Content
October 2016, Volume 17, Issue 4
- 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 - 668-670 From Boom to Bubble. How Finance Built the New Chicago
by Antoine Guironnet & Ludovic Halbert - 671-671 Thanks to Reviewers
by The Editors
July 2016, Volume 17, Issue 3
- 319-322 Who writes for and why?
by Aidan While - 325-343 Sustaining area-based initiatives by developing appropriate “anchors”: the role of social capital
by Annika Agger & Parama Roy & Øystein Leonardsen - 344-360 Planning and the rule of law
by Philip Booth - 361-384 Non-compliance with building permit regulations in Accra-Tema city-region, Ghana: exploring the reasons from the perspective of multiple stakeholders
by Godwin Arku & Kenneth O. Mensah & Nii K. Allotey & Ebenezer Addo Frempong - 385-404 The use of state-of-the-art transport models by policymakers – beauty in simplicity?
by Moshe Givoni & Eda Beyazit & Yoram Shiftan - 405-420 Pedestrian planning and the challenges of instrumental rationality in transport planning: emerging strategies in three Swedish municipalities
by David Lindelöw & Till Koglin & Åse Svensson - 421-443 Dealing with interrelatedness and fragmentation in road infrastructure planning: an analysis of integrated approaches throughout the planning process in the Netherlands
by Niels Heeres & Taede Tillema & Jos Arts - 447-473 Exchange between researchers and practitioners in urban planning: achievable objective or a bridge too far?/The use of academic research in planning practice: who, what, where, when and how?/Bridging research and practice through collaboration: lessons from a joint working group/Getting the relationship between researchers and practitioners working/Art and urban planning: stimulating researcher, practitioner and community engagement/Collaboration between researchers and practitioners: Political and bureaucratic issues/Investigating Research/Conclusion: Breaking down barriers through international practice?
by Joe Hurley & Christian Wilhelm Lamker & Elizabeth Jean Taylor & Dominic Stead & Meike Hellmich & Linda Lange & Helen Rowe & Sonja Beeck & Peter Phibbs & Ann Forsyth - 476-479 Planners amid the storm: Lessons from Israel/Palestine
by Marco Allegra - 480-481 The Routledge handbook of planning research methods
by Janice Barry - 481-483 Neighbourhood as refuge: community reconstruction, place remaking, and environmental justice in the city
by Nick Bailey - 483-485 Double review: the kind of solution Jane Jacobs is
by Jill L. Grant
April 2016, Volume 17, Issue 2
- 169-172 Daunting or inviting: “context” as your working theory of practice
by John Forester - 175-191 Greasing the wheels, or a spanner in the works? Permitting the adaptive re-use of redundant office buildings into residential use in England
by Kevin Muldoon-Smith & Paul Greenhalgh - 192-209 The managerial turn and municipal land-use planning in Switzerland – evidence from practice
by Jean-David Gerber - 210-226 Planning for empowerment: Upending the traditional approach to planning for affordable housing in the face of gentrification
by Kathryn L. Howell - 227-243 Enabling transformative agency: community-based green economic and workforce development in LA and Cleveland
by Lily Song - 244-263 The role of deliberative planning in translating best practice into good practice: from placeless-ness to placemaking
by Beau B. Beza - 267-300 Nature-based solutions for the contemporary city/Re-naturing the city/Reflections on urban landscapes, ecosystems services and nature-based solutions in cities/Multifunctional green infrastructure and climate change adaptation: brownfield greening as an adaptation strategy for vulnerable communities?/Delivering green infrastructure through planning: insights from practice in Fingal, Ireland/Planning for biophilic cities: from theory to practice
by Mark Scott & Mick Lennon & Dagmar Haase & Aleksandra Kazmierczak & Gerry Clabby & Tim Beatley - 302-313 EU territorial cohesion, a contradiction in terms
by Andreas Faludi - 314-315 Alternative visions of post-war reconstruction: creating the modern townscape
by Catherine Flinn Goldie
January 2016, Volume 17, Issue 1
- 3-6 The right to healthy place-making and well-being
by Mee Kam Ng - 9-34 This land can sustain us: cooperative land use planning on the Oneida Reservation
by Rebecca M. Webster - 35-51 A capabilities approach to arts and culture? Theorizing community development in West Philadelphia
