The research addresses practitioners’ perspective on the theoretical debate over process versus outcome. Analysis of 119 structured interviews of exemplary planners on their roles, goals, constraints, and strategies finds support for both sides. Planners are process-oriented facilitators who use communication and networking strategies. Ninety-five percent are outcome oriented, either toward their own goals, such as equity, or their agencies’, such as affordable housing. They plan in institutionally constrained practice settings of unequal power. They tailor strategies to constraints of politics, bureaucracy, or limited resources. Thus, planners reconcile the debate, using processes to achieve valued outcomes
After a 5-year study of transportation planning in the San Francisco Bay Area, we have concluded tha...
This paper resolves the long-standing debate between the two dominant process schools in strategy. A...
When planners evaluate their plans they tend to ask "Does this plan lead to this stated objective?"....
Although treatises on planning published since the 1960s show that alternative paradigms have domina...
Formal planning can provide openness, communication, and rationality, but does it? That is the esse...
Planning takes place on many levels, ranging from the individual to the nation and beyond. It can be...
Abstract Planning has lost its soul. The ebb and flow of spatial economics, the only determinant of ...
During the past ten years, I've shaped, written, or edited the gamut of planning products from thous...
This dissertation examines the intersections between difference, participation, and planning process...
Much theorising in our field is focused on what planning should do. Such work is generally informed ...
What methodologies do we write about, and what type of research do we actually conduct and build upo...
The role of a planner as collaborative facilitator has come under renewed criticism, from both plann...
Thesis (Master's)--University of Washington, 2017-06Due in part to its idiosyncratic nature, interpr...
The article presents a commentary on the implied meaning of participatory and collaborative practice...
Anticipation and planning have much in common. Anticipation means being ahead of things. Planning me...
After a 5-year study of transportation planning in the San Francisco Bay Area, we have concluded tha...
This paper resolves the long-standing debate between the two dominant process schools in strategy. A...
When planners evaluate their plans they tend to ask "Does this plan lead to this stated objective?"....
Although treatises on planning published since the 1960s show that alternative paradigms have domina...
Formal planning can provide openness, communication, and rationality, but does it? That is the esse...
Planning takes place on many levels, ranging from the individual to the nation and beyond. It can be...
Abstract Planning has lost its soul. The ebb and flow of spatial economics, the only determinant of ...
During the past ten years, I've shaped, written, or edited the gamut of planning products from thous...
This dissertation examines the intersections between difference, participation, and planning process...
Much theorising in our field is focused on what planning should do. Such work is generally informed ...
What methodologies do we write about, and what type of research do we actually conduct and build upo...
The role of a planner as collaborative facilitator has come under renewed criticism, from both plann...
Thesis (Master's)--University of Washington, 2017-06Due in part to its idiosyncratic nature, interpr...
The article presents a commentary on the implied meaning of participatory and collaborative practice...
Anticipation and planning have much in common. Anticipation means being ahead of things. Planning me...
After a 5-year study of transportation planning in the San Francisco Bay Area, we have concluded tha...
This paper resolves the long-standing debate between the two dominant process schools in strategy. A...
When planners evaluate their plans they tend to ask "Does this plan lead to this stated objective?"....