Planning Catalogue from Routledge 2009/10

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www.tandfbuiltenvironment.com ROUTLEDGE Planning Catalogue New Titles and Key Backlist 2009 VIEW ANY PRODUCT ONLINE BY CLICKING ON THE TITLE LISTING

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R o u t l e d g e

Planning CatalogueNew Titles and Key Backlist 2009

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Complete CatalogueThis catalogue only includes a selection of our titles in Planning. Our online catalogue at www.tandfbuiltenvironment.com gives you the power to search for any book currently in print by title, author or ISBN. All the entries have a description of the book’s content.

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Welcome to the Routledge

Planning CatalogueNew Titles and Key Backlist 2009

ContentsIntroduction to Planning . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1Urban Design and Planning . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2Sustainable Planning . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8Planning, Landscape and Environment . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12Planning and Communities . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15Rural Planning . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18Spatial and Regional Planning . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18Planning and Economy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23Planning History. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24Planning and Transport . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31Housing. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32Property and Real Estate . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 37Index . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40Questionnaire . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 44Order Form . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Back of Catalogue

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14TH EDITION

Town and Country Planning in the UKBarry Cullingworth and Vincent Nadin, DelftUniversity of Technology, the Netherlands

This revised fourteenth editionreinforces this title’s reputation asthe bible of British planning. Itprovides a thorough explanation ofplanning processes including theinstitutions involved, tools, systems,policies and changes to land use.

Selected Contents: 1. The Nature ofPlanning 2. The Evolution of Townand Country Planning 3. TheAgencies of Planning 4. The Planning

Policy Framework 5. The Control of Development 6. LandPolicies 7. Planning, the Environment and SustainableDevelopment 8. Heritage Planning 9. Planning and theCountryside 10. Urban Policies 11. Transport Planning 12. Planning, the Profession and the Public2006: 246x189: 624ppHb: 978-0-415-35809-5: £100.00 US $200.00Pb: 978-0-415-35810-1: £32.99 US $69.95eBook: 978-0-203-00425-8

3RD EDITION

Planning in the USAPolicies, Issues and Processes

Barry Cullingworth and Roger Caves

This fully updated third edition continues to provide athorough introduction to the policies, theory and practice ofplanning. It explains how issues are identified, defined andapproached, and is a key text for both academics andprofessionals alike.

Selected Contents: Introduction Part 1: Planning andGovernment 1. The Nature of Planning 2. Urbanization 3. Governing and Planning Urban Areas Part 2: Land UseRegulation 4. The Evolution of Planning and Zoning 5. TheInstitutional and Legal Framework of Planning and Zoning 6. The Techniques of Zoning and Subdivision Regulations 7. The Comprehensive Plan 8. Financing and Planning forDevelopment Part 3: Growth Management 9. GrowthManagement and Local Government 10. Urban GrowthManagement and the States Part 4: Planning andDevelopment Issues 11. Aesthetics 12. Heritage andHistoric Preservation 13. Transportation 14. Housing 15. Community and Economic Development Part 5:Environmental Policy and Planning 16. EnvironmentalPolicy and Planning 17. The Limits of Environmental PolicyPart 6: Technology in Planning 18. Technology andPlanning. Conclusion 19. Some Final Questions2008: 246x189: 480ppHb: 978-0-415-77420-8: £100.00 US $200.00Pb: 978-0-415-77421-5: £32.50 US $69.95

Planning, Law and EconomicsThe Rules We Make for Using Land

Barrie Needham

Series: RTPI Library Series

This book highlights the complex financial, personal, legal,ideological and societal aspects of land-use, and how itinfluences and is influenced by property rights.

Selected Contents: 1. Land-Use Planning and PropertyRights: A Fraught Relationship 2. Two Ways in which LawsCan Influence How Land is Used 3. The Legal Language:Rights in Land 4. The Economic Language: Making a GoodUse of Scarce Resources 5. An Evaluation of Property Law:Rules under Public Law 6. An Evaluation of Property Law:Rules Under Private Law 7. Application: AchievingNeighbourhood Quality 8. Application: Regional Land-UsePlanning 9. Conclusions: The Rules We Make for Using Land 2006: 234x156: 192ppHb: 978-0-415-34373-2: £90.00 US $150.00Pb: 978-0-415-34374-9: £28.99

1INTRODUCTION TO PLANNING

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Above: Pages taken from Town andCountry Planning in the UK.

NEW

Britain’s New TownsGarden Cities to Sustainable Communities

Anthony Alexander, Alan Baxter and Associates,London, UK

The New Towns Programme of 1946to 1970 was one of the mostsubstantial periods of urbandevelopment in Britain. The NewTowns have often been described asa social experiment; so what has thisexperiment proved?

This book covers the story of howthese towns came to be built, howthey aged, and the challenges andopportunities they now face as they

begin phases of renewal. The new approaches in designthroughout their past development reflect changes in societythroughout the latter half of the twentieth century. Thesechanges are now at the heart of the challenge of sustainabledevelopment.

Selected Contents: Introduction 1. The New Towns in aNew Light Part 1: Planning the New Towns 2. A Bit of aBombshell 3. The Early New Towns 4. The Later New Towns5. The Origin of the New Towns Concept Part 2: Buildingthe New Towns 6. The Formulation of the New TownsProgramme 7. Principles of New Town Design 8. A Leap intothe Unknown Part 3: Living in the New Towns 9. Criticisms of the New Towns 10. How the New TownsGrew Old 11. New Towns in the Age of SustainableCommunitiesJune 2009: 276x219: 208ppHb: 978-0-415-47512-9: £90.00 US $150.00Pb: 978-0-415-47513-6: £29.99 US $51.95

NEW

Making the Metropolitan LandscapeStanding Firm on Middle Ground

Edited by Jacqueline Tatom, Washington University, St. Louis, USA and Jennifer Stauber, Trivers Associates,St. Louis, USA

The American landscape is anextremely complex terrain born froma history of collective and individualexperiences. These createdenvironments, which all may becalled metropolitan landscapes,constantly challenge students andprofessionals in the fields ofarchitecture, design and planning toconsider new ways of making livelypublic places. This book bringstogether varied voices in urban

design theory and practice to explore new ways ofunderstanding place and our position in it.

Selected Contents: Part 1: Towards a MetropolitanLandscape: Interpreting American Cities Part 2: Towards aMetropolitan Urbanism – Democratic Aspirations, AmericanPragmatism and Design Practice Part 3: Making theMetropolitan Landscape: Action Through Practice Part 4: Programs for a Metropolitan LandscapeApril 2009: 246x174: 256ppHb: 978-0-415-77410-9: £85.00 US $140.00Pb: 978-0-415-77411-6: £27.99 US $49.95

URBAN PLANNING AND DESIGN2

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NEW

Urban Design and the British Urban RenaissanceEdited by John Punter, Cardiff University, UK

Are Britain’s cities attractive places inwhich to live, work and play? Askingthat question, this is a critical reviewof how the design dimension of theUrban Renaissance strategy wasdeveloped and applied, based onexpert academic assessments ofprogress in Britain’s thirteen largestcities. The case studies are precededby a dissection of New Labour’srenaissance agenda, and concluded

by a synthesis of achievements and failings. Exploring theimplications of this strategy for the future of urban planningand design, this is a must-read for students, practitioners ofthese subjects, and for all those who wish to improve thequality of the British urban environment.

Selected Contents: 1. An Introduction to the British UrbanRenaissance Part 1: The English ‘The Core Cities’: AnIntroduction 2. Birmingham: Translating Ambition intoQuality 3. Manchester: Making it Happen 4. Leeds: ShapingChange and Guiding Success 5. Sheffield: A ‘MiserableDisappointment’ No More? 6. Liverpool: A Decade ofDevelopment and Urban Design 7. Bristol: A Limited UrbanRenaissance 8. Newcastle: In Search of a Post-IndustrialDirection 9. Nottingham: A Consistent and IntegratedApproach to Urban Design Part 2: London and ThamesGateway: An Introduction 10. Central London: Intensity,Excess and Success in the Context of a World City 11. KingsCross: Renaissance for Whom? 12. The Isle of Dogs: 35 Yearsof Regeneration, but What Renaissance? 13. ThamesGateway: The Story So Far Part 3: The Celtic Capitals: AnIntroduction 14. Edinburgh: Catching Up with theContemporary 15. Glasgow: Renaissance on the Clyde? Part 4: Wales: An Introduction 16. Cardiff: ‘A Reputationfor Imaginative Architecture and Iconic Urban Design’?Part 5: Northern Ireland: An Introduction 17. Belfast: Re-Branding the Renaissance City: From ‘The Troubles’ to theTitanic Quarter 18. Conclusions: Reflecting on Urban DesignAchievements in a Decade of Urban RenaissanceOctober 2009: 246x189: 400ppHb: 978-0-415-44304-3: £90.00 US $150.00Pb: 978-0-415-44303-6: £34.99 US $60.00eBook: 978-0-203-86920-8

3URBAN PLANNING AND DESIGN

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Above: Pages taken from Urban Designand the British Urban Renaissance.

Public SpaceThe Management Dimension

Edited by Matthew Carmona, Claudio de Magalhães,both at The Bartlett School of Planning, UniversityCollege London, UK and Leo Hammond

In both the UK and the US there is asense of dissatisfaction and pessimismabout the state of urbanenvironments, particularly with thequality of everyday public spaces.Explanations for this have emphasizedthe poor quality of design thatcharacterizes many new publicspaces; spaces that are dominated byparking, roads infrastructure,introspective buildings, a lack of

enclosure and a poor sense of place, and which in differentways for different groups are too often exclusionary.

This book draws on three empirical projects to examine thequestions of public space management on an internationalstage. They are set within a context of theoretical debatesabout public space, its history, contemporary patterns of useand changing nature in western society, and about the newmanagement approaches that are increasingly being adopted.

Selected Contents: Part 1: Conceptualising Public Spaceand its Management 1. The Use and Nature of Public Space2. Public Space through History 3. Contemporary Debates andPublic Space 4. A Typology of Management Approaches Part 2: Investigating Public Space Management 5. ThreeStudies, Three Related Research Approaches 6. One Country,Multiple Endemic Problems 7. One Country, Twelve InnovativeAuthorities 8. Eleven Countries, Eleven Innovative Cities 9. Eleven Innovative Cities, Many Ways Forward 10. TwoWorld Cities, Three Iconic Spaces 11. Three Iconic Spaces,Two In-Depth Analyses 12. Debates, Problems and PossibleSolutions2008: 276x219: 240ppPb: 978-0-415-39649-3: £29.99 US $53.95

Cities Design & EvolutionStephen Marshall, University College London, UK

Cities Design & Evolution offers anengaging and original narrative thatinterprets planning philosophiesfrom Modernism to New Urbanism,organic theories from Patrick Geddesto Le Corbusier, and evolutionarythinking from Charles Darwin toRichard Dawkins. This book developsa new evolutionary perspective that

recognizes both the ‘designed’ and ‘organic’ nature of cities,and provides a rationale and impetus for fresh approaches tourban planning and design.

Selected Contents: 1. Introduction 2. Cities, Planning andModernism 3. Articulating Urban Order 4. The Social Logic ofUrban Order 5. The Kind of Thing a City Is 6. Emergence andEvolution 7. Emergent Urban Order 8. Cities in Evolution 9. Planning, Design and Evolution 10. Conclusions2008: 210x210: 360ppPb: 978-0-415-42329-8: £44.99 US $80.95

Conservation in the Age of ConsensusJohn Pendlebury

This text on the subject ofconservation in the builtenvironment provides a uniqueholistic view on the understanding ofthe practice of conservationconnecting it with wider societal andpolitical forces. UK practice is usedas a means, along with internationalexamples, for bringing together areal understanding of practice with asocial science analysis of the issues.The author introduces ideas aboutthe meanings and values attached to

historic environments and how that translates into publicpolicies of conservation.

Selected Contents: 1. Conservation, Culture and Planning 2. Modern Conservation 3. Policies and Plans 4. The 1970s5. Conservation, Conservatives and Consensus 6. TheCommodification of Heritage 7. Conservation and theCommunity 8. World Heritage 9. Postmodern Conservation10. Conservation Reformed 11. Conservation and theChallenge of Consensus2008: 234x156: 264ppHb: 978-0-415-24983-6: £90.00 US $150.00Pb: 978-0-415-24984-3: £29.99 US $53.95

URBAN PLANNING AND DESIGN4

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Urban and Regional Technology PlanningPlanning Practice in the Global Knowledge Economy

Kenneth E. Corey and Mark Wilson

Series: Networked Cities Series2006: 234x156: 240ppHb: 978-0-415-70140-2: £100.00 US $165.00Pb: 978-0-415-70141-9: £39.99 US $71.95

4TH EDITION

The City ReaderEdited by Richard LeGates, San Francisco State University,USA and Frederic Stout, Stanford University, USA

Series: Routledge Urban Reader Series

This fourth edition of the highlysuccessful The City Reader is newlyupdated and clearly structured to aidstudent understanding. It bringstogether the very best ofpublications on the city by renownedauthors both classic andcontemporary.

Selected Contents: Part 1: TheEvolution of Cities Introduction: ’TheUrbanization of the Human

Population’ Kingsley Part 2: Urban Culture and Society Part 3: Urban Space Part 4: Urban Politics, Governance, andEconomics Part 5: Urban Planning History and Visions Part 6: Urban Planning Theory and Practice Part 7:Perspectives on Urban Design Part 8: The Future of the City2007: 246x189: 632ppHb: 978-0-415-77083-5: £95.00 US $190.00Pb: 978-0-415-77084-2: £30.99 US $69.95

Urban EthicDesign in the Contemporary City

Eamonn Canniffe

Looks at the development of urban design, focusing on fourelements: the physical dimension of monuments and spaces,and the humanist dimension of patterns and narrative incities.

2005: 246x174: 208ppHb: 978-0-415-34864-5: £100.00 US $165.00Pb: 978-0-415-34865-2: £43.99 US $79.95

The Urban Design ReaderEdited by Michael Larice and Elizabeth Macdonald

Series: Routledge Urban Reader Series

This Reader draws together the bestclassic and contemporary writings toilluminate the theory and practice ofurban design. The selections includecontributions from Howard, Le Corbusier, Hall and Jacobs throughto Davis, Hayden and Gilham.

Selected Contents: Part 1: HistoricalPrecedents for the Urban Design Part 2: Normative Theories of GoodCity Part 3: Place Theories in Urban

Design Part 4: Dimensions of Place-Making Part 5: Typology andMorphology in Urban Design Part 6: Contemporary Challengesand Responses Part 7: Elements of the Public Realm Part 8: Practice and Process2006: 246x189: 560ppHb: 978-0-415-33386-3: £100.00 US $200.00Pb: 978-0-415-33387-0: £28.99 US $64.95

Cross-Cultural Urban DesignGlobal or Local Practice?

