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  • Broschiertes Buch

Regional and strategic planning aims to give coherence to the ways in which towns and the countryside change over the medium and longer term. It recognises that such change needs to be considered across reasonably wide areas for many matters, including the integrated development of housing, employment and transport, and anticipating the effects of climate change. This led to the development of spatial planning at the regional level in England during the late 1990s and 2000s. However this approach was controversial in some policy areas, especially housing, and was a major factor in leading to…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Regional and strategic planning aims to give coherence to the ways in which towns and the countryside change over the medium and longer term. It recognises that such change needs to be considered across reasonably wide areas for many matters, including the integrated development of housing, employment and transport, and anticipating the effects of climate change. This led to the development of spatial planning at the regional level in England during the late 1990s and 2000s. However this approach was controversial in some policy areas, especially housing, and was a major factor in leading to the sweeping away of the regional planning process by the Conservative / Liberal Democrat government in 2010-11. This book examines the regional planning experience up to 2010, and recovers lessons for the future, when renewed strategic planning will surely be added to current emphasis on "localism".
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Autorenporträt
Corinne Swain is a former Director of the international consultancy Arup, and is now an Arup Fellow. She chaired many examinations in public of regional strategy throughout England during the Regional Spatial Strategy era. She has served on several advisory groups, including, currently, the Mayor's Outer London Commission. Tim Marshall is Reader in Planning at Oxford Brookes University. He has researched regional planning in Britain and other European countries since the late 1990s and is joint author with John Glasson of Regional Planning (Routledge, 2007). Most recently he has researched the planning of major infrastructure, under an ESRC-funded fellowship. Tony Baden is now retired but for many years worked in the Office of the Deputy Prime Minister and its predecessors where he was, inter alia, responsible for regional planning. Prior to joining central government he worked for SERPLAN (London and South East Regional Planning Conference).