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2008 Acsp-Aesop Program

The document provides information about the Fourth Joint Congress of the Association of Collegiate Schools of Planning (ACSP) and the Association of European Schools of Planning (AESOP) to be held from July 6-11, 2008 in Chicago, Illinois. It lists the organizational leadership of both associations and outlines the program highlights, including special sessions, receptions, mobile workshops, and a book fair. The document also includes schedules, locations of events, policies and presenter information.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
422 views138 pages

2008 Acsp-Aesop Program

The document provides information about the Fourth Joint Congress of the Association of Collegiate Schools of Planning (ACSP) and the Association of European Schools of Planning (AESOP) to be held from July 6-11, 2008 in Chicago, Illinois. It lists the organizational leadership of both associations and outlines the program highlights, including special sessions, receptions, mobile workshops, and a book fair. The document also includes schedules, locations of events, policies and presenter information.

Uploaded by

nachoigm
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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ACSP AESOP

Fourth Joint Congress


July 6 11, 2008 Chicago, Illinois
Local host: University of Illinois at Chicago

ORGANIZATIONAL LEADERSHIP
Ex Ofcio

Co-Representatives

Curt Winkle, Conference Chair


University of Illinois at Chicago

Gerhard Schimak, Austria


Helene Linzer, Austria
Hans Leinfelder, Belgium
Jan Schreurs, Belgium
Elena Dimitrova, Bulgaria
Maxmillan Wittmann, Czech Republic
Karel Maier, Czech Republic
Petter Nss, Denmark
Finn Kjaersdam, Denmark
Henrik H. Hovgesen, Denmark
Madis Kaing, Estonia
Mervi Ilmonen, Finland
Didier Paris, France
Jan Tucny, France
Benjamin Davy, Germany
Enrico Gualini, Germany
Uwe Altrock, Germany
Heike Langenbach, Germany
Jorg Knieling, Germany
Pantoleon D. Skayannis, Greece
Gyula Horvth, Hungary
Paula Russell, Ireland
Domenico Patassini, Italy
Umberto Janin Rivolin, Italy
Ilir Gjinolli, Kosovo
Jekabs Trusins, Latvia
Edwin Mintoff, Malta
Torill Nyseth, Norway
Roar Amdam, Norway
Tadeusz Marszal, Poland
Tadeusz Markowski, Poland
Rui Braz Afonso, Portugal
Artur Da Rosa Pires, Portugal
Dejan Djordjevic, Serbia
Lubica Vtkov, Slovakia
Andrej Pogacnik, Slovenia
Eduardo Cceres, Spain
Enrique J Caldern, Spain
Kristina Nilsson, Sweden
Lennart Tonell, Sweden
Willy A. Schmid, Switzerland
Thomas Matta, Switzerland
Tejo Spit, The Netherlands
Barrie Needham, The Netherlands
Ela Babalik-Sutcliffe, Turkey
Zeynep Merey Enlil, Turkey
John Mccarthy, United Kingdom
David Ludlow, United Kingdom

Tridib Banerjee, PAB


University of Southern California
Eugenie Birch, PAB
University of Pennsylvania
Charles Hoch, PAB
University of Illinois at Chicago
Weiping Wu
Virginia Commonwealth University

ASSOCIATION OF
COLLEGIATE SCHOOLS
OF PLANNING

David Amborski, Canadian Liaison


Ryerson University

www.acsp.org

Ofcers
Michael Hibbard, President
University of Oregon
Cheryl Contant, Vice-President/President-Elect
Georgia Institute of Technology
Marie Howland, Secretary
University of Maryland
Barry Nocks, Treasurer
Clemson University
Mickey Lauria, Immediate Past President
Clemson University

Regional Representatives
Mildred Warner, Northeast
Cornell University
Clinton Andrews, Northeast
Rutgers University
June Manning Thomas, North Central
University of Michigan
Susan Bradbury, North Central
Iowa State University
Dan Immergluck, Southeast
Georgia Institute of Technology
Tim Chapin, Southeast
Florida State University
Elise Bright, South Central
Texas A & M University
Enid Arvidson, South Central
University of Texas, Arlington
David Sloane, West
University of Southern California
Randall Crane, West
University of California Los Angeles
Ahmed Abukhater, Student Representative
University of Texas at Austin
Yang Chen, Student Representative
Massachusetts Institute of Technology