by Andrew Zitcer & Julie Hawkins & Neville Vakharia - 52-71 Built environment, causality and urban planning
by Petter Næss - 72-92 Exploring pedagogical opportunities between architecture and planning: the case of University of Nevada, Las Vegas
by Mahyar Arefi & Firas Al-Douri - 93-118 Citizen activism, conservative views & mega planning in a digital era
by Karen Trapenberg Frick - 121-151 Exploring the winners and losers of marine environmental governance/Marine spatial planning: ?/“More than fishy business”: epistemology, integration and conflict in marine spatial planning/Marine spatial planning: power and scaping/Surely not all planning is evil?/Marine spatial planning: a Canadian perspective/Maritime spatial planning – “”/Marine spatial planning: “it is better to be on the train than being hit by it”/Reflections from the perspective of recreational anglers and boats for hire/Maritime spatial planning and marine renewable energy
by Wesley Flannery & Geraint Ellis & Geraint Ellis & Wesley Flannery & Melissa Nursey-Bray & Jan P. M. van Tatenhove & Christina Kelly & Scott Coffen-Smout & Rhona Fairgrieve & Maaike Knol & Svein Jentoft & David Bacon & Anne Marie O’Hagan - 154-160 Edward Soja: geographical imaginations from the margins to the core
by Margarida Queirós - 161-165 Planning practice in the West Bank: should planners speak up?
by Cliff Hague
October 2015, Volume 16, Issue 4
- () Editorial Board
by The Editors - 451-454 What’s missing?
by Robert Upton - 457-478 Planning for deep-rooted problems: What can we learn from aligning complex systems and wicked problems?
by Moira Zellner & Scott D. Campbell - 479-497 Institutions and the social construction of “missing links” in infrastructure planning
by Jaap G. Rozema - 498-516 Planning with half a mind: Why planners resist emotion
by Howell Baum - 517-534 Institutional practices and planning for walking: A focus on built environment audits
by Courtney Babb & Carey Curtis - 535-554 Postsecular planning? The idea of municipal spirituality
by Katie McClymont - 557-585 The transformative potential of civic enterprise
by Hendrik Wagenaar & Patsy Healey & Giovanni Laino & Patsy Healey & Geoff Vigar & Sebastià Riutort Isern & Thomas Honeck & Joost Beunderman & Jurgen van der Heijden & Hendrik Wagenaar - 588-593 Planetary urbanisation: what does it matter for politics or practice?
by Kate Shaw - 594-597 Town and Country Planning in the UK 15th edition and Planning in the UK. An Introduction
by Huw Thomas - 597-599 The public city: essays in honour of Paul Mees
by Alan Walks - 600-600 Referees in 2015
by The Editors
September 2015, Volume 16, Issue 3
- 293-296 Unsettling comforting deceits: Planning scholarship, planning practice and the politics of research impact
by Libby Porter - 299-318 Public welfare or sectarianism: A new challenge for planning
by Shlomit Flint-Ashery - 319-335 Seeing is not believing: cognitive bias and modelling in collaborative planning
by Charles Hoch & Moira Zellner & Dan Milz & Josh Radinsky & Leilah Lyons - 336-362 Scale and scope of environmental planning transformations: The Israeli case
by Deborah Shmueli & Eran Feitelson & Benny Furst & Iris Hann - 363-384 Negotiation processes in urban redevelopment projects: Dealing with conflicts by balancing integrative and distributive approaches
by Marlijn Baarveld & Marnix Smit & Geert Dewulf - 385-406 Growth modelling and the management of urban sprawl: Questioning the performance of sustainable planning policies
by Sébastien Lord & Maxime Frémond & Rojda Bilgin & Philippe Gerber - 409-434 Partnerships of learning for planning education Who is learning what from whom? The beautiful messiness of learning partnerships/Experiential learning partnerships in Australian and New Zealand higher education planning programmes/ Res non verba ? rediscovering the social purpose of planning (and the university): The Westfield Action Research Project/At the coalface, Take 2 : Lessons from students' critical reflections/Education for "cubed change"/Unsettling planning education through community-engaged teaching and learning: Reflections on the Indigenous Planning Studio
by Libby Porter & Christine Slade & Andrew Butt & Jo Rosier & Tim Perkins & Lee Crookes & Andy Inch & Jason Slade & Faranaaz Bassa & Brett Petzer & Tanja Winkler & Laura Saija & Janice Barry - 436-440 The re-creation of social town planning?
