ABSTRACT

What are the key rationalities that underpin planning policy discourses and how do they 'frame' seemingly irreconcilable conflicts around development and environmental protection? Providing a thorough assessment of these important questions, this stimulating book reviews planning policy in the UK and the rationality of 'sustainable development'. Supported by a wealth of empirical material collected over the past ten years, the study examines the national, regional and local tiers of planning for housing. It analyzes whether the rationality of planning for 'sustainable development' allows a new spatial sensibility to inform planning policy, and whether it still responds to the social demands that were previously incorporated within the developmental method. The overriding concern, which the authors respond to and expand upon, is whether planning for sustainable development can provide a satisfactory basis upon which to re-establish contemporary planning.

chapter 1|16 pages

Planning and the Governance of Growth

Theories and Issues

chapter 3|22 pages

The Policy Hierarchy in Planning

chapter 4|18 pages

Planning by Numbers

chapter 6|22 pages

Down to the District

Local Expressions of Development and Environment

chapter 7|16 pages

Towards a New Rationality of Planning?