READINGS FOR SEMESTER
if citation has no online link or is not from an assigned textbook, then the reading is available through ctools
The reading list includes both required and recommended (i.e., "see also") texts; the latter are optional.
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Sep 6: Course Introduction |
see also (useful as an introduction to planning):
Frank, Nancy. 2002. Rethinking Planning Theory for a Master's-Level Curriculum. Journal
of Planning Education and Research 21 (3):320-330.
Cullingworth,
Barry, and Roger W. Caves. "The Nature of Planning," in
Planning in the USA: Policies, Issues, and Processes, 2nd edition.
New York: Routledge, 2003, pp. 5-26.
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PREFACE: BIG IDEAS in PLANNING |
Sep 8: Leitmotifs in Planning Theory (the shift from the rural to the urban; the meaning and function of cities; the separation of space and community; the persistent economic advantage of cities) |
Simmel, Georg. "The Metropolis and Mental Life," in The Sociology of Georg Simmel, translated by Kurt H. Wolff Glencoe: The Free Press, 1950, pp. 409-424.
Mumford, Lewis, ‘What Is a City?’
Webber, Melvin ‘The Post-City Age’
Glaeser, Edward L. "Why Economists Still Like Cities." City Journal, Vol. 6, No. 2, 1996, pp. 70-77.
Lehmann, Nicholas, "Get out of Town: Has the Celebration of Cities Gone to Far?" The New Yorker, Jun 27, 2011
see also:
Louis Wirth, ‘Urbanism as a Way of Life’
(read every article carefully beforehand; be ready to discuss and to debate)
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Sep 13: Leitmotifs in Planning Theory (climate and livable cities; religion and the city; can cities be "solved"?) |
Arsenault, Raymond. 1984. "The End of the Long Hot Summer: The Air Conditioner and Southern Culture." The Journal of Southern History 50 (4):597-628.
Ian Buruma and Avishai Margalit, ‘The Occidental City’
Kotkin, Joel. 2005. The Urban Future. In LeGates, Richard and Frederic Stout, eds. 2007. The City Reader (4th edition). Routledge.
Lehrer, Jonah, 2010, A Physicist Solves the City (The New York Times).pdf
Bettencourt and West, A unified theory of urban living, Nature
Rittel, Horst W.J., and Melvin M. Webber. 1973. Dilemmas in a General Theory of Planning. Policy Sciences 4:155-169.
(read every article carefully beforehand; be ready to discuss and to debate) see also:
Bettencourt, Luís M. A., José Lobo, Deborah Strumsky, Geoffrey B. West, 2010, Urban Scaling and Its Deviations: Revealing the Structure of Wealth, Innovation and Crime across Cities, PLoS ONE (www.plosone.org) 1 November 2010 | Volume 5 | Issue 11 | e1354.
Teitz, Michael B. "American Planning in the 1990s: Evolution, Debate and Challenge." Urban Studies, Vol. 33, No. 4/5, May 1996, pp. 649-671.
Teitz, Michael B. "American Planning in the 1990s: Part II, The Dilemma of the Cities." Urban Studies, Vol. 34, No. 5/6, May 1997, pp. 775-796.
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20TH
CENTURY Planning History: from garden cities to Postmodernism |
Sep 15: The City in Film |
[Note: since many students will miss this session due to the Expanded Horizons trip, I will show excerpts from several films on cities + informal discussion. I welcome your suggestions on films.]
Films shown in class (excerpts):
- The City (1939; 32 minutes; Commentary: Lewis Mumford: music; Aaron Copeland; American Institute of Planners/Civic Films, Inc.). link
- Charley in New Town (1948, 8 minutes; “COI Presents” / “Central Office of Information”, UK) link, more info
- The Dynamic American City (1956, 28 minutes; US Chamber of Commerce) link + link (in two parts)
- Give yourself the Green Light (1954, 24 minutes; General Motors Corp./Handy Jam Corp.) link
- House in the Middle, The (1954, 12 minutes; National Paint, Varnish and Lacquer Association; Sponsor: National Clean Up-Paint Up-Fix Up Bureau. Produced with the cooperation of the Federal Civil Defense Administration.) link
- The Fifth Element (1997) [info from IMDB]
- Blade Runner (1982) [info from IMDB]
Other films suggested by students and the instructor:
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first, read about the garden city in Ebenezer Howard's own words (originally published in 1898 as To-Morrow: a peaceful path to real reform, republished in 1902 as Garden Cities of To-Morrow).
no need to read the entire book -- though short -- but do read enough to get a sense of both the goals and the specific features of Garden Cities. (e.g., these sections are a good start: Introduction, I-II, XII-XIII.)
