![]() |
Journal of Planning History
Journal Prestige (SJR): 0.258 ![]() Citation Impact (citeScore): 1 Number of Followers: 5 ![]() ISSN (Print) 1538-5132 - ISSN (Online) 1552-6585 Published by Sage Publications ![]() |
- Rise and Fall: Downtown Eugene’s Pedestrian Mall Experience and
Retail Core Transformation-
Free pre-print version: Loading...Rate this result: What is this?Please help us test our new pre-print finding feature by giving the pre-print link a rating.
A 5 star rating indicates the linked pre-print has the exact same content as the published article.
Authors: Subik Kumar Shrestha
Abstract: Journal of Planning History, Ahead of Print.
Downtown Eugene’s retail core transformed drastically after the institution of the pedestrian mall in 1971. The “Eugene Mall,” which was demolished across four stages between 1985 and 2002, was a part of the city’s federal urban renewal program of the late-1960s. This research examines (1) the reasons for the mall’s failure, (2) the displacement of retail businesses and brief rise and decline during the first phase of the mall’s existence (1971–1985), and (3) the resurgence of the downtown core through a shift in approach, specifically one that allowed diverse non-retail projects during its second phase (1986–2002).
Citation: Journal of Planning History
PubDate: 2023-02-03T02:44:03Z
DOI: 10.1177/15385132221150483
-
- Book Review: Chad Bryant. Prague: Belonging in the Modern City. Harvard
University Press, 2021-
Free pre-print version: Loading...Rate this result: What is this?Please help us test our new pre-print finding feature by giving the pre-print link a rating.
A 5 star rating indicates the linked pre-print has the exact same content as the published article.
Authors: Brigitte Le Normand
Abstract: Journal of Planning History, Ahead of Print.
Citation: Journal of Planning History
PubDate: 2023-01-19T10:30:26Z
DOI: 10.1177/15385132221144037
-
- Book Review: The Projects that Shaped New York City’s Public Spaces
-
Free pre-print version: Loading...Rate this result: What is this?Please help us test our new pre-print finding feature by giving the pre-print link a rating.
A 5 star rating indicates the linked pre-print has the exact same content as the published article.
Authors: Andrés F Ramirez
Abstract: Journal of Planning History, Ahead of Print.
Citation: Journal of Planning History
PubDate: 2022-12-02T07:47:48Z
DOI: 10.1177/15385132221142594
-
- Oran’s Front de Mer Projects 1891–1961: Premises of a Modern
Urbanism-
Free pre-print version: Loading...Rate this result: What is this?Please help us test our new pre-print finding feature by giving the pre-print link a rating.
A 5 star rating indicates the linked pre-print has the exact same content as the published article.
Authors: Allal Feriel Baya, Chérif Nabila
Abstract: Journal of Planning History, Ahead of Print.
This article reviews the urban revitalization and modernization actions of Oran’s Front de Mer, from the late nineteenth to the middle of the twentieth century. Throughout this period, when Algiers was undergoing a transformation based on the classical Haussmannian urban model, Oran stands out as an atypical example for the development of its urban planning projects. The research evidence, extracted for the first time from archival documents, reveals an advanced use of urban design concepts from the 1960’s, similar to the American model of waterfront revitalisation and deck urbanism developed in France.
Citation: Journal of Planning History
PubDate: 2022-10-18T10:12:49Z
DOI: 10.1177/15385132221130251
-
- Town Scheming: The Kenbi Aboriginal Land Claim and the Role of Planning in
Securing Possession-
Free pre-print version: Loading...Rate this result: What is this?Please help us test our new pre-print finding feature by giving the pre-print link a rating.
A 5 star rating indicates the linked pre-print has the exact same content as the published article.
Authors: Sue Jackson
Abstract: Journal of Planning History, Ahead of Print.
This article provides a detailed history of Australia’s longest running Indigenous land claim (1978–2016), made by the Larrakia traditional owners to the coastal hinterland of Darwin, under Australia’s first land rights legislation. It reveals the efforts of the state and its planners to exercise territorial control and establish a racialised socio-political order through planning legislation and land use plans. Institutions designed to return land to Indigenous peoples represent a critical site of inquiry for understanding not only how injustice is reproduced and resisted in settler colonial contexts but how settler colonial urbanism is made and remade as imperial power.
