Some aspects of regional planning
In: American political science review, Band 20, S. 273-283
ISSN: 0003-0554
30567 Ergebnisse
Sortierung:
In: American political science review, Band 20, S. 273-283
ISSN: 0003-0554
In: Public administration series : Bibliography P-7
In: Third world planning review: TWPR, Band 6, Heft 3, S. 239-253
ISSN: 0142-7849
Current regional planning policy in Venezuela differs in emphasis from previous efforts in the importance attached to securing social as well as economic development and in reducing interregional (and intraregional) disparities
World Affairs Online
In: The African review: a journal of African politics, development and international affairs, Band 1, S. 53-75
ISSN: 0002-0117, 0856-0056
In: RTPI Library Series
Planning for Growth: Urban and Regional Planning in China provides an overview of the changes in China's planning system, policy, and practices using concrete examples and informative details in language that is accessible enough for the undergraduate but thoroughly grounded in a wealth of research and academic experience to support academics. It is the first accessible text on changing urban and regional planning in China under the process of transition from a centrally planned socialist economy to an emerging market in the world. Fulong Wu, a leading authority on Chinese cities and urban and
In: Public management: PM, Band 61, S. 3-6
ISSN: 0033-3611
In: National municipal review, Band 15, Heft 2, S. 79-87
Abstract"The great need for regional planning today arises from the fact that as urban regions expand you have, not small intensive areas of bad growth. but widely extended areas, congestion and unhealthy social condition".
In: American political science review, Band 20, Heft 2, S. 273-283
ISSN: 1537-5943
The subject of regional planning now stands high on the calendar of American social thinking. Miss Kimball, in compiling her admirable manual of information three years ago, was able to make a fair display of papers and documents on regional, rural, state, and national planning. Since that time the sheaf of materials has grown substantially in bulk and variety. This increase of interest in the topic was inevitable. As in the world of abstract ideas every attempt to cut through to the heart of a problem lands us in metaphysics, to use the penetrating observation of William James, so in the field of municipal development any effort to follow the filaments of city planning to their roots leads us beyond the immediate urban area into the large and indefinite region of which it is a part. Anyone who has for a moment got away from the political aspects of a specific city government and taken up some particular question, such as transportation, knows how quickly he is carried beyond the legal boundaries of his municipality into its regional, state, national, and even international, relations. If anyone, perchance, has doubts on the point, let him spend a few hours with the 1920 report of the New York-New Jersey Port and Harbor Development Commission. Of course to adepts this is all trite enough, but it is an indication of what must be the inexorable drift in the thinking of those who are concerned with anything more than the decorative aspects of municipal design.
In: Urban and regional planning and development
In: Routledge revivals
In: Socio-economic planning sciences: the international journal of public sector decision-making, Band 1, Heft 1, S. 97
ISSN: 0038-0121