The growth of employment opportunities for planners working in the private sector has resulted in a rapid change in the composition of the planning profession in the UK, with over 40% of Royal Town Planning Institute members now employed in private practice. Existing writing on private planning practice is somewhat circumspect, with the private sector being associated largely with a profit-driven approach. Drawing on interviews with private sector planners, this paper argues that this fails to reflect the lived reality of private sector planners, and in so doing sets out an alternative and more nuanced characterisation of private practice
This paper explores the rationale for why few planners seek or hold public office. It introduces cor...
From an ethical perspective, the biggest difficulty for planners is to take the best approach in res...
For 30 years planning has been attacked both rhetorically and materially in England as governments h...
The growth of employment opportunities for planners working in the private sector has resulted in a ...
Despite intermittent recognition of the input of private planning consultants in the UK planning sys...
Until recently there has been little critical consideration of the privatization of urban planning e...
The Working in the Public Interest Project sought to understand shifts in the UK planning profession...
Over the past 30 years, the English planning system has undergone a series of reforms designed to in...
Consider the following headlines in 2012: “Zappo’s Founder Tony Hsieh Spends $350 Million of His Own...
This article reflects upon ideas of tacit knowledge in order to examine the nature of planners’ expe...
This chapter studies the role of private consultants in the reformed English planning system and the...
Since the 1970s, neo-liberal government policy has changed the context in which planners work, and r...
Talk by planners about major changes (‘reform’) in a particular planning regime is the focus of this...
This thesis is about the public interest and how it is articulated in English plan-making practices....
At a time of public sector retrenchment in urban regeneration it has become increasingly important t...
This paper explores the rationale for why few planners seek or hold public office. It introduces cor...
From an ethical perspective, the biggest difficulty for planners is to take the best approach in res...
For 30 years planning has been attacked both rhetorically and materially in England as governments h...
The growth of employment opportunities for planners working in the private sector has resulted in a ...
Despite intermittent recognition of the input of private planning consultants in the UK planning sys...
Until recently there has been little critical consideration of the privatization of urban planning e...
The Working in the Public Interest Project sought to understand shifts in the UK planning profession...
Over the past 30 years, the English planning system has undergone a series of reforms designed to in...
Consider the following headlines in 2012: “Zappo’s Founder Tony Hsieh Spends $350 Million of His Own...
This article reflects upon ideas of tacit knowledge in order to examine the nature of planners’ expe...
This chapter studies the role of private consultants in the reformed English planning system and the...
Since the 1970s, neo-liberal government policy has changed the context in which planners work, and r...
Talk by planners about major changes (‘reform’) in a particular planning regime is the focus of this...
This thesis is about the public interest and how it is articulated in English plan-making practices....
At a time of public sector retrenchment in urban regeneration it has become increasingly important t...
This paper explores the rationale for why few planners seek or hold public office. It introduces cor...
From an ethical perspective, the biggest difficulty for planners is to take the best approach in res...
For 30 years planning has been attacked both rhetorically and materially in England as governments h...