Classic Readings in Urban Planning / Jay Stein
Stein, Jay.
Book Content
The Crystallization of the City: The First Urban Transformation -- Towns, Time and Tradition: The Legacy of Planning in Frontier America -- If Planning is Everything, Maybe It’s Nothing -- The Science of “Muddling Through” -- Advocacy and Pluralism in Planning -- Dilemmas in a General Theory of Planning -- The Goals of Comprehensive Planning -- Planning Absorbs Zoning -- Building the Middle-Range Bridge for Comprehensive Planning -- Understanding American Land Use Regulation Since 1970 -- The Quiet Revolution Revisited -- Twentieth Century Land Use Planning -- Planning Through Consensus Building: A New View of the Comprehensive Planning Ideal -- Planning in the Face of Power -- The City as a Growth Machine: Toward a Political Economy of Place 1 -- Entrepreneurial Cities and Maverick Developers -- Applying Private-Sector Strategic Planning in the Public Sector -- Explaining Homelessness -- Social and Physical Planning for the Elimination of Urban Poverty -- Accommodating Human Unsettlement -- Woman-Made America: The Case of Early Public Housing Policy -- Autos, Transit, and The Sprawl of Los Angeles: The 1920S -- Urban Nature and Human Design: Renewing the Great Tradition -- The American Public Space -- Green Cities, Growing Cities, just Cities? Urban Planning and the Contradictions of Sustainable Development -- A Theory of Urban Form -- The Need for Concentration -- A Planned City -- By Way of Conclusion -- Selections from Cities in a World Economy -- The Crisis of Confidence in Professional Knowledge -- Toward a Longer View and Higher Duty for Local Planning Commissions -- Why We Need a New Vision.