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Journal articles on the topic 'Sociology|Urban planning'

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1

Zenner, Walter P. "Being Urban: A Sociology of City Life:Being Urban: A Sociology of City Life." City Society 6, no. 2 (1992): 174–75. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/city.1992.6.2.174.

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2

Mcneill, Donald. "Book Review: Urban sociology, capitalism and modernity." Progress in Human Geography 27, no. 4 (2003): 531–32. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/030913250302700419.

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3

Andreev, Igor. "On methods of coverage of sociopolitical aspects of urban development by social disciplines." MATEC Web of Conferences 193 (2018): 05020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/matecconf/201819305020.

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The author has identified a trend towards the politicization of urban planning in Russia, caused by a set of factors. The author believes that students should be timely taught to adequately respond to the attempts of the leading political parties and movements to influence the urban planning industry. These attempts represent the imposition of particular urban plans for their benefit, the resolution of urban planning conflicts in the best interests of particular parties, etc. According to the author, who has accumulated an extensive lecturing experience, this goal is attainable by offering social disciplines, including Sociology, Sociology of Urban Development, Bases of Social Regulation and Public Relations, to bachelor students, majoring in urban planning at the Moscow State University of Civil Engineering. The author has considered several issues of teaching methods, in particular, he has identified the list of political problems to be analyzed and the type of classes to be organized, etc. In the report, the author makes a conclusion that the focus on the sociopolitical aspects of urban planning in the courses of social disciplines improves the students’ understanding of the nature of urban planning as a democratic practice.
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Vigdorovich, O. "Formation of urban planning thinking as one of the priority areas of activity of the Department of Urban Planning and Urbanism." New Collegium 4, no. 102 (2020): 81–84. http://dx.doi.org/10.30837/nc.2020.4.81.

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The article covers the history of the creation and development of the Department of Urban Planning and Urbanism of the Kharkov National University of Civil Engineering and Architecture. There is a retrospective of the long-term work of the department staff timed to celebrate the 90th anniversary of the university. The interpretation of the formation of the urban planning format of thinking, as a powerful lever for the training of architects and urban planners, is demonstrated in different areas of scientific, educational, methodological and professional work of the department.
 The main task of the pedagogical work of the department was the preparation of specialists of a new formation for work in many areas related to urban planning and architectural design, this is the training of specialists of educational qualification levels "Bachelor" and "Master" in specialty 191 "Architecture and Urban Planning".
 Scientific research of the department staff is carried out in the following areas: urban sociology, transport systems, urban ecology, urban systems, streamlining engineering and transport networks of urban systems, urban development management, the introduction of systemic and synergetic approaches in the formation of urban planning systems, rational methods of building and reconstruction of cities and villages in Ukraine.
 Within the framework of the topic of improving the architectural environment and urban planning space of modern cities, studies are being carried out on the formation of the planning structure and spatial composition of Kharkov during the period of industrial and post-industrial development and the analysis of the implementation of urban planning concepts in the microdistrict development of Kharkov.
 The development of urban planning thinking, as the formation of a special structure of professional consciousness, is one of the main tasks of the work of the team of the Department of Urban Planning and Urbanism of KNUSA.
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5

Qin, Jing Zhuo. "Theoretical Research Analysis and Evaluation of Urban Sprawl - A Case Study on the Overall Planning of Kunming." Advanced Materials Research 1065-1069 (December 2014): 2832–35. http://dx.doi.org/10.4028/www.scientific.net/amr.1065-1069.2832.

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Urban sprawl studies involve various subject areas, including the urban geography, economics, sociology and ecology, etc. and it is a common topic focused by the geographers, planners, environmentalists, land economists, etc. At present, the land expansion in most cities of China is too fast, presenting the extensive economic development and urbanization model of the land extensive operation. It is badly in need of theoretical studies on the urban sprawl. In this paper, the existing domestic and foreign theoretical studies on the urban sprawl are analyzed and evaluated, and combining the overall planning of Kunming City, the urban sprawl phenomenon in Kunming is analyzed.
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6

Guidicini, Paolo. "Ripensare la "Sociologia urbana". Parte prima: specificitŕ disciplinare e variabili in campo." SOCIOLOGIA URBANA E RURALE, no. 86 (April 2009): 9–39. http://dx.doi.org/10.3280/sur2008-086002.