Edited by Catherine Bull, University of Melbourne,Australia, Davisi Boontharm, University of Singapore,Claire Parin, L’Ecole Nationale Superieure d’Architectureet de Paysage de Bordeaux, France, Darko Radovic,University of Melbourne, Australia and Guy Tapie,L’Ecole Nationale Superieure d’Architecture et dePaysage de Bordeaux, France

Unprecedented in its scope, Cross-Cultural Urban Designexplores how urban design has responded to recent trendstowards global standardization. Following analysis of itspractice in the local domain, the book looks at how urbanplanning and design should be repositioned for the future.

2007: 246x189: 272ppHb: 978-0-415-43279-5: £90.00 US $150.00Pb: 978-0-415-43280-1: £27.99 US $50.95eBook: 978-0-203-08939-2

5URBAN PLANNING AND DESIGN

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To ScaleOne Hundred Urban Plans

Eric Jenkins, Catholic University of America,Washington DC, USA

To Scale is a collection of plans ofurban spaces drawn at the samescale to help provide a single andaccurate resource of urban plans forarchitects, urban designers, plannersand teachers, and students.

The book contains one hundredfigure-ground plans from seventy-eight cities around the

world, describing an identical area (half a kilometer square)for each urban space. Accompanying each plan arephotographs, diagrams and text that illustrate essentialaspects of the plan or urban space for the designer.

Selected Contents: Introduction. Amsterdam. Arras. Athens.Baltimore. Barcelona. Bath. Beijing. Bergen. Berlin. Bern.Bologna. Bordeaux. Boston. Bras’lia. Bruges. Buenos Aires. Cairo. Ceske Budejovice. Chandigar. Chicago.Cincinnati. Cleveland. Copenhagen. Cuzco. Denver. Detroit.Dresden. Dublin. Dubrovnik. Edinburgh. Florence. Genoa.Indianapolis. Isfahan. Istanbul. Jerusalem. Krakow. Lisbon.London. Los Angeles. Lucca. Madrid. Mexico City. Milan.Montreal. Moscow. Nancy. New Haven. New Orleans. NewYork. Oslo. Paris. Philadelphia. Portland. Prague. Rome.Saint Petersburg. Salamanca. Salzburg. San Francisco.Santiago. Savannah. Seattle. Seville. Siena. Stockholm.Tallinn. Telc. Tokyo. Tokyo. Torino. Trieste. Tunis. Vancouver.Venezia. Verona. Vienna. Vigevana. Washington2007: 250x250: 240ppHb: 978-0-415-95400-6: £90.00 US $150.00Pb: 978-0-415-95401-3: £27.99 US $50.95

URBAN PLANNING AND DESIGN6

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The Ludic CityExploring the Potential of Public Spaces

Quentin Stevens, The Bartlett School of Planning,University College London, UK

This international and illustratedwork challenges current writingsfocussing on the problems of urbanpublic space to present a morenuanced and dialectical conceptionof urban life.

Detailed and extensive internationalurban case studies – Melbourne,London, Berlin, New York andBrisbane – show how urban openspaces are used for play, which isdefined and discussed using Caillois’four-part definition – competition,

chance, simulation and vertigo. Quentin Stevens exploresand analyzes these case studies according to locations whereplay has been observed: paths, intersections, thresholds,boundaries, and props.

Applicable to a wide-range of countries and city forms, TheLudic City is a fascinating and stimulating read for all whoare involved or interested in the design of urban spaces.

2007: 234x156: 248ppHb: 978-0-415-40179-1: £90.00 US $150.00Pb: 978-0-415-40180-7: £27.99 US $50.95

Crime Prevention and the Built EnvironmentTed Kitchen, Sheffield Hallam University, UK andRichard H. Schneider, University of Florida, USA

Using new data and case study documentation, this bookpresents a unique international perspective on crimeprevention theory, linking theory, evidence and practicalapplication to bridge gaps between planning, design andcriminology.

2007: 234x156: 296ppHb: 978-0-415-37324-1: £85.00 US $140.00Pb: 978-0-415-37325-8: £29.99 US $53.95eBook: 978-0-203-09881-3

Urban Structure MattersResidential Location, Car Dependence and TravelBehaviour

Petter Naess

Series: RTPI Library Series2006: 234x156: 344ppHb: 978-0-415-37574-0: £75.00 US $125.00

Urban Design FuturesEdited by Malcolm Moor and Jon Rowland

’The urban design primer of theyear ... This is a book coveringthe richness of the urban designdebate with ideas ranging fromthe inspiring to the absolutelybarmy – It is a vital introductoryread for students of urban designand a valuable pot pourri of thecurrent urban design debate.’ –Green Places

’The value of this collection ... is that it does not limititself to recount what is but to challenge establishedorthodoxies – including those of existing urbandesigners.’ – Urban Design

2006: 238x225: 216ppHb: 978-0-415-31877-8: £100.00 US $165.00Pb: 978-0-415-31878-5: £34.99 US $62.95

Urban Complexity and Spatial StrategiesTowards a Relational Planning for Our Times

Patsy Healey

Series: RTPI Library Series

Well-illustrated, Urban Complexityand Spatial Strategies developsimportant new relational andinstitutionalist approaches to policyanalysis and planning, of relevanceto all those with an interest in citiesand urban areas.

Selected Contents: 1. The Project ofStrategic Planning for Urban Areas 2. Urban ’Regions’ and TheirGovernance 3. The Strategic Shapingof Urban Development in Amsterdam4. The Struggle for Strategic Flexibility

in Urban Planning in Milan 5. The Transformation of Identityin the Cambridge Sub-Region 6. Strategy-Making in aRelational World 7. Spatial Imaginations and Urban ’Region’Strategies 8. Getting to Know an Urban ’Region’ 9. Relational Complexity and Urban Governance2006: 234x156: 352ppHb: 978-0-415-38034-8: £90.00 US $150.00Pb: 978-0-415-38035-5: £27.99 US $50.95

7URBAN PLANNING AND DESIGN

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NEW

Eco-UrbanityTowards Well-Mannered Built Environments

Edited by Darko Radovic, University of Melbourne,Australia

There is need for change in ourcurrently unsustainable cities.Carefully outlining paths towardsbetter, sustainable ways of urbanliving, this book proposes a radicalchange in the ways we conceive andlive our urban environments.

Bringing together diverse culturaland disciplinary views on urbansustainability, eighteen leadingacademics and practitioners insustainable architecture and

urbanism explore global concerns of sustainability andurbanity.

Selected Contents: Introduction: Towards a Theory of Eco-Urbanity Darko Radovic Part 1: The Compact City,Strategies and Success Stories 1. Eco-Urbanity: TheFramework of an Idea Darko Radovic 2. The BarcelonaAgenda: Reuse, Compactness and Green Oriol Clos 3. FromIndustrial Cities to Eco-Urbanity – The Melbourne Case StudyRob Adams 4. The Sustainable City as a Fine-Grained CityDavid Sim 5. From the Compact City to the DefragmentedCity: Another Route Towards Sustainable Urban Form? MikeJenks Part 2: Other Cultures, Approaches and Strategies6. Designing for Shrinkage: Fibercity 2050, Tokyo OhnoHidetoshi 7. Excavating the Lost Commons: Creating GreenSpaces and Water Corridors for Eco-Urban InfrastructureIshikawa Mikiko 8. Continuity and Departure: A Case Study ofSingapore’s Nankin Street Heng Chye Kiang 9. The CulturalChallenge for Sustainable Cities: Coping with Sprawl inBangkok and Melbourne Sidh Sintusingha 10. Geometries ofLife and Formlessness: The Theoretical Legacies of HistoricalBeijing Zhu Jianfei 11. Eco-City? Eco-Urbanity? Arvind KrishanPart 3: Other Scales and Sensibilities 12. Eco-Urbanism:An Israeli Perspective Arie Rahamimoff 13. Bringing BackNature and Re-Invigorating the City Centre Kengo Kuma 14. Sustainable Design Towards a Positive Spiral KodamaYuichiro 15. Creating a Cemetery: Architecture that SustainsCultural Forms Naito Hiroshi 16. Towards Well-Mannered BuiltEnvironments Darko RadovicMarch 2009: 246x174: 264ppHb: 978-0-415-47277-7: £85.00 US $150.00Pb: 978-0-415-47278-4: £27.99 US $49.95

SUSTAINABLE PLANNING8

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Above: Pages taken from Eco-Urbanity.

NEW

Sustainable Olympic Design and Urban DevelopmentAdrian Pitts, Sheffield Hallam University, UK andHanwen Liao, University of Greenwich, London, UK

With appropriate planning anddesign, Olympic urban developmenthas the potential to leave positiveenvironmental legacies to the hostcity and contribute to environmentalsustainability.

This book explains how a modernOlympic games can successfullydevelop a more sustainable designapproach by learning from thelessons of the past and by taking

account of the latest developments. It offers an assessment tool that can be tailored to individualcircumstance – a tool which emerges from the analysis ofprevious summer games host cities and from techniques inenvironmental analysis and assessment.

Selected Contents: Part 1: The Olympic DevelopmentScenario 1. Introduction 2. Olympic History and its UrbanContext Part 2: Olympic Design and Development: Pastand Present 3. Urban Development 4. Sports Venue Designand Development 5. Olympic Village Design and Development6. The Olympic Impact on Host Cities Part 3: EvaluatingOlympic Urban Development for Sustainability7. Infrastructural Requirements to Stage the Modern Games8. Sustainable Olympic Urban Development 9. ProposedEvaluation Framework for the Olympic City 10. The London2012 Olympics 11. Conclusions and RecommendationsApril 2009: 246x189: 224ppHb: 978-0-415-46761-2: £85.00 US $140.00Pb: 978-0-415-46762-9: £40.00 US $71.95

9SUSTAINABLE PLANNING

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Above: Pages taken from Sustainable OlympicDesign and Urban Development.

2ND EDITION

Sustainable Urban Development ReaderEdited by Stephen M. Wheeler, University ofCalifornia, Davis, USA and Timothy Beatley, Universityof Virginia, USA

Series: Routledge Urban Reader Series

’A comprehensive andintellectually rich compendium ofthe state-of-the-art knowledgeon sustainable urbandevelopment. The scholarly,judicious choice of topics andcontributors, and the sequencingof the readings are admirable. Acarefully crafted synthesis of themajor themes associated withsustainable urban development.’

– Journal of the American Planning Association

The Sustainable Urban Development Reader presents anauthoritative overview of the field using original sources in ahighly readable format for university classes in urban studies,environmental studies, the social sciences, and related fields.It also makes a wide range of sustainable urban planning-related material available to the public in a clearand accessible way, forming an indispensable resource foranyone interested in the future of urban environments.

Selected Contents: Part 1: Origins of the SustainabilityConcept Part 2: Dimensions of Sustainable UrbanDevelopment Part 3: Tools for Sustainability Planning Part 4: Sustainable Urban Development Internationally Part 5: Visions of Sustainable Community Part 6: Case Studiesof Urban Sustainability Part 7: Sustainability Planning Exercises2008: 246x189: 512ppHb: 978-0-415-45381-3: £95.00 US $190.00Pb: 978-0-415-45382-0: £31.50 US $64.95eBook: 978-0-203-89427-9

Designing the Reclaimed LandscapeAlan Berger, Harvard University Graduate School ofDesign, USA

Drawing on the work of the well-known ’Project for ReclamationExcellence’ at Harvard’s GraduateSchool of Design, this volumeoutlines the latest design thinking,theory and practice for landscapeplanners, landscape architects anddesigners, and others interested inmaximizing the future potential ofreclaimed land.

The first practical yet in-depthexploration of how to reclaim the

post-industrial landscape, this volume includes excellent casestudies by practitioners and policy makers from around theUS, giving first rate practical examples.

Selected Contents: Part 1: Contextualizing LandscapeAlteration through Historic, Systemic, and Biologic PerspectivesPart 2: Interdisciplinary Responses and Opportunities inReclamation Part 3: Technology, Representation, andInformation in Reclamation Design Part 4: Future Directionsand Programs in US Reclamation Policy and Law 2007: 246x174: 200ppHb: 978-0-415-77303-4: £39.99 US $71.95

Urban Sustainability throughEnvironmental DesignApproaches to Time-People-Place Responsive Urban Spaces

Edited by Kevin Thwaites, University of Sheffield, UK,Sergio Porta, Politecnico di Milano, Italy, Ombretta Romice, University of Strathclyde, UK andMark Greaves, Glasgow City Council, UK

Urban Sustainability throughEnvironmental Design provides theanalytical tools and practicalmethodologies that can beemployed for sustainable and long-term solutions to the design andmanagement of urbanenvironments.

2007: 246x189: 200ppHb: 978-0-415-39547-2: £90.00 US $150.00Pb: 978-0-415-38480-3: £27.99 US $50.95

SUSTAINABLE PLANNING10

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Sustainable Urban Development Series

Sustainable Urban Development Volume 4Changing Professional Practice

Edited by Ian Cooper, Eclipse Research Consultants,Cambridge, UK and Martin Symes, University of theWest of England, UK

This fourth volume explores how theprofessions responsible forenhancing the built environment’ssustainability seek to deliver this newagenda, offering multi-perspectivecase studies and discussion to arguefor a rethinking of the role of theurban development professional.

Selected Contents: Foreword ColinFudge. Preface: A EuropeanPerspective 1. Introduction Part 1:Changing Processes 2. SustainableConstruction and Policy Learning in

Europe 3. Urban Sprawl: Challenges for European PolicyIntegration and City Governance 4. Decision-MakingProcesses in Urban Design 5. Sustainable Urban Developmentand the Professions in the UK 6. Sustainable Communities:Policy, Practice and Professional Development Part 2: Changing Institutions 7. Sustainable Constructionand Urbanism in the Netherlands and the Czech Republic 8. Institutional Dynamics and Institutional Barriers toSustainable Construction in France, Great Britain and theNetherlands 9. Expertise and Methodology in Building Designfor Sustainable Development 10. New Professional Leadershipin France 11. Sustainable Building in Italy 12. BuildingOperations and Use 13. Conclusions2008: 234x156: 328ppHb: 978-0-415-43821-6: £90.00 Pb: 978-0-415-43822-3: £34.99

Sustainable Urban Development Volume 1The Framework and Protocols for EnvironmentalAssessment

Edited by Stephen Curwell, University of Salford, UK,Mark Deakin, Napier University, Edinburgh, UK and Martin Symes, University of the West of England, UK2005: 234x156: 256ppHb: 978-0-415-32214-0: £90.00 Pb: 978-0-415-32215-7: £34.99

Sustainable Urban Development Volume 3The Toolkit for Assessment

Edited by Ron Vreeker, Free University, Amsterdam, the Netherlands, Mark Deakin, Napier University,Edinburgh, UK and Stephen Curwell, University ofSalford, UK

This book outlines the BEQUESTtoolkit that provides the means bywhich to link the protocols with theassessment methods currentlyavailable to evaluate thesustainability of urban development.

