Content
May 2020, Volume 21, Issue 3
- 501-504 The Heart of Community Engagement: Practitioner Stories from Across the Globe
by Leonie Sandercock
June 2020, Volume 21, Issue 2
- 185-188 Kindness, Planners’ Response to Vulnerability, and an Ethics of Care in the Time of Covid-19
by John Forester - 191-199 Academia in the Time of COVID-19: Towards an Ethics of Care
by Esteve Corbera & Isabelle Anguelovski & Jordi Honey-Rosés & Isabel Ruiz-Mallén - 200-217 Unravelling the Concept of Social Transformation in Planning: Inclusion, Power Changes, and Political Subjectification in the Oosterweel Link Road Conflict
by Elisabet Van Wymeersch & Thomas Vanoutrive & Stijn Oosterlynck - 218-235 Viability Planning, Value Capture and the Geographies of Market-Led Planning Reform in England
by Jessica Ferm & Mike Raco - 236-253 Redesigning Town Centre Planning: From Master Planning Revival to Enabling Self-Reorientation
by Neil A. Powe - 254-271 Checks and Balances in Centralized and Decentralized Planning Systems: Ontario, British Columbia and Israel
by Eran Razin - 272-289 Is a New ‘Planning 3.0’ Paradigm Emerging? Exploring the Relationship between Digital Technologies and Planning Theory and Practice
by Ruth Potts - 293-321 Climate Justice in a Climate Changed World
by Libby Porter & Lauren Rickards & Blanche Verlie & Karyn Bosomworth & Susie Moloney & Bronwyn Lay & Ben Latham & Isabelle Anguelovski & David Pellow & Libby Porter & Lauren Rickards & Blanche Verlie & Karyn Bosomworth & Susie Moloney & Bronwyn Lay & Ben Latham & Isabelle Anguelovski BCNUEJ & David N. Pellow & Naarm/Birrarung-ga & Libby Porter & Karyn Bosomworth & Susie Moloney & Blanche Verlie & Bronwyn Lay - 325-329 Metropolitan Strategic Planning after Modernism
by Glen Searle - 330-336 Urban China: The Tortuous Path Towards Sustainability
by Giulio Verdini & Li Zhang - 338-340 Planning Singapore: The Experimental City
by Kah-Wee Lee
January 2020, Volume 21, Issue 1
- 3-6 The Decade of Environmental Panic
by Robert Upton - 9-38 Planning Our Future: Institutionalizing Youth Participation in Local Government Planning Efforts
by Nina Palmy David & Adria Buchanan - 39-57 Limitations of Technical Approaches to Transport Planning Practice in Two Cases: Social Issues as a Critical Component of Urban Projects
by Lara K. Mottee & Jos Arts & Frank Vanclay & Richard Howitt & Fiona Miller - 58-75 The Potentials and Pitfalls of ‘Art in Research’ Methodologies: Foregrounding Memory and Emotion in Planning Research
by Raksha Vasudevan - 76-93 Transcending Dilemmas in Urban Policy-Making: Envisioning versus Adapting, Growing versus Stabilizing
by António Ferreira & Joana Ribeiro-Santos & Isabel Breda-Vázquez - 94-122 Late Modernity to Postmodern? The Rise of Global Resilience and its Progressive Potentials for Local Disaster Planning (Seattle and Paris)
by Ihnji Jon & Magali Reghezza-Zitt - 125-154 Climate Disruption and Planning: Resistance or Retreat?
by Mark Scott & Mick Lennon - 157-163 Telling Tales: Using Story as a Mode of Encounter
by Andrea Cook - 164-174 Hear the Rime of the Fellow Mariner? A Letter to the Next Generation of Emphatic Co-Creators in Planning
by Miloš N. Mladenović & Susa Eräranta - 175-181 Planning Dilemmas
by Abdul Khakee
October 2019, Volume 20, Issue 5
- 627-629 We Still Need New Ideas
by Lisa K. Bates - 633-655 What Does Good Green Infrastructure Planning Policy Look Like? Developing and Testing a Policy Assessment Tool Within Central Scotland UK
by Max Hislop & Alister J. Scott & Alastair Corbett - 656-672 Planning at the Interface of Localism and Mayoral Priorities: London’s Ungovernable Boroughs
by Alan Mace & Alan Sitkin - 673-688 Can ‘Permission in Principle’ for New Housing in England Increase Certainty, Reduce ‘Planning Risk’, and Accelerate Housing Supply?