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- Re-thinking "Urban Sociology". Part one: disciplinary specificity and field variables, In his paper Paolo Guidicini proposes a profound reflection on some basisconcepts for Urban Sociology. The goal is outline the essential elements to rethinking the urban sociological research, from re-conceptualisation of urban actor to a re-interpretation of human/urban link, across the analysis of two classical binomial as homogeneity/heterogeneity and identity/identification. Key words: urban sociology, cognitive surplus, city of the third world.
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7

Dunford, Michael, and Chris Pickvance. "Pickvance, C., editor 1976: Urban sociology: critical essays. London: Tavistock Publications." Progress in Human Geography 31, no. 4 (2007): 537–49. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0309132507079504.

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8

Hodkinson, Stuart. "Urban outcasts: a comparative sociology of advanced marginality - By Loïc Wacquant." Area 42, no. 2 (2010): 253–54. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1475-4762.2010.00950_2.x.

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9

Haklay, Muki, Piotr Jankowski, and Zbigniew Zwoliński. "Selected Modern Methods and Tools for Public Participation in Urban Planning – A Review." Quaestiones Geographicae 37, no. 3 (2018): 127–49. http://dx.doi.org/10.2478/quageo-2018-0030.

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Abstract The paper presents a review of contributions to the scientific discussion on modern methods and tools for public participation in urban planning. This discussion took place in Obrzycko near Poznań, Poland. The meeting was designed to allow for an ample discussion on the themes of public participatory geographic information systems, participatory geographic information systems, volunteered geographic information, citizen science, Geoweb, geographical information and communication technology, Geo-Citizen participation, geo-questionnaire, geo-discussion, GeoParticipation, Geodesign, Big Data and urban planning. Participants in the discussion were scholars from Austria, Brazil, the Czech Republic, Finland, Ireland, Italy, the Netherlands, Poland, the United Kingdom, and the USA. A review of public participation in urban planning shows new developments in concepts and methods rooted in geography, landscape architecture, psychology, and sociology, accompanied by progress in geoinformation and communication technologies. The discussions emphasized that it is extremely important to state the conditions of symmetric cooperation between city authorities, urban planners and public participation representatives, social organizations, as well as residents.
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Hess-Lüttich, Ernest W. B. "Urban discourse – city space, city language, city planning: Eco-semiotic approaches to the discourse analysis of urban renewal." Sign Systems Studies 44, no. 1/2 (2016): 12–33. http://dx.doi.org/10.12697/sss.2016.44.1-2.02.

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Sustainable Urban Planning has to be understood as a communicative process connecting city architecture, technology, city district management and social infrastructure of neighbourhoods. The focus on sustainability raises the question of the necessary discourse conditions that allow architects and city planners enter into a dialogue with other urban stakeholders, citizens, local administrators and politicians, and discuss which cultural heritage should be preserved and where sustainability takes precedence. Looking at the style of discourse in urban communication brings also its socio-cultural modalities into focus. At the intersection of communication and discourse studies, urban ecology and sociology, the article focuses on the growing interest in architectural communication and, taking current approaches as a starting point, seeks to clarify which conversational maxims and discourse requirements by mediation, moderation, and integration are promising for achieving a new urban quality.
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11

Juvancic, Matevz, and Spela Verovsek. "Narrating and explaining urban stories through inherited visual urban vocabulary." Visual Communication 17, no. 1 (2017): 47–69. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1470357217727676.

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This article proposes and formulates the visual urban vocabulary for tacit, intuitive, experiential, but none-the-less fast, plausible, generative, informative, sketch-like composition and visualization of urban stories. Through visual and socially ‘inherited’ clues, the authors explain the complexities of urban spaces, their elements, interrelations and cause–effect phenomena to expert and non-expert public alike. The rules, syntax and overall advantages of such a vocabulary are grounded in the existing linguistic, cognitive, psychological theories, visual sociology and theories of urban design, combined and supported by the authors’ own research into visualizations and tools for evaluating, understanding and presenting urban spaces. With many illustrations, the article demonstrates the use for – and the use of – generic urban stories in discussions about urbanity, urban environments, livable places, etc. and positions them into educational, research and participatory planning and commercial contexts.
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12

Underwood, David K. "Alfred Agache, French Sociology, and Modern Urbanism in France and Brazil." Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians 50, no. 2 (1991): 130–66. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/990590.

