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About
The Planners Network is an association of professionals, activists, academics, and students involved in physical, social, economic, and environmental planning in urban and rural areas, who promote fundamental change in our political and economic systems.

city_planning equity_planning | Modified: 06-NOV-06 | No copyright policy selected

Journal of Planning Education and Research, Vol. 25, No. 3, 249-263 (2006)

Environmental Justice and the New Regionalism

Joel Rast
University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee
During the past decade, renewed calls for central city revitalization have come from scholars and practitioners working within a new regionalist perspective. Such arguments have provided much of the ideological underpinning for coalitions around the country promoting smart growth and other regional reforms. Smart growth policies seek to curb urban sprawl by channeling investment into already developed areas, including inner-city communities. Given the attention paid to urban policy among advocates of the new regionalism, one would expect inner-city minorities to be well represented in the dialogue. However, the dialogue over smart growth and regionalism has largely failed to engage inner-city African Americans, Latinos, and other minorities. This article asks why that is the case, examines the consequences, and proposes a strategy for reframing the new regionalist debate in a way that may resonate more with minority stakeholders.

environmental_justice regional_planning equity_planning | Modified: 14-OCT-06 | No copyright policy selected
Krumholz, Norman. . Reinventing cities : equity planners tell their stories / Norman Krumholz and Pierre Clavel. [1566392098 (cloth : alk. paper) ] Philadelphia : Temple University Press, 1994.
Call#: Van Pelt Library HT167 .K75 1994


city_planning equity_planning krumholz | Modified: 14-OCT-06 | No copyright policy selected
Journal of planning literature. [0885-4122 ] Columbus, Ohio : Ohio State University Press, 1986-
Call#: Fine Arts Library NA9000 .J687

Title: The Theory and Practice of Equity Planning: An Annotated Bibliography
Source: Journal of planning literature [0885-4122] Metzger yr:1996 vol:11 iss:1 pg:112

abstract- Equity planning is a framework in which urban planners working within government use their research, analytical, and organizing skills to influence opinion, mobilize underrepresented constituencies, and advance and perhaps implement policies and programs that redistribute public and private resources to the poor and working class. This approach divergesfrom the downtown-oriented land-use planning tradition of most U.S. cities. The bibliography compiles literature that describes some of the theoretical and political debate about planning for social equity goals. It is also a resource that informs and guides planners, public administrators, urban policy analysts, and community leaders regarding some of the actual experiences of equity planning over the past twentyfive years.
city_planning equity_planning | Modified: 14-OCT-06 | No copyright policy selected