by Nick Gallent & Claudio de Magalhaes & Sonia Freire Trigo & Kath Scanlon & Christine Whitehead - 689-710 “Laissez faire has had its day”: Land Use, Waste, and Propertied Improvement in Early Canadian Planning
by Trevor J. Wideman - 711-732 Ordering Space in a Changing Climate: A Relational Analysis of Planning Practices in Bohol, Philippines
by S. Dujardin & N. Dendoncker - 735-759 People and Planning at Fifty/‘People and Planning’ 50 Years On: The Never-Ending Struggle for Planning to Engage with People/Skeffington: A View From The Coalface/From Participation to Inclusion/Marking the 50th Anniversary of Skeffington: Reflections from a Day of Discussion/What to Commemorate? ‘Other’ International Milestones of Democratising City-Making/An American’s Reflections on Skeffington’s Relevance at 50
by Andy Inch & Francesca Sartorio & Jeff Bishop & Yasminah Beebeejaun & Katie McClymont & Alexandre Apsan Frediani & Camila Cociña & Kathryn S. Quick - 763-768 Land for the Many and a New Politics of Land
by Tom Kenny - 769-775 Planning on the Waterfront: Setting the Agenda for Toronto’s ‘smart city’ Project
by Alexandra Flynn & Mariana Valverde - 776-784 3D Printing of Cities: Is Urban Planning Ready?
by Simone Amato Cameli
August 2019, Volume 20, Issue 4
- 469-471 Platforms of Change and Interstitial Spaces
by Crystal Legacy - 475-493 Trans-Local Civic Networking: An Alternative Planning Praxis
by Tomer Dekel & Avinoam Meir & Nurit Alfasi - 494-511 Barriers and Openings for Transforming Swedish Planning Practice – Examples of Landscape and Health Policy Integration
by Mari Kågström & Sylvia Dovlén - 512-536 Planning Particularities: Reinterpreting Urban Planning in China with the Case of Chengdu
by Julie T. Miao - 537-554 A Heuristic Approach for Exploring Uncertainties in Transport Planning Research
by Miguel L. Navarro-Ligero & Julio A. Soria-Lara & Luis Miguel Valenzuela-Montes - 555-572 The Strategic Incrementalism of Lahti Master Planning: Three Lessons
by Raine Mäntysalo & Johanna Tuomisaari & Kaisa Granqvist & Vesa Kanninen - 575-603 Planning, Land and Housing in the Digital Data Revolution/The Politics of Digital Transformations of Housing/Digital Innovations, PropTech and Housing – the View from Melbourne/Digital Housing and Renters: Disrupting the Australian Rental Bond System and Tenant Advocacy/Prospects for an Intelligent Planning System/What are the Prospects for a Politically Intelligent Planning System?
by Libby Porter & Desiree Fields & Ani Landau-Ward & Dallas Rogers & Jathan Sadowski & Sophia Maalsen & Rob Kitchin & Oliver Dawkins & Gareth Young & Lisa K Bates - 606-611 Advocacy Planning in the Age of Trump: An Opportunity to Influence National Urban Policy
by Kenneth Reardon & Antonio Raciti - 612-618 Planning’s Position in the ‘Hollowing-Out’ and ‘Filling-In’ of Local Government in Ireland
by Mick Lennon - 619-624 The Poverty of Territorialism
by Eduardo Medeiros - 622-624 The Poverty of Territorialism
by Rodrigo V. Cardoso
May 2019, Volume 20, Issue 3
- 317-319 Signs of Hope in the Dark?