Several sources:
- the 1902 edition (London, S. Sonnenschein & co., ltd.): HathiTrust link; or at archive.org. Also try google books link.
- or the 1965 MIT Press edition. [google book link]
- see also an excerpt at at John Rep's Cornell site.
second, read these interpretations/critiques of Howard:, I-II
Hall, Peter. 2002. Cities of Tomorrow. (Chs.
1-4)
Ruth Eckdish Knack, "Garden Cities"
Garvin, Alexander. 1998. Are Garden Cities Still Relevant? In Revolutionary Ideas in Planning?Proceedings of the 1988 National Planning Conference. Boston: AICP Press.
optional/further reading and context:
Jacob Riis, How
the Other Half Lives (hypertext)
a chronology of planning history
Planned
Communities / New Towns (George Mason U.)
Utopia - The Search for the Ideal
Society (NY Public Library)
H-Utopia Discussion Group
Society for Utopian Studies
on
Edward Bellamy's Looking Backward |
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Sep 22: City Beautiful Movement: Daniel Burnham, the 1893 World
Columbian Exposition (Chicago), and the 1909 Plan of Chicago |
Hall, Ch. 6;
Wilson, "The Glory, Destruction, and Meaning of the City Beautiful Movement,"
see also:
Encyclopedia of Chicago: The
Plan of Chicago
Loos, Adolf, and Adolf Opel. 1998. Ornament and crime : selected essays, Studies
in Austrian literature, culture, and thought. Riverside,
Calif.: Ariadne Press. (Chapter: 29: Ornament and Crime).
Gilbert, James Burkhart. 1991. Perfect cities: Chicago's utopias of 1893. Chicago:
University of Chicago Press. Chapter 4: "First City: Form and Fantasy"
Chicago's
Columbian Exposition of 1893 including "Idea,
Experience, Aftermath"
Chicago
History Museum
Chronological
history of Chicago (timeline)
UVA's "The Capitol Project: "City
Beautiful" and "the
1901 Plan for Washington, D.C."
Frederick Law Olmsted, Jr. "The
City Beautiful," The Builder (July 7, 1911):15-17.
you might also see:
Erik Larson. 2003. The Devil in the White City: Murder, Magic, and Madness
at the Fair That Changed America - Crown Pub. [NOT on reserve, but on the
best-seller lists]
Note: Where is there a piece of the 1893 Columbian
Exposition on the UM campus? answer |
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Sep 27: The Legacy of Modernist Planning and Architecture |
Hall, Ch. 7
Le Corbusier, ‘A Contemporary City’
Mumford, Lewis. 1986. "Yesterday's City of Tomorrow." In The Lewis Mumford
reader. New York: Pantheon Books.
Wright, Frank Lloyd. 1935. Broadacre City: A New Community Plan. In LeGates, Richard and Frederic Stout, eds. 2007. The City Reader (4th edition). Routledge.
Fishman, Robert. 1982. "Conclusion," in Urban
Utopias in the Twentieth Century. New York, NY: Basic Books, pp. 265 - 277
see also:
Glazer, Nathan. "The Social Agenda of Architecture," in From a Cause to a Style. Princeton, 2007, pp. 271-292.
