Debates around the purpose of green belts arise regularly in England. The aim of this paper is to contribute to this debate by examining the way in which pressures to review green belt policy have mounted at the local level. The paper evaluates the way that planning policy in the Cambridge sub-region has shifted in emphasis to reflect changing national directives and in response to localized growth pressures. Focusing upon the University of Cambridge’s proposed urban extension, the paper demonstrates the way that this key stakeholder’s needs have taken precedence, outweighing green belt designation
In 2019 I was invited to join an academic panel advising the Shadow Planning Minister, who was revie...
This study examines the effectiveness of the Metropolitan Green Belt (MGB), to understand whether or...
Public support for Green Belt in England is legendary but is often dismissed as sentimental attachme...
The green belt, without question the most well-known and influential legacy of town and country plan...
The Green Belt is probably England’s most popular and longstanding planning policy commanding widesp...
The Metropolitan Green Belt (henceforth MGB) has been proposed since the late nineteenth century but...
Since the New Labour government took office in 1997 it has made a number of calls for the reform of ...
A green belt is a zone of land around the city where building development is severely restricted. Al...
A somewhat overlooked aspect of the geography of 'after-Fordist' regulation concerns the precise rol...
The paper sets out to compare two widely applied planning strategies--- green belt and green wedge--...
Green Belt policies have helped to create chaotic landscapes at the rural–urban interfaces of the Un...
The green belt has been one of the UK’s most consistent and successful planning policies. Over the p...
The aim of this paper is to consider the passions aroused by Green Belts in their urban containment ...
Green belts have been a part of the planning landscape for much of the 20th century, yet they have c...
International land-use concepts are transformed to suit local circumstances. What is truly common af...
In 2019 I was invited to join an academic panel advising the Shadow Planning Minister, who was revie...
This study examines the effectiveness of the Metropolitan Green Belt (MGB), to understand whether or...
Public support for Green Belt in England is legendary but is often dismissed as sentimental attachme...
The green belt, without question the most well-known and influential legacy of town and country plan...
The Green Belt is probably England’s most popular and longstanding planning policy commanding widesp...
The Metropolitan Green Belt (henceforth MGB) has been proposed since the late nineteenth century but...
Since the New Labour government took office in 1997 it has made a number of calls for the reform of ...
A green belt is a zone of land around the city where building development is severely restricted. Al...
A somewhat overlooked aspect of the geography of 'after-Fordist' regulation concerns the precise rol...
The paper sets out to compare two widely applied planning strategies--- green belt and green wedge--...
Green Belt policies have helped to create chaotic landscapes at the rural–urban interfaces of the Un...
The green belt has been one of the UK’s most consistent and successful planning policies. Over the p...
The aim of this paper is to consider the passions aroused by Green Belts in their urban containment ...
Green belts have been a part of the planning landscape for much of the 20th century, yet they have c...
International land-use concepts are transformed to suit local circumstances. What is truly common af...
In 2019 I was invited to join an academic panel advising the Shadow Planning Minister, who was revie...
This study examines the effectiveness of the Metropolitan Green Belt (MGB), to understand whether or...
Public support for Green Belt in England is legendary but is often dismissed as sentimental attachme...