Selected Contents: 1. IntroductionPart 1: The Toolkit 2. The Toolkit forAssessment Part 2: Assessment3. Scenario Analysis in Spatial ImpactAssessment 4. Multi-CriteriaEvaluation and Planning Support:Choosing Among Alternative

Scenarios 5. Mixed and Compact Land Use Assessments 6. SMARTNET: A System for Multi-Criteria Appraisal of RoadTransport Networks 7. The NAR Model of Land Use andBuildings 8. The Building Passport Assessment 9. TheEuropean HQE2R Sustainable Neighbourhood Assessment 10. The REGEN Assessment of the Porta Nuova District’sCentral Railway Station 11. Assessment Methods Underlyingthe Planning and Development of Modena City’s CSR Part 3: Evaluating the Sustainability of UrbanDevelopment 12. The Search for Sustainable Communities:Ecological Integrity, Equity and the Question of Participation 13. Governing the Sustainable of Urban Development 14. Conclusions2008: 234x156: 304ppHb: 978-0-415-32218-8: £85.00 Pb: 978-0-415-32219-5: £34.99

Sustainable Urban Development Volume 2The Environmental Assessment Methods

Edited by Mark Deakin, Napier University, Edinburgh,UK, Gordon Mitchell, University of Leeds, UK, Peter Nijkamp and Ron Vreeker, both at FreeUniversity, Amsterdam, the Netherlands2007: 234x156: 544ppHb: 978-0-415-32216-4: £90.00 Pb: 978-0-415-32217-1: £34.99

11SUSTAINABLE PLANNING

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NEW3RD EDITION

Methods of Environmental Impact AssessmentEdited by Peter Morris and Riki Therivel, OxfordBrookes University, UK

Series: Natural and Built Environment Series

Environmental impact assessment(EIA) is now firmly established as animportant and often obligatory partof proposing or launching anydevelopment project. Delivering asuccessful EIA needs not only anunderstanding of the theory but alsoa detailed knowledge of themethods for carrying out theprocesses required. Peter Morris and Riki Therivel bring together the latestadvice on best practice fromexperienced practitioners to ensure

an EIA is carried out correctly. This new edition:

• explains how an EIA works and how it should be carried out

• demonstrates the relationship of the EIA to socio-economic, environmental and ecological systems

• includes completely updated legislative and policy contexts

• has added explanations of shared and integrative methods including a new chapter on EIA and sustainability.

Selected Contents: Part 1: Methods for EnvironmentalComponents 1. Introduction Riki Therivel and Peter Morris2. Socio-Economic Impacts 1: Overview and Economic ImpactsJohn Glasson 3. Socio-Economic Impacts 2: Social ImpactsAndrew Chadwick 4. Noise Riki Therivel 5. Transport Chris Fryand Riki Therivel 6. Landscape and Visual Rebecca Knight 7. Archaeological and Other Material and Cultural Assets RikiTherivel 8. Air Quality and Climate David Walker and HannahDalton 9. Soils, Geology and Geomorphology Chris Stapleton,Kevin Hawkins and Martin Hodson 10. Water Sally-BethKelday, Andrew Brookes and Peter Morris 11. Ecology PeterMorris and Roy Emberton 12. Coastal Ecology andGeomorphology Ricard Cottle and Sian John Part 2: Sharedand Integrative Methods 13. Environmental RiskAssessment and Risk Management Andrew Brookes 14. Geographical Information Systems and EIA AgustinRodriguez-Bachiller and Graham Wood 15. Quality of LifeCapital Riki Therivel 16. Sustainable Development andSustainability Appraisal Roy Emberton and Riki Therivel.AppendicesMarch 2009: 234x156: 576ppHb: 978-0-415-44174-2: £80.00 US $145.00Pb: 978-0-415-44175-9: £29.99 US $53.95

PLANNING, LANDSCAPE AND ENVIRONMENT12

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Above: Pages taken from Methods ofEnvironmental Impact Assessment.

NEW

Spatial RecallMemory in Architecture and Landscape

Edited by Marc Treib, University of California atBerkeley, USA

Architecture and designed landscapesserve as grand mnemonic devices thatrecord and transmit vital aspects ofculture and history. Spatial Recall castsa broad net over the concept ofmemory and gives a variety ofperspectives from twelve internationallynoted scholars, practicing designers,and artists such as Juhani Pallasmaa,Adriaan Geuze, Susan Schwartzenberg,Georges Descombes and Esther daCosta Meyer.

Essays range from broad topics ofmessage and audiences to specific ones of landscapeproduction. Beautifully illustrated, Spatial Recall is acomprehensive view of memory in the built environment,how we have read it in the past, and how we can create itin the future.

Selected Contents: Yes, Now I Remember: An IntroductionMarc Treib Part 1: Body 1. Space, Place, Memory, andImagination: The Temporal Dimension of Existential SpaceJuhani Pallasmaa 2. Re-Creating the Past: Notes on theNeurology of Memory Susan Schwartzenberg 3. The Place ofMemory Donlyn Lyndon 4. Indelible Marker, Palimpsest, ThinAir Alice Aycock Part 2: Landscapes 5. Rivers, Meanders,and Memory Matt Kondolf 6. Displacements: Canals, Rivers,and Flows Georges Descombes 7. Land, Cows and PyramidsAdriaan Geuze 8. The Mediterranean Cemetery: Landscape asCollective Memory Luigi Latini Part 3: Buildings 9. The Placeof Place in Memory Esther da Costa Meyer 10. RememberingRuins, Ruins Remembering Marc Treib 11. The MemoryIndustry and its Discontents: The Death and Life of a KeywordAndrew Shanken 12. Mnemonic Value and HistoricPreservation Jorge Otero-PailosMay 2009: 234x156: 272ppHb: 978-0-415-77735-3: £85.00 US $140.00Pb: 978-0-415-77736-0: £30.00 US $53.95

13PLANNING, LANDSCAPE AND ENVIRONMENT

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Strategic Planning for WaterHugh Howes

Strategic Planning for Waterexamines the neglected relationshipbetween planning for water andspatial planning. It provides thebackground to sustainable watermanagement and assistance tospatial planners in understanding thecomplex water environment.

2007: 246x189: 192ppHb: 978-0-415-42538-4: £29.99 eBook: 978-0-203-08940-8

Open Space: People SpaceEdited by Catharine Ward Thompson, EdinburghCollege of Art, UK and Penny Travlou, OPENspaceResearch, Edinburgh College of Art, UK

Highly visual and containingcontributions from leading names inlandscape, architecture and design,this volume provides a rare insightinto people’s engagement with theoutdoor environment; looking at theways in which the design of spacesand places meets people’s needs anddesires in the twenty-first century.

Selected Contents: Part 1: PolicyIssues: What are the CurrentChallenges in Planning for InclusiveAccess Part 2: The Nature of

Exclusion: What is the Experience of Exclusion in DifferentContexts? Part 3: Design Issues: Where are the DesignChallenges and What Does Inclusive Design Mean in Practice?Part 4: Research Issues: Where are the Research Challenges andWhich Theories and Methods Offer Most Promise2007: 276x219: 224ppHb: 978-0-415-41533-0: £90.00 US $150.00Pb: 978-0-415-41534-7: £34.99 US $62.95eBook: 978-0-203-96182-7

Planning at the Landscape ScalePaul Selman

Series: RTPI Library Series2006: 234x156: 224ppHb: 978-0-415-35141-6: £90.00 US $150.00Pb: 978-0-415-35142-3: £29.99 US $53.95

3RD EDITION

Introduction ToEnvironmental Impact AssessmentR. Therivel, John Glasson and Andrew Chadwick

Series: Natural and Built Environment Series

An introduction to environmentalimpact assessment, this text isdesigned to be used by students ofplanning, environmental studies andgeography.

2005: 234x156: 448ppHb: 978-0-415-33836-3: £85.00 US $140.00Pb: 978-0-415-33837-0: £32.99 US $59.95eBook: 978-0-203-02306-8

Transforming Parks and Protected AreasPolicy and Governance in a Changing World

Edited by Kevin S. Hanna, Douglas A. Clark and D. Scott Slocombe, all at Wilfrid Laurier University, Canada

A rare collection of articles that fusesacademic theory, critique of practice,and practical knowledge, TransformingParks and Protected Areas analyzesand critiques the emerging issues inthe design and operation of parks andprotected areas.

Selected Contents: 1. Introduction:Protected Areas in a Changing WorldPart 1: The Challenges ofGovernance 2. Evolution of

Contexts for Protected Areas Governance 3. GovernanceModels for Parks, Recreation, and Tourism 4. InformationTechnology and the Protection of Biodiversity in ProtectedAreas 5. Anthropological Contributions to Protected AreaManagement 6. Steering Governance through RegimeFormation at the Landscape Scale: Evaluating Experiences inCanadian Biosphere Reserves Part 2: Critical Perspectives7. Conflict and Protected Areas Establishment: BritishColumbia’s Political Parks 8. Deconstructing EcologicalIntegrity Policy in Canadian National Parks 9. The Science andManagement Interface in National Parks 10. IndigenousPeoples and Protected Heritage Areas: Acknowledging CulturalPluralism 11. Political Ecology Perspectives on Ecotourism toParks and Protected Areas 12. Summary and Synthesis 2007: 246x174: 248ppHb: 978-0-415-37423-1: £65.00 US $110.00eBook: 978-0-203-96190-2

Winner of the LanscapeInstitute’s Research Award 2008

PLANNING, LANDSCAPE AND ENVIRONMENT14

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NEW

Planning the Night-Time CityMarion Roberts and Adam Eldridge, both atUniversity of Westminster, UK

This book draws on extensive casestudy research done in the UK andinternationally to explain howchanging approaches to evening andnight-time activities have beenconceptualized in planning practice,and how these ideas have beensubverted by the entertainmentindustry to the point that somemicro-districts in certain regeneratedand creative cities have now beendubbed ‘no-go’ areas.

Selected Contents: 1. Introduction2. Cities at Night 3. Visions of the Night-Time City 4. PartyCities 5. Binge Drinking Britain? 6. Regulating Consumption7. Regulating Licensing 8. Planning and Managing the Night-Time City 9. Consumers 10. Night-Time Cities, Night-Time FuturesJune 2009: 234x156: 304ppHb: 978-0-415-43617-5: £85.00 US $140.00Pb: 978-0-415-43618-2: £27.99 US $49.99

NEW2ND EDITION

Shaping NeighbourhoodsFor Local Health and Global Sustainability

Hugh Barton, Marcus Grant and Richard Guise, all atUniversity of the West of England, UK

With many new case studies and awealth of new research, this newedition outlines the principles forplanning healthy and sustainableneighbourhoods and towns, puttingthe topical issues of climate changeand obesity at the centre of itsconcern.

Containing many new case studiesand a wealth of new research, thisindispensable guide bridges the gap

between theory and practice, between planning authorities,investors and communities, and between differentprofessional perspectives.

February 2010: 276x219: 288ppHb: 978-0-415-49548-6: £85.00 US $140.00Pb: 978-0-415-49549-3: £35.00 US $62.95

NEW

Becoming PlacesKim Dovey, Melbourne University, Australia

About the practices and politics ofplace and identity formation – theslippery ways in which who we arebecomes wrapped up with wherewe are – this book exposes therelations of place to power. It linkseveryday aspects of place experienceto the social theories of Deleuze andBourdieu in a very readable manner.This is a book that takes the socialcritique of built form another stepthrough detailed fieldwork and

analysis in particular case studies

Through a broad range of case studies from nationalistmonuments and new urbanist suburbs to urban lanewaysand avant-garde interiors, questions are explored such as:What is neighbourhood character? How do squattersettlements work and does it matter what they look like?Can architecture liberate? How do monuments and publicspaces shape or stabilize national identity?

Selected Contents: Part 1: Ideas 1. Making Sense of Place2. Place as Assemblage 3. Silent Complicities 4. Limits ofCritical Architecture Part 2: Places 5. Slippery Characters:Defending and Creating Place Identities with Ian Woodcockand Stephen Wood 6. Becoming Prosperous: InformalUrbanism in Yogyakarta with Wiryono Rhajo 7. UrbanisingArchitecture: Koolhaas and Spatial Segmentarity 8. OpenCourt: Transparency and Legitimation in the Courthouse 9. Safety Becomes Danger: Drug-Use in Public Space with JohnFitzgerald 10. New Orders: Monas and Merdeka Square withEka Permanasari 11. Urban Slippage: Smooth and StriatedStreetscapes in Bangkok with Kasama PolakitJuly 2009: 246x174: 208ppHb: 978-0-415-41636-8: £80.00 US $130.00Pb: 978-0-415-41637-5: £25.99 US $46.95eBook: 978-0-203-87500-1

15PLANNING AND COMMUNITIES

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Heterotopia and the CityPublic Space in a Postcivil Society

Edited by Michiel Dehaene, Eindhoven University ofTechnology, the Netherlands and Lieven De Cauter,Katholiek Universitat, Leuven, Belgium

With theoretical contributions on theconcept of heterotopia, including anew translation of Foucault’sinfluential 1967 text, Of Other Spaceand essays by well-known scholars,the book comprises a series ofcritical case studies, from Beaubourgto Bilbao, which probe a range of(post)urban transformations andwhich redirect the debate on theprivatization of public space.

Heterotopia and the City provides acollective effort to reposition

heterotopia as a crucial concept for contemporary urbantheory. The book will be of interest to all those wishing tounderstand the city in the emerging postcivil society andpost-historical era. Planners, architects, cultural theorists,urbanists and academics will find this a valuable contributionto current critical argument.

Selected Contents: Part 1: Heterotopology: ‘A Science in theMaking’ Part 2: Heterotopia Revisited Part 3: The Mall asAgora: The Agora as Mall Part 4: Dwelling in a PostcivilSociety Part 5: Terrains Vagues: Transgression and UrbanActivism Part 6: Heterotopia in the Splintering MetropolisPart 7: Heterotopia After the Polis2008: 234x156: 360ppHb: 978-0-415-42288-8: £75.00 US $125.00eBook: 978-0-203-08941-5

Planning the Good CommunityNew Urbanism in Theory and Practice

Jill Grant

Series: RTPI Library Series2005: 234x156: 296ppHb: 978-0-415-70074-0: £90.00 US $150.00Pb: 978-0-415-70075-7: £32.99 US $59.95

Private CitiesGlobal and Local Perspectives

Georg Glasze, Chris Webster and Klaus Frantz

Series: Routledge Studies in Human Geography2005: 234x156: 256ppHb: 978-0-415-34170-7: £90.00 US $180.00

NEW

Regenerating LondonGovernance, Sustainability and Community in aGlobal City

Edited by Rob Imrie, Loretta Lees and Mike Raco, allat King’s College London, UK

Regenerating London explores latestthinking on urban regeneration inone of the fastest changing worldcities. Engaging with social,economic, and political structures ofcities, it highlights paradoxes andcontradictions in urban policy andoffers an evaluation of thecontemporary forms of urbanredevelopment.

Selected Contents: Part 1: TheDimensions of Urban Change in

London Part 2: Prestige Projects and the Sustainable City Part 3: Sustainability, Inclusion and Social Mixing Part 4: Community Governance and Urban Change Part 5: Conclusions February 2009: 246x174: 336ppHb: 978-0-415-43366-2: £85.00 US $150.00Pb: 978-0-415-43367-9: £25.99 US $46.95

An Introduction to CommunityDevelopmentEdited by Rhonda Phillips, Arizona State University,USA and Robert H. Pittman, University of CentralArkansas, USA

Comprehensive and practical, thistextbook enables students toconnect academic study andprofessional know-how, anddemonstrates how to best plan therebuilding, revitalization anddevelopment of communitiesutilizing a wide variety of economicand strategic tools. Features include;chapter outlines, text boxes, keywords and references.