by Hugh Ellis - 441-446 Can zombies become human again? Plan Melbourne, zombie institutions, and citizen dissent
by Carolyn Whitzman - 447-448 The down-deep delight of democracy
by Andrea Restrepo-Mieth
June 2015, Volume 16, Issue 2
- 145-148 What kind of research might help us become better planners?
by John Forester - 151-168 Seeking density and mix in the suburbs: challenges for mid-sized cities
by Kirk Brewer & Jill L Grant - 169-183 The paradox of strategic spatial planning: A theoretical outline with a view on Finland
by Raine Mäntysalo & Jonna K. Kangasoja & Vesa Kanninen - 184-205 Post-war planning and policy tourism: the international study tours of the Town and Country Planning Association 1947-1961
by Ian R. Cook & Stephen V Ward & Kevin Ward - 206-225 Urban entrepreneurialism and car-use reduction
by Anders Tønnesen - 226-247 Planning allocations and the stubborn north-south divide in Tel Aviv-Jaffa
by Talia Margalit & Efrat Vertes - 251-275 Planning for the new European metropolis: functions, politics, and symbols/Metropolitan regions: functional relations between the core and the periphery/Business investment decisions and spatial planning policy/Metropolitan challenges, political responsibilities/Spatial imaginaries, urban dynamics and political community/Capacity-building in the city region: creating common spaces/Which challenges for today's European metropolitan spaces?
by Willem Salet & Rick Vermeulen & Federico Savini & Sebastian Dembski & Alain Thierstein & Peter Nears & Bart Vink & Patsy Healey & Ursula Stein & Henrik Schultz & Willem Salet & Rick Vermeulen & Federico Savini & Sebastian Dembski - 278-284 Planning with Resurgent religion: informality and gray spacing of the urban landscape
by Nimrod Luz - 285-290 Nature conservation in the Anthropocene: preservation, restoration and the challenge of novel ecosystems
by Mick Lennon
March 2015, Volume 16, Issue 1
- 3-6 #UmbrellaMovement: Some reflections from Hong Kong
by Luca Bertolini - 7-7 Illustrations
by Klaus R. Kunzmann - 11-27 Civil society enterprise and local development
by Patsy Healey - 28-44 Partnerships for disability-inclusive road development in Papua New Guinea: Unusual suspects and equivocal gains
by Carolyn Whitzman - 45-62 A strategy-based framework for assessing the flood resilience of cities - A Hamburg case study
by Britta Restemeyer & Johan Woltjer & Margo van den Brink - 63-78 The role and evolution of boundary concepts in transdisciplinary landscape planning
by Paul Opdam & Judith Westerink & Claire Vos & Barry de Vries - 79-96 Learning alliance methodology: Contributions and challenges for multicultural planning in health service provision: A case study in Kent, UK
by Carlos Moreno-Leguizamon & Marcela Tovar-Restrepo & Clara Irazábal & Christine Locke - 99-125 Raising sustainability/Mobilising sustainability: Why European sustainable urban development initiatives are slow to materialise/Territorial cohesion as a vehicle of sustainability/Sustainable urban development and the challenge of global air transport nodes and spatial integration/Distorted density: Where developers and non-governmental organizations on sustainable urban development agree/Overcoming politics with markets? The co-production of sustainable development in urban and regional planning
by Constance Carr & Tom Becker & Estelle Evrard & Birte Nienaber & Ursula Roos & Evan McDonough & Markus Hesse & Rob Krueger - 128-132 Is planning theory really open for planning practice?
