Why should the government be in the business of influencing how our society uses urban and rural land? The answer to this question is important to professional city and regional planners wishing to justify their programs, and to land-use theorists seeking to understand the forces behind land-use patterns.The allocation of land can be conducted by either public planning or by the private market. Both methods have their drawbacks and advantages. While it is necessary to understand both systems, as they work alone and together, this essay will focus on the market approach. Many would like to see the market used as the primary system for allocating land. In response to this position, this essay will present a critique of the land market and a j...
Urban scholars have recently begun to employ transaction costs as a heuristic device to understand t...
Although directed to the British system of Town and Country Planning the analysis and suggestions ma...
The what and why of planning; What is planning?; Why is planning needed?; When does the market fail?...
Why should the government be in the business of influencing how our society uses urban and rural lan...
Over the past fifty years, economists have developed methods for estimating the public benefits of g...
Land is a key factor for urban planning and is a basic input for any housing and construction policy...
Although directed to the British system of Town and Country Planning this paper has relevance for ma...
This article aims to relate intrinsic aspects of urban planning that are becoming increasingly impor...
Is land use planning fundamentally different from other forms of central planning? If so, does that ...
The challenge of facilitating economic density is fundamental for successful urbanization. Flexible ...
In public management, it is common to face conflicting objectives, particularly in relation to land ...
Land scarcity and conflict over rural land uses—agriculture, open space, housing, etc.—are common in...
The research presented here consists of two essays that describe applications of nonmarket valuation...
In the first part of this essay I approached the relation of capital to the land principally through...
Increasing interest in the federally owned lands by individuals and groups repre-senting a broad cro...
Urban scholars have recently begun to employ transaction costs as a heuristic device to understand t...
Although directed to the British system of Town and Country Planning the analysis and suggestions ma...
The what and why of planning; What is planning?; Why is planning needed?; When does the market fail?...
Why should the government be in the business of influencing how our society uses urban and rural lan...
Over the past fifty years, economists have developed methods for estimating the public benefits of g...
Land is a key factor for urban planning and is a basic input for any housing and construction policy...
Although directed to the British system of Town and Country Planning this paper has relevance for ma...
This article aims to relate intrinsic aspects of urban planning that are becoming increasingly impor...
Is land use planning fundamentally different from other forms of central planning? If so, does that ...
The challenge of facilitating economic density is fundamental for successful urbanization. Flexible ...
In public management, it is common to face conflicting objectives, particularly in relation to land ...
Land scarcity and conflict over rural land uses—agriculture, open space, housing, etc.—are common in...
The research presented here consists of two essays that describe applications of nonmarket valuation...
In the first part of this essay I approached the relation of capital to the land principally through...
Increasing interest in the federally owned lands by individuals and groups repre-senting a broad cro...
Urban scholars have recently begun to employ transaction costs as a heuristic device to understand t...
Although directed to the British system of Town and Country Planning the analysis and suggestions ma...
The what and why of planning; What is planning?; Why is planning needed?; When does the market fail?...