ASSOCIATION OF
EUROPEAN SCHOOLS
OF PLANNING
www.aesop-planning.com

Ofcers
Peter Ache, President
Helsinki University of Technology
Anna Geppert, Secretary General
Universite de Reims
Willem Salet, Senior Vice President
University of Amsterdam
Andreas Voigt, Treasurer
Vienna University of Technology
Nikos Karadimitriou, Communications
University College Longon
Beatrix Haselsberger, Young Academics
Vienna University of Technology
Pantoleon Skayannis, Conferences
University of Thessaly
Andrea Frank, GPEAN Representative
Cardiff University
Roelof Verhage, Junior Vice President
Instit dUrbanisme de Lyon
Sebastien Pioantoni,
Assistant of Secretary General
Universite de Reims

Congress Staff
Donna Dodd, Congress Director
Kirsten Dazevedo, Registration Manager
Laura Ervin, Logistics Manager
Glenda Fisher, Logistics Coordinator
Suzannah Hamlin, Registration Assistant

Table of Contents
Organizational Leadership . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2
Welcome Messages . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
Program Highlights . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
Joint Plenary Assembly. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .9
Receptions. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
Welcome Reception Monday. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
Student, University and Publisher Receptions. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
Session Highlights . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
Special Sessions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
Local Host . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
Sponsored Sessions. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
Mobile Workshops. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
Book Fair and Job Bank. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
At-a-Glance. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
Hotel Floor Plan 6th Floor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
Hotel Floor Plan 7th Floor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24
Hotel Floor Plan 10th Floor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25
Schedule At-A-Glance. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26
Table of Sessions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28
Business Meetings. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30
Special Interest Group Events. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33
Research Poster Display. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34
Session Titles By Track. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35
Tuesday Chronological Sessions, Roundtables & Meetings. . . . . . . . . . 39
Wednesday Chronological Sessions, Roundtables & Meetings . . . . . . 63
Thursday Chronological Sessions, Roundtables & Meetings. . . . . . . . . 75
Friday Chronological Sessions, Roundtables & Meetings . . . . . . . . . . 103
Reference and Index. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Presenter Information. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Congress Registration & Check-in. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Last Minute Changes Document. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Policies and Guidelines . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Audio Visual Equipment Available. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Instructions for Moderators and Discussants. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Practical Information for your Stay. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Track Descriptions. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Author/Participant Index. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

117
119
119
119
119
120
120
121
122
128

Advertising
Metropolitan Institute . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
Student Reception. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32
IRRPP . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33
Liverpool University Press . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 127
University of Southern California. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . inside back cover
Conference Benefactors. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . outside back cover
3

Welcome Messages

Welcome
ACSP!
Welcome
AESOP!
Welcome
to Chicago!
From the
ACSP President
Micheal Hibbard

Michael Hibbard, ACSP President,

Its my pleasure to welcome you to the


4th Joint AESOP/ACSP Congress, which is
also the 49th Annual ACSP Conference. It
promises to be a very stimulating conference
in one of Americas most exciting cities.
The conference theme, Bridging the
Divide: Celebrating the City, speaks to us in
a variety of ways. Most directly, of course, it
suggests the various divides racial, ethnic,
religious, and so on that characterize
many cities around the world, as well as
the possibilities for planning as a source
of knowledge and action to help bridge
those divides. The empirical, theoretical,
methodological, and pedagogical sessions
that form the heart of our conference will
challenge us to think deeply and creatively
about the ways planning can make a
difference.
The theme also captures the spirit of the
ongoing relationship between ACSP and our
AESOP colleagues. Our two organizations
have been celebrating the city and working
to create bridges among our members since
our first joint congress at Oxford in 1991.
The institutional and individual relationships
that have developed over the past seventeen
years are too numerous to mention. They
cross the full range of our scholarly, teaching,
and public service activities, from joint
research projects to collaborative studios
and consultations. This Joint Congress is an
opportunity to affirm existing relationships
and forge new ones.
Ten years after Oxford, with the first
World Planning Schools Congress (WPSC)
at Shanghai in 2001, our bridging took the
leap to the global. The Global Planning
Education Network (GPEAN), a network of
nine associations of university-level urban
and regional planning programs from around
the world, emerged from WPSC. The GPEAN
leadership is holding its annual meetings at
the Joint Congress. This includes the WPSC
Steering Committee which, following the
success of WPSC2 in Mexico City in 2006,
is planning for WPSC3. Please join me in
welcoming them to Chicago.
In another exciting bridging opportunity,
our Joint Congress is overlapping with the
13th International Planning History Society
Conference (IPHS). IPHS will meet at the
same hotel as the Joint Congress, from

