49
Springer Verlag, Singapore Urban-Rural Transformation Geography
Book SynopsisThis book attempts to introduce the theory of system science and engineering technology into the geographic research of urban-rural transformation, reveals the level-structure-function of urban-rural transformation, and promotes the scientific research on urban-rural transformation. Focusing on the systematic diagnosis of new-type urbanization, urban-rural land use, industrial structure transformation and public facilities allocation, this book explores the long-term mechanism, innovative model, and scientific way of urban-rural land optimal allocation and spatial reconstruction and develops urban-rural transformation geography. In terms of the contents, the book constructs the theory and method system of urban-rural transformation geography, analyzes the process, pattern, mechanism, and response of urban-rural transformation, reveals the evolution characteristics, types, and regional differences of urban-rural regional system, and finally puts forward the optimal decision-making of urban-rural transformation.This book not only provides references for graduate and researchers in geography, regional development, urban and rural planning, resource science, environmental science, human-earth system science, sustainability science, and other related fields but also guides the decision-making of planners and government officials.Table of ContentsResearch background and value of urban-rural transformation.- Research progress and practical enlightenment of urban-rural transformation.- Geographical basis and theoretical exploration of urban-rural transformation.- Research methods of urban-rural transformation geography.- Strategic objectives and regional orientation of urban-rural transformation in China.- Spatial-temporal pattern of urban-rural transformation in Bohai Rim region.- Resource and environmental effects of urban-rural transformation in China.- Optimization ideas and system innovation of urban-rural transformation.- Conclusion and prospect.
£123.49
Springer Verlag, Singapore Infrastructure Planning and Management in India:
Book SynopsisThis book addresses comprehensive issues of infrastructure management at the sectoral level in India. This book analyses four critical sectors viz. Transportation, Power, Urban, and Digital Infrastructure and their planning and management from an Indian perspective. The book also identifies empirical risks and challenges in the planning and management of infrastructure in India. A diverse set of management solutions that can support better infrastructure management across sectors are also discussed in the present book.Table of ContentsSection 1: Transport Infrastructure: fostering the economic growth.- Chapter 1. Road Safety Management in India: Issues and Challenges and Opportunities.- Chapter 2. An assessment of the Port Development in India.- Chapter 3. Emerging scope of Airport Infrastructure: Case of India.- Chapter 4. Rail Infrastructure- Journey since Indian independence and beyond.- Section 2: How power sector is managed in India?.- Chapter 5. Power Sector Infrastructure Management: Issues and Challenges.- Chapter 6. Renewable Energy Management: An analysis of the status quo.- Chapter 7. Energy, Climate Change and Sustainable Development in India.- Section 3: The emergence of modern cities: Smart or Sustainable?.- Chapter 8. Smart City: Sustainable City for tackling Urban Challenges.- Chapter 9. Electric Mobility & Electric Vehicles Management in India.- Chapter 10. Sustainable Infrastructure Development in India: Drivers and Barriers.- Section 4: Developing digital infrastructure.- Chapter 11.Recent Trends in Digital Infrastructure india.
£113.99
Taylor & Francis Human Rights and Counterterrorism in Americas Asia Policy 363 Adelphi series
a huge range and FREE tracked UK delivery on ALL orders.
£24.99
Taylor & Francis Urban Planning and Real Estate Development
a huge range and FREE tracked UK delivery on ALL orders.
