The laws, policies, customary practices and other institutions that govern a country's land development and the pattern of its spatial economy are constantly evolving. They change at the margin and by catastrophe; involving major land reform, minor statutes, economic crises, and gradual shifts in the way things are done. This article analyses the institutions of planning using qualitative models of incomplete contracting. It portrays them as fluid social constructs that adapt according to the relative costs of organizing the transactions that constitute a planning service. The focus is on the way organizational and institutional structures influence and are determined by post-contractual hazards. Post-contractual hazards are risks to the de...
To organize new governance arrangements and to restore trust in spatial planning, contracts are ofte...
The first dialogue of this chapter is between a pro-government interventionist planner and a pro-mar...
Planning theory pays relatively little attention to the relationship between planningand law. When i...
The laws, policies, customary practices and other institutions that govern a country's land developm...
Abstract This article argues that an inadvertent side effect of the current preoccupation with plann...
This thesis will look at the profession of Town Planning from an economic perspective utilising New ...
An investigation of planning obligations is used to explore the political and economic dynamics asso...
International audienceIn Regulation and Planning, planning scholars from the United Kingdom, France,...
While risk is a key concern in property development, it tends to be discussed by planners only relat...
<p>Planning is a principle of the Public Administration and the contractual activity. Currently, mos...
This paper explains the history and problems of the traditional plan-market dichotomy and characteri...
This Article proposes a mechanism to internalize the risk to the public interest created by the proc...
Abstract Planning has lost its soul. The ebb and flow of spatial economics, the only determinant of ...
To address the social, spatial and environmental problems of cities, planners often promote and enga...
It is often held that planning theory has little influence on planning practice. Some speak of an ev...
To organize new governance arrangements and to restore trust in spatial planning, contracts are ofte...
The first dialogue of this chapter is between a pro-government interventionist planner and a pro-mar...
Planning theory pays relatively little attention to the relationship between planningand law. When i...
The laws, policies, customary practices and other institutions that govern a country's land developm...
Abstract This article argues that an inadvertent side effect of the current preoccupation with plann...
This thesis will look at the profession of Town Planning from an economic perspective utilising New ...
An investigation of planning obligations is used to explore the political and economic dynamics asso...
International audienceIn Regulation and Planning, planning scholars from the United Kingdom, France,...
While risk is a key concern in property development, it tends to be discussed by planners only relat...
<p>Planning is a principle of the Public Administration and the contractual activity. Currently, mos...
This paper explains the history and problems of the traditional plan-market dichotomy and characteri...
This Article proposes a mechanism to internalize the risk to the public interest created by the proc...
Abstract Planning has lost its soul. The ebb and flow of spatial economics, the only determinant of ...
To address the social, spatial and environmental problems of cities, planners often promote and enga...
It is often held that planning theory has little influence on planning practice. Some speak of an ev...
To organize new governance arrangements and to restore trust in spatial planning, contracts are ofte...
The first dialogue of this chapter is between a pro-government interventionist planner and a pro-mar...
Planning theory pays relatively little attention to the relationship between planningand law. When i...