At a time of public sector retrenchment in urban regeneration it has become increasingly important to understand how planners can help create better places. Recent studies suggest that planners must behave as market actors by deploying planning tools strategically to influence market behaviour. In this context, this paper examines how local planning authorities use a variety of policy instruments to influence urban projects and turn planning strategies into action. To understand how planning tools can be used to achieve successful results in urban regeneration practice, the paper presents a cross-comparison of mixed-use city centre regeneration projects in Bristol and Liverpool
This paper focuses on the contentious transition to viability-driven planning in England, whereby de...
For 30 years, planning has been attacked both rhetorically and materially in England as governments ...
There is a popular view that land use planning regulations (‘planning’) is hostile to both developme...
At a time of public sector retrenchment in urban regeneration it has become increasingly important t...
For 30 years planning has been attacked both rhetorically and materially in England as governments h...
Increasing renovation costs and ever more limited public funding for urban regeneration in combinati...
This paper challenges the dichotomous distinction between planning and the market promoted by mainst...
Urban regeneration that combines integrated and place-based approaches increasingly aims at includin...
Within the context of austerity politics, there is an increasing emphasis on regeneration initiative...
PhD ThesisUrban Development Corporations (UDCs) are perhaps the most outstanding examples of govern...
The common understanding of urban planning is that it is plan-making technical formulations of pla...
As much of Europe emerges from one of the worst economic downturns in living memory, the UK’s urban ...
English planning system reforms can be understood as part of a broader reorganisation of public serv...
In considering the position of community engagement within planning in a time of neo-liberalism and ...
This paper draws on a study of the politics of development planning in London's South Bank to examin...
This paper focuses on the contentious transition to viability-driven planning in England, whereby de...
For 30 years, planning has been attacked both rhetorically and materially in England as governments ...
There is a popular view that land use planning regulations (‘planning’) is hostile to both developme...
At a time of public sector retrenchment in urban regeneration it has become increasingly important t...
For 30 years planning has been attacked both rhetorically and materially in England as governments h...
Increasing renovation costs and ever more limited public funding for urban regeneration in combinati...
This paper challenges the dichotomous distinction between planning and the market promoted by mainst...
Urban regeneration that combines integrated and place-based approaches increasingly aims at includin...
Within the context of austerity politics, there is an increasing emphasis on regeneration initiative...
PhD ThesisUrban Development Corporations (UDCs) are perhaps the most outstanding examples of govern...
The common understanding of urban planning is that it is plan-making technical formulations of pla...
As much of Europe emerges from one of the worst economic downturns in living memory, the UK’s urban ...
English planning system reforms can be understood as part of a broader reorganisation of public serv...
In considering the position of community engagement within planning in a time of neo-liberalism and ...
This paper draws on a study of the politics of development planning in London's South Bank to examin...
This paper focuses on the contentious transition to viability-driven planning in England, whereby de...
For 30 years, planning has been attacked both rhetorically and materially in England as governments ...
There is a popular view that land use planning regulations (‘planning’) is hostile to both developme...