Glazer, Nathan. "The Public's Image of the Profession," in The Profession of City Planning: Changes, Images, and Challenges, edited by Lloyd Rodwin and Bishwapriya Sanyal. New Jersey: Center for Urban Policy Research, 2000, pp. 224-230. [citations updated] |
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Essay One due Sep 29 |
Sep 29 - Oct 4: Two Visions of Postwar American Cities: Robert Moses
and Jane Jacobs |
Sep 29:
Jane Jacobs. The Death and Life of Great American Cities, 1961 (online full text available through UM Libraries ebrary)
- Introduction (in Readings
in Planning Theory); also in ctools
- Ch. 7, "The Generators of Diversity"
- Ch. 21, "The kind of problem a city is,"
Oct. 4:
Montgomery, Roger. 1998. "Is There Still Life in The Death and Life?" Journal
of the American Planning Association 64 (3):269-274.
Berman, Marshall. 1988. All That is Solid Melts into Air. New York:
Penguin. (excerpt)
"The
Metropolis Observed: Jane Jacobs at 81" Metropolis online (April
1998)
Robert Moses obituary, New
York Times, July 30, 1981
Lloyd Rodwin. 1961. "Neighbors
Are Needed " (a review of The Death and Life of Great American Cities by
Jane Jacobs). New York Times, Nov. 5.
see also:
"Robert Moses & the Modern City" (web site @ Wallach Art Gallery, Columbia University)
Cleveland Rodgers (1939). "Robert
Moses: An Atlantic Portrait," The Atlantic Monthly,
Robert Moses (1962) "Are
Cities Dead?"The Atlantic Monthly, January.
Whyte, William H. 1987. The Social Life of Small Urban Spaces. In The Public
Face of Architecture: Civic Culture and Public Spaces, edited by Glazer,
Nathan and Lilla, Mark. New York: Free Press.
"Godmother
of the American City," Metropolis online (March
2001)
Robert Moses: Cross-Bronx
Expressway, Triborough
Bridge
Erica Pearson, "The
Power Broker Revisited," Gotham Gazette, (August 18, 2003)
100
years of Times Square (NY Times)
Altshuler, Alan A., and David Luberoff "Mega-Projects and Urban Theory," in
Mega-Projects: The Changing Politics of Urban Public Investment. Washington,
D.C.; Cambridge, MA Brookings Institution Press; Lincoln Institute of Land
Policy, 2003, pp. 45-75.
Pogrebin, Robin. 2007. Rehabilitating Robert Moses. The New York Times. January 23 html
"The Godfather
of Sprawl," The Atlantic Monthly, May 26, 1999.
1953 interview with Robert Moses (video link)
"The World that Moses Built" (video link) -- highly recommended.
Nicolai Ouroussoff, 2006. "Outgrowing Jane Jacobs and Her New York," The New York Times, April 30. link
"Time for Some Jane Jacobs Revisionism?"
The New York Times, November 1, 2007. link.
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Oct 6: Are we still Modernists? -- or -- Post-Modernism as a rejection or an extension of Modernism? |
James C. Scott, "Authoritarian High Modernism" in Readings in Planning
Theory
Ellin, Nan. 1999. Themes of Postmodern Urbanism. In Postmodern urbanism.
New York: Princeton Architectural Press. (excerpt: "Themes of Postmoderm
Urbanism")
Sandercock, Leonie, "Mongrel Cities," in Readings in Urban Theory
Sharon Zukin, Changing Landscapes of Power: Opulence and the Urge for Authenticity, in Readings in Urban Theory
see also:
Kaika, Maria, and Erik Swyngedouw. "Fetishizing the Modern City: The
Phantasmagoria of Urban Technological Networks." International Journal
of Urban and Regional Research, Vol. 24, No. 1, March 2000, pp. 120-138.
David Harvey. "Social Justice, Postmodernism, and the City," [to be added]
Campbell, Scott, "Is 'Progress' No Longer Progressive? Reclaiming the
Ideology of Progress in Planning," pdf
file
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Oct 11: Public Space, Public Interest and Privatization |
Margaret Kohn, The Mauling of Public Space, in Readings in Planning Theory
Tim Love, Urban design after Battery Park City, in Readings in Planning Theory
Whyte, William H. "The Social Life of Small Urban Spaces," in The Public Face of Architecture: Civic Culture and Public Spaces. New York: Free Press, 1987, pp. 292-310.
