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      Book

      The Network Society
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      Book

      The Network Society

      DOI link for The Network Society

      The Network Society book

      A New Context for Planning

      The Network Society

      DOI link for The Network Society

      The Network Society book

      A New Context for Planning
      Edited ByLouis Albrechts, Seymour Mandelbaum
      Edition 1st Edition
      First Published 2005
      eBook Published 14 October 2005
      Pub. Location London
      Imprint Routledge
      DOI https://doi.org/10.4324/9780203799338
      Pages 347
      eBook ISBN 9780203799338
      Subjects Geography
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      Albrechts, L., & Mandelbaum, S. (Eds.). (2005). The Network Society: A New Context for Planning (1st ed.). Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9780203799338

      ABSTRACT

      In a clear and rewarding style, Albrechts and Mandelbaum consider the challenges that the new paradigm of the Network Society creates for Urban and Regional Planning. Chapters grouped into five themes discuss theoretical and practical perspectives on the contemporary organization of social, economic, cultural, political and physical spaces. These sections are:

      • models of the Network Society
      • the impact of physical networks such as transport
      • challenges for Planners raised by society’s increased reliance on new technology
      • an examination of local networks including community networks and the possibilities of setting up local networks for disaster recovery
      • a comparison of spatial and policy networks and an exploration of the institutions involved.

      This book is essential reading for graduate level courses in urban studies, city and regional planning, and urban design. With its clear structure – unitary sections but a diversity of perspectives – the book can be used easily in courses such as Planning Theory, Urban Infrastructure and Public Policy.

      TABLE OF CONTENTS

      chapter |6 pages

      Introduction

      ByLouis Albrechts, Seymour J. Mandelbaum

      chapter |2 pages

      PART I

      chapter 1|15 pages

      Communicative Action and the Network Society: A Pragmatic Marriage?

      ByNiraj Verma and HaeRan Shin

      chapter 2|10 pages

      Planning and the Network City: Discursive Correspondences

      ByRobert A. Beauregard

      chapter 3|11 pages

      Escaping the Prison of “the Present Place”: Can We Plan the Future of Localities in the Context of a Network Society?

      ByDowell Myers

      chapter 4|12 pages

      The Discourse Network: A Way of Understanding Policy Formation, Stability, and Change in the Networked Polity

      ByNicholas Low

      chapter |6 pages

      Commentary: Networks and Planning Thought

      ByJudith E. Innes

      chapter |2 pages

      PART II

      chapter |2 pages

      Impact of Physical Networks

      chapter 5|14 pages

      Cities and Transport: Exploring the Need for New Planning Approaches

      ByLuca Bertolini

      chapter 6|14 pages

      Networking for Trans-national “Missing Links”: Tracing the Political Success of European High-speed Rail in the 1990s

      ByDeike Peters

      chapter 7|15 pages

      Strategies for Networked Cities

      ByStephen Graham

      chapter 8|10 pages

      The “Network City”: A New Old Way of Thinking Cities in the ICT Age

      ByPaul Drewe

      chapter |3 pages

      Commentary: Challenging the “Old” Urban Planning Paradigm: The Network Approach

      ByGabriel Dupuy

      chapter |2 pages

      Organization of Space and Time: Challenges for Planning and Planners

      chapter 9|21 pages

      Planning as Persuasive Storytelling in the Context of “the Network Society”

      ByJames A. Throgmorton

      chapter 10|15 pages

      Network Complexity and the Imaginative Power of Strategic Spatial Planning

      ByPatsy Healey

      chapter |4 pages

      Commentary: Imagining Urban Transformation

      ByLeonie Sandercock

      chapter |2 pages

      PART III

      chapter |2 pages

      Local Networks and Capital Building

      chapter 11|14 pages

      Why Liberal Planning Cannot Manage the Network Society: Lessons from Community Action

      ByHowell S. Baum

      chapter 12|14 pages

      ICT-enforced Community Networks for Sustainable Development and Social Inclusion

      ByKlaus Frey

      chapter 13|14 pages

      Recovery from Disasters: Challenges for Low-income Communities in the Americas

      ByWilliam J. Siembieda

      chapter 14|11 pages

      TEEN The Multicultural City in the Age of Networks

      ByXavier de Souza Briggs

      chapter |5 pages

      Commentary: Local Networks and Capital Building

      BySusan S. Fainstein

      chapter |2 pages

      Governance Capacity, Policy Networks, and Territorial Specificities

      chapter 15|17 pages

      The Global Emergence of Private Planning and Governance

      ByChris Webster, Shin Lee

      chapter 16|25 pages

      TEEN Inter-agency Transport Planning: Cooperation in a Loose Policy Network

      ByTore Sager, Inger-Anne Ravlum

      chapter 17|13 pages

      Collaborative Planning, Commitment, and Trust: Dealing with Uncertainty in Networks

      ByRonald G.H. van Ark and Jurian Edelenbos

      chapter 18|23 pages

      Reconnecting Space, Place, and Institutions: Inquiring into “Local” Governance Capacity in Urban and Regional Research

      ByEnrico Gualini

      chapter |6 pages

      Commentary: Governance Capacity, Policy Networks, and Territorial Specificities

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