Paradigm Change in the Japanese Urban Planning Profession (2): Land Readjustment System as a Local Detailed Planning
In: Journal of the City Planning Institute of Japan, Band 22, Heft 0, S. 115-120
ISSN: 2185-0593
51 Ergebnisse
Sortierung:
In: Journal of the City Planning Institute of Japan, Band 22, Heft 0, S. 115-120
ISSN: 2185-0593
In: Journal of the City Planning Institute of Japan, Band 19, Heft 0, S. 247-252
ISSN: 2185-0593
In: Journal of the City Planning Institute of Japan, Band 15, Heft 0, S. 13-18
ISSN: 2185-0593
In: Library for Sustainable Urban Regeneration, 10 v.No. 10
For the first time in human history, more than half the world's population is urban. A fundamental aspect of this transformation has been the emergence of giant cities, or megacities, that present major new challenges. This book examines how issues of megacity development, urban form, sustainability, and unsustainability are conceived, how governance processes are influenced by these ideas, and how these processes have in turn influenced outcomes on the ground, in some cases in transformative ways. Through 15 in-depth case studies by prominent researchers from around the world, this book exami
In: Journal of the City Planning Institute of Japan, Band 52, Heft 3, S. 975-982
ISSN: 2185-0593
In: Journal of the City Planning Institute of Japan, Band 31, Heft 0, S. 565-570
ISSN: 2185-0593
In: Journal of the City Planning Institute of Japan, Band 49, Heft 1, S. 101-112
ISSN: 2185-0593
In: Journal of the City Planning Institute of Japan, Band 49, Heft 3, S. 1029-1034
ISSN: 2185-0593
In: Journal of the City Planning Institute of Japan, Band 48, Heft 3, S. 993-998
ISSN: 2185-0593
In: Journal of the City Planning Institute of Japan, Band 47, Heft 3, S. 493-498
ISSN: 2185-0593
In: Journal of the City Planning Institute of Japan, Band 46, Heft 3, S. 997-1002
ISSN: 2185-0593
In: Journal of the City Planning Institute of Japan, Band 46, Heft 3, S. 439-444
ISSN: 2185-0593
In: Journal of the City Planning Institute of Japan, Band 45.1, Heft 0, S. 39-44
ISSN: 2185-0593
In: Journal of the City Planning Institute of Japan, Band 45.3, Heft 0, S. 253-258
ISSN: 2185-0593
In: Urban studies, Band 47, Heft 3, S. 556-583
ISSN: 1360-063X
During the past decade, Tokyo has seen a massive building boom, despite a prolonged economic slump since 1990. Since the 1980s, central government has enacted a steady stream of building code changes that allow much larger buildings. This paper argues that the recent wave of private investment in high-rise intensification has been instigated by these changes to building regulations, so that the form of urban restructuring and the distribution of winners and losers in the process are shaped by the central state, a reverse of the previous trend of decentralisation of planning powers. This restructuring of central/ local government relations can be understood as a creative rescaling of governance power that disrupted established democratic institutional frameworks of decision-making and conflict resolution. This study highlights both the centrality of land assets in Japan's developmental capitalism and the continuing importance of the distinctive institutional legacies of the developmental state in structuring Japanese urban governance.