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The 1930 master plan for Rio de Janeiro, drawn up by the French architect-urbanist Alfred Agache, had an important impact on Rio and on the development of modern planning in Brazil. Reflecting the socioscientific methods of Edmond Demolins and the Musée Social in Paris as well as the sociological ideas of Gabriel Tarde and Emile Durkheim, the plan exemplifies the ambitions and techniques of the urbanism of the Société Française d'Urbanistes (SFU). Agache, a leading theorist, teacher, and practitioner of SFU urbanism, developed a sociological urbanisme parlant that evolved out of his Beaux-Arts training and his background in French sociology. Agache's ideas on the fine arts and urban planning were synthesized and refined in the courses on social art history and urbanism, the first of their kind in France, that he taught at the Collège Libre des Sciences Sociales in Paris. In defining theoretically and expressing artistically the Brazilian capital's urban program in terms of the fine art of applied sociology, Agache provided the Brazilians with a blueprint for socioeconomic and moral reform on the levels of both urban and national development. Situated chronologically between the international expositions of 1925 and 1937 in Paris, Agache's project reflects as well the larger purposes and methods of the two expos and, in so doing, clarifies the historical evolution of SFU urbanism.
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13

R�my, Jean. "Trends in Urban Sociology in French-speaking countries from 1945 to 1980." GeoJournal 31, no. 3 (1993): 265–78. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/bf00817381.

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14

Gabdrakhmanova, Nailia, and Maria Pilgun. "Intelligent Control Systems in Urban Planning Conflicts: Social Media Users’ Perception." Applied Sciences 11, no. 14 (2021): 6579. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/app11146579.

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The relevance of this study is determined by the need to develop technologies for effective urban systems management and resolution of urban planning conflicts. The paper presents an algorithm for analyzing urban planning conflicts. The material for the study was data from social networks, microblogging, blogs, instant messaging, forums, reviews, video hosting services, thematic portals, online media, print media and TV related to the construction of the North-Eastern Chord (NEC) in Moscow (RF). To analyze the content of social media, a multimodal approach was used. The paper presents the results of research on the development of methods and approaches for constructing mathematical and neural network models for analyzing the social media users’ perceptions based on their digital footprints. Artificial neural networks, differential equations, and mathematical statistics were involved in building the models. Differential equations of dynamic systems were based on observations enabled by machine learning. Mathematical models were developed to quickly detect, prevent, and address conflicts in urban planning in order to manage urban systems efficiently. In combination with mathematical and neural network model the developed approaches, made it possible to draw a conclusion about the tense situation around the construction of the NEC, identify complaints of residents to constructors and city authorities, and propose recommendations to resolve and prevent conflicts. Research data could be of use in solving similar problems in sociology, ecology, and economics.
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15

Slater, Tom. "Loïc Wacquant, 2008,Urban Outcasts: A Comparative Sociology of Advanced Marginality." Urban Geography 31, no. 2 (2010): 141–43. http://dx.doi.org/10.2747/0272-3638.31.2.141.

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16

Reid, Bob. "Shaping Places: Urban Planning, Design and Development." Journal of Urban Affairs 36, no. 4 (2014): 809–10. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/juaf.12063.

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17

Totaforti, Simona. "Emerging Biophilic Urbanism: The Value of the Human–Nature Relationship in the Urban Space." Sustainability 12, no. 13 (2020): 5487. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/su12135487.

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The research presented in this article adopts an urban sociology perspective to explore the relationship between spaces designed with biophilic principles and people’s pro-environmental values and behaviors. The research hypothesized that biophilic design and planning promote connectedness with nature and are positively related to pro-environmental and more sustainable values and behaviors. The contemporary city asserts the need for new paradigms and conceptual frameworks for reconfiguring the relationship between the urban environment and the natural environment. In order to understand whether biophilic design, planning, and policies can meet the global challenges regarding the future existence on earth of humans, focus groups were conducted to investigate how people’s relationship with the built-up space and the natural landscape is perceived, and to what extent the inclusion of nature and its patterns at various levels of urban planning meets people’s expectations. The results suggest that biophilic design and planning can be considered a useful paradigm to deal with the challenges that are posed by the city of the future, also in terms of sustainability, by reinterpreting and enhancing the human–nature relation in the urban context.
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18

Didenko, K. "GLOBAL ARCHITECTURAL AND URBAN PLANNING TRENDS 1900s and 1930s AND THEIR INFLUENCE ON THE ARCHITECTURE AND URBAN PLANNING OF METROPOLITAN KHARKOV." Municipal economy of cities 3, no. 156 (2020): 126–34. http://dx.doi.org/10.33042/2522-1809-2020-3-156-126-134.