by Jan Vogelij - 133-138 A mutated skyline: New York's sky is for sale
by Ana Morcillo Pallarés
December 2014, Volume 15, Issue 4
- 447-450 Editorial matters
by Aidan While - 453-479 Making space for reconciliation in the planning system
by Lindsay Galbraith - 480-504 Multi-level integrated planning and greening of public infrastructure in South Africa
by Thierry Giordano - 505-526 Decoding borders. Appreciating border impacts on space and people
by Beatrix Haselsberger - 527-542 Planning support systems and interdisciplinary learning
by Peter Pelzer & Stan Geertman - 543-562 Meta-governance and developing integrated territorial strategies: The case study of MIRT territorial agendas in the Randstad (Netherlands)
by Wil Zonneveld & Marjolein Spaans - 565-588 Protests with proposals: Teaching and learning activist planning in the Dominican Republic/Planning, activism and critical pedagogy through the interstices of horizontal governance/National political struggles, neoliberalism, and the evolution of urban planning in the Dominican Republic/Decentralization of planning in the Dominican Republic under neoliberalism and the role of civil society/Learning and working in Los Platanitos, Santo Domingo Norte: Mujeres Unidas and the vermiculture pilot project/Teaching reflexivity: An e-dialogue on critical service learning under neoliberal governance/The state, the city, and participation in civil society in the Dominican Republic
by Bjørn Sletto & Juan Torres & Nicolas Mendoza & Rosario Rizzo Lara & Nathan Brigmon & Tania Davila & Matthew Clifton & Pamela Sertzen & Lindsey Carte & Solange Muñoz & Oscar Omar Diaz & Amparo Chantada - 590-595 The challenges of the "material turn" for planning studies
by Yvonne Rydin - 596-602 Between a rock and hard place: House-building in Brighton and Hove
by Samer Bagaeen - 603-605 A new Europe 2020 strategy adopting an enhanced regional aproach
by Panagiotis Liargovas & Nikolaos Apostolopoulos
September 2014, Volume 15, Issue 3
- 287-290 Specialists and generalists: are there too many hedgehogs and not enough foxes?
by Heather Campbell - 293-310 From plan to reality: Implementing a community vision in Jackson Square, Boston
by Patricia Molina Costa - 311-327 Residents, customers or citizens? Tracing the idea of youthful participation in the context of administrative reforms in Finnish public administration
by Pia Bäcklund & Kirsi Pauliina Kallio & Jouni Häkli - 328-348 "Fight the towers! Or kiss your car park goodbye": How often do residents assert car parking rights in Melbourne planning appeals?
by Elizabeth Taylor - 349-369 Memory and place in participatory planning
by Tovi Fenster & Chen Misgav - 370-385 Trans-national promotion of British and American planning practice in the 1940s
by Marco Amati & Robert Freestone - 389-430 What constitutes a "successful" mega transport project?/Leadership, risk and storylines: The case of the Sydney Cross City Tunnel/The case of the LGV Méditerranée high speed railway line/Dealing with context and uncertainty in the development of the Athens Metro Base Project/What constitutes a "successful" mega transport project? Lessons from the Metropolitan Expressway in Tokyo/The RandstadRail project: A case study in decision-making strategies under uncertainty/Constructive conflicts in the case of the Öresund Link/Perspectives on "success" from the UK Channel Tunnel Rail Link Project/Some concluding remarks
by Harry T. Dimitriou & Nicholas Low & Sophie Sturup & Genevieve Zembri & Elisabeth Campagnac & George Kaparos & Pantoleon Skayannis & Yasunori Muromachi & Seiji Iwakura & Kazuya Itaya & Mendel Giezen & Luca Bertolini & Willem Salet & Jamil Khan & Fredrik Petterson & Bengt Holmberg & E. John Ward & Phil G. Wright & Harry T. Dimitriou & Harry T. Dimitriou - 432-438 Ørestad: Copenhagen's radical new town project in transition
by Stan Majoor - 439-440 Green infrastructure for landscape planning: integrating human and natural systems
by Mick Lennon - 441-443 Relaunching Titanic: memory and marketing in the new Belfast
by Mark Scott
June 2014, Volume 15, Issue 2
- 149-152 The proper spirit of enquiry
by Robert Upton - 155-169 EUropeanisation or Europeanisation of spatial planning?