Selected Contents: Editors’ Overview Part 1: FoundationsPart 2: Preparation and Planning Part 3: ProgrammingTechniques and Strategies Part 4: Issues ImpactingCommunity Development2008: 246x189: 392ppHb: 978-0-415-77384-3: £85.00 US $150.00Pb: 978-0-415-77385-0: £32.00 US $57.95eBook: 978-0-203-88693-9

PLANNING AND COMMUNITIES16

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The Social Fabric of the Networked CityEdited by Géraldine Pflieger, Luca Pattaroni,Christophe Jemelin and Vincent Kaufmann, all at theFederal Institute of Technology, Lausanne (EPFL),Switzerland

This book is constructed around thework of Manuel Castells on thespace of places, the space of flowsand the networked city. Following anintroduction by Castells in which hesets out the theoretical and empiricalframework to be followed, the bookfeatures nine original contributionsfocusing on the transformation ofthe fabric of the networked city interms of policies and social practices.

Selected Contents: 1. Introduction:New Perspectives on Urban Forms,

Power and Experiences Part 1: Urban Technologies, Powerand Experiences: A Theoretical Framework 2. TheNetworked City 3. Architecture and Reflexivity Part 2:Mobility and Accessibility: New Planning Practices andChallenges 4. Mobility Pioneers in Germany: New Patterns of(im)Mobility in an Age of Second Modernity 5. SpatialPatterns and Social Inequality in Switzerland – Modern or Post-Modern? Part 3: The Modern Urban Planning Ideal6. Atypical Haussman Boulevards in the Nineteenth Century:The Non-Standardized Development of the Rue des PyrénéesProject 7. ’Villes Nouvelles’ and Political Infrastructures inFrance: A 1960s Sociological Viewpoint Part 4: NewArticulations Between Flows and Places 8. Expertise forthe Neighbourhood – Neighbourhood Against Expertise: CaseStudy of the Berne West Tramway 9. An Airport in itsEnvironment: Non-Territorialization or Re-Territorialization?10. Conclusion: Reshaping Cities2008: 246x174: 304ppHb: 978-0-415-46144-3: £44.99 US $80.95

Loose SpacePossibility and Diversity in Urban Life

Edited by Karen Franck and Quentin Stevens2006: 246x174: 320ppHb: 978-0-415-70116-7: £90.00 US $150.00Pb: 978-0-415-70117-4: £29.99 US $53.95

Personal MobilitiesAharon Kellerman

Series: Networked Cities Series2006: 234x156: 224ppHb: 978-0-415-39159-7: £75.00 US $125.00eBook: 978-0-203-08716-9

Intimate MetropolisUrban Subjects in the Modern City

Edited by Vittoria Di Palma, Columbia University, NewYork, USA, Diana Periton, Mackintosh School ofArchitecture, Glasgow School of Art, UK and Marina Lathouri, Architectural Association School ofArchitecture, London, UK

Providing authoritative newperspectives on individual citizenshipas it relates to both public andprivate space, in-depth case studiesof major European, American andother world cities and written by aninternational set of contributors, thisvolume is key reading for all studentsof architecture.

Selected Contents: IntroductionVittoria Di Palma, Diana Periton,Marina Lathouri 1. Urban Life DianaPeriton 2. Heads: Philip-Lorca

diCorcia and the Paradox of Urban Portraiture Hugh Campbell3. A Space for the Imagination: Depicting Women Readers inthe Nineteenth-Century City Kathryn Brown 4. ‘So the FlâneurGoes For a Walk In His Room’: Interior, Arcade, Cinema,Metropolis Charles Rice 5. Exhibitionism: John Soane’s ‘ModelHouse’ Helene Furján 6. Private House, Public House: VictorHorta’s Ubiquitous Domesticity Amy Kulper 7. Drawing andDispute: The Strategies of the Berlin Block Katharina Borsi 8. ‘The Necessity of the Plan’: Visions of Individuality andCollective Intimacies Marina Lathouri 9. City is House andHouse is City: Aldo van Eyck, Piet Blom, and the Architectureof Homecoming Karin Jaschke 10. Urban Play: Intimate Spaceand Postwar Subjectivity Roy Kozlovsky 11. Pervasive Intimacy:The Unité d’Habitation and Golden Lane as Instruments ofPostwar Domesticity Christopher Hight 12. Zoom: GoogleEarth and Global Intimacy Vittoria Di Palma2008: 234x156: 288ppHb: 978-0-415-41506-4: £90.00 US $150.00Pb: 978-0-415-41507-1: £29.99 US $53.95

Creating Child Friendly CitiesReinstating Kids in the City

Edited by Brendan Gleeson and Neil Sipe2006: 234x156: 176ppHb: 978-0-415-39160-3: £75.00 US $125.00eBook: 978-0-203-08717-6

Planning on the EdgeNick Gallent, Johan Andersson and Marco Bianconi2006: 234x156: 256ppHb: 978-0-415-37571-9: £90.00 US $150.00Pb: 978-0-415-40290-3: £33.99 US $61.95

17PLANNING AND COMMUNITIES

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Introduction to Rural PlanningNick Gallent, The Bartlett School of Planning, UniversityCollege London, UK, Meri Juntti, University of EastAnglia, UK, Sue Kidd and Dave Shaw, both atUniversity of Liverpool, UK

Series: Natural and Built Environment Series

Introduction to Rural Planningprovides an overview of rural(spatial) planning for students onplanning, geography and relatedprogrammes. It charts the majorpatterns and processes of ruralchange affecting the Britishcountryside, its landscape, itscommunities and its economies inthe twentieth century. The authorsexamine the role of ‘planning’ inshaping rural spaces, not only thestatutory ‘comprehensive’ planning

that emerged in the post-war period, but also planning andrural programme delivery undertaken by central, regionaland local policy agencies. This book is designed toaccompany a typical teaching programme in rural planning.

Selected Contents: Part 1: Ruruality, Planning andGovernance 1. Introduction 2. Rural Governance and SpatialPlanning Part 2: The Rural Economy 3. Economic Change4. The Farming Economy 5. New Economies Part 3: TheNeeds of Rural Communities 6. Community Change 7. Rural Housing: Demand, Supply, Affordability and theMarket 8. Living in the Countryside Part 4: EnvironmentalChange and Planning 9. A Changing Environment 10. A Differentiated Environment Part 5: Governance,Coordination and Integration 11. (Re) Positioning RuralAreas 12. Conclusions: Integrating Agendas, CoordinatingResponses 2008: 234x156: 384ppHb: 978-0-415-42996-2: £90.00 US $150.00Pb: 978-0-415-42997-9: £27.99 US $50.95

Regions and Cities Series

Creative RegionsTechnology, Culture and KnowledgeEntrepreneurship

Edited by Philip Cooke, Cardiff University, UK andDafna Schwartz, University of the Negev, Israel2007: 234x156: 312ppHb: 978-0-415-43428-7: £65.00

Devolution, Regionalism and RegionalDevelopmentThe UK Experience

Edited by Jonathan Bradbury, Swansea University, UK2007: 234x156: 240ppHb: 978-0-415-32361-1: £65.00

European Cohesion PolicyWillem Molle, Erasmus School of Economics, theNetherlands2007: 234x156: 368ppHb: 978-0-415-43811-7: £90.00 Pb: 978-0-415-43812-4: £37.95 eBook: 978-0-203-94527-8

Clusters and Regional DevelopmentCritical Reflections and Explorations

Edited by Bjorn Asheim, Philip Cooke and Ron Martin2006: 234x156: 320ppHb: 978-0-415-34914-7: £70.00

Regional Development in theKnowledge EconomyEdited by Philip Cooke and Andrea Piccaluga2006: 234x156: 304ppHb: 978-0-415-36553-6: £75.00

The Rise of the English Regions?Edited by Irene Hardill, Paul Benneworth,Mark Baker and Leslie Budd2006: 234x156: 320ppHb: 978-0-415-33632-1: £70.00

RURAL PLANNING SPATIAL AND REGIONAL PLANNING18

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NEW IN 2010

European SpatialPlanning and Territorial Co-OperationStefanie Dühr, Radboud University, the Netherlands,Claire Colomb, University College London, UK andVincent Nadin, Delft Technical University, theNetherlands

Strategic spatial planning isexperiencing a renaissance inEurope. This unique and timelytextbook discusses theoreticalperspectives on cartographiccommunication, power, territorial co-operation, and policy-making inEurope. In doing so, the authorsprovide conceptual and practicaltools to help students understandthe role, content and style of mapsand visualizations in strategic spatial

planning processes. Written for students, academics andresearchers of European spatial planning and policy, thisbook explores how spatial planning processes will developand discusses the best use of cartographic representation toreach agreement and focus dialogue in the future.

January 2010: 246x174: 400ppHb: 978-0-415-46773-5: £85.00 US $150.00Pb: 978-0-415-46774-2: £29.99 US $53.95

Spatial Planning Systems of Britainand FranceA Comparative Analysis

Edited by Philip Booth, University of Sheffield, UK,Michelle Breuillard, Universite de Lille II, France,Charles Fraser, London South Bank University, UK andDidier Paris, Universitie de Lille II, France

Exploring the similarities anddifferences between the spatialplanning in Great Britain and France,this book draws on the outcomes ofthe Franco-British Planning StudyGroup. It features detailed analysisand case studies.

2007: 234x156: 256ppHb: 978-0-415-42951-1: £75.00 US $125.00eBook: 978-0-203-96224-4

NEW

The New Spatial PlanningTerritorial Management with Soft Spaces and FuzzyBoundaries

Graham Haughton, University of Hull, UK, Philip Allmendinger, University of Cambridge, UK,David Counsell, University College Cork, Ireland andGeoff Vigar, Newcastle University, UK

Spatial planning, strongly advocatedby government and the profession, isintended to be more holistic, morestrategic, more inclusive, moreintegrative and more attuned tosustainable development thanprevious approaches. In what theauthors refer to as the ’New SpatialPlanning’, there is a fairly rapidlyevolving maturity and sophisticationin how strategies are developed andproduced. Crucially, the authorsargue that the reworked boundaries

of spatial planning means that to understand it we need tolook as much outside the formal system of practices of‘planning’ as within it.

Using a rich empirical resource base, this book takes a criticallook at recent practices to see whether the new spatialplanning is having the kinds of impacts its advocates wouldwish. Contributing to theoretical debates in planning, staterestructuring and governance, it also outlines and critiquesthe contemporary practice of spatial planning. This book willhave a place on the shelves of researchers and studentsinterested in urban/regional studies, politics and planningstudies.

Selected Contents: Preface 1. The New Spatial Planning:Territorial Management and Devolution 2. RethinkingPlanning: State Restructuring, Devolution and SpatialStrategies 3. Irish Spatial Planning and the Cork Experience 4. Spatial Planning in Northern Ireland and the EmergentNorth West Region of Ireland 5. Spatial Planning in aDevolved Scotland 6. The Wales Spatial Plan and ImprovingPolicy Integration 7. English Spatial Planning and Dealing withGrowth in the Leeds City Region 8. Congested Governanceand the London Thames Gateway 9. A New Spatial Planning? November 2009: 234x156: 280ppHb: 978-0-415-48335-3: £85.00 US $140.00Pb: 978-0-415-48336-0: £29.99 US $53.95

19SPATIAL AND REGIONAL PLANNING

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RTPI Library Series

NEW

Regional Planning for Open SpaceEdited by Arnold van der Valk, Wageningen University,the Netherlands and Terry van Dijk, University ofGroningen, the Netherlands

Reviewing the limitations of variousplanning options, this bookaddresses the debate on how topreserve open space in the contextof a growing metropolis.

The importance of open spaces forwell-being in urban life is well-established. With case studieson internalization and valuationmethods, this book criticallyexamines the liberal discourse thaturges the transfer of responsibilityfor open space from government tothe market.

European and American expert authors confront politicalrhetoric with grounded analysis and conclude that themarket needs to be combined with governmental efforts.They scrutinize the connection between open space and theplanning institutions designed to implement its policy. Thisbook provides practical pieces of insight in how to structurean open space problem, information on what to expect frominstruments, and new ideas on alternative approaches.

Selected Contents: 1. Rethinking Open Space Planning inMetropolitan Areas 2. Planning and Development of theFringe Landscapes: On the Outer Side of the Copenhagen‘Fingers’ 3. Threats to Metropolitan Open Space: TheNetherlands Economic and Institutional Dimension 4. Development Constraints Reduce Urban Open Space: ActualConditions and Future Requirements in England 5. Viability ofCross-Subsidy Strategies: A Netherlands Case Study 6. DoesProximity to Open Space Increase the Value of Dwellings?Evidence from Three Dutch Case Studies 7. Government orMarket: Competing Ideals in American Metropolitan Regions8. Maintaining the Working Landscape: The Portland MetroUrban Growth Boundary 9. The Impact of Open SpacePreservation Policies: Evidence from the Netherlands and theUS 10. Spaces of Engagement for Open Space Advocacy: AGrounded Theory on Local Opposition in the Netherlands 11. Formalisation of ‘Open Space’ as ‘Public Space’ in Zoning:The Belgian Experience 12. Aesthetic Approaches to ActiveUrban Landscape Planning: European Exemplars 13. Flächenhaushalt Reconsidered: Alternatives to the GermanFederal Thirty Hectares Goal 14. Planning Open Spaces:Balancing Markets, State and CommunitiesJune 2009: 234x156: 352ppHb: 978-0-415-48003-1: £75.00 eBook: 978-0-203-35938-9

Conceptions of Space and Place inStrategic Spatial PlanningEdited by Simin Davoudi, University of Newcastle, UKand Ian Strange, Leeds Metropolitan University, UK

Bringing together authors fromacademia and practice, this bookexamines spatial planning atdifferent places throughout theBritish Isles. Six illustrative casestudies examine which conceptionsof space and place have beenarticulated, presented and visualizedthrough the production of spatialstrategies. Ranging from a largeconurbation (London) to regional(Yorkshire and Humber) and nationallevels, the case studies give a

rounded and grounded view of the physical results and thetheory behind them.