July 10-13. For those interested in urban


history and the history of planning this is a
wonderful chance to link with colleagues
from around the world.
Bringing the theme of Bridging the Divide:
Celebrating the City down to the reality of
the local context, an impressive number
of walking, biking, bus, and train mobile
workshops are on offer, including several
with historical emphases organized by IPHS.
Chicago embodies many of the divides
implied by the theme; it also exemplifies
many important, successful planning
solutions. I urge you to get to know our
host city.
Finally, I want to acknowledge the
organizers of this wonderful event. Curt
Winkle of the University of Illinois at Chicago
chairs ACSPs Conference Committee.
Donna Dodd is our Association Manager
and Conference Director. They have had
the major responsibility for everything from
planning to scheduling to logistics. Every
participant in the Joint Congress owes them
a debt of gratitude.
Curt and Donna have been ably supported
by the Joint Congress Steering Committee,
which is co-chaired by Curt and Simin
Davoudi, Newcastle University; other
members are Peter Ache, Helsinki University
of Technology, Robin Boyle, Wayne State
University, and Karel Meier, Czech Technical
University of Prague. Curt is also Chair of the
Local Host Committee from the University of
Illinois at Chicago; other members are Karen
Berthiaume, John Betancur, Charles Hoch,
Martin Jaffe, and Jodi White.
Enjoy the conference!

Michael Hibbard
University of Oregon, Eugene

Welcome Messages

From the
AESOP President
Peter Ache

Dear Participants of the joint ACSP/


AESOP 2008 Conference Bridging the Divide:
Celebrating the City
On behalf of AESOP, I warmly welcome
you to a new Joint Conference with our
partner association ACSP in Chicago. With
about 1000 participants coming from many
countries around the world we are facing
a very exciting and stimulating six days of
scholarly exchange and debate. The topic
Bridging the Divide: Celebrating the City is
well chosen for that purpose, allowing for
multi-facetted interpretations and views:
The city and the urban are the epitome of
our current third millennium (UN Habitat).
In Europe the strategic dimension in
particular of the large metropolitan spaces
has received a new impulse, pointing
out the motoric qualities of those units,
driving societies ahead in economic terms.
We also witness the increasing divides
between those steaming ships and the seas
of deserts around them, to use a figure
for characterisation. On board, not every
passenger travels happily increasingly
our urban societies are divided societies.
The dividing lines go along with many
dimensions, the cities find themselves in
a position of multiple frontier spaces, as
our colleague Saskia Sassen phrased it.
Obviously, the core object of our profession
still manages to escape our efforts to
understand, conceptualize, manage, develop,
and improve and instead surprises us, time
and again.

The current congress is the fourth


Joint Congress of ACSP and AESOP. For
our association, the great interest from
planning scholars from America, Europe and
beyond demonstrates also that AESOP has
developed a lot during its already twenty
years of existence. The number of papers
from both associations show, how rich and
wide our planning knowledge is and we will
for sure enjoy a good range of stimulating
discussions and exchanges of ideas
between planning scholars, educators and
practitioners.
Behind the scenes, people worked
for this success. I would therefore like to
thank the two chairs of the Joint Congress
Committee, Simin Davoudi and Curt Winkle
for establishing an excellent cooperation.
My particular thanks then go again to the
local chair Curt Winkle and his colleagues
from the Local Host Committee at the
University of Illinois at Chicago for all their
efforts in preparing an outstanding event in a
wonderful location. They were supported by
Donna Dodd who has done an excellent job
as Congress Director.
I wish you all a stimulating conference
and a pleasant time in Chicago.

