Rationalities of Planning

Rationalities of Planning

Author: Jonathan Murdoch

Publisher: Taylor & Francis

Published: 2017-07-05

Total Pages: 175

ISBN-13: 1351906747

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Placing a particular focus on the provision of new housing in suburban and rural areas of Southern England, this book explores how the state seeks to adjudicate conflicts around development and conservation.


Forum Retreat Planning Guide: A Planning Guide for Forums to Organize and Conduct Effective Retreats

Forum Retreat Planning Guide: A Planning Guide for Forums to Organize and Conduct Effective Retreats

Author: Ellie Byrd

Publisher: Forumsherpa, Incorporated

Published: 2015-12-06

Total Pages: 272

ISBN-13: 9781930521209

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The Forum Retreat Planning Guide, 3rd edition, is a must-have for any Forum planning their annual Forum Retreat. This book provides step-by-step instructions on how to plan a successful retreat including: identifying objectives, defining parameters, selecting a theme, building an agenda, hiring a facilitator, handling difficult situations, avoiding pitfalls and selecting meaningful exercises. This 259-page book includes 175 pages of exercises, categorized by objective and level of depth. The information in this book can be utilized for corporate retreats, peer team retreats or with any executive group that is seeking to build relationships and increase authenticity.


Planning Democracy

Planning Democracy

Author: Nikhil Menon

Publisher: Cambridge University Press

Published: 2022-03-31

Total Pages: 291

ISBN-13: 1009050354

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The Indian planning project was one of the postcolonial world's most ambitious experiments. Planning Democracy explores how India fused Soviet-inspired economic management and Western-style liberal democracy at a time when they were widely considered fundamentally contradictory. After nearly two centuries of colonial rule, planning was meant to be independent India's route to prosperity. In this engaging and innovative account, Nikhil Menon traces how planning built India's knowledge infrastructure and data capacities, while also shaping the nature of its democracy. He analyses the challenges inherent in harmonizing technocratic methods with democratic mandates and shows how planning was the language through which the government's aspirations for democratic state-building were expressed. Situating India within international debates about economic policy and Cold War ideology, Menon reveals how India walked a tightrope between capitalism and communism which heightened the drama of its development on the global stage.


Making Strategies in Spatial Planning

Making Strategies in Spatial Planning

Author: Maria Cerreta

Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media

Published: 2010-09-11

Total Pages: 433

ISBN-13: 9048131065

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This provocative collection of essays challenges traditional ideas of strategic s- tial planning and opens up new avenues of analysis and research. The diversity of contributions here suggests that we need to rethink spatial planning in several f- reaching ways. Let me suggest several avenues of such rethinking that can have both theoretical and practical consequences. First, we need to overcome simplistic bifurcations or dichotomies of assessing outcomes and processes separately from one another. To lapse into the nostalgia of imagining that outcome analysis can exhaust strategic planners’ work might appeal to academics content to study ‘what should be’, but it will doom itself to further irrelevance, ignorance of politics, and rationalistic, technocratic fantasies. But to lapse into an optimism that ‘good process’ is all that strategic planning requires, similarly, rests upon a ction that no credible planning analyst believes: that enough talk will miraculously transcend con ict and produce agreement. Neither sing- minded approach can work, for both avoid dealing with con ict and power, and both too easily avoid dealing with the messiness and the practicalities of negotiating out con icting interests and values – and doing so in ethically and politically critical ways, far from resting content with mere ‘compromise’. Second, we must rethink the sanctity of expertise. By considering analyses of planning outcomes as inseparable from planning processes, these accounts help us to see expertise and substantive analysis as being ‘on tap’, ready to put into use, rather than being particularly and technocratically ‘on top’.


The Postcolonial Moment in South and Southeast Asia

The Postcolonial Moment in South and Southeast Asia

Author: Gyan Prakash

Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing

Published: 2018-02-22

Total Pages: 312

ISBN-13: 1350038644

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By exploring themes of fragility, mobility and turmoil, anxieties and agency, and pedagogy, this book shows how colonialism shaped postcolonial projects in South and Southeast Asia including India, Pakistan, Burma, and Indonesia. Its chapters unearth the contingency and contention that accompanied the establishment of nation-states and their claim to be decolonized heirs. The book places key postcolonial moments - a struggle for citizenship, anxious constitution making, mass education and land reform - against the aftermath of the Second World War and within a global framework, relating them to the global transformation in political geography from empire to nation. The chapters analyse how futures and ideals envisioned by anticolonial activists were made reality, whilst others were discarded. Drawing on the expertise of eminent contributors, The Postcolonial Moment in South and Southeast Asia represents the most ground-breaking research on the region.