Neil Smith, "Gentrification, the Frontier, and the Restructuring of Urban Space", in Readings in Urban Theory.
Michael Sorkin, The End(s) of Urban Design, in Readings in Urban Theory.
see also:
Margaret Crawford, Blurring the Boundaries: Public Space and Private Life, in Readings in Urban Theory.
Donald McNeill, The 'Bilbao Effect', in Readings in Urban Theory.
Trevor Boddy, Overhead and Underground.
view the video by William H. Whyte, "Social Life of Small Urban Places," (Vimeo link) - not great video quality, but a planning classic and Whyte's narrative is wry and insightful.
link to blog site: please post an image of public space and view images and captions provided by other students. (see your class email -- archived on ctools -- for instructions on how to post)
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Oct 13: Special Lecture (Tom Skuzinski), Drawing Connections between the Mortgage Foreclosure Crisis and Planning Theory |
Jesus Hernandez, Redlining Revisited: Mortgage Lending Patterns in Sacramento 1930–2004, International Journal of Urban and Regional Research, Volume 33.2, June 2009, pp. 291–313.
Kathe Newman, Post-Industrial Widgets: Capital Flows and the Production of the Urban, International Journal of Urban and Regional Research, Volume 33.2, June 2009, pp. 314–31.
optional:
Justin P. Steil , Innovative responses to foreclosures: paths to neighborhood stability and housing opportunity, Columbia Journal of Race and Law, Vol. 1:1, pp. 63-117.
(an optional, really interesting read on the links between the foreclosure crisis, segregation, and how we govern our cities. I encourage you to at least skim the first parts of it if you have the time.)
useful links:
For this with no knowledge of the crisis at all, I'm going to commit academic treason and point you to Wikipedia's listing on the "Subprime Mortgage Crisis"
For those wanting a detailed, mostly objective legal perspective explaining the foreclosure crisis, check this four part brief article from the Mortgage Law Network.
And a website with some useful materials on the response to the crisis: foreclosure-response.org
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Oct 18: No Class (Fall Study Break) |
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Metropolitan Planning: Suburbanization and Regionalism |
Oct 20: The Origins and Consequences (social, environmental) of Suburbia |
Hall, Cities of Tomorrow (Chs. 3, 5, 9)
Fishman, Robert. "Bourgeois Utopias: Visions of Suburbia," (just added to ctools)
Rybczynski, Witold. "Country Homes for City People," in City Life.
New York: Touchstone / Simon & Schuster, 1995, pp. 173-196.
Cohen, Lizabeth. "Residence: Inequality in Mass Suburbia," in A Consumers' Republic. New York: Vintage, 2003, pp. 194-256.
see also:
Fishman, Robert. Bourgeois utopias: the rise and fall of suburbia (limited google view)
Fishman, Robert. 2000. "The Death and Life of American Regional Planning." In Reflections
on Regionalism, edited by B. Katz. Washington: Brookings Inst. pdf
file
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Oct 25: The Future of Suburban Spaces: Edge Cities, New Urbanism, Retrofitting Suburbia |
Fishman, Robert, The Fifth Migration, in Readings in Urban
Theory
Brooks, David. "Out for a Drive," in On
Paradise Drive. New York:
Simon & Schuster, 2004, pp. 15-64
Kunstler, James Howard. "Home From Nowhere." Atlantic Monthly, Vol. 278, No. 3, September 1996.
Talen, Emily, Connecting New Urbanism and American Planning: An Historical Interpretation, in Readings in
Urban Theory.
see also:
Robert Lang and Edward Blakely, SUBURBS: In Search of the Real OC: Exploring the State of American Suburbs
Robert Lang, Thomas Sanchez and Jennifer LeFurgy, Beyond Edgeless Cities: Office Geography in the New Metropolis
America's
new Utopias (The Economist)
New
York Times Magazine: "the Suburban Nation" (April 9, 2000)
Talen, Emily, and Cliff Ellis. 2002. Beyond Relativism:
Reclaiming the Search for Good City Form. Journal of Planning Education
and Research 22 (1):36-49.