by Andy Inch - 323-338 Critically Reconsidering Orthodox Ideas: Planning as Teleocratic Intervention and Planning as a Rational Decision Method
by Stefano Moroni - 339-357 Notes for a Substantive Theory of Rural Planning: Evidence from the US Experience
by Michael Hibbard & Kathryn I Frank - 358-375 Built on Solid Foundations? Assessing the Links between City-Scale Land Titling, Tenure Security and Housing Investment
by Benjamin C. R. Flower - 376-394 The Governance of Local Urban Climate Adaptation: Towards Participation, Collaboration and Shared Responsibilities
by E-M. Trell & M.T. van Geet - 395-419 Co-Production as a Driver of Urban Governance Transformation? The Case of the Oplan LIKAS Programme in Metro Manila, Philippines
by Jakub Galuszka - 423-446 Gigs, Side Hustles, Freelance: What Work Means in the Platform Economy City/ Blight or Remedy: Understanding Ridehailing’s Role in the Precarious “Gig Economy”/ Labour, Gender and Making Rent with Airbnb/ The Gentrification of ‘Sharing’: From Bandit Cab to Ride Share Tech/ The ‘Sharing Economy’? Precarious Labor in Neoliberal Cities/ Where Is Economic Development in the Platform City?/ Shared Economy: WeWork or We Work Together
by Lisa K. Bates & Austin Zwick & Zachary Spicer & Tamara Kerzhner & Anna Joo Kim & Ashley Baber & Jamaal W. Green & dominic t. moulden - 448-455 Journey into an Immense Heart of Car Parking
by Elizabeth Jean Taylor - 456-465 Parking and the City
by Rebecca Clements - 460-465 The Oxford Handbook of Mega Project Management
by Sophie Sturup
March 2019, Volume 20, Issue 2
- 159-162 Vision 20/20: Planning Theory and Practice, Past and Future
by Jill L. Grant - 165-181 Inverse Planning in the Cracks of Formal Land Use Regulation: The Bottom-Up Regularisation of Informal Settlements in Maputo, Mozambique
by Francesco Chiodelli & Anna Mazzolini - 182-202 Internal Migration and Spatial Dispersal; Changes in Israel’s Internal Migration Patterns in the New Millennium
by Sagit Azary-Viesel & Ravit Hananel - 203-220 Diffuse Institutional Trust and Specific Institutional Mistrust in Nordic Participatory Planning: Experience from Contested Urban Projects
by Markku Lehtonen & Laurence De Carlo - 221-240 Gender Mainstreaming in Urban Planning: The Potential of Geographic Information Systems and Open Data Sources
by Jose Carpio-Pinedo & Sonia De Gregorio Hurtado & Inés Sánchez De Madariaga - 241-257 Does Participatory Planning Promise Too Much? Global Discourses and the Glass Ceiling of Participation in Urban Malawi
by Hilde Refstie & Marianne Millstein - 261-287 Planning and the So-Called ‘Sharing’ Economy / Can Shared Mobility Deliver Equity?/ The Sharing Economy and the Ongoing Dilemma about How to Plan for Informality/ Regulating Platform Economies in Cities – Disrupting the Disruption?/ Regulatory Combat? How the ‘Sharing Economy’ is Disrupting Planning Practice/ Corporatised Enforcement: Challenges of Regulating AirBnB andOther Platform Economies/ Nurturing a Generative Sharing Economy for Local Public Goods and Service Provision
by Anna Joo Kim & Anne Brown & Marla Nelson & Renia Ehrenfeucht & Nancy Holman & Nicole Gurran & Jathan Sadowski & Mara Ferreri & Romola Sanyal & Marta Bastos & Klaas Kresse - 290-297 Evil Insurgency. A Comment on the Interface ‘Strengthening Planning’s Effectiveness in A Hyper-Polarized World’
by Benjamin Davy - 298-304 Podcasting and Urban Planning
by Dallas Rogers & Miles Herbert - 305-310 Doing What We Can with What We’ve Got: Reflections on PAR and the ECR Experience
by Jason Slade - 311-314 Green Belts: Past; Present; Future?
by Michael Buxton
January 2019, Volume 20, Issue 1
- 3-7 Reflecting on theory and practice
by Mark Scott - 11-36 Exceptional Spaces for Sustainable Living: The Regulation of One Planet Developments in the Open Countryside
by Neil Harris - 37-52 Detachment in Planning Practice
by Juliana M. Zanotto - 53-69 Sustainability Science and Planning: A Crucial Collaboration?