Citation: Journal of Planning History
PubDate: 2022-10-15T11:32:09Z
DOI: 10.1177/15385132221128510
-
- Review Essay: Make No Little Plans' Different Views of the New York
and Chicago Waterfronts-
Free pre-print version: Loading...Rate this result: What is this?Please help us test our new pre-print finding feature by giving the pre-print link a rating.
A 5 star rating indicates the linked pre-print has the exact same content as the published article.
Authors: David L.A. Gordon
Abstract: Journal of Planning History, Ahead of Print.
Citation: Journal of Planning History
PubDate: 2022-09-15T01:48:49Z
DOI: 10.1177/15385132221125897
-
- Review of Kristin Poling, Germany’s Urban Frontiers: Nature and History
on the Edge of the Nineteenth-Century City-
Free pre-print version: Loading...Rate this result: What is this?Please help us test our new pre-print finding feature by giving the pre-print link a rating.
A 5 star rating indicates the linked pre-print has the exact same content as the published article.
Authors: Brian Ladd
Abstract: Journal of Planning History, Ahead of Print.
Citation: Journal of Planning History
PubDate: 2022-05-16T04:41:49Z
DOI: 10.1177/15385132221102149
-
- Book Review
-
Free pre-print version: Loading...Rate this result: What is this?Please help us test our new pre-print finding feature by giving the pre-print link a rating.
A 5 star rating indicates the linked pre-print has the exact same content as the published article.
Authors: John R. McNeill
Abstract: Journal of Planning History, Ahead of Print.
Citation: Journal of Planning History
PubDate: 2022-05-16T04:33:29Z
DOI: 10.1177/15385132221095040
-
- How the Working-Class Home became Modern, 1900-1940
-
Free pre-print version: Loading...Rate this result: What is this?Please help us test our new pre-print finding feature by giving the pre-print link a rating.
A 5 star rating indicates the linked pre-print has the exact same content as the published article.
Authors: Arijit Sen
Abstract: Journal of Planning History, Ahead of Print.
Citation: Journal of Planning History
PubDate: 2022-05-03T02:14:13Z
DOI: 10.1177/15385132221091489
-
- Rethinking Placemaking in The City Creative
-
Free pre-print version: Loading...Rate this result: What is this?Please help us test our new pre-print finding feature by giving the pre-print link a rating.
A 5 star rating indicates the linked pre-print has the exact same content as the published article.
Authors: Andrés F Ramírez
Abstract: Journal of Planning History, Ahead of Print.
Citation: Journal of Planning History
PubDate: 2022-05-02T09:23:23Z
DOI: 10.1177/15385132221091495
-
- A Floral Nation: Warren H. Manning, Civic Horticulture, and the Didactic
Cityscape-
Free pre-print version: Loading...Rate this result: What is this?Please help us test our new pre-print finding feature by giving the pre-print link a rating.
A 5 star rating indicates the linked pre-print has the exact same content as the published article.
Authors: Kevan Klosterwill
Abstract: Journal of Planning History, Ahead of Print.
Warren H. Manning developed a distinctive approach to civic horticulture that recurred throughout his career as a city planner, calling for educational plantings beyond limited educational gardens to encompass streets, neighborhoods, school and college campuses, and entire park systems. These plantings, supported by printed media, were resources for citizens to educate themselves, improve their own home grounds, and in turn participate in the improvement of the community’s civic landscape as a whole. Manning’s approach brought together village improvement, amateur naturalist societies, schoolyard gardening, and his own experience designing arboreta with the Olmsted firm.
Citation: Journal of Planning History
PubDate: 2022-04-29T04:53:04Z
DOI: 10.1177/15385132211067713
-
- The Dismantling of Growth Management in Florida': The Consistency
Mandate, Policy Change, and Institutional Realignment-
Free pre-print version: Loading...Rate this result: What is this?Please help us test our new pre-print finding feature by giving the pre-print link a rating.
