Abstract
The author examines three approaches to planning theory: the communicative model, the new urbanism, and the just city. The first type emphasizes the planner's role in mediating among 'stakeholders, ' the second paints a physical picture of a desirable planned city, and the third presents a model of spatial relations based on equity. Differences among the types reflect an enduring tension between a focus on the planning process and an emphasis on desirable outcomes. The author defends the continued use of the just-city model and a modified form of the political economy mode of analysis that underlies it.
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Fainstein, S. S. (2000). New directions in planning theory. Urban Affairs Review, 35(4), 451–478. https://doi.org/10.1177/107808740003500401
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