The New York Times. 2010. Redefining What 'Home' Means [room for debate]. Sept. 7.
Congress for the New Urbanism
post your answers to the future of suburbs here
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Core
Questions: Should we plan? How should we plan? |
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Essay Two due Nov 1 |
Oct 27 - Nov 1: Arguments for and Against Planning |
Oct 27:
Richard E. Foglesong, "Planning the Capitalist City" in Readings in Planning
Theory
Richard
Klosterman. "Arguments for and Against Planning"
Garrett Hardin, 1968. The Tragedy of the Commons. Science, Vol. 162 no. 3859, pp. 1243-1248 [link]
see also:
Robert Axelrod; William D. Hamilton, 1981. The Evolution of Cooperation, Science, New Series, Vol. 211, No. 4489. (Mar. 27, 1981), pp. 1390-1396.
Alexander, Ernest R. 2004. Capturing the Public Interest : Promoting Planning in Conservative Times. Journal of Planning Education and Research 24:102.
Nov. 1
Campbell, Heather and Robert Marshall, "Utilitarianism’s Bad Breath? A Re-evalution of the Public Interest Justification for Planning." in Readings in Planning
Theory
Peter Gordon, "Plan Obsolescence", Reason, 1998.
Friedrich Hayek, 1945. The Use of Knowledge in Society. American Economic Review, XXXV, No. 4; September, 519-30.
see also:
Harvey, David. "On Planning the Ideology of Planning," in The Urbanization of Capital: Studies in the History and Theory of Capitalist Urbanization.
browse the e-journal Planning & Markets
Peter Gordon, Hayek
and Cities: Guidelines for Regional Scientists ; The
Sprawl Debate : Let Markets Plan [Adobe PDF Format]
Harper, Thomas L., and Stanley M. Stein. 1995. Out of the Postmodern Abyss: Preserving the Rationale for Liberal Planning. Journal of Planning Education and Research 14 (4):233-244.
Terry Moore (1978): Why Allow Planners to Do What They Do? A Justification from Economic Theory, Journal of the American Institute of Planners, 44:4, 387-398. [newly added]
class blog theme: arguments for/against planning |
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Nov 3 - 8: How should we plan? Traditional Approaches |
Nov 3:
Susan S. Fainstein, Planning Theory and the City, in Readings in Planning Theory.
Altshuler, Alan, "The Goals of Comprehensive Planning"
Charles E. Lindblom, The Science of Muddling Through, in Readings in Planning Theory.
Paul Davidoff, Advocacy and Pluralism in Planning, in Readings in Planning Theory.
Nov 8:
Jerome L. Kaufman and Harvey M. Jacobs. "A Public Planning Perspective on Strategic
Planning,"
Norman Krumholz. "A Retrospective View of Equity Planning: Cleveland, 1969-1979,"
Susan S. Fainstein and Norman I. Fainstein. "City Planning and Political Values:
An Updated View"
American Institute of Certified Planners, Code of Ethics and Professional Conduct, in Readings in Planning Theory
also: hand-out for in-class group exercise on comparative advantages/disadvantages of planning styles |
click for larger image |
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Nov 10: How should we plan? Recent Alternative Approaches |
John Forester, Challenges of Deliberation and Participation, in Readings in Planning Theory.
Bent Flyvbjerg, Bringing Power to Planning Research: One Researcher's Praxis Story, in Readings in Planning Theory.
Flyvbjerg, Bent and Tim Richardson, "Planning and Foucault: In Search
of the Dark Side of Planning Theory"
Mark Pennington, "A Hayekian Liberal Critique of Collaborative Planning"
also: hand-out for in-class exercise/role-playing on styles of planning applied to a brownfield adaptive-reuse scenario
and be sure to add your answers to the collectively-authored google docs table of
planning styles
see also:
Brooks, Michael P. 2002. Planning Theory for Practitioners (Ch. 9: "Decentralized Non-Rationality: the Planner as Communicator), APA Press. [new addition]
Charles J. Hoch, 2007. Pragmatic Communicative Action Theory. Journal of Planning Education and Research; 26; 272.