Selected Contents: Introduction 1. Space and Place in theTwentieth Century Planning 2. Making Wales: Spatial StrategyMaking in a Devolved Context 3. Identity and Territory: TheCreation of a National Planning Framework for Scotland 4. Gateways and Hubs’: Strategic Spatial Planning in Ireland 5. Building Consensus in Contested Spaces and Places? TheRegional Development Strategy for Northern Ireland 6. DoingStrategic Planning Differently: The Yorkshire and Humber RegionalSpatial Strategy 7. Managing the Metropolis: Economic Change,Institutional Reform and Spatial Planning in London 8. Asymmetric Development in Spatial Planning: PositivistContents and Poststructuralist Processes? 9. Conclusion2008: 234x156: 304ppHb: 978-0-415-43102-6: £85.00 Pb: 978-0-415-48666-8: £29.99

Indicators for Urban and Regional PlanningThe Interplay of Policy and Methods

Cecilia Wong2006: 234x156: 240ppHb: 978-0-415-27451-7: £90.00 Pb: 978-0-415-27452-4: £29.99

The Visual Language of Spatial PlanningExploring Cartographic Representations for SpatialPlanning in Europe

Stefanie Dühr2006: 234x156: 224ppHb: 978-0-415-39581-6: £100.00 Pb: 978-0-415-39582-3: £43.99

SPATIAL AND REGIONAL PLANNING20

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Dialogues in Urban & Regional PlanningVolume 3

Edited by Thomas Harper, University of Calgary, Canada,Anthony Gar-On Yeh, University of Hong Kong andHeloisa Costa, Federal University of Minas Gerais, Brazil

This is the third volume in the seriesoffering a new selection of the best,award winning, urban planningscholarship from each of the world’splanning school associations.

Selected Contents: 1. Introduction:Seizing the Opportunity 2. Portraying, Classifying andUnderstanding the EmergingLandscapes in the Post-Industrial City3. Water and Urban Sustainability inthe Metropolitan Area of the Valley ofMexico Virginia 4. China’s Urban

Developmental Planning in Rapid Urbanization: ResourceMobilization and Responsiveness to Market Change 5. NewUrbanism and Sprawl: A Toronto Case Study 6. ReimaginingInner-City Regeneration in Hillbrow, Johannesburg: Identifyinga Role for Faith-Based Community Development 7. TownPlanning Versus Urbanismo 8. ’Paris Burns’: Architecture orRevolution? 9. On the Edge of Reason: Planning and UrbanFutures in Africa 10. Territorial Planning and the NationalProject: The Challenges of Fragmentation 11. Planning Stylesin Conflict: The Metropolitan Transportation Commission 12. Performance-Based Planning: Perspectives from the UnitedStates, Australia, and New Zealand 13. The Logic of CriticalCommunicative Planning: Transaction Cost Alteration 14. Planning Appeals: Are Third Party Rights Legitimate? TheCase Study of Victoria, Australia2008: 234x156: 384ppHb: 978-0-415-77623-3: £90.00 US $150.00

Dialogues in Urban and Regional PlanningVolume 2

Edited by Bruce Stiftel, Vanessa Watson and Henri Acselrad2006: 234x156: 384ppHb: 978-0-415-40285-9: £90.00 US $150.00

Dialogues in Urban and Regional PlanningVolume 1

Edited by Bruce Stiftel and Vanessa Watson2004: 234x156: 384ppHb: 978-0-415-34693-1: £90.00 US $150.00

Planning and DecentralizationContested Spaces for Public Action in the Global South

Edited by Victoria A. Beard, University of California atIrvine, USA, Faranak Miraftab, University of Illinois,Urbana-Champaign, USA and Christopher Silver,University of Florida, Gainsville, USA

The first in-depth study of theimpact of economic and politicaldecentralization on planning practicein developing economies, thisinnovative volume – using originalcase study research by leadingexperts drawn from diverse fields ofinquiry, from planning to urbanstudies, geography and economics –explores the dramatic transformationthat decentralization implies inresponsibilities of the local planningand governance structures.

Selected Contents: 1. Introduction: Situating Contested Notionsof Decentralized Planning in the Global South Part 1: Decentralization: Contexts-Outcomes2. Decentralization and Entrepreneurial Planning 3. Decentralization, Privatization and Countervailing PopularPressure: South African Water Commodification andDecommodification 4. Decentralized Planning and MetropolitanGrowth: Poverty and Wealth in Buenos Aires Suburbs 5. NewSpaces New Contests: Appropriating Decentralization for PoliticalChange in Bolivia Part 2: The Challenges of Fiscal andAdministrative Decentralization 6. The Evolution ofSubnational Development Planning Under DecentralizationReforms in Kenya and Uganda 7. Decentralization in Vietnam’sWater Sector: Community Level Privatization in the MekongDelta 8. Decentralization and Local Democracy in Chile: TwoActive Communities and Two Models of Local Governance Part 3: The Role of Non-State Participants inDecentralization 9. Community-Driven Development and EliteCapture: Microcredit and Community Board Participation inIndonesia 10. University-Community Partnership:Institutionalizing Empowered and Participatory Planning inIndonesia 11. En(Gendering) Effective Decentralization, theExperience of Women in Panchayati Raj in India 12. Decentralization and Social Capital in Urban Thailand 13. Decentralization and the Struggle for Participation in LocalPolitics and Planning: Lessons from Naga City, the Philippines 14. Conclusion: Making Sense of Decentralized Planning in theGlobal South 2008: 234x156: 248ppHb: 978-0-415-41497-5: £90.00 US $150.00Pb: 978-0-415-41498-2: £34.99 US $62.95

21SPATIAL AND REGIONAL PLANNING

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Local and Regional DevelopmentAndy Pike, Andrés Rodríguez-Pose and John Tomaney2006: 246x174: 328ppHb: 978-0-415-35717-3: £95.00 US $190.00Pb: 978-0-415-35718-0: £25.99 US $54.95

Territory, Identity and Spatial PlanningSpatial Governance in a Fragmented Nation

Edited by Mark Tewdwr-Jones and Philip Allmendinger2006: 234x156: 408ppHb: 978-0-415-36034-0: £100.00 US $165.00Pb: 978-0-415-36035-7: £38.99 US $70.95

The Network SocietyA New Context for Planning

Edited by Louis Albrechts and Seymour Mandelbaum

Series: Networked Cities Series2005: 234x156: 347ppHb: 978-0-415-70150-1: £100.00 US $165.00Pb: 978-0-415-70151-8: £39.99 US $71.95

Regional PlanningJohn Glasson and Tim Marshall,both at Oxford Brookes University, UK

Series: Natural and Built Environment Series

This comprehensive introduction tothe concepts and theory of regionalplanning in the UK. Drawing onexamples from throughout the UK isthe essential, up-to-date text forstudents interested in all aspects ofthis increasingly influential subject.

2007: 234x156: 336ppHb: 978-0-415-41525-5: £85.00 US $140.00Pb: 978-0-415-41526-2: £24.99 US $44.95

Strategic Planning for Regional Development in the UKEdited by Harry T. Dimitriou, The Barlett School ofPlanning, University College London, UK and Robin Thompson, Robin Thompson Associates andUniversity College London, UK

Series: Natural and Built Environment Series

Strategic Planning for RegionalDevelopment in the UK is essentialreading for students and academicsworking within strategic andregional planning and provides policymakers and practitioners with acomprehensive and thoughtprovoking introduction to thiscritically important emerging field.

Selected Contents: 1. IntroductionHarry Dimitriou and Robin Thompson2. The Evolution of Strategic Planningand Regional Development in the UK

Peter Hall 3. Regional Institutions, Governance and thePlanning System Mark Tewdwr-Jones and Philip Allmendinger4. Strategic Planning Thought: Lessons from Other Sectors forRegional Development Harry Dimitriou 5. Strategic Thoughtand Regional Planning: The Importance of Context Harry T.Dimitriou and Robin Thompson 6. Strategic Choice andRegional Planning Chris Yewlett 7. Regional EconomicPlanning and Development: Policies and Spatial ImplicationsPeter Roberts 8. Regional Planning, Regional Developmentand Transport Markets Roger Vickerman 9. The Role ofPlanning and Development in Spatial Labour Markets IvanTurok 10. Regional Transport and Integrated Land-Use/Transport Planning Tools David Banister and DavidSimmonds 11. Regional Household Projections and StrategicHousing Allocations Nick Gallent 12. Regional Planning andSustainability Assessment John Glasson 13. Strategic andRegional Planning in the Greater South-East Robin Thompson14. Strategic and Regional Planning in the North-East PaulBenneworth and Geoff Vigar 15. Strategic and RegionalPlanning in the North-West Mark Baker and Gwyn Williams16. Strategic Planning in the Glasgow Metropolitan RegionVincent Goodstadt 17. Conclusions Harry Dimitriou and RobinThompson2007: 234x156: 384ppHb: 978-0-415-34937-6: £90.00 US $150.00Pb: 978-0-415-34938-3: £29.99 US $53.95

SPATIAL AND REGIONAL PLANNING22

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NEW

Business Networks in Clusters and Industrial DistrictsThe Governance of the Global Value Chain

Edited by Fiorenza Belussi, University of Padova, Italyand Alessia Sammarra, University of L’Aquila, Italy

Series: Regions and Cities

How do we define and identify districts and clusters? Howdo they evolve? How do clusters and districts relate to theglobal economy? What policy options are available topromote them in eastern and western economies?

This collection of papers from international experts includestheoretical and empirical contributions examining thesequestions and offering deep insights into the internal-external mechanism of knowledge circulation and learning.

Selected Contents: Part 1: The Business Model of IndustrialDistricts and Clusters in the Knowledge-Based View and in theSocial Network Analysis Perspective Part 2: Industrial Districtsand Clusters in the Global Value Chains. A TaxonomicalExercise on the Path-Dependent Avenue of Marshallian /Satellite / Evolutionary / Science DistrictsJuly 2009: 234x156: 448ppHb: 978-0-415-45784-2: £95.00 US $155.00

Geographies of the New EconomyCritical Reflections

Edited by Peter W. Daniels, Andrew Leyshon,Michael J. Bradshaw and Jonathan Beaverstock

Series: Regions and Cities

Drawing on international evidence, this book explores themeaning and consequences of the 'new economy' anddebates the efficacy of this widely used concept.

2006: 234x156: 208ppHb: 978-0-415-35783-8: £65.00 US $130.00

Intelligent Cities and Globalisation ofInnovation NetworksNicos Komninos, Thessaloniki Aristotle University, Greece

Series: Regions and Cities

This book is about intelligentclusters, cities, and regions and theirrole in the globalization ofinnovation networks. It tells us whyintelligent environments areimportant today; and how we cancreate such environments.

Selected Contents: Part 1:Intelligent Cities and Globalisationof Innovation 1. An Intelligent-Global World is Emerging 2. Lessonsfrom Regions of Innovation Excellence3. Systems of Innovation: Diversity

and Evolution 4. Virtual Innovation Environments: Adding aGlobal Dimension to Innovation Systems 5. IntelligentClusters, Communities, and Cities Part 2: Building Blocks:Knowledge Functions of Intelligent Cities 6. StrategicIntelligence Networks 7. Technology Transfer and Absorption8. Innovation and Product Development Over Network 9. Digital City Marketplaces: Global Trade and Local Services 10. Building Blocks of Intelligent Communities, Clusters, andCities. Appendix: Five Platforms for Intelligent Cities 2008: 234x156: 320ppHb: 978-0-415-45591-6: £80.00 US $145.00Pb: 978-0-415-45592-3: £29.95 US $53.95

Mobile Technologies of the CityEdited by Mimi Sheller and John Urry

Series: Networked Cities Series

Mobile communications technologies and urbantransportation and surveillance systems worldwide areevolving and developing. This is one of the first studies toexamine these phenomenon in relation to each other, incities across three continents.

2006: 234x156: 208ppHb: 978-0-415-37434-7: £85.00 US $140.00

23PLANNING AND ECONOMY

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Planning, History andEnvironment Series

NEW IN 2010

Urban Coding and PlanningEdited by Stephen Marshall, University CollegeLondon, UK

One of the most significant recentinnovations in urban planning, bornof New Urbanism, is the revival orreinvention of the practice of coding– by which a set of written rules andgraphical specifications are used onan area-wide basis to direct thedesign of individual buildings andtheir relationships to streets andoverall urban layout.

Stephen Marshall and hiscontributors investigate the natureand contribution of urban coding,

and its merits and demerits which are conceptually distinctfrom, but often bound up with, the merits and demerits ofconventional town planning. The book investigates differentkinds of urban coding, from different geographical areas,and from a historical perspective to the present day.

Selected Contents: 1. Introduction 2. Planning by Coding:The Streets and Squares of London 3. Land, Buildings andUrban Order: The Creation of the Scottish TenementTownscape 4. Type, Form and Process: European Typo-morphological Codes 5. Civic Design through Coding:Regulating Built Form for Public Purposes in the United States6. Town Founding, Ground Planning and Urban Coding:Learning from the Laws of the Indes 7. Urban Form byDesign: Learning from Traditional Codes of the MediterraneanRegion 8. Paradigms for Design: The Vastu Vidya Codes ofIndia 9. Prescribing the Ideal City: Planning Principles, DesignCodes and Urban Patterns in Beijing 10. Urban Change andContinuity: Transitions in Urban Coding and Planning inAdelaide 11. Coding as ‘Bottom-up’ Planning: Developing aNew African Urbanism 12. Conclusions: Lessons for Urbanism February 2010: 234x156: 272ppHb: 978-0-415-44126-1: £85.00Pb: 978-0-415-44127-8: £27.50

NEW

Capital Cities in the Aftermath of EmpiresPlanning in Central and Southeastern Europe

Edited by Emily Gunzburger Makas, University of NorthCarolina at Charlotte, USA and Tanja DamljanovicConley, University of Texas at Arlington, USA

This is the first book to explore the urban and planninghistory of cities across Central and South-Eastern Europeagainst a background of rising nationalism. Introductorychapters outline the political history of the area, how thedevelopments in the different countries were interconnectedand how the capital cities of each independent country orgrowing national movement were linked to thesedevelopments. Fourteen studies of individual cities describestheir planning, urban design and architecture.

December 2009: 246x174: 304ppHb: 978-0-415-45943-3: £65.00 eBook: 978-0-203-85983-4

The Evolving Arab CityTradition, Modernity and Urban Development

Edited by Yasser Elsheshtawy, UAE University, UnitedArab Emirates

This collection reveals the contrastsand similarities between older,traditional Arab cities and the neweroil-stimulated cities of the Gulf in theirsearch for development and a place inthe world order. The eight cities whichform the core of the book – Rabat,Amman, Beirut, Kuwait, Manama,Doha, Abu Dhabi and Riyadh –provide a unique insight into today’sMiddle Eastern city.

Selected Contents: 1. Introduction:The Great Divide: Struggling and Emerging Cities of the ArabWorld 2. Prologue: The New Arab Metropolis Part 1: TheStruggling Arab City 3. Amman: Disguised Genealogy,Recent Urban Restructuring and Neo-Liberal Threats 4. FromRegional Node to Backwater and Back to Uncertainty: TheRefashioning of Beirut, 1943–2006 5. Rabat: From Capital toGlobal Metropolis Part 2: The Emerging Arab City 6. Riyadh: A City of ‘Institutional’ Architecture 7. Kuwait:Learning from a Globalized City 8. Manama: TheMetamorphosis of a Gulf City 9. Rediscovering the Island:Doha’s Urbanity from Pearls to Spectacle 10. Cities of Sandand Fog: Abu Dhabi’s Arrival on the Global Scene2008: 246x174: 328ppHb: 978-0-415-41156-1: £75.00

PLANNING HISTORY24

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Ordinary Places/Extraordinary EventsCitizenship, Democracy and Public Space in LatinAmerica

Clara Irazábal, University of Southern California, USA

Clara Irazábal and her contributorsexplore the urban history of some ofLatin America’s cities through studiesof their public spaces and what hastaken place there, revealingcontemporary definitions ofcitizenship and democracy in theAmericas.