A 5 star rating indicates the linked pre-print has the exact same content as the published article.
Authors: Evangeline R. Linkous
Abstract: Journal of Planning History, Ahead of Print.
In 1985, Florida established a groundbreaking approach to growth management and intergovernmental relations, which the state’s 2011 Community Planning Act is widely described as ending. This paper presents a history and institutional analysis of policy changes for the State’s core consistency doctrine. It concludes that the CPA did not end growth management since Florida retains the mandate for local planning consistent with state growth management criteria and subject to state review. However, it does formalize diminished state authority over local planning. Florida’s current institutional arrangement for planning involves an assertive state rule-making stance, but shifts planning responsibility to local governments.
Citation: Journal of Planning History
PubDate: 2022-04-28T12:42:36Z
DOI: 10.1177/15385132221082652
-
- Saving the Shaker Lakes: How an Alliance between Two Wealthy Suburbs and
Cleveland’s Black Mayor Stopped the Clark Freeway-
Free pre-print version: Loading...Rate this result: What is this?Please help us test our new pre-print finding feature by giving the pre-print link a rating.
A 5 star rating indicates the linked pre-print has the exact same content as the published article.
Authors: Virginia P. Dawson
Abstract: Journal of Planning History, Ahead of Print.
In the 1960s, the suburbs of Cleveland Heights and Shaker Heights protested the routing of an Interstate highway through their historic park. Known as the Clark Freeway, I-290 was meant to connect downtown Cleveland with the newer suburbs located beyond the city’s outer beltway. Fearing irreparable damage to their communities, a group of garden club women and a committee of citizen activists brought pressure on county, state, and federal officials to delay route selection. However, only after Cleveland Mayor Carl Stokes joined the fight, did Governor James Rhodes summon the political will to cancel the highway.
Citation: Journal of Planning History
PubDate: 2022-04-22T03:45:09Z
DOI: 10.1177/15385132221084659
-
- Down the Vertical Refuse Chutes in Singapore High-rise Living
-
Free pre-print version: Loading...Rate this result: What is this?Please help us test our new pre-print finding feature by giving the pre-print link a rating.
A 5 star rating indicates the linked pre-print has the exact same content as the published article.
Authors: Belinda Yuen, Jane M. Jacobs
Abstract: Journal of Planning History, Ahead of Print.
In the first three decades of post-independence (1960–1990), Singapore underwent a radical housing transition into high-rise, high-density housing that required technical innovation to manage new scales and heights of household waste. Drawing on perspectives from urban political ecology, three questions are examined: What were the key challenges of household waste management policy and technology across this period' Who were the key actors and development partners' What was the environmental and social rationale for everyday waste management, and how did it change over time' We discern a pattern of innovation, which was driven by intersecting challenges around accessibility, affordability and adoption.
Citation: Journal of Planning History
PubDate: 2022-04-15T01:18:43Z
DOI: 10.1177/15385132221085948
-
- Échelon, Quincunx, Quadrangle: The Olmsted Firm and Campus Planning in
the Early Decades of Vassar College-
Free pre-print version: Loading...Rate this result: What is this?Please help us test our new pre-print finding feature by giving the pre-print link a rating.
A 5 star rating indicates the linked pre-print has the exact same content as the published article.
Authors: Yvonne Elet
Abstract: Journal of Planning History, Ahead of Print.
Frederick Law Olmsted and his sons were America’s foremost campus planners, whose multidisciplinary skill set and collaborative practices enabled them to envision and realize comprehensive plans for campuses, much as they did for their better-known parks and suburban communities. This article contributes a new campus case study to Olmsted firm history. There have long been unsubstantiated reports that F. L. Olmsted designed the bucolic Hudson Valley campus of Vassar College, although the source of Vassar’s early designs has remained unclear. Drawing on unpublished archival materials, this article traces three generations of the Olmsted firm at Vassar, revealing that it was John Charles Olmsted—whose important oeuvre remains to be fully distinguished—who fundamentally shaped Vassar’s central campus. This narrative elucidates the planning processes of this small, progressive woman’s college in its formative decades, and addresses the shifting role of the landscape architect in American campus design in the late nineteenth- and early twentieth centuries.