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Organizational changes in project activity and the stages of its formation in the Ukrainian SSR as a tool for constructing a new social reality have been traced. The first stage was the approval of the altered role of architecture and the architect in socialist model, the second - the inclusion of social relations and lifestyle in the subject of architectural creativity, the third - conceptual approaches / models and the fourth - the creation of new samples of architecture. Global trends in urban planning and housing construction in the 1920s - 1930s essential for understanding the processes taking place in the construction of the capital Kharkov have been established. Namely: – the formation of urban planning schools at the turn of the XIXth and XXth centuries. (England, France, Germany, Austria (Vienna), as well as in Moscow, St. Petersburg, Kharkov and Kiev; – outsourcing knowledge from other sciences (statistics, economics, law, sociology, etc.); – aspiration to construct cheap housing, industrialization and standardization; – attraction of private capital to the construction of residential complexes. A similarity pointed out between architectural and urban planning concepts is composed of the attraction to conceptual solutions alike to the "garden city" in early 1920s, the search for a new housing typology (sometimes small) with facilities; creation of the concepts of a house-commune and a housing complex. Implementation of avant-garde concepts in the development of social and housing infrastructure of the metropolitan Kharkov is considered. In the 1920s the formation of architectural and urban planning concepts in the USSR took place in correlation with the basic social ideas of architectural and urban planning practices of the West in the following sequence: noncritical borrowing of Western bourgeois models ("garden city"), attempts at social innovation inspired by the classics of utopian socialism (house-commune as phalanx reincarnation), constructing new functional-spatial models as means of implementing social doctrine (residential complexes); socio-economic invention in the context of industry planning (Sotsgorod). Practical verification of the models created at each stage became an incentive for new searches. Keywords: architectural and town-planning tendencies, socialization of town-planning, socialization of residential architecture complexes, metropolitan Kharkov.
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19

Tranos, Emmanouil. "Social Network Sites and Knowledge Transfer: An Urban Perspective." Journal of Planning Literature 35, no. 4 (2020): 408–22. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0885412220921526.

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This article surveys the literature to explore whether and how internet technologies and applications such as social network sites (SNS) support social interactions and, through them, knowledge transfers at different spatial scales and settings. By employing concepts from economic geography and combining them with ideas and empirics from urban sociology, business, and media studies, this article informs urban thinking about the underpinning mechanisms behind SNS-mediated vis-à-vis face-to-face knowledge-related interactions and how they mirror but also challenge established spatial patterns of knowledge spillovers.
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20

stomberg, john. "Zhan Wang: Urban Landscape." Gastronomica 7, no. 2 (2007): 9–11. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/gfc.2007.7.2.9.

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The artist Zhan Wang replicates the city of Beijing using a variety of mass-produced cookware and his own, hand-molded, stainless steel rock formations. The installation, called Urban Landscape: Beijing, simultaneously extends and significantly alters both the tradition of Marcel Duchamp and the general precepts of minimalist sculpture. His work also addresses current social concerns such as urbanization and globalization. Urban Landscape: Beijing embodies Zhan's expansive worldview. In the context of his work, the artist discusses concerns that range from economics, theology, sociology, urban planning, and architecture to formal art issues, such as the use of found objects and the role of the grid. He encourages our contemplation of rapid modernization in China--and the negative effect it can have on life there--and shares our pleasure in the gleaming surfaces of his materials. Urban Landscape: Beijing evokes both the allure of modern urban culture and the consequences of urban renewal--it offers the sensuous pleasure of modernity and the sting of the price paid.
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Föllmer, Moritz. "The sociology of individuality and the history of urban society." Urban History 47, no. 2 (2019): 311–26. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0963926819000877.

