Eine Plattform für die Wissenschaft: Bauingenieurwesen, Architektur und Urbanistik
“Laissez faire has had its day”: Land Use, Waste, and Propertied Improvement in Early Canadian Planning
Land use control has become a ubiquitous part of contemporary planning, but in early 20th century Canada such controls were under constant debate. I review these debates and interrogate planning-led anxieties around waste to show how planners used categories of waste to encourage land use control and to facilitate the improvement of people’s lives and property. I think through the frictions that emerged when such planning ideas, mobilized through professional networks, touched down in the cities of Vancouver and Winnipeg. Land use regimes warrant increased scholarly attention: early conversations have contemporary relevance, as their discursive logics are foundational to modern methods of land use control.
“Laissez faire has had its day”: Land Use, Waste, and Propertied Improvement in Early Canadian Planning
Land use control has become a ubiquitous part of contemporary planning, but in early 20th century Canada such controls were under constant debate. I review these debates and interrogate planning-led anxieties around waste to show how planners used categories of waste to encourage land use control and to facilitate the improvement of people’s lives and property. I think through the frictions that emerged when such planning ideas, mobilized through professional networks, touched down in the cities of Vancouver and Winnipeg. Land use regimes warrant increased scholarly attention: early conversations have contemporary relevance, as their discursive logics are foundational to modern methods of land use control.
“Laissez faire has had its day”: Land Use, Waste, and Propertied Improvement in Early Canadian Planning
Wideman, Trevor J. (Autor:in)
Planning Theory & Practice ; 20 ; 689-710
20.10.2019
22 pages
Aufsatz (Zeitschrift)
Elektronische Ressource
Englisch
Laissez-nous faire notre métier
Online Contents | 2009
|Laissez-faire versus policy-led transformation
British Library Conference Proceedings | 1995