by Andreas Faludi - 170-186 Doomed to informality: Familial versus modern planning in Arab towns in Israel
by Nurit Alfasi - 187-201 Writing about engaged scholarship: Misunderstandings and the meaning of "quality" in action research publications
by Laura Saija - 202-219 Understanding community development in a "theory of action" framework: Norms, markets, justice
by Laura Wolf-Powers - 220-234 Planning for population ageing: Ensuring enabling and supportive physical-social environments - Local infrastructure challenges
by Elizabeth O'Brien - 237-242 Planning innovation and post-disaster reconstruction: The case of Tohoku, Japan/Reconstruction of tsunami-devastated fishing villages in the Tohoku region of Japan and the challenges for planning/Post-disaster reconstruction in Iwate and new planning challenges for Japan/Towards a "network community" for the displaced town of Namie, FukushimaResilience design and community support in Iitate Village in the aftermath of the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear disaster/Evolving place governance innovations and pluralising reconstruction practices in post-disaster Japan
by Kayo Murakami & David Murakami Wood & Hiroshi Tomita & Satoshi Miyake & Rieko Shiraki & Kayo Murakami & Koji Itonaga & Christian Dimmer - 268-275 Don't mention the culture war: Beyond creative ambiguity and professional "quietism" in Northern Ireland/North of Ireland spatial planning?
by William J.V. Neill - 276-281 The four components and six essential pairs: A framework for neighbourhood revitalization
by Victoria Morckel - 282-283 Takings international: A comparative perspective on land use regulations and compensation rights
by Li Sun
March 2014, Volume 15, Issue 1
- 3-5 Editorial
by Trudi Elliot - 9-25 Rome undergraduate planning workshop: A reflexive approach to neighborhood studies
by Gregory Smith & Mildred E. Warner & Carlotta Fioretti & Claudia Meschiari - 26-40 Limits and potentials to deliberative engagement in highly regulated planning systems: Norm development within fixed rules
by Crystal Legacy & Alan March & Clare M. Mouat - 41-61 Conceptions of justice in the planning of the new urban landscape - Recent changes in the comprehensive planning discourse in Malmö, Sweden
by Katarina Nylund - 62-76 Co-production and collaboration in planning - The difference
by Vanessa Watson - 77-92 Intellectuals and the production of space in the urban renewal process in Hong Kong and Taipei
by Mee-Kam Ng - 95-122 Challenging theory: Changing practice: Critical perspectives on the past and potential of professional planning
by Kelvin MacDonald & Bishwapriya Sanyal & Mitchell Silver & Mee Kam Ng & Peter Head & Katie Williams & Vanessa Watson & Heather Campbell - 124-138 A new vision for planning - There must be a better way?
by Leonora Rozee - 139-143 Does ESPON support planning practice?