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AbstractThis article explores the role of individuality in Europe's urban past. In so doing, it builds on Georg Simmel's famous article ‘The metropolis and mental life’ as well as recent work especially by Bernard Lahire, Niklas Luhmann and Uwe Schimank. The article brings out key sociological insights and links them to a range of studies by urban historians, which are thus revisited from a fresh angle. The focus is on three key dimensions of the modern city: first, sites of social and cultural life; secondly, politics and government; thirdly, non-humans such as material objects, animals and natural elements.
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Christmann, Gabriela, Ajit Singh, Jörg Stollmann, and Christoph Bernhardt. "Visual Communication in Urban Design and Planning: The Impact of Mediatisation(s) on the Construction of Urban Futures." Urban Planning 5, no. 2 (2020): 1–9. http://dx.doi.org/10.17645/up.v5i2.3279.

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<p>This editorial introduces the subject matter of the thematic issue, which includes a diverse collection of contributions from authors in various disciplines including, history, architecture, planning, sociology and geography. Within the context of mediatisation processes—and the increased use of ever-expanding I&C technologies—communication has undergone profound changes. As such, this thematic issue will discuss how far (digital) media tools and their social uses in urban design and planning have impacted the visualisation of urban imaginations and how urban futures are thereby communicatively produced. Referring to an approach originating from the media and communication sciences, the authors begin with an outline of the core concepts of mediatisation and digitalisation. They suggest how the term ‘visualisation’ can be conceived and, against this background, based upon the sociological approach of communicative constructivism, a proposal is offered, which diverges from traditional methods of conceptualising visualisations: Instead, it highlights the need for a greater consideration towards the active role of creators (e.g., planners) and recipients (e.g., stakeholders) as well as the distinctive techniques of communication involved (e.g., a specific digital planning tools). The authors in this issue illustrate how communicative construction, particularly the visual construction of urban futures, can be understood, depending upon the kind of social actors as well as the means of communication involved. The editorial concludes with a summary of the main arguments and core results presented.</p>
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Özdemir, Esin, and Ayda Eraydin. "Fragmentation in Urban Movements: The Role of Urban Planning Processes." International Journal of Urban and Regional Research 41, no. 5 (2017): 727–48. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/1468-2427.12516.

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Chu, Chao Chao, and Chao Luo. "Research on Urban Feminine Public Space." Applied Mechanics and Materials 409-410 (September 2013): 362–65. http://dx.doi.org/10.4028/www.scientific.net/amm.409-410.362.

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There have made great progress in urban space research which based on the individual bodily difference in the context of postmodernism. Feminine space also has been focused in the Architecture. In China, women often are regarded as one unit of sub-groups, whose living condition and living space had undergone great changes. Based on the bodily difference, from the view of functional requirements, behavior needs, physical needs and psychological requirements of women, the paper discusses the major existing problems in four aspects, which concluding function layout, transport supply, service facilities and space identify. Combined architecture and geography, sociology, urban planning, the paper uses the method of cognitive map and preference method to explore feminine cognitive pattern and behavior model, thus construct the ideal paradigm of urban feminine public space.
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Fusco, Sharon R. "Urban Planning Today Edited by William S. Saunders." Journal of Urban Affairs 31, no. 1 (2009): 111–12. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-9906.2008.431_1.x.

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Rosentraub, Mark S. "Planning Olympic Legacies: Transport Dreams and Urban Realities." Journal of Urban Affairs 36, no. 2 (2014): 306–8. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/juaf.12064.

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Steiner, Frederick. "Planning Ideas That Matter." Journal of Urban Affairs 36, no. 3 (2014): 534–35. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/juaf.12058.

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Lederman, Jacob. "Urban Fads and Consensual Fictions: Creative, Sustainable, and Competitive City Policies in Buenos Aires." City & Community 14, no. 1 (2015): 47–67. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/cico.12095.

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Scholarship in urban sociology has pointed to the reliance of city governments on ever–more market mechanisms for organizing social and economic policy. This form of governance involves prioritizing cities’ cultural and social assets for their value in a global competition of urban “brands,” each competing for new infusions of human and investment capital. At the same time, however, cities have been at the center of seemingly progressive policy efforts aimed at promoting innovation, sustainability, and creativity. These themes represent a newly dominant planning discourse in cities across the globe. While researchers have thoroughly examined how “creative classes” and “creative cities” may exclude everyday, working–class, or poor residents, new urban imaginaries focused on sustainability potentially imply less stratified urban outcomes. Analyzing two high–profile interventions in Buenos Aires, Argentina—a sustainable urban regeneration plan for the historic downtown, and the creation of an arts cluster in the impoverished south of the city—this paper argues that despite divergent narratives, creative and sustainable urban projects suggest similar policy agendas, planning assumptions, and relationships to market mechanisms. Increasingly, global policies, whose design and objectives may appear to contradict market logics, may have outcomes that further them.
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Knudsen, Tim. "Success in planning." International Journal of Urban and Regional Research 12, no. 4 (1988): 550–65. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1468-2427.1988.tb00096.x.