by Edward J. Jepson, Jr. - 70-96 Spatial Planning Judgments and Computer Supported Collaborative Planning
by Dan Milz - 99-128 Borders and Refuge: Citizenship, Mobility and Planning in a Volatile World/ Introduction: Urban Planning and the Global Movement of People/ Planning for Refugees in Cities/ The Role of Planning in Humanitarian Response, Looking at Urban Crisis Response in Lebanon/ Urban Refugees: An Urban Planning Blind Spot?/ Immigrant Rights in Europe: Planning the Solidarity City/ Propertied Liberalism in a Borderland City/ Displacement, Refuge and Urbanisation: From Refugee Camps to Ecovillages/ From Capitalist-Urbanisation as Politics-of-Refuge to Planning as Planetary-Politics-of-Care
by Libby Porter & Romola Sanyal & Synne Bergby & Kelly Yotebieng & Henrik Lebuhn & Magie M. Ramírez & Pedro Figueiredo Neto & Simone Tulumello - 130-136 Participatory Action Research and Early Career Researchers: The Structural Barriers to Engagement and Why We Should Do It Anyway
by Katrina Raynor - 137-144 Learning in Participatory Planning Processes: Taking Advantage of Concepts and Theories Across Disciplines
by José W. Meléndez & Brenda Parker - 145-147 Knowledge for Social Change. Bacon, Dewey, and the Revolutionary Transformation of Research Universities in the Twenty-First Century
by Laura Saija - 148-155 Illustrations: Discovering Qingdao
by Klaus R. Kunzmann
October 2018, Volume 19, Issue 5
- 645-649 Confronting Disconnections of the Mind, Practice and Politics – Planning and Meaningful Conversation. What Role for an Academic Planning Journal on the Cusp of Its Twentieth Birthday?
by Heather Campbell - 653-677 Is Planning ‘Secular’? Rethinking Religion, Secularism, and Planning
by Babak Manouchehrifar - 678-697 Planning for Waterway Renewal: Balancing Institutional Reproduction and Institutional Change
by Jannes J. Willems & Tim Busscher & Johan Woltjer & Jos Arts - 698-716 Framing the Future: On Local Planning Cultures and Legacies
by Dave Valler & Nicholas A. Phelps - 717-733 Development Rights: Regulating Vertical Urbanism in Taiwan
by Mi Shih & Hsiu-tzu Betty Chang & Frank J. Popper - 734-750 The Rise of the Private Sector in Fragmentary Planning in England
by Gavin Parker & Emma Street & Matthew Wargent - 753-778 The Autonomous Vehicle Revolution: Implications for Planning/The Future Driverless City?/Autonomous Vehicles – A Planner’s Response/Autonomous Vehicles: Opportunities, Challenges and the Need for Government Action/Three Signs Autonomous Vehicles Will Not Lead to Less Car Ownership and Less Car Use in Car Dependent Cities – A Case Study of Sydney, Australia/Planning for Autonomous Vehicles? Questions of Purpose, Place and Pace/Ensuring Good Governance: The Role of Planners in the Development of Autonomous Vehicles/Putting Technology in its Place
by Libby Porter & John Stone & Crystal Legacy & Carey Curtis & James Harris & Elliot Fishman & Jennifer Kent & Greg Marsden & Louise Reardon & Jack Stilgoe - 780-787 Planning Matter: Acting with Things
by David Webb - 782-784 Urban Planning Education / The Toxic University
by Huw Thomas - 784-787 The SPINDUS Handbook for Spatial Quality: A Relational Approach
by Patsy Healey
August 2018, Volume 19, Issue 4
- 469-473 Hazards of Argumentation: How the Rhetoric of Good Reasons Can Narrow Attention and Undermine Planning Imagination
by John Forester - 477-495 Planning as State-Effect: Calculation, Historicity and Imagination at Marina Bay, Singapore
by Kah-Wee Lee - 496-513 The Micro-Geography of a Home as a Contact Zone: Urban Planning in Fragmented Settler Colonialism