by Jan Vogelij - 144-146 Creating child-friendly cities: Reinstating kids in the city
by Niamh Moore-Cherry
December 2013, Volume 14, Issue 4
- 429-432 Editorial
by Mark Scott - 435-454 Recognition of indigenous water values in Australia's Northern Territory: current progress and ongoing challenges for social justice in water planning
by Sue Jackson & Marcus Barber - 455-469 Young adults and the decline of the urban English pub: issues for planning
by Marion Roberts & Tim Townshend - 470-491 Knowledge-based land use and transport planning? Consistency and gap between "state-of-the-art" knowledge and knowledge claims in planning documents in three Scandinavian city regions
by Petter Næss & Lisa Hansson & Tim Richardson & Aud Tennøy - 492-508 Revisiting a programmatic planning approach: managing linkages between transport and land use planning
by Tim Busscher & Taede Tillema & Jos Arts - 509-525 From disunited sectors to disjointed segments? Questioning the functional zoning of the sea
by Stephen Jay - 529-529 Finding hope in unpromising times: Stories of progressive planning alternatives for a world in crisis/Neoliberal planning is not the only way: mapping the regressive tendencies of planning practice/Can Batlló: Sustaining an insurgent urbanism/Dynamic planning initiated by residents: Implementable plans for the informal built urban fabric of the Palestinian neighbourhoods of East Jerusalem/REDWatch: Monitory democracy as a radical approach to citizen participation in planning/Making space for public ownership: The re-municipalisation of public services through grassroots struggle and local state action/"Neighbourhood inquiry": For a post-political politics/Looking inwards: Extended family living as an urban consolidation alternative/Grow your own
by Libby Porter & Marc Martí-Costa & Marc Dalmau Torvà & Efrat Cohen-Bar & Ayala Ronel & Dallas Rogers & Andrew Cumbers & Neil Gray & Natascha Klocker & Chris Gibson & Harmen de Hoop - 562-566 Are English neighbourhood forums democratically legitimate?
by Simin Davoudi & Paul Cowie - 567-569 The argumentative turn revisited: public policy as communicative practice
by Emerita Judith E. Innes - 569-570 Democracy deferred: Civic leadership after 9/11
by Dr Crystal Legacy
September 2013, Volume 14, Issue 3
- 289-291 Comparison, context and finding the political in planning
by Libby Porter - 295-314 Growing a just garden: environmental justice and the development of a community garden policy for Hamilton, Ontario
by Erika S. Jermé & Sarah Wakefield - 315-332 Non-implementation of development plans and participatory action research in Zimbabwe
by Siambabala Bernard Manyena - 333-348 Political dilemmas in peripheral development: investment, regulation, and interventions in metropolitan Amsterdam
by Federico Savini - 349-372 Challenging dichotomies - exploring resilience as an integrative and operative conceptual framework for large-scale urban green structures
by H. Erixon & S. Borgström & E. Andersson - 373-387 Five years later: how California community members acted on transformative learning achieved in a participatory planning process
by Marisa A. Zapata - 391-415 The future of the suburbs. Suburbs in transition/The resettlement of America's suburbs/Suburbs in global context: the challenges of continued growth and retrofitting/Suburban urbanity: re-envisioning indigenous settlement practices/Toward a new suburban America: will we catch the wave?/Optimistic and pessimistic perspectives on the evolution of the North American suburb/Response
by Jill L. Grant & Arthur C. Nelson & Ann Forsyth & Michelle Thompson-Fawcett's & Pamela Blais & Pierre Filion - 418-424 Displacing wind power across national boundaries or eco-innovation? Spatial planning implications of UK-Ireland renewable energy trading
by Mark Scott & Eoin O'Neill - 425-426 Measuring wellbeing: Towards sustainability
by Ian Bache
June 2013, Volume 14, Issue 2
- 155-156 Our infatuation with the object of planning: If only we could read off and follow the rules