Peter Ache
Helsinki University of Technology

Bridging the Divide: Celebrating the City


The conference theme Bridging the Divide: Celebrating the City focuses on the mediating role of cities.
Many cities are, to some degree, divided or contested. And cities themselves may play roles in reproducing
identities that promote conflict between racial, ethnic, religious or national groups. A key question arises:
How can innovative approaches to planning and governance help to bridge these divides?
We encouraged papers and debate on the nature of these divides and the role that cities play in spanning
them, through, for example, place-shaping, infrastructure development, governance, fostering of bridging
social capital, capacity building, promoting environmental justice, reducing health disparities, and creating
mechanisms for conflict resolution.
We hope to learn by building bridges in scholarshipsharing international perspectives and experiences
on the role of cities in mediating conflict.

Welcome Messages
From the Chairs of
the Joint Congress
Steering Committee

From the Co-Chairs


of the Local Host
Committee

In the last 17 years since ACSP and AESOP


held their first joint congress in Oxford we
have developed closer ties academically,
professionally, institutionally and on an
individual basis. Our joint congresses have
gone from strength to strength in terms of their
scale, scope and quality of engagement. With
more than 1000 participants from more than
40 countries, the Chicago Congress has broken
all records to become the largest gathering
ever of planning scholars in the United States
and Europe. It is also set to raise the bar with
regard to the quality of debate and scholarship.
Our joint congresses which happen about
every five years provide not only a forum for
intellectual exchanges in the field of spatial
planning, but also a site for social learning
and for deeper understanding of the working
practices and institutional traditions of our two
associations. Our joint congresses have proved
to be an effective way of bridging the divides
and celebrating diversity.
For us, the co-chairs of the Joint Congress
Steering Committee, the last two years
of working together has been a rich and
challenging experience; one which will
undoubtedly remain a major story and privilege
of our academic life. We have been supported
generously by members of the Joint Steering
Committee: Peter Ache, Helsinki University
of Technology; Robin Boyle, Wayne State
University; Michael Hibbard, University of
Oregon; and Karel Meier, Czech Technical
University of Prague. Furthermore, we wouldnt
have had a congress if not for the Local Host
Committee at the University of Illinois at
Chicago. We would like to express our sincere
gratitude to you for your participation, and
particularly to those who acted as track chairs,
moderators and discussants.
With best wishes for a stimulating and
enjoyable congress!

Welcome! We are delighted to share


our city and hope that you find this to be an
engaging place to bridge the divide between
scholarship in the U.S. and Europe.
While exploring the city, you will see racial,
ethic and other divides among neighborhoods
as well as the many ways in which the
structure of neighborhoods, the lakefront
and citywide festivals bring people together.
We have planned mobile workshops to guide
your explorations, but we also encourage you
to strike out on your own and become part
of this city of neighborhoods with the help
of scores of practicing planners, faculty and
students who share their advice on what to
see and where to eat in the booklet included
in your congress packet. Planners report the
Wicker Park neighborhood to be the place
where they have the most fun outside of their
homes, for example. If you can only see one
suburb, consider Oak Park for its architecture
and accessibility. Both are easily accessible
by CTA. Planners think the best tour of the city
may be the Architecture River Cruise provided
by the Chicago Architecture Foundation. You
will find this and other advice on restaurants
and music venues and plus a list of the worstplanned places in Chicago!
Our thanks to Ernest Mahaffey, the UIC
Institute for Research on Race and Public
Policy, the UIC Great Cities Institute, Robin
Hambleton, the Chicago Council on Global
Affairs and TimeOut Chicago for their support
of this conference. Thank you to Andrew
Greenley who coordinated the mobile
workshops; Ratoola Kundu who organized
the student reception; and Ann Barnds who
prepared the survey of planners.
Have a fun and productive stay in Chicago!