by Tovi Fenster - 514-533 Re-Contextualising Oregon’s Urban Growth Boundary to City-Regional Planning in Tampere, Finland: The Need for Strategic Bridge-Building
by Helka Kalliomäki - 534-557 Mapping Stakeholders’ Relating Pathways in Collaborative Planning Processes; A Longitudinal Case Study of an Urban Regeneration Partnership
by Lieselot Vandenbussche - 558-577 Towards an Integrative Perspective: Bringing Ken Wilber’s Philosophy to Planning Theory and Practice
by António Ferreira - 581-615 Strengthening Planning’s Effectiveness in a Hyper-Polarized World/Responding to the Conservative Common Sense of Opposition to Planning and Development in England/The Limits to Negotiation and the Promise of Refusal/Planning Contexts in a Hyper-Polarized World/A Right to Sanctuary: Supporting Immigrant Communities in an Era of Extreme Precarity/Planning and Climate Change: Opportunities and Challenges in a Politically Contested Environment/Speaking with the Middle 40% to Bridge the Political Divide for Mutual Gains in Planning Agreements
by Karen Trapenberg Frick & Dowell Myers & Andy Inch & Heather Dorries & June Manning Thomas & Willow S. Lung-Amam & Gerardo Francisco Sandoval & Ann W. Foss & Karen Trapenberg Frick & Dowell Myers - 618-622 Delivering the New Urban Agenda Through Urban and Territorial Planning
by Cliff Hague - 623-627 Embedding Health Considerations in Urban Planning
by Melanie Lowe - 628-632 NHS Healthy New Towns Programme
by Amy Bowkett & Holly Norman - 633-638 Buffeted by Culture: Urban Planners, Notional Places, and Narratives of Fakery
by Stephen Rowley - 639-641 Imagining Urban Futures
by Paul Graham Raven
May 2018, Volume 19, Issue 3
- 1-1 Erratum
by The Editors - 319-323 The Art of Planning Theory and Practice in Singapore
by Mee Kam Ng - 327-344 Technologies of Mobilising Consensus: The Politics of Producing Affordable Housing Plans for the London Legacy Development Corporation’s Planning Boundary
by Cecil Sagoe - 345-362 Placing the Action in Context: Contrasting Public-centered and Institutional Understandings of Democratic Planning Politics
by Sherif Zakhour & Jonathan Metzger - 363-384 Transformations of Planning Rationales: Changing Spaces for Governance in Recent Dutch National Planning
by Verena Balz & Wil Zonneveld - 385-404 Responsibility for Sustainable Development in Europe: What Does It Mean for Planning Theory and Practice?
by Catalina Turcu - 405-421 Barriers and Drivers of Planning for Climate Change Adaptation across Three Levels of Government in Canada
by Greg Oulahen & Yaheli Klein & Linda Mortsch & Erin O’Connell & Deborah Harford - 425-446 Can We Learn from Our Mistakes? Introduction/Lessons Learned from Implementing Two Programs to Develop More Infrastructure Projects in Asia/Who Does the Agent of Change Represent? Stardom vs. Ownership/Learning from Mistakes/Mistakes, Errors and Possible Failures/Discerning Demography and Economy/Can a Planning and Land Use Lawyer Learn from Past Mistakes?/On Subjective Processes and the Limiting of Enquiry/Afterword: Abiding Challenges of Deliberative Practice
by Heather Campbell & John Forester & Bishwapriya Sanyal & Khairul Anwar & Carlos Brando & Iwan J Azis & Matteo Robiglio & Ezio Micelli & Riccardo Delli Santi & Dave Vanderhoven - 448-453 Heritage and Brexit
by John Pendlebury & Loes Veldpaus - 454-457 No Left or Right, Only Right or
by Karen Trapenberg Frick - 458-461 Challenges for the Grand Parisian Metropolitanization
by Socrates Stratis - 462-465 Zoned in the USA: The Origins and Implications of American Land-Use Regulation
by Elizabeth Jean Taylor
March 2018, Volume 19, Issue 2
- 155-157 Good for Whom and Where?