by John Forester - 158-179 The right to the city: theory and practice in Brazil
by Abigail Friendly - 180-197 Reconceptualising territoriality and spatial planning: insights from the sea
by Sue Kidd & Dave Shaw - 198-210 Institutional perspectives on operationalising climate adaptation through planning
by Tony Matthews - 211-232 Mainport and corridor: exploring the mobilizing capacities of Dutch spatial concepts
by Lianne van Duinen - 233-247 Framing climate change: new directions in Dutch and Danish planning strategies
by Anne Jensen & Severine van Bommel & Anders Branth Pedersen & Helle Ørsted Nielsen & Wiebren Kuindersma - 251-276 Design confronts politics, and both thrive!/Creativity in the face of urban design conflict: A profile of Ric Richardson/From mediation to the creation of a "trading zone"/Conflict and creativity in Albuquerque/Reflecting on a mediation narrative from Albuquerque, New Mexico/From mediation to charrette/Physical clarity and necessary interruption/Ric Richardson responds
by John Forester & John Forester & Alessandro Balducci & Ali Madanipour & Klaus R. Kunzmann & Tridib Banerjee & Emily Talen & Ric Richardson - 278-282 Connecting growth and wealth through visionary planning: The case of Abu Dhabi 2030
by Michael Murray - 283-285 Learning the city: Knowledge and translocal assemblage
by Patsy Healey - 285-286 Behind the scenes: The politics of planning Adelaide
by Neil Parkyn
March 2013, Volume 14, Issue 1
- 3-5 Planning, the political in the everyday
by Luca Bertolini - 8-19 The neglected places of practice
by Robert Beauregard - 20-38 A new land: Deleuze and Guattari and planning
by Mark Purcell - 39-56 Engaging the public with online discussion and spatial annotations: The generation and transformation of public knowledge
by Jarkko Bamberg - 57-74 Making sense of India's spatial plan-making practice: Enduring approach or emergent variations?
by Sanjeev Vidyarthi & Charles Hoch & Carlton Basmajian - 75-100 Civic networks for sustainable regions - Innovative practices and emergent theory
by Judith E. Innes & Jane Rongerude - 103-140 Living with flood risk/The more we know, the more we know we don't know: Reflections on a decade of planning, flood risk management and false precision/Searching for resilience or building social capacities for flood risks?/Participatory floodplain management: Lessons from Bangladesh/Planning and retrofitting for floods: Insights from Australia/Neighbourhood design considerations in flood risk management/Flood risk management - Challenges to the effective implementation of a paradigm shift
by Mark Scott & Iain White & Christian Kuhlicke & Annett Steinführer & Parvin Sultana & Paul Thompson & John Minnery & Eoin O'Neill & Jonathan Cooper & Mark Adamson & Elizabeth Russell - 142-147 Dimensions of territorial governance
by Dominic Stead - 148-149 Real social science. Applied phronesis
by Michael Gunder - 149-151 Starchitecture: Scenes, actors and spectacles in contemporary cities
by Susan S. Fainstein
December 2012, Volume 13, Issue 4
- 503-506 Resisting the Growth Clamp
by Aidan While - 509-527 Outcomes from Community Engagement in Urban Regeneration: Evidence from England's New Deal for Communities Programme
by Paul Lawless & Sarah Pearson - 529-548 Including the Excluded? Changing the Understandings of Ethnicity in Contemporary English Planning
by Yasminah Beebeejaun - 549-568 (Not) Exercising Discretion: Environmental Planning and the Politics of Blame-Avoidance
by Philip Catney & John Henneberry - 569-589 Towards Comprehensive Spatial Development in Europe: A Critical View from Finland
by Helka Kalliomäki - 593-627 What's Love Got To Do With It? Illuminations on Loving Attachment in Planning
by Libby Porter & Leonie Sandercock & Karen Umemoto & Karen Umemoto & Lisa K. Bates & Marisa A. Zapata & Michelle C. Kondo & Andrew Zitcer & Robert W. Lake & Annalise Fonza & Bjorn Sletto & Aftab Erfan & Leonie Sandercock - 631-640 Temporal and Spatial Analysis of Later-Life Migration into Florida from 1980-2010 with an Application of the Palm Bay Parkway