Patsy Healey, Traditions of Planning Thought, in Readings in Planning Theory.
Frank Fischer, Public Policy as Discursive Construct: Social Meaning and Multiple Realities, in Readings in Planning Theory.
Judith E. Innes & David E. Booher (2004): Reframing public participation: strategies for the 21st century, Planning Theory & Practice, 5:4, 419-436 |
click to run your own google ngram of planning styles ( add your own search terms) |
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Social Justice and the City: Race, Ethnicity, Diversity, Gender |
Nov 15 - 17: Race, Ethnicity, Diversity |
Nov 15:
Iris Marion Young, Inclusion and Democracy, in Readings in Planning Theory
Ruth Fincher and Kurt Iveson , Conceptualizing Recognition in Planning, in Readings in Urban Theory.
June Manning Thomas, "Educating planners: unified diversity for social action", Journal of Planning Education and Research, 1996, 15: 171.
Nov 17:
June Manning Thomas, The Minority-race Planner in the Quest for a Just City, in Readings in Planning Theory
Fainstein, Susan S. Cities and Diversity: Should we want it? Can we plan for it? in Readings in Urban Theory.
Umemoto, Karen. 2001. Walking in Another's Shoes: Epistemological Challenges
in Participatory Planning. Journal of Planning Education
and Research 21
(1):17-31.
see also:
APA Diversity Web portal
APA Diversity Task Force, Increasing Diversity in the Planning Profession: A Report on the 2004 Minority Planning Summit and Recommendation for Future Action (March 2005) American Planning Association. pdf file.
Leonardo Vazquez, 2002. "Diversity and the Planning Profession," Planners Network. [link]
Planners of Color Interest Group (POCIG), Survey of Diversity and Minority Faculty Perceptions of Institutional Climate of Planning Schools (Climate Survey), Recommendations Prepared by the POCIG Policy and Advocacy Committee, 2010. [link]
Jargowsky, Paul A. "Sprawl, Concentration of Poverty, and Urban Inequality," in Squires, Gregory D., ed. Urban Sprawl: Causes, Consequences, and Policy Responses. Washington D.C.: The Urban Institute Press. 2002, pp. 39-69.
Sugrue, Thomas. The Origins of the Urban Crisis: Race and Inequality in Postwar Detroit. Princeton: Princeton University Press. 2005 (reprint). pp.180-229. (Chs. 7 and 8)
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Nov 22: Gender, Equity and the City |
Dolores Hayden, Nurturing: Home, Mom and Apple Pie, in Readings in Planning Theory
Michael Frisch, Planning as a Heterosexist Project, in Readings in Planning Theory
Gwendolyn Wright, Women's Aspirations and the Home: Episodes in American Feminist Reform, in Readings in Urban Theory.
Susan Moller Okin, Is Multiculturalism Bad for Women? in Readings in Urban Theory.
see also:
Barbara Rahder and Carol Altilia, Where is Feminism in Planning Going? Appropriation or Transformation? Planning Theory, July 2004; vol. 3, 2: pp. 107-116.
Jacqueline Leavitt, Where's the gender in community development? Signs; Autumn 2003; 29, 1; 207-230.
Nussbaum, Martha C. Women and human development. Ch 1 (selection): “In defense of universal values,” Cambridge University Press, 2000 [Sections I, II, IV: pp. 39-59; 70-86]
Ann Forsyth, 2001. Sexuality and Space: Nonconformist Populations and Planning Practice, Journal of Planning Literature, Vol. 15, No. 3 (February), 339-58.
Doan, P. and H. Higgins. 2011. "The Demise of Queer Space? Resurgent Gentrification and LGBT Neighborhoods," Journal of Planning Education and Research. 31, 1: 6-25. [just added]
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Nov 24: No class (Thanksgiving Break) |
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The ECONOMIC City, The Ecological city |
Nov 29: Restructuring and Retheorizing: Economic Development & the Changing Urban Economy |
Krugman, Paul. "Localization," in Geography and Trade. Cambridge, Mass. MIT Press, 1991, pp. 35-67.