Selected Contents: Prologue:Ordinary Places, Extraordinary Events1. Introduction: Citizenship,Democracy and Urban Space In LatinAmerica Part 1: Cities,

Democracies and Powers: The Politics of SpatialAppropriations and Social Representations 2. PoliticalAppropriations of Public Space: Extraordinary Events in the Z-Calo of Mexico City 3. Reinventing the Void: The Museumof Art of São Paulo and the Reshaping of Public Life AlongAvenida Paulista 4. Permanence of a Memorable Urban Spaceas a Place for Extraordinary Events: The Plaza of the CentralStation in Santiago de Chile 5. Lima’s Historic Centre: OldPlaces Shaping New Social Arrangements 6. The Plaza DeBolivar in Bogota: Place of Singularity, Multiplicity of EventsPart 2: Place, Citizenships and Nationhoods: Singularityof Place, Multiplicity of Projects 7. Space, Revolution, andResistance: Ordinary Places and Extraordinary Events in Caracas8. The Struggle for Urban Territories: Human Rights Activists inBuenos Aires 9. Events in the Metropolis: Public Space,Celebration, Citizenship, and Resistance in Rio de Janeiro 10. Iconic Voids and Social Identity in a Polycentric City:Havana from the Nineteenth to the Twenty-First Century 11. Unresolved Public Expressions of Anti-Trujillismo in SantoDomingo2008: 234x156: 264ppHb: 978-0-415-35452-3: £75.00 eBook: 978-0-203-00121-9

NEW

Dubai: Behind an Urban SpectacleYasser Elsheshtawy, UAE University, United Arab Emirates

This book explores Dubai’s historyfrom its beginnings as a small fishingvillage to its place on the worldstage today, using historicalnarratives, travel descriptions, novelsand fictional accounts by localwriters to bring colour to the historyof the city’s urban development.With case studies and surveys theauthor explores the economic andpolitical forces driving Dubai’s urbangrowth, its changing urbanity and its

place within the global city network.

Selected Contents: Preface 1. The Emerging Urbanity ofDubai 2. Arab Cities and Globalization 3. The Other Dubai: APhoto Essay 4. The Illusive History of Dubai 5. TheTransformation of Dubai or Towards the Age ofMegastructures 6. Spectacular Architecture and Urbanism 7. The Spectacular and the Everyday: Dubai’s Retail Landscape8. Transient City: Dubai’s Forgotten Urban Spaces 9. GlobalDubai or DubaizationJuly 2009: 246x174: 304ppHb: 978-0-415-44461-3: £60.00

25PLANNING HISTORY

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Above: Pages taken from Dubai:Behind an Urban Spectacle.

Planning the MegacityJakarta in the Twentieth Century

Christopher Silver, University of Florida, Gainsville, USA

Expert Christopher Silver shows howJakarta was transformed from acolonial capital into a megacity ofwell over ten million inhabitants.

Selected Contents: Introduction 1. Understanding Urbanization andthe Megacity in Southeast Asia 2. Fashioning the Colonial CapitalCity, 1900–1940 3. Plans for theModern Metropolis, 1950–1970s 4. Planning For Housing,Neighbourhoods and UrbanRevitalization 5. Expansion,

Revitalization and the Restructuring of Metropolitan Jakarta,the 1970s to the early 1990s 6. Urban Village to World City:Re-Planning Jakarta in the 1990s 7. Planning in the NewDemocratic Megacity2007: 234x156: 272ppHb: 978-0-415-70164-8: £75.00

Designing Australia’s CitiesCulture, Commerce and the City Beautiful,1900–1930

Robert Freestone, University of New South Wales,Australia

Looking at the ways in which theCity Beautiful movement influencedthe design and development ofAustralian cities, this pioneeringnational study surveys the rulingideas, influences, outcomes andenduring legacies of the early artisticturn in Australian urban design.With the return of the American CityBeautiful movement to the forefrontof urban design, DesigningAustralia’s Cities is a relevantaccount of the ways in which this

movement influenced and shaped Australian city design, butmore importantly sheds light on a planning culture thatstretches far beyond Australia and is of increasing relevanceworldwide today.

Selected Contents: 1. Introduction 2. America and theWorld 3. The Australian Scene 4. The Federal Capital 5. CityPlans 6. Civic Centres 7. Public Spaces 8. The CampusBeautiful 9. Parks, Parkways and the Street Beautiful 10. TheEveryday Landscape 11. New Themes, Old Traditions2007: 234x156: 336ppHb: 978-0-415-42421-9: £100.00 Pb: 978-0-415-42422-6: £33.99

Olympic CitiesCity Agendas, Planning, and the World’s Games,1896 to 2016

Edited by John R. Gold, Oxford Brookes University, UKand Margaret M. Gold, London MetropolitanUniversity, UK

Olympic Cities provides the first fulloverview of the changingrelationship between cities and theOlympic events since 1896. Witheighteen specially commissioned andoriginal essays written by a team ofdistinguished international authors,it explores the historical experienceof staging the Olympics from thepoint of view of the host city.

As controversy over the growing sizeand expense of the Olympics

continues unabated, this book’s incisive and timelyassessment of the Games’ development and the complexagendas that host cities attach to the event will be essentialreading not only for urban and sports historians, urbangeographers, planners and all concerned with understandingthe relationship between cities and culture, but for anyonewith an interest in the staging of mega-events.

Selected Contents: 1. Introduction Part 1: The OlympicFestivals 2. Athens to Athens: The Summer Olympics,1896–2004 3. The Winter Olympics: Driving Urban Change,1924–2002 4. The Cultural Olympiads: Reviving the Panegyris5. The Rise of the Paralympics Part 2: Planning andManagement 6. Financing the Games 7. Promoting theOlympic City 8. Accommodating the Spectacle 9. UrbanRegeneration and Renewal Part 3: City Portraits 10. Berlin1936 11. Mexico City 1968 12. Montreal 1976 13. Barcelona 1992 14. Sydney 2000 15. Athens 200416. Beijing 2008 17. London 2012 18. Afterword2007: 246x174: 368ppHb: 978-0-415-37406-4: £75.00 Pb: 978-0-415-37407-1: £25.99

PLANNING HISTORY26

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NEW IN PAPERBACK

Planning Europe’s Capital CitiesAspects of Nineteenth-Century Urban Development

Thomas Hall, Stockholm University, Sweden

During the nineteenth century manyof Europe’s capital cities were subjectto major expansion andimprovement schemes – fromVienna’s Ringstrasse to theboulevards of Paris.

Thomas Hall examines the planningprocess in fifteen of those cities andaddresses the following questions:when and why did planning begin,and what problems was it meant to

solve? Who developed the projects, and how, and whomade the decisions? What urban ideas are expressed in theprojects? What were the legal consequences of the plans,and how did they actually affect subsequent urbandevelopment in the individual cities? What similarities ordifferences can be identified between the various schemes?How have such schemes affected the development of urbanplanning in general?

October 2009: 246x189: 408ppPb: 978-0-415-55249-3: £24.99

NEW IN PAPERBACK

Planning Latin America’s Capital Cities 1850-1950Edited by Arturo Almandoz, Universidad Simón Bolívar, Venezuela

In this first comprehensive work inEnglish to describe the building ofLatin America’s capital cities in thepostcolonial period, ArturoAlmandoz and his contributorsdemonstrate how Europe, andFrance in particular, shaped theirculture, architecture and planninguntil the United States began to playa part in the 1930s. A series of casestudies are devoted to individual

cities, each extensively illustrated and written by authoritieson the city concerned. Providing a historical survey of LatinAmerican urban development, this book also offers a newperspective on international planning.

October 2009: 246x189: 296ppPb: 978-0-415-55308-7: £24.99

27PLANNING HISTORY

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NEW IN PAPERBACK

Planning Middle Eastern CitiesAn Urban Kaleidoscope

Edited by Yasser Elsheshtawy, UAE University, UnitedArab Emirates

Cairo, Baghdad, Algiers and Dubaicannot be easily lumped together asa single group. Cities in the Arabworld are too diverse and hybrid,ranging from those rich in tradition,to ’forgotten’ cities, to newlyemerging Gulf cities.

The authors here, Arab scholars andarchitects local to the cities theydescribe, provide an authentic voicewith an understanding no outsider

could achieve. They explore issues of identity, hybridity,colonization and globalization in the context of the strugglesand solutions offered by each city from the late nineteenthcentury to the present day. Their focus is on how the builtenvironment has changed over time and under differentinfluences.

Selected Contents: 1. The Middle East City: Moving Beyondthe Narrative of Loss 2. The Merits of Cities' Locations 3. TheSpatial Development and Urban Transformation of Colonialand Postcolonial Algiers 4. Globalization and the Search forModern Local Architecture: Learning from Baghdad 5. Sana'a:Transformation of the Old City and the Impacts of the ModernEra 6. Lake Tunis, or the Concept of the Third Centre 7. Cairo's Urban Déjà Vu: Globalization and Urban Fantasies8. Redrawing Boundaries: Dubai, An Emerging Global City October 2009: 246x189: 224ppPb: 978-0-415-55309-4: £24.99

The Making and Selling of Post-Mao BeijingAnne-Marie Broudehoux2004: 246x174: 280ppHb: 978-0-415-32057-3: £75.00

Globalizing TaipeiThe Political Economy of Spatial Development

Edited by Reginald Tin-Wang Kwok

’Taipei has always remained oneof the world’s most intriguingyet least understood major cities– but, with the publication of thismajor research study, there isunderstanding at last.’ – Sir PeterHall, University College London, UK

’Academic studies about Taipei ...are uncommon ... hence it is apleasure to see this editedvolum. Anyone interested in

modern Taiwan and especially Taipei and itsdevelopment, will find this volume highly informativeand useful as a reference work.’ – The China Journal

2005: 234x156: 272ppHb: 978-0-415-35451-6: £75.00

New Urbanism and American PlanningThe Conflict of Cultures

Emily Talen2005: 234x156: 328ppHb: 978-0-415-70132-7: £100.00 Pb: 978-0-415-70133-4: £27.99

NEW IN PAPERBACK

Planning Twentieth Century Capital CitiesEdited by David Gordon

This book examines the plans for sixteen important capitalcities around the world, each with its own fully illustratedchapter written by an expert on the urban development ofthat city.

September 2009: 246x189: 400ppHb: 978-0-415-28061-7: £85.00Pb: 978-0-415-55734-4: £24.99

Remaking Chinese Urban FormModernity, Scarcity and Space, 1949–2005

Duanfang Lu2006: 234x156: 216ppHb: 978-0-415-35450-9: £85.00

WINNER OF 2006IPHS AWARD

PLANNING HISTORY28

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Atlas of Vernacular Architecture of the WorldMarcel Vellinga, Paul Oliver, both at Oxford BrookesUniversity, UK and Alexander Bridge, Cartographer, UK

’This is an invaluable guide tothe global scatter of folkarchitectural traditions thatshape today’s most bracingsustainable designs.’ – TheChristian Science Monitor

’Considering the subject matterand the lack of original researchin this field, the book is goodvalue.’ – Reference Reviews

The first world atlas ever compiled on vernaculararchitecture, this comprehensive work illustrates the varietyand ingenuity of the world’s vernacular building traditionsfrom a multi-disciplinary, cross-cultural and comparativeapproach, using over sixty world and regional maps.

Mapping such diverse aspects as materials and resources,technologies, structural systems, symbolism, forms andservice systems on a cross-cultural and comparative basis,the Atlas of Vernacular Architecture of the World reveals thedistribution, diversity and relationships of the world’svernacular building traditions.

Selected Contents: Introduction Part 1: Contexts 1. Nations 2. Topography 3. Water 4. Climate 5. Vegetation6. Soils 7. Economy 8. Population 9. Language 10. Religion11. Cultural Areas Part 2: Cultural and Material Aspects12. Materials and Resources 13. Structural Systems andTechnologies 14. Forms, Plans and Types 15. Services andFunctions 16. Symbolism and Decoration 17. Developmentand Sustainability 2008: 276x219: 160ppHb: 978-0-415-41151-6: £49.99 US $92.95

NEW

Encyclopedia of VernacularArchitecture of the WorldPaul Oliver, Oxford Brookes University, UK

The Encyclopedia of Vernacular Architecture of the World isan inspiration and resource for architects, anthropologists,folklorists and geographers, and important for all who helpshape housing and conservation policies.

January 2009eBook: 978-0-203-92766-3: £900.00 US $1700.00

Designing the City of ReasonFoundations and Frameworks

Ali Madanipour, University of Newcastle-Upon-Tyne, UK

With a practical approach to theory,Designing the City of Reason offersnew perspectives on how differingbelief systems and philosophicalapproaches impact on city designand development, exploring howthis has changed before, during andafter the impact of modernism in allits rationalism.

Selected Contents: 1. IntroductionPart 1: Foundations 2. City ofTemples 3. City of Mechanical Clocks4. City of Machines 5. City of Sights

and Sounds 6. City of People Part 2: Frameworks7. Keeping Time 8. Measuring Space 9. Assigning Value 10. Providing Accounts 11. Connecting Actions 12. City ofReason2007: 234x156: 352ppHb: 978-0-415-42091-4: £90.00 US $150.00Pb: 978-0-415-42092-1: £27.99 US $50.95

Cinematic UrbanismA History of the Modern from Reel to Real

Nezar AlSayyad

Exploring the relationship betweencities and their cinematic portrayalsin over a century of film, this bookshows how notions of society informand are influenced by the images wehave come to know on screen.

2006: 246x174: 256ppHb: 978-0-415-70048-1: £89.99 US $154.95Pb: 978-0-415-70049-8: £29.99 US $54.95

29PLANNING HISTORY

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The Practice of ModernismModern Architects and Urban Transformation,1954–1972

John R. Gold, Oxford Brookes University, UK

Making extensive use of informationgained from hours of in-depthinterviews with architects, this bookexamines the complex relationshipbetween vision and subsequentpractice in the saga of post-warurban reconstruction.

2007: 234x156: 352ppHb: 978-0-415-25842-5: £84.95 US $144.95Pb: 978-0-415-25843-2: £32.99 US $56.95eBook: 978-0-203-96218-3

NEW IN PAPERBACK

To-MorrowA Peaceful Path to Real Reform

E. Howard, Sir Peter Hall, University College London,UK, Dennis Hardy and Colin Ward

Foreword by David Lock, Town and Country PlanningAssociation, UK

Ebenezer Howard’s To-Morrow isdeservedly the most famouspublication in the history of townplanning. Originally published in1898 and repeatedly thereafter, itsparked the garden city movementacross the world, and fundamentally

changed the terms of debate in urban planning.

This new paperback facsimile of the original version ofHoward’s work includes a detailed commentary by threeleading commentators and reproduces in full colour all thematerial subsequently left out and lost to posterity. This is aninvaluable insight into the originality and breadth ofHoward’s vision, and demonstrates the full extent of hisinspiration of future generations of town planners.

