Rural Places and Planning provides a compact analysis for students and early-career practitioners of the critical connections between place capitals and the broader ideas and practices of planning, seeded within rural communities. It looks across twelve international cases, examining the values that guide the pursuit of the ‘good countryside’.

The book presents rural planning – rooted in imagination and reflecting key values – as being embedded in the life of particular places, dealing with critical challenges across housing, services, economy, natural systems, climate action and community wellbeing in ways that are integrated and recognise broader place-making needs. It introduces the breadth of the discipline, presenting examples of what planning means and what it can achieve in different rural places.

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This book provides a compact analysis for students and early-career practitioners of the critical connections between place capitals and the broader practices of planning, seeded within rural communities. It introduces the breadth of the discipline, presenting examples of what planning means and what it can achieve in different rural places.
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<p>1. Introduction</p><p> 2. The built rural</p><p> 3. The economic rural</p><p> 4. The land-based rural</p><p> 5. The social and cultural rural</p><p> 6. Conclusions</p>

Offers distilled research and bite-sized case studies;

Provides a concise, global overview of the discipline;

Unpacks the complexities and interconnections in rural planning in a concise format.

Offers readers a broad overview of the rural planning in a succinct manner and demonstrate the interrelated complexity of rural places and the need for planning to interact rather than intervene.

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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781447356370
Publisert
2022-03-08
Utgiver
Bristol University Press
Høyde
240 mm
Bredde
172 mm
Aldersnivå
P, G, 06, 01
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet

Biografisk notat

Menelaos Gkartzios is Reader in Planning and Rural Development at Newcastle University.

Nick Gallent is Professor of Housing and Planning at University College London.

Mark Scott is Professor of Planning at University College Dublin.