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Knapp, Courtney E. "Experimenting with anarchistic approaches to collaborative planning: The Planning Free School of Chattanooga." Journal of Urban Affairs 39, no. 5 (2017): 635–57. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/07352166.2017.1305767.

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Hebbert, Michael, and Fionn Mackillop. "Urban Climatology Applied to Urban Planning: A Postwar Knowledge Circulation Failure." International Journal of Urban and Regional Research 37, no. 5 (2013): 1542–58. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/1468-2427.12046.

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Chamberlain, Julie. "Experimenting on racialized neighbourhoods: Internationale Bauausstellung Hamburg and the urban laboratory in Hamburg–Wilhelmsburg." Environment and Planning D: Society and Space 38, no. 4 (2020): 607–25. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0263775820903328.

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The ‘urban laboratory’ concept has become a popular discourse and structure for urban projects in recent years. In this article, I ask what the concept achieves in the context of racialized urban disinvestment and stigmatization, with the Hamburg International Building Exhibition’s (Internationale Bauausstellung Hamburg, 2006–2013) work in Hamburg–Wilhelmsburg as an example. Drawing on laboratory studies and urban sociology, I sketch out the laboratory as an ‘imaginative infrastructure’ , including what it offers to the ‘investigators’ who use it. Based on the ‘situatedness’ of the urban laboratory, I argue that the racialization of the neighbourhood and its residents is important to the history of Wilhelmsburg’s planning, and to its recent laboratorization. Laboratorization of racialized people and spaces is not new, but rather has a long history in European colonialism. I conclude that though the experiment in Hamburg–Wilhelmsburg appears to be with the neighbourhood’s racialization itself, there is nothing experimental about attempting the planning myth and common sense of ‘social mix’ to which Internationale Bauausstellung Hamburg contributes. I argue that racialized Wilhelmsburgers deserve problem-solving that does not reinforce existing patterns of development and thus their stigmatization.
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Healey, Patsy. "Urban Planning Today - Edited by William S. Saunders." International Journal of Urban and Regional Research 31, no. 4 (2007): 887–89. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1468-2427.2007.00763_5.x.

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Harris, Andrew, and Susan Moore. "Planning Histories and Practices of Circulating Urban Knowledge." International Journal of Urban and Regional Research 37, no. 5 (2013): 1499–509. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/1468-2427.12043.

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Sidaway, James D. "Urban and Regional Planning in Post-independence Mozambique." International Journal of Urban and Regional Research 17, no. 2 (1993): 241–59. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1468-2427.1993.tb00479.x.

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36

Beito, David T., and Bruce Smith. "The Formation of Urban Infrastructure through Nongovernmental Planning." Journal of Urban History 16, no. 3 (1990): 263–303. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/009614429001600302.

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37

Fulong Wu and Jingxing Zhang. "Planning the Competitive City-Region." Urban Affairs Review 42, no. 5 (2007): 714–40. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1078087406298119.

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38

Woodworth, Max D. "Fulong Wu 2015: Planning for Growth: Urban and Regional Planning in China . New York: Routledge." International Journal of Urban and Regional Research 42, no. 3 (2018): 539–41. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/1468-2427.12639.

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39

Yankovskaya, Y. S., E. N. Lebedeva, and Yu N. Lobanov. "Natural-climatic and environmental aspects in architectural and urban design and research of the residential environment." Вестник гражданских инженеров 17, no. 5 (2020): 49–58. http://dx.doi.org/10.23968/1999-5571-2020-17-5-49-58.