Porter, Michael. "New Strategies for Inner-City Economic Development." Economic Development Quarterly, Vol. 11, No. 1, February 1997, pp. 11-27.
Chapple, Karen, Cynthia Kroll, T. William Lester and Sergio Montero. 2010. Innovation in the Green Economy: An Extension of the Regional Innovation System Model? Economic Development Quarterly 2011 25: 5
see also:
Matti Siemiatycki, Implications of Private-Public Partnerships on the Development of Urban Public Transit Infrastructure: The Case of Vancouver, Canada, in Readings in Planning Theory.
Hall, Peter. Cities of Tomorrow (Ch. 11)
Joe Painter, Regulation Theory, Post-Fordism and Urban Politics, in Readings in Urban Theory.
Mark Purcel, Neoliberalization and Democracy, in Readings in Urban Theory.
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Essay Three due Dec 1 |
Dec 1: Theorizing the Sustainable City
Nicholas Low and Brendan Gleeson, "Environmental Justice"
Campbell, Scott. "Green Cities, Growing Cities? Ecology, Economics and
the Contradictions of Urban Planning," In Readings in Planning Theory.
Hayward, Steven F. "A Sensible Environmentalism." Public Interest,
Vol. 151, No. Spring, 2003, pp. 62-74.
Marcuse, Peter. 1998. Sustainability
is not enough. Planners Network May (129):1-10.
Please complete short online survey on sustainability by Thursday 12 noon.
see also:
Thomas L. Daniels (2009): A Trail Across Time: American Environmental Planning From City Beautiful to Sustainability, Journal of the American Planning Association, 75:2, 178-192
Swyngedouw, E. and N.C. Heynen, 2003. Urban Political Ecology, Justice and the Politics of Scale. Antipode: A Journal of Radical Geography. 35(5): 898-918.
Eric J. Heikkila (2011): Environmentalism with Chinese Characteristics? Urban River Revitalization in Foshan, Planning Theory & Practice, 12:01, 33-55
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PB analysis due Dec 9 |
Changing
Cityscapes: Future Challenges to Urban Planning |
Dec 6 - 8 (first half of session): Theory goes Global (Globalization, Megacities, Informational Society) |
Dec. 6: Understanding the Process of Globalization, the Phenomenon of Global Cities, and differentiating between what is new and what is long-standing:
Peter Evans, Political Strategies for More Livable Cities, in Readings in Planning Theory
Yang Zheng and Ke Fang, Is history repeating itself? Urban Renewal in the United States to Inner-City Redevelopment in China, in Readings in Planning Theory
Saskia Sassen, The Global City: Strategic Site/New Frontier, in Readings in Urban Theory
John Friedmann, Reflections on Place and Place-Making in the Cities of China, in Readings in Urban Theory.
Dec. 8: Rewriting Planning Theory beyond the Anglo-American Narrative
Oren Yiftachel, Re-engaging Planning Theory? Towards 'South-Eastern' Perspectives, in Readings in Planning Theory
Ward Steven, Reexamining the International Diffusion of Planning, in Readings in Planning Theory
see also:
Watson, Vanessa(2003)'Conflicting rationalities: implications for planning theory and ethics', Planning Theory & Practice, 4:4, 395-407.
David Harvey, Uneven Geographical Developments and Universal Rights, in Readings in Urban Theory.
Michael Peter Smith, Transnationalism and Citizenship, in Readings in Urban Theory.
Ha-Joon Chang, The Economic Theory of the Developmental State, in Readings in Urban Theory.
Mike Davis, The Prevalence of Slums, in Readings in Urban Theory.
James Holston, Dangerous Spaces of Citizenship: Gang Talk, Rights Talk and Rule of Law in Brazil, in Readings in Urban Theory.
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The
Final Week |
Dec 8 (second half): Review Session + Question and Answer |
study guide |
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Dec 13: In-class Exam |
[exam information]
EXTRA OFFICE HOURS posted |
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