Martin Jaffe, University of Illinois at Chicago


Simin Davoudi, Newcastle University, UK

Curt Winkle, University of Illinois at Chicago


Curt Winkle, University of Illinois, Chicago

Simin Davoudi

Curt Winkle

Martin Jaffee

Local Host Committee


Ann Barnds
John Betancur
Caitlin Cottrill
Andrew Greenlee
Charles Hoch
Martin Jaffe (co-chair)
Ratoola Kundu
Kazuya Kawamura
Leonor Vanik
Curt Winkle (co-chair)

HIGHLIGHTS

Highlights

Joint Plenary Highlights

ACSPAESOP
Joint
Plenary
Monday Afternoon
July 7,
3:00 5:00 pm

Richard C. Longworth

Richard C. Longworth
Globalization presents grave challenges
to the manufacturing towns and cities of the
American Midwest, Chicagos hinterland,
and most of these cities are failing this
challenge. The Midwest pioneered the
Industrial Era in America. It was the Silicon
Valley of the early 20th century and thrived
for a century on the ideas and innovations
of that era. Now that era is gone, replaced
by the Global Era. Some cities, like Chicago,
have made the transformation. Others, from
Cleveland to St.Louis, havent. The result is a
deep divide between global cities and postindustrial slums, between thriving metro
areas and declining hinterlands, between
races in a traditionally segregated region
and between classes in a region that has
always seen itself as classless. Richard C.
Longworth, author of the new book Caught
in the Middle: Americas Heartland in the
Age of Globalism, discusses these new
challenges to Midwestern cities and to their
civilizations.
Richard Longworth is a senior fellow
at the Chicago Council on Global Affairs
and author of the new book, Caught in
the Middle: Americas Heartland in the
Age of Globalism, published in January by
Bloomsbury. Longworth joined the Council
in 2003 as executive director of its Global
Chicago Center after a career in journalism,
most recently as senior correspondent for
the Chicago Tribune. For 20 years, Longworth
was a foreign correspondent for the Tribune
and United Press International and was the
Tribunes Chief European Correspondent.
He has reported from 75 countries on five
continents.

Sir Peter Hall

Sir Peter Hall

Economic change, driven as always by


technology, is creating a new urban
geography across the developed world.
The old industrial heartland regions are
declining; regions around great trading cities
- London, Paris, Amsterdam, New York, San
Francisco - are booming and expanding into
vast polycentric mega-city regions in which
different cities play different roles in a highly

synergistic urban network. But there are two


interesting complications.
First, in the old Rustbelt regions,
some major cities - Chicago, Liverpool,
Manchester, Lille - are making a spectacular
comeback. But second, these successful
cities increasingly exhibit sharp contrasts
between vibrant downtowns and increasingly
isolated ghettos of deep deprivation.
Sometimes there is a racial component
here. But more fundamental is the fact that
here - as in the old one-industry towns in
these same regions, which lack the means to
develop a new economic base - successive
generations of blue-collar families are failing
to make a successful transition through the
educational system into the new economy.
As the Democratic primaries so clearly
showed, the outcome is a fundamentally
new class divide in advanced western
economies.
Peter Hall is Professor of Planning
and Regeneration at the Bartlett School
of Architecture and Planning, University
College London and President of the Town
and Country Planning Association. From
1991-1994 he was Special Adviser on
Strategic Planning to the Secretary of State
for the Environment, with special reference
to issues of London and South East regional
planning including Thames Gateway and
the Channel Tunnel Rail Link. In 1998-99
he was a member of the Deputy Prime
Ministers Urban Task Force. From 2004-2008
he was Chair of ReBlackpool, the Blackpool
Urban Regeneration Company. He is author,
co-author or editor of more than 35 books
on urban and regional planning and related
topics most recently, London Voices London
Lives, published in 2007. He received the
Gold Medal of the Royal Town Planning
Institute in 2003, the Balzan International
Prize in 2005 and the Sir Patrick Abercrombie
Prize of the International Union of Architects
in 2008.