Citation: Journal of Planning History
PubDate: 2022-03-25T06:25:51Z
DOI: 10.1177/15385132221081531
-
- Planned Obsolescence' The Role of the Town Common in the Making of
Savannah’s Urban Plan-
Free pre-print version: Loading...Rate this result: What is this?Please help us test our new pre-print finding feature by giving the pre-print link a rating.
A 5 star rating indicates the linked pre-print has the exact same content as the published article.
Authors: David W. Gobel
Abstract: Journal of Planning History, Ahead of Print.
The colonial town common of Savannah, Georgia, played a vital role in the city’s history. It enabled public surveyors in the late 18th and early 19th century to expand the celebrated urban plan of streets and public squares that had been initiated by the city’s founder, James Oglethorpe. Its fortuitous role as an expansion zone, however, does not appear to have been intended from start as some have supposed. Instead, Savannah’s town common, like others of its time, was an unscripted, liminal space serving multiple, undesignated functions. This paper investigates its intended and actual use and its gradual disappearance
Citation: Journal of Planning History
PubDate: 2022-03-25T04:06:37Z
DOI: 10.1177/15385132211073471
-
- Corrigendum to Cleaning Streams in Cook County, IL: Forest Preserves,
Water Pollution, and Interwar Environmentalism in the Chicago Region-
Free pre-print version: Loading...Rate this result: What is this?Please help us test our new pre-print finding feature by giving the pre-print link a rating.
A 5 star rating indicates the linked pre-print has the exact same content as the published article.
Abstract: Journal of Planning History, Ahead of Print.
Citation: Journal of Planning History
PubDate: 2022-03-21T11:02:43Z
DOI: 10.1177/15385132221081283
-
- Arcadia for Everyone' The Social Context of Garden Suburbs in the U.S
-
Free pre-print version: Loading...Rate this result: What is this?Please help us test our new pre-print finding feature by giving the pre-print link a rating.
A 5 star rating indicates the linked pre-print has the exact same content as the published article.
Authors: Emily Talen
Abstract: Journal of Planning History, Ahead of Print.
Garden suburbs are a particular type of residential development that flourished in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, in the U.S. and globally. Using census data of 283 garden suburbs in the U.S., I investigated the exclusivity of the garden suburb by looking at income, housing value, race, and age. I found that garden suburbs had more Whites, single-family housing, and higher family income in all time periods. Income levels were significantly higher whether the comparison was between garden suburbs and the immediately surrounding area (1mile), or between garden suburbs and a wider context.
Citation: Journal of Planning History
PubDate: 2022-02-22T11:37:02Z
DOI: 10.1177/15385132211073520
-
- From “Citizen Jane” to an Institutional History of Power and Social
Change: Problematizing Urban Planning’s Jane Jacobs Historiography-
Free pre-print version: Loading...Rate this result: What is this?Please help us test our new pre-print finding feature by giving the pre-print link a rating.
A 5 star rating indicates the linked pre-print has the exact same content as the published article.
Authors: Stefan Norgaard
Abstract: Journal of Planning History, Ahead of Print.
Conventional wisdom frames scholar and activist Jane Jacobs as a skeptical housewife, heterodox/dissident critic, or common-sense neighborhood resident. Yet a comprehensive archival review of Jacobs’ professional engagement with philanthropy and urban-development organizations reveals instead an activist scholar-leader in a larger, well-funded movement that must be understood in its time and place. Institutional partnerships shaped and informed Jacobs’ most noted projects, and her counsel, in turn, shaped urban-development grantmaking. An historical assessment of Jacobs’ ideas, and of social change more broadly, should examine not just individuals, but also supporters, organizations, and paradigms.
Citation: Journal of Planning History
PubDate: 2022-02-21T04:19:06Z
DOI: 10.1177/15385132211070512
-
- Overpromising Technocracy’s Potential: The American-Yugoslav Project,
Urban Planning, and Cold War Cultural Diplomacy-
Free pre-print version: Loading...Rate this result: What is this?Please help us test our new pre-print finding feature by giving the pre-print link a rating.