October 2009: 276x219: 232ppPb: 978-0-415-56193-8: £24.99 US $44.95

PLANNING HISTORY30

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Planning and TransformationLearning from the Post-Apartheid Experience

Philip Harrison, University of the Witwatersrand, SouthAfrica, Alison Todes, Human Sciences Research Council,South Africa and Vanessa Watson, University of CapeTown, South Africa

Series: RTPI Library Series

Planning and Transformationprovides a comprehensive view ofplanning under political transition inSouth Africa, offering an accessibleresource for both students andresearchers in an international and alocal audience.

Selected Contents: Preface Part A: Setting the Scene.Introduction 1. Planning the Spacesof Colonialism and Apartheid 2. NewPlanning Visions 3. Planning Post-Apartheid Part B: Planning and

Governance. Introduction: International Debates 4. Planningand Local Governance 5. Planning as Governance Beyond theLocal: The Regional Question, National and Provincial PlanningPart C: Discourses of Planning. Introduction: InternationalDebates 6. Discourses of the Spatial 7. Discourses of SocialTransformation 8. Discourses of the Economy and the Market9. Discourses of Sustainability Part D: Planning and Society.Introduction: International Debates 10. The PlanningProfession and Society 11. Educating Planners 12. Planning,Democracy and Values 13. Responding to Diversity:Conflicting Rationalities 14. Responding to Informality 15. Conclusion: The Power of Planning and the Limits toPower: Learning from the South African Experience2007: 234x156: 320ppHb: 978-0-415-36033-3: £100.00 US $165.00Pb: 978-0-415-36031-9: £32.99 US $59.95

NEW

Transport Policy andPlanning in Great BritainPeter Headicar, Oxford Brookes University, UK

Series: Natural and Built Environment Series

Transport in the twenty-first centuryrepresents a significant challenge atthe global and the local scale. Aidedby over sixty clear illustrations, PeterHeadicar disentangles this complex,modern issue in five parts, offeringcritical insights into:

• the nature of transport

• the evolution of policy and planning

• policy instruments

•planning procedures

•the contemporary agenda.

Distinctive features include the links forged betweentransport and spatial planning, which are often neglected.

Selected Contents: Part 1: The Nature of Transport Part 2: The Evolution of Transport Policy and Planning Part 3: Public Choices – Ends and Means Part 4: PlanningProcedures Part 5: The Contemporary Policy AgendaApril 2009: 234x156: 496ppHb: 978-0-415-46986-9: £85.00 US $150.00Pb: 978-0-415-46987-6: £34.99 US $62.95

31PLANNING AND TRANSPORT

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Above: Pages taken from Transport Policy and Planning in Great Britain

5TH EDITION

Public TransportIts Planning, Management and Operation

Peter White, University of Westminster, UK

Series: Natural and Built Environment Series

Public Transport is a comprehensivetextbook covering the planning of allpublic transport systems (bus, coach,rail, taxi and domestic air travel) inBritain and other countries withsimilar systems. The term ‘planning’is used both in the context of localauthority and central governmentroles and in the work done bytransport operators for example,network structures, vehicle typeselection.

In addition to the various types oftransport, the differing needs of the urban, rural and longdistance markets are examined. This restructured fifth editiongives greater emphasis to service quality and marketingissues as well as covering recent changes in legislation,statistics and research findings.

Selected Contents: 1. Organisation and Control of Transportin the British Isles 2. The Role of Public Transport 3. ServiceQuality and Marketing 4. The Technology of Bus and CoachSystems 5. Urban Railways and Rapid Transit Systems 6. Network Planning 7. Costing and Cost Allocation Methods8. Pricing Theory and Practice 9. Rural Public Transport 10. Intercity Public Transport 11. Some Current Policy Issues 2008: 234x156: 240ppHb: 978-0-415-44531-3: £90.00 US $150.00Pb: 978-0-415-44530-6: £29.99 US $53.95

NEW2ND EDITION

Understanding Housing FinanceMeeting Needs and Making Choices

Peter King, De Montfort University, UK

One of the biggest challenges for students of housing isunderstanding the financial principles which underpin theplace of housing in the wider economy. By taking a politicaleconomy approach, Peter King’s Understanding HousingFinance makes the basic principles of the subject accessible,without requiring detailed prior knowledge of economics orfinancial systems.

Selected Contents: 1. Understanding Housing Finance 2. Need, Choice and Responsibility 3. The Importance ofMarkets 4. Government Action 5. Influencing Markets 6. Controlling Housing 7. Complexity and ChoiceJanuary 2009: 234x156: 192ppHb: 978-0-415-43294-8: £85.00 US $150.00Pb: 978-0-415-43295-5: £25.00

PLANNING AND TRANSPORT HOUSING32

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Above: Pages taken from Public Transport. Above: Pages taken from Understanding Housing Finance.

Housing and Society Series

NEW

Housing and Health in EuropeThe WHO LARES Project

Edited by David Ormandy, University of Warwick, UK

In this cross-disciplinary research,David Ormandy and expertcontributors explain the nature anddevelopment of the World HealthOrganization’s study of housingacross Europe. In-depth analysisprovides new evidence of linksbetween the health of inhabitantsand their housing conditions, withfocus on critical topics such as:

• indoor air pollution

• the effect of cold homes and dampness

•noise effects

•domestic accidents.

With practical examples of survey tools, the attention givento methodological approaches makes this text an importantresource for policy professionals as well as housing, planningand public health academics.

Selected Contents: 1. Background and Introduction 2. TheCities 3. The Surveys 4. The Results 5. Scores and Conventions6. Indoor Air Pollution, Asthma and Allergic Diseases 7. Damp,Mould and Health 8. The Effect of Cold Homes on Health 9. Residential Energy Systems 10. Safety and Fear of Crime 11. Housing and Mental Health 12. Building Quality of LifeRelated Housing Scores 13. Residential Environmental Qualityand Quality of Life 14. The Health Relevance of the ImmediateHousing Environment 15. Noise Effects and Morbidity 16. Domestic AccidentsApril 2009: 234x156: 352ppHb: 978-0-415-47735-2: £75.00 eBook: 978-0-203-88523-9

NEW

The Hidden MillionsHomelessness in Developing Countries

Graham Tipple and Suzanne Speak, both at Universityof Newcastle-Upon-Tyne, UK

This book explores the extent, causesand characteristics of homelessnessin developing countries. Bringingtogether a major review of literatureand empirical case studies, it isinvaluable for those studying,researching or working in housing,homelessness, social policy or urbanpoverty.

Drawing on local research in ninecountries in the global south, thisbook offers an insight into the livesof homeless people, public

perceptions of homelessness, and the policies andinterventions which might variously increase or reducehomelessness. Exploring the human context as well as policyand planning, it will challenge current preconceptions.

Selected Contents: 1. Current Theory on Homelessness 2. Homelessness and International Housing Policy 3. TheContinuing Urban Housing Shortfall and Affordability Crisis 4. Defining Homelessness in Developing Countries 5. Accommodation Conditions and Differentiating betweenHomeless People and those in Inadequate Housing 6. Estimating the Hidden Millions 7. Who are the HiddenMillions? 8. Economic, Social and Cultural Causes 9. Politicaland Legal Issues 10. Disaster and Conflict 11. Exclusion,Perceptions and Isolation 12. Children and Homelessness 13. Towards Strategic Interventions for Homeless PeopleMarch 2009: 234x156: 344ppHb: 978-0-415-42671-8: £85.00 Pb: 978-0-415-42672-5: £27.99

33HOUSING

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Above: Pages taken from Housing and Health in Europe.

NEW

Housing, Markets and PolicyEdited by Peter Malpass, University of the West ofEngland, UK and Rob Rowlands, CURS, University ofBirmingham, UK

This book of specially commissionedessays by distinguished housingscholars addresses the big issues incontemporary debates abouthousing and housing policy in theUK. Setting out a distinctive andcoherent analysis, it steers a coursebetween those accounts that rely oneconomic theory and analysis, andthose that emphasize policy.

It is informed by the idea that the1970s was a pivotal decade in thesecond half of the twentieth-century,

and that since that time there has been a profoundtransformation in the housing system and housing policy inthe UK. The contributors describe, analyze and explainaspects of that transformation, as a basis for understandingthe present and thinking about the future. The analysis ofhousing is set within an understanding of the wider changesaffecting the economy and the welfare state since the crisesof the mid 1970s.

July 2009: 234x156: 280ppHb: 978-0-415-47778-9: £90.00Pb: 978-0-415-47779-6: £34.99eBook: 978-0-203-87281-9

Housing and Social PolicyContemporary Themes and Critical Perspectives

Edited by Peter Somerville and Nigel Sprigings

’This engaging collection ... challenges housing policymakers, practitioners and academics to engage withthese debates and offer their own perspective andsolutions.’ – John Flint, Sheffield Hallam University, UK

2005: 234x156: 272ppHb: 978-0-415-28366-3: £90.00 Pb: 978-0-415-28367-0: £33.99

Housing, Care and InheritanceMisa Izuhara, University of Bristol, UK

Drawing on the author’s long-standing research into housingissues surrounding the ageingsociety, this book examines thisphenomenon which is now aconcern in many mature economies.

Selected Contents: 1. Introduction2. Intergenerational Reciprocity:Cultural Practice 3. Housing Assetsand Intergenerational Transfer in aGlobal Context 4. Long Term Careand the Shifting the State-FamilyBoundaries 5. Accumulation of

Housing Wealth and Family Relations 6. Plans for Disposal ofAssets 7. Rethinking the ‘Generational Contact’ BetweenHousing, Care and Inheritance 8. Conclusion2008: 234x156: 168ppHb: 978-0-415-41548-4: £85.00

Housing TransformationsShaping the Space of Twenty-First Century Living

Bridget Franklin, Cardiff University, UK2006: 234x156: 320ppHb: 978-0-415-33618-5: £100.00 Pb: 978-0-415-33619-2: £33.99 eBook: 978-0-203-42139-0

HOUSING34

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Housing, Planning and Design Series

Housing Market Renewal and Social ClassChris Allen, Manchester Metropolitan University, UK

A unique sociological analysis ofproducer and consumer behaviour in’failing’ housing markets, this book:

• offers a sociological analysis of a ’declining’ housing market that is undergoing a process of re-structuring rather than an analysis of a ’rising’ one

• focuses on the consumers in the social structure of housing markets rather than the producers.

Incisive and analytical, this text is aninvaluable resource for students or professionals in the areasof housing, sociology and planning.

Selected Contents: Part 1: Invitation to Class Analysis1. The Death and Resurrection of Class in Sociology 2. Theorizing Social Class Part 2: Social Class and theMarket for Houses 3. Social Class and the Question ofBeing 4. Being in the Market for Houses 5. Being in aDepressed Market for Houses Part 3: The Class Politics ofHousing Market Renewal 6. HMR and the ‘New’ MarketLogic of Urban Renewal 7. Working Class Experiences of theBrave New Housing Market 8. HMR and the Politics of MiddleClass Domination 9. The Rich Get Richer – Profiteering fromWorking Class Suffering2008: 234x156: 248ppHb: 978-0-415-41560-6: £90.00 Pb: 978-0-415-41561-3: £29.99

Planning and Housing in the RapidlyUrbanising WorldPaul Jenkins, Harry Smith and Ya Ping Wang

This book examines the evolving relationship betweendevelopment strategies and urban planning in Latin America,Asia and Sub-Saharan Africa, with a focus on sustainabilityin rapidly urbanizing areas.

2006: 234x156: 384ppHb: 978-0-415-35796-8: £100.00 Pb: 978-0-415-35797-5: £26.99

Decent Homes for AllPlanning’s Evolving Role in Housing Provision

Nick Gallent and Mark Tewdwr-Jones

The first text available on thehousing-planning interface, thisbook shows the relationshipbetween planning and housingsupply and addresses fundamentalquestions about the current housingcrisis, through examining its historyand evolution.

2006: 234x156: 320ppHb: 978-0-415-27446-3: £100.00 Pb: 978-0-415-27447-0: £29.99

International Perspectives on Rural HomelessnessEdited by Paul Cloke and Paul Milbourne

This book provides comparativematerial on the cultural, political andpolicy contexts of ruralhomelessness, the nature and scaleof the issue, and the complex localgeographies of rural homelessness.

2006: 234x156: 336ppHb: 978-0-415-34372-5: £85.00 eBook: 978-0-203-63963-4

35HOUSING

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NEW3RD EDITION

Urban Planning and Real EstateDevelopmentJohn Ratcliffe, Dublin Institute, Ireland, Michael Stubbs, National Trust, UK and Miles Keeping, GVA Grimley, UK

Series: Natural and Built Environment Series

This third edition of Urban Planningand Real Estate Development guidesstudents through the procedural andpractical aspects of developing landfrom the point of view of bothplanner and developer. The planningsystem is explained, from theincreasing emphasis on spatialplanning at a regional level down tothe detailed perspective of thedevelopment control process and thespecialist requirements of historicbuildings and conservation areas. At

the same time the authors explain the entire developmentprocess from inception through appraisal, valuation andfinancing to completion and disposal.

Selected Contents: Part 1: Introduction 1. Urban Planningand Real Estate Development: The Context and TheoryPart 2: Urban Planning Organization 2. Policy andImplementation of Urban Planning 3. Town Planning Law andRegulation 4. Planning Appeals 5. The Future for DisputeResolution in Planning 6. Planning Gain, Planning Obligationsand the Community Infrastructure Levy Part 3: UrbanPlanning Issues 7. Specialist Town Planning Controls 8. Sustainable Development and Climate Change 9. UrbanRenaissance and Regeneration Part 4: The Real EstateDevelopment Process 10. Sustainability and PropertyDevelopment 11. The Property Development Process 12. Development Site Appraisal 13. Development Valuation14. Property Development Finance 15. Marketing forDevelopment Part 5: Real Estate Development Sectors16. Retail Development 17. Office Development 18. IndustrialDevelopment 19. Residential DevelopmentJanuary 2009: 234x156: 696ppHb: 978-0-415-45077-5: £90.00 US $155.00Pb: 978-0-415-45078-2: £35.00 US $62.95

A New Vision for HousingChristopher Holmes2005: 198x129: 232ppHb: 978-0-415-36081-4: £90.00 US $150.00Pb: 978-0-415-36080-7: £22.99

5TH EDITION

Property DevelopmentSara Wilkinson, University of Melbourne, Australia andRichard Reed, Deakin University, Melbourne, Australia

Foreword by David Cadman

This fifth edition of David Cadman’slong-standing textbook brings issuesof property development up to datefor a new generation of students. Itprovides a clear and practicaloverview of the propertydevelopment process, together withcritical analysis of the key issuesfaced by property professionalstoday.

With new sections on SustainableProperty Development and thegrowth of international working in

the property sector, it is essential reading for all students ofproperty development.