by Andy Sharma - 641-642 Insurgencies: Essay in Planning Theory
by Stacy Anne Harwood - 642-644 Reconsidering Jane Jacobs
by Katharine A. Martindale
2012, Volume 13, Issue 3
- 349-353 Lots of words… but do any of them matter? The challenge of engaged scholarship
by Heather Campbell - 357-358 Notes on Contributors
by The Editors - 359-381 Processes of Innovation: Reformation of the English Strategic Spatial Planning System
by Susannah Gunn & Jean Hillier - 383-396 Boundary Interaction in Emerging Scenes: Two Participatory Planning Cases from Finland
by Helena Leino - 397-420 “The organised encroachment of the powerful”—Everyday practices of public space and water supply in Dhaka, Bangladesh
by Kirsten Hackenbroch & Shahadat Hossain - 421-444 Experiences of Neighbourhood Walkability Among Older Australians Living in High Density Inner-City Areas
by Desley Vine & Laurie Buys & Rosemary Aird - 445-460 At the Crossroads between Urban Planning and Urban Design: Critical Lessons from Three Italian Case Studies
by Pier Palermo & Davide Ponzini - 463-464 Notes on Contributors
by The Editors - 465-490 Introduction: Time to ThinkPlanning (Education)—From Marginal Interface to Central Opportunity Space?Science for Practice?Educating Professionals for Practice in a Complex World–a Challenge for Engineering and Planning SchoolsProject-Based Learning–Core University Education in Spatial Planning and DevelopmentManaging Planning Pathologies: An Educational Challenge of the New Apprenticeship Programme in FinlandConclusion: Time to Act
by Luca Bertolini & Andrea Frank & John Grin & Sarah Bell & Bernd Scholl & Hanna Mattila & Eeva Mynttinen & Raine Mäntysalo & Luca Bertolini - 493-496 Territorial Agenda of the European Union 2020: Towards an Inclusive, Smart and Sustainable Europe of Diverse Regions
by Cormac Walsh - 497-498 Strategic Planning for Contemporary Urban Regions: City of Cities: A project for Milan
by Patsy Healey - 498-500 Evaluation for Participation and Sustainability in Planning
by Solmaz Tavsanoglu
2012, Volume 13, Issue 2
- 189-192 On the Genealogy of Planning
by Robert Upton - 194-195 Notes on Contributors
by The Editors - 213-231 Indigenous State Planning as Inter-Institutional Capacity Development: The Evolution of “Government-to-Government” Relations in Coastal British Columbia, Canada
by Janice Barry - 233-256 Conservation Under Occupation: Conflictual Powers and Cultural Heritage Meanings
by Feras Hammami - 257-273 Theorizing Inside Activism: Understanding Policymaking and Policy Change from Below
by Jan Olsson & Erik Hysing - 275-293 TV, Boon or Bane? Participation and a Televised Town Meeting
by Bonnie Johnson - 296-297 Notes on Contributors
by The Editors - 299-333 Resilience: A Bridging Concept or a Dead End?“Reframing” Resilience: Challenges for Planning Theory and PracticeInteracting Traps: Resilience Assessment of a Pasture Management System in Northern AfghanistanUrban Resilience: What Does it Mean in Planning Practice?Resilience as a Useful Concept for Climate Change Adaptation?The Politics of Resilience for Planning: A Cautionary Note
by Simin Davoudi & Keith Shaw & L. Haider & Allyson Quinlan & Garry Peterson & Cathy Wilkinson & Hartmut Fünfgeld & Darryn McEvoy & Libby Porter & Simin Davoudi - 336-341 Dutch spatial planning policies in transition
by Lasse Gerrits & Ward Rauws & Gert de Roo - 342-343 Readings in Planning Theory
by Patsy Healey - 344-346 Finding Our Way
by Libby Porter
2012, Volume 13, Issue 1
- 3-6 Planning in the Face of Crisis
by Mark Scott - 8-9 Notes on Contributors
by The Editors - 11-26 Learning to Improve Practice: Lessons from Practice Stories and Practitioners' Own Discourse Analyses (or Why Only the Loons Show Up)
by John Forester - 27-45 Committed to Coordination? How Different Forms of Commitment Complicate the Coordination of National and Urban Planning
by Patrik Tornberg - 47-69 “Keeping Dalston Different”: Defending Place-Identity in East London
by Gethin Davison & Kim Dovey & Ian Woodcock