A 5 star rating indicates the linked pre-print has the exact same content as the published article.
Authors: Tracy Neumann
First page: 3
Abstract: Journal of Planning History, Ahead of Print.
From the mid-1960s to the mid-1970s, the Ford Foundation funded an urban planning exchange between American academics and Yugoslav urban planners as something of a test case in transferring American planning technology to the socialist world. The American-Yugoslav Project was one of several international urban development projects the Ford Foundation pursued at mid-century as part of its Cold War-era cultural diplomacy efforts. The largely unsuccessful technology transfer at the center of the American-Yugoslav Project was a contributing factor to the Foundation’s retreat from international urban development and provides a case study in how one-size-fits-all development models falter when challenged by real-world conditions.
Citation: Journal of Planning History
PubDate: 2022-02-14T01:40:54Z
DOI: 10.1177/15385132211060041
-
- Between Anticipative and Iconic: Re-imaging the Emirati Villa and its
Spatial Assemblages-
Free pre-print version: Loading...Rate this result: What is this?Please help us test our new pre-print finding feature by giving the pre-print link a rating.
A 5 star rating indicates the linked pre-print has the exact same content as the published article.
Authors: Mamun Rashid, Dilshad R. Ara
First page: 47
Abstract: Journal of Planning History, Ahead of Print.
This article chronicles the evolution of the UAE’s (United Arab Emirates) residential architecture from its pre-urban beginnings in the dwellings of semi-nomadic tribes and coastal merchants to the ‘iconic' villas of the present. A temporal framing of traditional planning practices, including the collaborative roles of Sheikhs and transnational actors (in global and citywide planning networks), provides a narrative about Emirati houses from the pre-oil era (pre-1950s) to the post-federation era (post-1970s). This mapping of housing transitions is useful because previous research in the UAE’s tribal-modern context has largely ignored continuities and contingencies. The discursive relationship between past and present, top-down planning and user-driven bottom-up practice can contribute to a more nuanced understanding of urban development that does not blindly accept dominant views of iconic forms or planning histories.
Citation: Journal of Planning History
PubDate: 2022-03-03T01:36:58Z
DOI: 10.1177/15385132211061816
-
- Making a Self-Reliant Citizen: Technocracy, Rural Redevelopment and the
Etawah Pilot-
Free pre-print version: Loading...Rate this result: What is this?Please help us test our new pre-print finding feature by giving the pre-print link a rating.
A 5 star rating indicates the linked pre-print has the exact same content as the published article.
Authors: Deepa Ramaswamy
First page: 68
Abstract: Journal of Planning History, Ahead of Print.
The essay traces the trajectory of India’s first rural development program, the Etawah Pilot program from 1948, which became part of the country’s first five-year plans in 1951 with the support of the US government and the Ford Foundation. With a focus on the project’s two central actors, US architect-planner Albert Mayer and Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru, the essay argues that the Etawah Pilot program was a modernizing experiment in citizen assimilation that became a trans-national model for postwar development aid with the international architect-planner as the traveling technocrat set to develop expertise for newly independent nations.
Citation: Journal of Planning History
PubDate: 2022-05-12T07:18:30Z
DOI: 10.1177/15385132221081766
-
- Journal of Planning History
-
Free pre-print version: Loading...Rate this result: What is this?Please help us test our new pre-print finding feature by giving the pre-print link a rating.
A 5 star rating indicates the linked pre-print has the exact same content as the published article.
First page: 83
Abstract: Journal of Planning History, Ahead of Print.
PubDate: 2022-02-08T12:23:26Z
DOI: 10.1177/15385132211046229
-
- The American Road: Highways and American Political Development,
1891–1956-
Free pre-print version: Loading...Rate this result: What is this?Please help us test our new pre-print finding feature by giving the pre-print link a rating.
A 5 star rating indicates the linked pre-print has the exact same content as the published article.
Authors: Bruce E. Seely
First page: 86
Abstract: Journal of Planning History, Ahead of Print.
Citation: Journal of Planning History
PubDate: 2022-03-12T12:58:43Z
DOI: 10.1177/15385132221079231
-