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The article is devoted to the problems of studying the natural and climatic aspect of the living environment formation in architectural and urban planning. The history of the issue is considered, scientific and qualification research from the 1960-s and 1970-s is analyzed. At present, there are observed tendencies of direct borrowing and transferring from the West of some new «techniques and principles», as well as putting forward rather superficial ideas regarding the transformation of the living environment, while fundamental domestic developments of the Soviet and post-Soviet times are often forgotten and ignored. Special attention is paid to the subject, problems and results of dissertation research in the field of architecture and urban planning, as well as related technical sciences. In addition, material from works on such branches as sociology and geography, biology and agriculture is considered.
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Steil, Justin, and Aditi Mehta. "When Prison Is the Classroom: Collaborative Learning about Urban Inequality." Journal of Planning Education and Research 40, no. 2 (2017): 186–95. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0739456x17734048.

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This article analyzes the pedagogy of an urban sociology course taught in prison, with both outside and imprisoned students. The course examined the production of knowledge used in the field of planning and sought to facilitate the coproduction of new insights about urban inequality. Participant observation, focus groups, and students’ written reflections reveal that, in comparison to traditional classroom settings, students explored with greater complexity their embodiment of multiple social identities, wrestled more deeply with the structural embeddedness of individual agency, and situated their personal experiences in a broader theoretical narrative about urban inequality. Building trust in the face of significant power disparities within the classroom was essential to learning. The findings highlight the importance of new locations of learning that enable classrooms to become contact zones, pushing students to collaboratively reimagine justice in the city with those outside the traditional classroom.
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Huxley, Margo. "Historicizing Planning, Problematizing Participation." International Journal of Urban and Regional Research 37, no. 5 (2013): 1527–41. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/1468-2427.12045.

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42

Gold, John R. "In Spite of Planning." Journal of Urban History 26, no. 4 (2000): 545–52. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/009614420002600409.

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43

Sheail, John. "Interwar Planning in Britain." Journal of Urban History 11, no. 3 (1985): 335–51. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/009614428501100304.

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44

Burgess, Patricia. "Profit, Planning, and Politics." Journal of Urban History 22, no. 3 (1996): 391–98. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/009614429602200307.

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Williams, Stewart. "Planning in Ten Words or Less: A Lacanian Entanglement with Spatial Planning." Housing, Theory and Society 28, no. 1 (2011): 105–7. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/14036096.2010.511893.

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46

Korthals Altes, Willem K. "Taking planning seriously: Compulsory purchase for urban planning in the Netherlands." Cities 41 (December 2014): 71–80. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cities.2014.05.011.

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Newman, Peter. "Cool planning: How urban planning can mainstream responses to climate change." Cities 103 (August 2020): 102651. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cities.2020.102651.

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48

Mohd Firdaus, Rohana, Mohd Hisyam Rasidi, and Ismail Said. "The Understanding of River and Community Resilience Studies in Perspective of Landscape Architecture." Jurnal Arsitektur dan Perencanaan (JUARA) 4, no. 1 (2021): 72–89. http://dx.doi.org/10.31101/juara.v4i1.1759.

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River is part of community livelihood whereby its resilience protects it. However, river issues are still discussed, indicating opportunity and room for improvement. The social lens as perspective is also still lacking. Thereby, community resilience is adopted as approach looking at river. Hence, this paper explored the river and community resilience studies from social aspect. 129 articles based on online database were gathered, sieved and analysed. It was found that river and community resilience shares fields of fluvial geomorphology, sociology, ecology, urban planning and disaster risk. These fields have impacts in people-place relationship throughout humanity. Therefore, the community is responsible upon river and key to resilience.River is part of community livelihood whereby its resilience protects it. However, river issues are still discussed, indicating opportunity and room for improvement. The social lens as perspective is also still lacking. Thereby, community resilience is adopted as approach looking at river. Hence, this paper explored the river and community resilience studies from social aspect. 129 articles based on online database were gathered, sieved and analysed. It was found that river and community resilience shares fields of fluvial geomorphology, sociology, ecology, urban planning and disaster risk. These fields have impacts in people-place relationship throughout humanity. Therefore, the community is responsible upon river and key to resilience.
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Zhang, Tingwei. "From Intercity Competition to Collaborative Planning." Urban Affairs Review 42, no. 1 (2006): 26–56. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1078087406289555.

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Redaelli, Eleonora. "Cultural Planning in the United States." Urban Affairs Review 48, no. 5 (2012): 642–69. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1078087412441158.

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