by Libby Porter - 160-179 The Political Premises of Contemporary Urban Concepts: The Global City, the Sustainable City, the Resilient City, the Creative City, and the Smart City
by Tali Hatuka & Issachar Rosen-Zvi & Michael Birnhack & Eran Toch & Hadas Zur - 180-197 Health-Promoting Spatial Planning: Approaches for Strengthening Urban Policy Integration
by Melanie Lowe & Carolyn Whitzman & Billie Giles-Corti - 198-217 “Between a Rock and a Hard Place”: Planning Reform, Localism and the Role of the Planning Inspectorate in England
by Martin Boddy & Hannah Hickman - 218-234 Black-boxing the Evidence: Planning Regulation and Major Renewable Energy Infrastructure Projects in England and Wales
by Yvonne Rydin & Lucy Natarajan & Maria Lee & Simon Lock - 235-251 Radical Resilience: Autonomous Self-management in Post-disaster Recovery Planning and Practice
by Ihnji Jon & Mark Purcell - 254-288 Race and Spatial Imaginary: Planning Otherwise/Introduction: What Shakes Loose When We Imagine Otherwise/She Made the Vision True: A Journey Toward Recognition and Belonging/Isha Black or Isha White? Racial Identity and Spatial Development in Warren County, NC/Colonial City Design Lives Here: Questioning Planning Education’s Dominant Imaginaries/Say Its Name – Planning Is the White Spatial Imaginary, or Reading McKittrick and Woods as Planning Text/Wakanda! Take the Wheel! Visions of a Black Green City/If I Built the World, Imagine That: Reflecting on World Building Practices in Black Los Angeles/Is Honolulu a Hawaiian Place? Decolonizing Cities and the Redefinition of Spatial Legitimacy/Interpretations & Imaginaries: Toward an Instrumental Black Planning History
by Lisa K. Bates & Sharita A. Towne & Christopher Paul Jordan & Kitso Lynn Lelliott & Lisa K. Bates & Sharita A. Towne & Christopher Paul Jordan & Kitso Lynn Lelliott & Monique S. Johnson & Bev Wilson & Tanja Winkler & Anna Livia Brand & C. N. E. Corbin & Matthew Jordan Miller & Annette Koh & Konia Freitas & Andrea R. Roberts - 291-297 Cities, Automation, and the Self-parking Elephant in the Room
by Erick Guerra & Eric A. Morris - 298-304 Global Home-Sharing, Local Communities and the Airbnb Debate: A Planning Research Agenda
by Nicole Gurran - 305-309 Is the Delhi Mumbai Industrial Corridor (DMIC) an Emerging ‘Megaregion’ in India?
by Chandrima Mukhopadhyay - 310-312 Local government and urban governance in Europe
by Eduardo Oliveira - 313-315 Planning for Coexistence? Recognizing Indigenous Rights Through Land-use Planning in Canada and Australia
by Heather Dorries
January 2018, Volume 19, Issue 1
- 3-6 Complexity and Uncertainty, If That Is Not an Over-Simplification
by Robert Upton - 9-9 Tribute to John Friedmann
by Heather Campbell & Andy Inch & Crystal Legacy - 10-12 Insurgencies and Revolutions: Reflections on John Friedmann’s Contributions to Planning Theory and Practice
by Megan Horst - 13-17 Memories of John Friedmann
by Klaus R. Kunzmann - 21-38 Institutions and Urban Space: Land, Infrastructure, and Governance in the Production of Urban Property
by André Sorensen - 39-57 Experiences of Participatory Planning in Contexts of Inequality: A Qualitative Study of Urban Renewal Projects in Colombia
by Ellen van Holstein - 58-73 Tactical Urbanism: Delineating a Critical Praxis
by David Webb - 74-92 Defining University Anchor Institution Strategies: Comparing Theory to Practice
by Meagan M. Ehlenz - 93-113 The Impact of Changed Structural Conditions on Regional Sustainable Mobility Planning in Norway
by Aud Tennøy & Kjersti Visnes Øksenholt - 117-137 The New Urban Agenda: From Vision to Policy and Action/Will the New Urban Agenda Have Any Positive Influence onGovernments and International Agencies?/Informality in the New Urban Agenda: From the Aspirational Policiesof Integration to a Politics of Constructive Engagement/Growing Up or Growing Despair? Prospects for Multi-Sector Progresson City Sustainability Under the NUA/Approaching Risk and Hazards in the New Urban Agenda: ACommentary/Follow-Up and Review of the New Urban Agenda
by Matthias Garschagen & Libby Porter & David Satterthwaite & Arabella Fraser & Ralph Horne & Michael Nolan & William Solecki & Erin Friedman & Eleni Dellas & Franziska Schreiber - 140-148 Making Towns Work: Habitat III – What Relevance?