£128.25
Taylor & Francis Ltd Museums and Design for Creative Lives
Book SynopsisMuseums and Design for Creative Lives questions what we sacrifice when we allow economic imperatives to shape public museums, whilst also considering the implications of these new museum realities. It also asks: how might we instead design for creative lives?Drawing together 28 case studies of museum design spanning 70 years, the book explores the spatial and social forms that comprise these successful examples, as well as the design methodologies through which they were produced. Re-activating a well-trodden history of progressive museum design and raising awareness of the involvement of the built forms in how we feel, think and act, MacLeod provides strategies and methods to actively counter the economisation of museums and a call to museum makers to work beyond the economic and advance this deeply human history of museum making. Museums and Design for Creative Lives will be of great interest to academics and students in museum stTrade Review"For anyone who believes that museums have the potential to act as powerful agents for social change, Museums and Design for Creative Lives is a must-read. MacLeod applies a theoretical framework of social space to current museum practice that not only identifies unchallenged assumptions about goals, standards, and processes in museums, but also articulates essential qualities and values inherent in what she calls "progressive museum design." The theory comes to life in the second part of the book, which explores the many visions, intentions, and design practices in 28 museum case studies of progressive museum design from around the world. Most importantly, MacLeod summarizes with six frames of mind or calls to action that provide us with concrete, provocative, and energizing ways forward." — Kathleen McLean, USATable of ContentsPart 1; Chapter 1 The economization of museums and the ‘truth’ of space; Chapter 2 Landscapes of potential: the social and spatial underpinnings of museums; Chapter 3 Design for creative lives: new museum design cultures; Bibliography; Part 2; 4. Battersea Arts Centre, London, UK, 2007-; 5. Blue House, Wanchai, Hong Kong, 2017; 6. Boston Children’s Museum, Boston, USA, 1960s; 7. Derby Silk Mill Museum of Making, Derby, UK, 2020; 8. District Six Museum, Cape Town, South Africa, 1994-present; 9. Exile, Kingston Lacy, UK, 2017; 10. Exploratorium, San Francisco, USA, 1969; 11. Festival of Britain, London, UK, 1951; 12. Fun Palace, London, UK, 1960-75; 13. Galleries of Modern London, Museum of London, UK, 2004-10; 14. Guggenheim Helsinki, Finland, 2013-16; 15. Humankind, Calke Abbey, UK, 2019-20; 16. Jubilee Arts, The Bus Project, UK, 1978-84; 17. Kelvingrove Museum and Art Gallery, Glasgow, UK, 1998-2006; 18. Launchpad, Science Museum, London, UK, 1986; 19. Lost Childhoods, Museum of Art and History, Santa Cruz, USA, 2017; 20. Louisiana Museum of Modern Art, Denmark, 1958; 21. Museo Casa de la Memoria Medellin, Colombia, 2012-; 22. Museo Taller Ferrowhite, Bahia Blanca, Argentina, 2004-; 23. Museum at the Gateway Arch, St Louis, USA, 2018; 24. National Human Rights Museum, Jing-Mei White Terror Memorial Park, Taipei, Taiwan, 2011-; 25. Parque Explora, Medellín, Colombia, 2008-; 26. Pride and Prejudice, Walker Art Gallery, Liverpool, UK, 2014-19; 27. SESC Pompéia, Sao Paulo, Brazil, 1982; 28. Sugar Hill Children’s Museum of Art and Storytelling, New York, USA, 2015; 29. Talking About… Disability and Art, Birmingham Museum and Art Gallery, UK, 2006-8; 30. The Past is Now, Birmingham Museum and Art Gallery, UK, 2017; 31. United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, Washington, USA, 1993-
£32.99
Taylor & Francis Zoning Board Manual
a huge range and FREE tracked UK delivery on ALL orders.
£128.25
Taylor & Francis The Citizens Guide to Planning
a huge range and FREE tracked UK delivery on ALL orders.
£123.50
Taylor & Francis Reconsidering Ian McHarg
a huge range and FREE tracked UK delivery on ALL orders.
£128.25
Taylor & Francis Career Worth Planning
a huge range and FREE tracked UK delivery on ALL orders.
£128.25
Taylor & Francis Redesigning Cities
a huge range and FREE tracked UK delivery on ALL orders.
£128.25
Taylor & Francis Delta Urbanism New Orleans
a huge range and FREE tracked UK delivery on ALL orders.
£128.25
Taylor & Francis The High Cost of Free Parking
a huge range and FREE tracked UK delivery on ALL orders.
£128.25
Taylor & Francis Job of the Planning Commissioner
a huge range and FREE tracked UK delivery on ALL orders.
£128.25
Taylor & Francis Ltd Job of the Practicing Planner
a huge range and FREE tracked UK delivery on ALL orders.
£128.25
Taylor & Francis Ltd Land Use and the Constitution
a huge range and FREE tracked UK delivery on ALL orders.
£128.25