Highlights Welcome Reception

Welcome
Reception
Cruise Aboard the
Odyssey
Monday, July 7,
Boarding at 6:00 pm
Do not miss the opening reception cruise of the ACSPAESOP 4th Joint Congress. Board the Odyssey or the
Spirit of Chicago which both disembark from Navy Pier on
Lake Michigan. Both ships offer signature elegance and
total entertainment experiences only true luxury cruising
vessels can provide. Creative appetizers, entrees and
desserts prepared fresh onboard daily. Award-winning
wines. Dancing to live music. And unmatched skyline
views of Chicago drifting past your table.
Round trip motor coach transportation will be provided
from the Marriott Hotel beginning at 5:30pm, but Navy
Pier is also walking distance from the hotel. Written
directions can be provided. Please ask for them at the
registration desk.
Arrive at 6:00pm to pick up your tickets and board the
ship. Check in at the Congress registration desk just in
front of either ship. Given the size of attendance at this
years Joint Congress, we advise you to pre-arrange to
travel to Navy Pier with friends as you might end up on
separate ships. Enjoy!

10

Highlights Student, University and Publisher Receptions

Intercontinental
Planning
Student
Reception
Tuesday, July 8,
Fad Irish Pub,
6:00 8:00 pm
Fad, pronounced fdoe, is the Irish expression
meaning long ago. The term was commonly
used as the preface of old Irish stories told
by the Seancha (Shana-kee) or storyteller.
At Fad they tell the story of Irelands rich
and celebrated pub culture. It is a culture
of hospitable surroundings, good food and
good drink, and friendly conversation- what
they call craic. Fad blends the best of the
old with the best of the new. The decor and
friendly staff evoke images of the great old
pubs of Ireland whereas the style of operating
- music, food, beverages - connects more
so with the contemporary pubs and bars of
modern Ireland.
Fad is located at 100 W. Grand in the heart
of downtown Chicago on the corner of Clark
and Grand, across the street from Maggianos
312-836-0066. See our ad on page 30 for
more details.

Alumni &
Publisher
Receptions
Sunday, July 6th,
Tuesday, July 8 and
Wednesday, July 9
Dialogues Book Signing
Reception
Sunday, July 6, 7:00pm,
Lincolnshire I & II/Foyer

MIT Department of Urban


Studies and Planning
Wednesday, July 9, 7:00pm - 9:00pm,
Northwestern/Ohio/Foyer

2008 Joint Congress Local


Host University of Illinois at
Chicago Alumni and Friends
Reception
Wednesday, July 9, 7:00pm - 9:00pm,
Purdue/Wisconsin

Routledge Reception for


Planning, Theory & Practice
Tuesday, July 8, 6:15pm - 7:30pm,
Lincolnshire I & II/ Foyer

Cornell University/Planners
Network/University of
Pennsylvania
Wednesday, July 9, 7:00pm - 9:00pm,
Chicago Ballroom, Salon D
Florida State University/
University of Florida
Wednesday, July 9, 7:00pm - 9:00pm, Huron
Hafen City University
Hamburg
Wednesday, July 9, 7:30pm - 9:30pm,
Addison
Journal of Urbanism
Reception
Wednesday, July 9, 6:15pm - 7:30pm,
Great America I & II/ Foyer
Lincoln Institute of Land
Policy
Wednesday, July 9, 6:00pm - 7:30pm,
Halsted

Reception for Wim Wiewels


Appointment as President of
Portland State University
Wednesday, July 9, 7:30pm - 9:30pm,
Avenue Ballroom
Routledge Reception for JAPA
Wednesday, July 9, 7:00pm - 9:00pm,
Indiana/Iowa/Foyer
Rutgers University
Wednesday, July 9, 7:00pm - 9:00pm,
Water Tower
University of California at
Berkeley
Wednesday, July 9, 7:00pm - 9:00pm,
Chicago Ballroom, Salon E
University of California
at Irvine, Department of
Planning, Policy and Design
Alumni Reception
Wednesday, July 9, 7:00pm - 10:00pm,
OHare
University of Michigan
Wednesday, July 9, 7:00pm - 8:30pm,
Navy Pier Room

11

Highlights Session Highlights

Special
Sessions
............................................................................

...........................................................................