by Ronald McGill - 149-151 Encounters in planning thought. 16 autobiographical essays from key thinkers in spatial planning
by Benjamin Davy
October 2017, Volume 18, Issue 4
- () Editorial Board
by The Editors - 519-522 Editorial
by Michael Harris - 525-548 Doing the Just City: Social Impact Assessment and the Planning of Beersheba, Israel
by Oren Yiftachel & Rani Mandelbaum - 549-565 The Influence Fallacy: Resident Motivations for Participation in an English Housing Regeneration Project
by Dominic Aitken - 566-582 Rethinking Participation, Rethinking Planning
by Amelia Thorpe - 583-596 Planning as Persuaded Storytelling: The Role of Genre in Planners’ Narratives
by Andrew Zitcer - 597-615 Planning for Sharing – Providing Infrastructure for Citizens to be Makers and Sharers
by Anna Hult & Karin Bradley - 616-635 Secondary Yet Metropolitan? The Challenges of Metropolitan Integration for Second-Tier Cities
by Rodrigo V. Cardoso & Evert J. Meijers - 639-666 Indigenous Planning: from Principles to Practice/A Revolutionary Pedagogy of/for Indigenous Planning/Settler-Indigenous Relationships as Liminal Spaces in Planning Education and Practice/Indigenist Planning/What is the Work of Non-Indigenous People in the Service of a Decolonizing Agenda?/Supporting Indigenous Planning in the City/Film as a Catalyst for Indigenous Community Development/Being Ourselves and Seeing Ourselves in the City: Enabling the Conceptual Space for Indigenous Urban Planning/Universities Can Empower the Next Generation of Architects, Planners, and Landscape Architects in Indigenous Design and Planning
by Libby Porter & Hirini Matunga & Leela Viswanathan & Lyana Patrick & Ryan Walker & Leonie Sandercock & Dana Moraes & Jonathan Frantz & Michelle Thompson-Fawcett & Callum Riddle & Theodore (Ted) Jojola - 668-675 On Planning for Not Having a Plan?
by Jean Hillier - 676-683 Love Among the Ruins: Nonviolent Anarchism and the Housing Question
by Chris Allen - 684-689 Lived Spaces and Planning Anarchy: Theory and Practice of Colin Ward
by David Crouch - 690-694 Our Own Power to Act
by Mark Purcell - 695-695 Thanks to Reviewers
by The Editors
July 2017, Volume 18, Issue 3
- 339-342 Plus ça change
by Jill L. Grant - 345-350 Of property and planning: a brief introduction
by Mona Fawaz & Nada Moumtaz - 351-364 Land use, planning, and the “difficult character of property”
by Nicholas Blomley - 365-384 Planning and the making of a propertied landscape
by Mona Fawaz - 385-404 Property titles and the urban poor: from informality to displacement?
by Ann Varley - 407-427 Process design decisions in community-based collaboration: implications for implementation and collateral social benefits
by Connie P. Ozawa & Deborah F. Shmueli & Sanda Kaufman - 428-445 Urban consolidation process and discourses in Sydney: unpacking social media use in a community group’s media campaign
by Wayne Williamson & Kristian Ruming - 446-465 Contestation and conservatism in neighbourhood planning in England: reconciling agonism and collaboration?
by Gavin Parker & Tessa Lynn & Matthew Wargent - 469-488 Planning in the face of immovable subjects: a dialogue about resistance to development forces
by Andy Inch & Lucie Laurian & Clare Mouat & Ruth Davies & Benjamin Davy & Crystal Legacy & Clare Symonds - 490-493 Making post-truth planning great again: confronting alternative facts in a fractured democracy
by Juan J. Rivero - 494-504 Visions of Refugia: territorial and transnational solutions to mass displacement
by Robin Cohen & Nicholas Van Hear - 505-507 Instruments of planning: tensions and challenges for more equitable and sustainable cities
by Lucy Natarajan - 508-512 Response to the Comment article, “When a joke means so much more: the end of PLANET, and the rise of Planners 2040” (Volume 18, 2017, Issue 1)
by G. William Page - 513-515 Giusy Pappalardo responds to her commentators of the “Learning from practice: environmental and community mapping as participatory action research in planning” (Volume 18, 2017, Issue 1)
by Giusy Pappalardo
April 2017, Volume 18, Issue 2
- 177-180 Transport planning in the urban age
by Crystal Legacy - 183-201 (Re)constructing Informality and “Doing Regularization” in the Conservation Zone of Mexico City
by Priscilla Connolly & Jill Wigle - 202-216 Reimagining planning: moving from reflective practice to deliberative practice - a first exploration in the Italian context
by Daniela De Leo & John Forester - 217-232 What price planning? Reimagining planning as “market maker”
by Alex Lord & Philip O’Brien - 233-248 Neighbourhood planning and the impact of place identity on housing development in England
by Quintin Bradley - 249-267 What is functional mix? An assemblage approach
by Kim Dovey & Elek Pafka - 268-287 From squatters to creatives. An innovation perspective on temporary use in planning
by Thomas Honeck - 291-319 Confronting the challenge of humanist planning/Towards a humanist planning/A humanist perspective on knowledge for planning: implications for theory, research, and practice/To learn to plan, write stories/Three practices of humanism and critical pragmatism/Humanism or beyond?