Selected Contents: Foreword David Cadman 1. Introduction2. Land for Development 3. Development Appraisal and Risk4. Development Finance 5. Planning 6. Construction 7. Market Research 8. Promotion and Selling 9. SustainableDevelopment 10. International Practice2008: 234x156: 400ppHb: 978-0-415-43062-3: £90.00 US $150.00Pb: 978-0-415-43063-0: £24.99 US $44.95US $41.95

PROPERTY AND REAL ESTATE36

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2ND EDITION

Property ValuationThe Five Methods

Douglas Scarrett, Formerly Tutor for College of EstateManagement, Reading University, UK

Completely revised to incorporaterecent developments in practice, thissecond edition of Douglas Scarrett’sestablished text describes the processof valuation of real estate through itsfive principal methods: comparative,investment, residual, profits, andcontractor’s methods.

Unlike most existing texts, this bookis designed to allow students to readabout the methods either chapter-by-chapter or as a whole,thus enabling a deeper

understanding of each in its own right as well as how theyfit together. Discussing changes in retail practice and the roleof accountants in looking at viability of businesses, the bookfeatures new case studies, enhanced visual aids, diagrams,and tables to help readers visualize the process.

Selected Contents: 1. Setting the Scene 2. The OverallInvestment Market 3. The Property Market 4. ValuationMathematics 5. The Determinant of Value 6. TheComparison Method 7. The Investment Method 8. TheResidual Method – The Problem 9. The Residual Method –The Process 10. The Profits Principle 11. The Profits Principle– Trading Accounts and Definitions 12. The Contractor’s Test13. The Contractor’s Test – Application. Appendix. FurtherReading2008: 234x156: 216ppHb: 978-0-415-42325-0: £90.00 US $150.00Pb: 978-0-415-42326-7: £29.99 US $53.95

NEW

Introducing PropertyValuationMichael Blackledge, University of Portsmouth, UK

This comprehensive introduction tothe concepts and methods of valuingreal estate provides information forstudents to progress successfully frombasic principles to a moresophisticated understanding of thesubject.

The book takes a practical rather thanpurely theoretical approach anddemonstrates how the principles canbe applied in professional practicewith constant reference to therequirements of, and guidance

provided by, the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors.

The traditional five methods of valuation are briefly explainedbut concentration is on the practical application of the twomain approaches: the comparison and investment methods.The alternative method of valuation of discounted cash flow,an area which has been neglected in other texts, is alsocovered. Further reading is given, along with a full range ofworked examples, clear chapter summaries and furtherquestions. Website companion material is also available.

May 2009: 246x189: 392ppHb: 978-0-415-43476-8: £90.00 US $150.00Pb: 978-0-415-43477-5: £24.99 US $44.95eBook: 978-0-203-87617-6

37PROPERTY AND REAL ESTATE

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Pages taken from Property Valuation. Pages taken from Introducing Property Valuation.

AAcselrad, Henri .................................21

Albrechts, Louis ................................22

Alexander, Anthony ............................2

Allen, Chris.......................................35

Allmendinger, Philip....................19, 22

Almandoz, Arturo.............................27

AlSayyad, Nezar................................29

Andersson, Johan .............................17

Asheim, Bjorn...................................18

Atlas of Vernacular Architecture of the World.....................................29

BBaker, Mark ......................................18

Barton, Hugh....................................15

Beard, Victoria A. .............................21

Beatley, Timothy ...............................10

Beaverstock, Jonathan ......................23

Becoming Places ...............................15

Belussi, Fiorenza ...............................23

Benneworth, Paul .............................18

Berger, Alan......................................10

Bianconi, Marco................................17

Blackledge, Michael ..........................37

Boontharm, Davisi ..............................5

Booth, Philip .....................................19

Bradbury, Jonathan...........................18

Bradshaw, Michael J. ........................23

Breuillard, Michelle ...........................19

Bridge, Alexander .............................29

Britain’s New Towns............................2

Broudehoux, Anne-Marie..................28

Budd, Leslie ......................................18

Bull, Catherine....................................5

Business Networks in Clusters and Industrial Districts ......................23

CCadman, David.................................36

Canniffe, Eamonn...............................5

Capital Cities in the Aftermath of Empires ........................................24

Carmona, Matthew ............................4

Caves, Roger ......................................1

Chadwick, Andrew...........................14

Cinematic Urbanism..........................29

Cities Design and Evolution.................4

City Reader, The..................................5

Clark, Douglas A. .............................14

Cloke, Paul .......................................35

Clusters and Regional Development......................18

Colomb, Claire .................................19

Conceptions of Space and Place in Strategic Spatial Planning..............20

Conservation in the Age of Consensus...............................4

Cooke, Philip ....................................18

Cooper, Ian.......................................11

Corey, Kenneth E................................5

Costa, Heloisa...................................21

Counsell, David.................................19

Creating Child Friendly Cities ............17

Creative Regions ...............................18

Crime Prevention and the Built Environment ...............................7

Cross-Cultural Urban Design ...............5

Cullingworth, Barry.............................1

Curwell, Stephen..............................11

DDamljanovic Conley, Tanja.................24

Daniels, Peter W. ..............................23

Davoudi, Simin .................................20

De Cauter, Lieven .............................16

Deakin, Mark....................................11

Decent Homes for All .......................35

Dehaene, Michiel..............................16

Designing Australia’s Cities ...............26

Designing the City of Reason............29

Designing the Reclaimed Landscape........................10

Devolution, Regionalism and Regional Development......................18

Di Palma, Vittoria..............................17

Dialogues in Urban and Regional Planning .............................21

Dialogues in Urban and RegionalPlanning (series)................................21

Dimitriou, Harry T. ............................22

Dovey, Kim .......................................15

Dubai: Behind an Urban Spectacle................................25

Dühr, Stefanie.............................19, 20

EEco-Urbanity .......................................8

Eldridge, Adam.................................15

Elsheshtawy, Yasser ..............24, 25, 28

Encyclopedia of Vernacular Architecture of the World .................29

European Cohesion Policy.................18

European Spatial Planning and Territorial Co-operation ..............19

Evolving Arab City, The .....................24

FFranck, Karen ...................................17

Franklin, Bridget ...............................34

Frantz, Klaus.....................................16

Fraser, Charles ..................................19

Freestone, Robert .............................26

GGallent, Nick.........................17, 18, 35

Gar-On Yeh, Anthony .......................21

Geographies of the New Economy ............................23

Glasson, John .............................14, 22

Glasze, Georg...................................16

Gleeson, Brendan .............................17

Globalizing Taipei .............................28

Gold, John R. ............................26, 30

Gold, Margaret M. ...........................26

Gordon, David ..................................28

Grant, Jill ..........................................16

Grant, Marcus ..................................15

Greaves, Mark ..................................10

Guise, Richard ..................................15

Gunzburger Makas, Emily.................24

HHall, Sir Peter....................................30

Hall, Thomas.....................................27

Hammond, Leo...................................4

Hanna, Kevin S. ................................14

Hardill, Irene .....................................18

Hardy, Dennis ...................................30

Harper, Thomas ................................21

Harrison, Philip .................................31

Haughton, Graham...........................19

Headicar, Peter .................................31

Healey, Patsy.......................................7

INDEX38

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Heterotopia and the City ..................16

Hidden Millions, The.........................33

Holmes, Christopher .........................36

Housing and Health in Europe ..........33

Housing and Social Policy .................34

Housing and Society Series (series) ..............................33, 34

Housing Market Renewal and Social Class ................................35

Housing Transformations ..................34

Housing, Care and Inheritance..........34

Housing, Markets and Policy.............34

Housing, Planning and Design Series (series)..................35

Howard, E. .......................................30

Howes, Hugh ...................................14

IImrie, Rob.........................................16

Indicators for Urban and Regional Planning .............................20

Intelligent Cities and Globalisation of Innovation Networks ....................23

International Perspectives on Rural Homelessness ..........................35

Intimate Metropolis ..........................17

Introducing Property Valuation .........37

Introduction to CommunityDevelopment, An..............................16

Introduction To Environmental Impact Assessment ...........................14

Introduction to Rural Planning ..........18

Irazábal, Clara...................................25

Izuhara, Misa ....................................34

JJemelin, Christophe ..........................17

Jenkins, Eric ........................................6

Jenkins, Paul .....................................35

Juntti, Meri .......................................18

KKaufmann, Vincent...........................17

Keeping, Miles..................................36

Kellerman, Aharon............................17

Kidd, Sue..........................................18

King, Peter........................................32

Kitchen, Ted........................................7

Komninos, Nicos...............................23

Kwok, Reginald ................................28

LLarice, Michael....................................5

Lathouri, Marina ...............................17

Lees, Loretta .....................................16

LeGates, Richard.................................5

Leyshon, Andrew..............................23

Liao, Hanwen .....................................9

Local and Regional Development ......22

Loose Space......................................17

Lu, Duanfang....................................28

Ludic City, The ....................................7

MMacdonald, Elizabeth .........................5

Madanipour, Ali ................................29

Magalhães, Claudio de .......................4

Making and Selling of Post-Mao Beijing, The.......................28

Making the Metropolitan Landscape ..........................................2

Malpass, Peter ..................................34

Mandelbaum, Seymour.....................22

Marshall, Stephen.........................4, 24

Marshall, Tim....................................22

Martin, Ron ......................................18

Methods of Environmental Impact Assessment ...........................12

Milbourne, Paul ................................35

Miraftab, Faranak .............................21

Mitchell, Gordon ..............................11

Mobile Technologies of the City........23

Molle, Willem ...................................18

Moor, Malcolm ...................................7

Morris, Peter.....................................12

NNadin, Vincent..............................1, 19

Naess, Petter.......................................7

Natural and Built Environment Series(series) .........12, 14, 18, 22, 31, 32, 36

Needham, Barrie.................................1

Network Society, The ........................22

Networked Cities Series (series)....................5, 17, 22, 23

New Spatial Planning, The ................19

New Urbanism and American Planning............................28

New Vision for Housing, A ...............36

Nijkamp, Peter ..................................11

OOliver, Paul .......................................29

Olympic Cities...................................26

Open Space: People Space................14

Ordinary Places/Extraordinary Events .........................25

Ormandy, David................................33

PParin, Claire ........................................5

Paris, Didier ......................................19

Pattaroni, Luca..................................17

Pendlebury, John ................................4

Periton, Diana...................................17

Personal Mobilities............................17

Pflieger, Géraldine ............................17

Phillips, Rhonda ................................16

Piccaluga, Andrea .............................18

Pike, Andy ........................................22

Pittman, Robert H.............................16

Pitts, Adrian........................................9

Planning and Decentralization ..........21

Planning and Housing in the Rapidly Urbanising World..................35

Planning and Transformation ............31

Planning at the Landscape Scale .........4

Planning Europe’s Capital Cities ........27

Planning in the USA............................1

Planning Latin America’s Capital Cities 1850-1950 ..................27

Planning Middle Eastern Cities ..........28

Planning on the Edge .......................17

Planning the Good Community.........16

Planning the Megacity ......................26

Planning the Night-time City.............15

Planning Twentieth Century Capital Cities.....................................28

Planning, History and EnvironmentSeries (series)............24, 25, 26, 27, 28

Planning, Law and Economics.............1

Porta, Sergio.....................................10

Practice of Modernism, The ..............30

Private Cities .....................................16

Property Development ......................36

Property Valuation ............................37

Public Space .......................................4

39INDEX

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Public Transport ................................32

Punter, John .......................................3

RRaco, Mike .......................................16

Radovic, Darko ...............................5, 8

Ratcliffe, John...................................36

Reed, Richard ...................................36

Regenerating London .......................16

Regional Development in theKnowledge Economy ........................18

Regional Planning .............................22

Regional Planning for Open Space....20

Regions and Cities (series)...........18, 23

Remaking Chinese Urban Form.........28

Rise of the English Regions?, The......18

Roberts, Marion................................15

Rodríguez-Pose, Andrés ....................22

Romice, Ombretta ............................10

Routledge Studies in Human Geography (series)................16

Routledge Urban Reader Series (series) ................................5, 10

Rowland, Jon......................................7

Rowlands, Rob .................................34

RTPI Library Series (series)..........1, 7, 14, 16, 20, 31

SSammarra, Alessia ............................23

Scarrett, Douglas ..............................37

Schneider, Richard H...........................7

Schwartz, Dafna ...............................18

Selman, Paul.....................................14

Shaping Neighbourhoods .................15

Shaw, Dave.......................................18

Sheller, Mimi.....................................23

Silver, Christopher.......................21, 26

Sipe, Neil ..........................................17

Slocombe, D. Scott ...........................14

Smith, Harry .....................................35

Social Fabric of the Networked City, The .........................17

Somerville, Peter ...............................34

Spatial Planning Systems of Britain and France ........................19

Spatial Recall ....................................13

Speak, Suzanne ................................33

Sprigings, Nigel.................................34

Stauber, Jennifer.................................2

Stevens, Quentin ..........................7, 17

Stiftel, Bruce .....................................21

Stout, Frederic ....................................5

Strange, Ian ......................................20

Strategic Planning for RegionalDevelopment in the UK ....................22

Strategic Planning for Water.............14

Stubbs, Michael ................................36

Sustainable Olympic Design and Urban Development.....................9

Sustainable Urban Development Reader ........................10

Sustainable Urban Development Series (series)...............11

Sustainable Urban Development Volume 1 ....................11

Sustainable Urban Development Volume 2 ....................11

Sustainable Urban Development Volume 3 ....................11

Sustainable Urban Development Volume 4 ....................11

Symes, Martin...................................11

TTalen, Emily.......................................28

Tapie, Guy ..........................................5

Tatom, Jacqueline ...............................2

Territory, Identity and Spatial Planning ................................22

Tewdwr-Jones, Mark...................22, 35

Therivel, Riki ...............................12, 14

Thompson, Robin .............................22

Thwaites, Kevin ................................10

Tipple, Graham.................................33

To Scale ..............................................6

Todes, Alison ....................................31

Tomaney, John..................................22

To-Morrow .......................................30

Town and Country Planning in the UK..............................1

Transforming Parks and Protected Areas .........................14

Transport Policy and Planning in Great Britain...................31

Travlou, Penny ..................................14

Treib, Marc .......................................13

UUnderstanding Housing Finance .......32

Urban and Regional Technology Planning ...........................5

Urban Coding and Planning..............24

Urban Complexity and Spatial Strategies ................................7

Urban Design and the British Urban Renaissance ...................3

Urban Design Futures .........................7

Urban Design Reader, The ..................5

Urban Ethic.........................................5

Urban Planning and Real Estate Development..........................36

Urban Structure Matters .....................7

Urban Sustainability ThroughEnvironmental Design .......................10

Urry, John .........................................23

Vvan der Valk, Arnold.........................20

van Dijk, Terry...................................20

Vellinga, Marcel ................................29

Vigar, Geoff ......................................19

Visual Language of Spatial Planning, The ........................20

Vreeker, Ron .....................................11

WWang, Ya Ping..................................35

Ward Thompson, Catharine..............14

Ward, Colin ......................................30

Watson, Vanessa ........................21, 31

Webster, Chris ..................................16

Wheeler, Stephen M. ........................10

White, Peter .....................................32

Wilkinson, Sara.................................36

Wilson, Mark......................................5

Wong, Cecilia ...................................20

INDEX40

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