A platform for research: civil engineering, architecture and urbanism
Regional planning is dead: long live planning regional futures
This paper starts from the premise that regional planning as it is known is now defunct and something that we need to get used to. Identifying those disruptive elements that have undermined traditional forms of institutionalized regional planning, it is argued that contemporary planning debates are too obsessed with the institutional planning frame and have become distracted from the changing content of the real-world picture. The aim in this paper is to reassert the purpose and values of planning by rediscovering the content, conceptualize multiple and fluid forms of planning frames, and reposition the planner as an orchestrator and enabler of planning regional futures.
Regional planning is dead: long live planning regional futures
This paper starts from the premise that regional planning as it is known is now defunct and something that we need to get used to. Identifying those disruptive elements that have undermined traditional forms of institutionalized regional planning, it is argued that contemporary planning debates are too obsessed with the institutional planning frame and have become distracted from the changing content of the real-world picture. The aim in this paper is to reassert the purpose and values of planning by rediscovering the content, conceptualize multiple and fluid forms of planning frames, and reposition the planner as an orchestrator and enabler of planning regional futures.
Regional planning is dead: long live planning regional futures
Harrison, John (author) / Galland, Daniel (author) / Tewdwr-Jones, Mark (author)
Regional Studies ; 55 ; 6-18
2021-01-02
13 pages
Article (Journal)
Electronic Resource
Unknown
Taylor & Francis Verlag | 1997
|Online Contents | 1997
|Engineering Index Backfile | 1928
|ASCE | 2021
|