by Ryan M. Good & Juan J. Rivero & Andrew Zitcer & Karen Umemoto & Robert W. Lake & Howell Baum & John Forester & Philip Harrison - 322-327 The world in the Americas – a reflection on the 2016 World Planning Schools Congress in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
by Carlos Balsas - 328-333 The “whys and wherefores” of citizen participation in the landscapes of HS2
by Jo Phillips - 334-336 Rebuilding community after Katrina: transformative education in the New Orleans planning initiative
by Lisa Schweitzer
January 2017, Volume 18, Issue 1
- () Corrigendum
by The Editors - () Erratum
by The Editors - 3-6 Anticipations: on the state of the planning imagination
by Andy Inch - 7-8 Illustrations: Nepal memories
by Klaus R. Kunzmann - 11-33 The flagship concept of the ‘4th urban environment’. Branding and visioning in Malmö, Sweden
by Carina Listerborn - 34-50 Confronting collective traumas: an exploration of therapeutic planning
by Aftab Erfan - 51-70 Food justice and municipal government in the USA
by Megan Horst - 71-88 The “deliberative bureaucrat”: deliberative democracy and institutional trust in the jurisdiction of the Finnish planner
by Sari Puustinen & Raine Mäntysalo & Jonne Hytönen & Karoliina Jarenko - 89-108 Reforming spatial planning in anglophone Caribbean countries
by Michelle A. Mycoo - 109-124 The planned, the unplanned and the hyper-planned: dwelling in contemporary Jerusalem
by Michal Braier & Haim Yacobi - 127-153 Learning from practice: environmental and community mapping as participatory action research in planning
by Laura Saija & Daniela De Leo & John Forester & Giusy Pappalardo & Ives Rocha & Bjørn Sletto & Jason Corburn & Baraka Mwau & Alberto Magnaghi - 156-162 When a joke represents so much more: the end of PLANET and the rise of planners 2040
by Mai Thi Nguyen & Jennifer Evans-Cowley & Leigh Graham & Laura Solitare & J. Rosie Tighe & Shannon Van Zandt - 163-167 Public reason and the planning academic
by Anne Taufen Wessells - 168-172 Why are planning awards important?
by P. J. Geraghty - 173-174 Knowledge, policy, and expertise: the UK Royal Commission on Environmental Pollution, 1970–2011
by Andy Jordan
October 2016, Volume 17, Issue 4
- () Editorial Board
by The Editors - 489-493 Lessons from the UK’s Brexit vote: will it prove to be a fork in the road or just the same old cul-de-sac?
by Heather Campbell - 497-515 The implementation deficits of adaptation and mitigation: green buildings and water security in Amsterdam and Boston
by Maarten Markus & Federico Savini - 516-536 Place-making or place-masking? The everyday political economy of “making place”
by Ruth Fincher & Maree Pardy & Kate Shaw - 537-556 Participation, scenarios and pathways in long-term planning for climate change adaptation
by Inês Campos & André Vizinho & Carlos Coelho & Fátima Alves & Mónica Truninger & Carla Pereira & Filipe Duarte Santos & Gil Penha Lopes - 557-576 Practices and rationales of community engagement with wind farms: awareness raising, consultation, empowerment
by Mhairi Aitken & Claire Haggett & David Rudolph - 577-600 Digital knowledge technologies in planning practice: from black boxes to media for collaborative inquiry
by Robert Goodspeed - 601-617 Bringing planning to the streets: using site-specific video as a method for participatory urban planning
by Riina Lundman - 621-651 “Float like a butterfly, sting like a bee”: giving voice to planning practitioners
by Tuna Tasan-Kok & Luca Bertolini & Sandra Oliveira e Costa & Hila Lothan & Higor Carvalho & Maarten Desmet & Seppe De Blust & Tim Devos & Deniz Kimyon & J. A. Zoete & Peter Ahmad - 654-657 Culture? And planning?
by Simone Abram - 658-662 Revisiting comparative planning cultures: is culture a reactionary rhetoric?
by Bish Sanyal - 663-667 Planning mono-culture or planning difference?
by Vanessa Watson