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Making Governments Plan Raymond J. Burby (Professor of Urban and Regional Planning and DeBlois Chair in Urban and Public Affairs, University of New Orleans)

Making Governments Plan By Raymond J. Burby (Professor of Urban and Regional Planning and DeBlois Chair in Urban and Public Affairs, University of New Orleans)

Summary

Published in cooperation with the Center for American Places, Harrisonburg, Virginia.

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Making Governments Plan Summary

Making Governments Plan: State Experiments in Managing Land Use by Raymond J. Burby (Professor of Urban and Regional Planning and DeBlois Chair in Urban and Public Affairs, University of New Orleans)

"The message of this book is one of cautious optimism. New challenges to planning are coming forth...These have caused some state legislatures to be reluctant to create or strengthen comprehensive-planning requirements. We do not think that such challenges necessitate a dismantling of these requirements. Instead, they require stronger justification for governmental actions and more (rather than less) attention to the details of the design of state mandates."-from Making Governments Plan In the past fifty years the American landscape-urban, rural, and wild-has undergone significant change. Searching for ways of coping with this change, policy makers at the state and local levels have attempted to capture the benefits of development while avoiding the congestion, housing shortages, and environmental degradation that often accompany rapid changes in land use. Uncounted new methods-growth boundaries, subdivision exactions, impact fees-have been tried. At the forefront of the growth management movement, a handful of states have forged new systems of governance to link local policy more closely to state goals and to cajole (and sometimes coerce) cooperation among neighboring localities. In this path-breaking book, a team of scholars from five universities show how new experiments in growth management can reinvigorate land use planning and help local governments find new solutions to the problems caused by growth and change. Drawing on evidence from five states and scores of cities and counties, the authors show why the benefits of growth are not automatic. Much depends on how well states craft growth management legislation, how amply programs are funded, and how dedicated state officials are to working with localities. By building on these findings, they conclude, states and localities can improve their chances for coping successfully with land use change. Beyond these policy lessons, Making Governments Plan offers important theoretical insights on how to design intergovernmental programs more effectively and how to use local comprehensive plans to further policy objectives. This knowledge can, in turn, provide the foundation for further theoretical work and for extending the lessons of this book to other policy arenas. Published in cooperation with the Center for American Places, Harrisonburg, Virginia.

Making Governments Plan Reviews

A rigorously researched and informative book on the effects of state planning mandates on local planmaking and local growth management... the book is essential reading. -- Ernest Sternberg Journal of Environmental Planning and Management

About Raymond J. Burby (Professor of Urban and Regional Planning and DeBlois Chair in Urban and Public Affairs, University of New Orleans)

Raymond J. Burby is DeBlois Chair of Urban and Public Affairs and Professor of Urban and Regional Planning at the University of New Orleans. His many books include Environmental Management and Governance, Sharing Environmental Risks, and Cities Under Water. Peter J. May is professor of political science at the University of Washington, Seattle.

Table of Contents

Preface and Acknowledgments
Chapter 1. The States and Planning Mandates
Part I: State Experiments in Managing Land Use
Chapter 2. California: Coping with Congestion
Chapter 3. North Carolina: Mandated Planning to Protect the Coast
Chapter 4. Florida: Putting it All Together
Chapter 5. Texas and Washington: Marching to a Different Drummer
Part II: Mandate Design and Outcomes
Chapter 6. Designing and Implementing Mandates
Chapter 7. Enhancing Planning
Chapter 8. Managing Development
Part III: Prospects for Making Governments Plan
Chapter 9. Rethinking Planning Mandates
Appendix: Research Design and Measurement of Variables
References
Index

Additional information

CIN080185623XG
9780801856235
080185623X
Making Governments Plan: State Experiments in Managing Land Use by Raymond J. Burby (Professor of Urban and Regional Planning and DeBlois Chair in Urban and Public Affairs, University of New Orleans)
Used - Good
Hardback
Johns Hopkins University Press
1998-01-09
208
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
This is a used book - there is no escaping the fact it has been read by someone else and it will show signs of wear and previous use. Overall we expect it to be in good condition, but if you are not entirely satisfied please get in touch with us

Customer Reviews - Making Governments Plan