Tuesday,
4:45pm 6:15pm

Tuesday, July 8,
9:45am 11:15am

ACSP General Assembly and


Awards Ceremony

ACSP Special Tribute Session Martin Meyerson: Practitioner,


Educator, Researcher

Room: 7th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Salon I

Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Great America II

............................................................................
Tuesday,
4:45pm 6:15pm
AESOP General Assembly
Room: 7th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Salon II

..........................................................................
Wednesday, July 9
9:45am 11:15am

12

Martin Meyerson (1922-2007) had important


impacts on the planning profession as a
practitioner, educator, researcher, theoretician
and university president. This panel will focus on
Meyersons early career as a planning practioner
and scholar, from the late 1940s to the 1960s.
While it will review Meyersons contributions to
planning theory, education and research, its intent
is to illuminate a relatively unstudied period of
planning history. Papers will explore key ideas
including the evolution of the public interest,
track the persistence of these ideas through
generations of students as well as in publications
and research stimulated by Meyerson at critical
points of his career

ACSP-AESOP Joint Presidential Session: Planning,


Imagination and Transnational
Scholarship: A Tribute to
Peter H. Marris

.........................................................................

Room: 10th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Huron Room

Student Award Paper Session

The purpose of the panel is to review the lifetime


research contribution of Professor Peter H. Marris
who conducted sociological and planning related
research on three continents namely Europe,
Africa and the United States to understand the
disruptive impact of social changes on the human
condition.

Room: 10th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Huron Room

Thursday, July 10,


9:45am 11:15am

Students of both organizations, ACSP and AESOP,


will present their award winning papers during
this special session. Come hear the best of the
best.

Sessions Highlights Highlights

.........................................................................

.........................................................................

Wednesday, July 9,
9:45am 11:15am

Friday, July 11,


8:00am 9:00am

Young Academics (AESOP YA)


Roundtable: Getting the most
out of the Paper Presenting
Experience

PhD Matriculation Roundtable


Hosted by the ACSP Student
Board Representatives

Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Michigan Room


All are invited. The AESOP Young Academics
have recognized that young planning scholars
often find it difficult to position themselves at
big scientific conferences. One of the reasons for
this includes fear of presenting to an experienced
audience, which may be exacerbated by a lack
of the know-how of good presenting. Therefore,
for their 2008 Roundtable, the AESOP Young
Academics are organizing a Session at the
ACSP/AESOP Chicago Conference to help young
planning scholars overcoming their personal
uncertainties and to encourage them to become
more active at scientific conferences. The focus of
the roundtable is to look at the different benefits
that academics can derive from presenting at
conferences. This provides a mean to look at the
different approaches that can be taken to giving a
paper, and to highlight the practicalities involved
in ensuring that young academics really do benefit
from conference participation.
presentations as a road map to academic
publishing;
presentations as a dry run for the oral
examination or viva voce exam; presentations
as a transferable skill for the academic career;
presentations to catch the eye of a potential
partner, external examiner or collaborator.

Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Illinois Room


All are invited. This informal roundtable
discussion will include topics such as: timeline for
comprehensive exams; dissertation preparation;
publication; relationship with advisors; the
balance between family, job hunting and offer
negotiation; and more.

.........................................................................
Thursday, July 10,
4:30 6:00pm
IPHS Opening Plenary The Plan of Chicago: New
Perspectives (everyone
invited)
Room: 7th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Salon II
From the day it was issued in 1909, The Plan of
Chicago by Daniel Burnham and Edward Bennett
took its place as a landmark in urban planning. In
this panel we will hear from Carl Smith; Franklyn
Bliss Snyder, Professor of English and American
Studies at Northwestern University, author of the
highly regarded book, The Plan of Chicago: Daniel
Burnham and the Remaking of the American
City (2006), which won the Lewis Mumford Prize
for Best Book in Planning History given by the
Society of American City, Regional, and Planning
History, and leading author of an interpretive
digital website on the plan for the Encyclopedia of
Chicago; and Kristen Schaffer, Associate Professor
of Architecture at North Carolina State University,
and author of a ground breaking analysis of the
Burnham Plan in the reprint of the Burnham plan
published by Princeton Architectural Press in
1993. Commentary will be provided by Neil Harris,
professor emeritus at the University of Chicago
and one of the nations foremost scholars of
American culture.

13

Local Host
Sessions
University of Illinois
at Chicago
Department of Urban
Planning & Public
Affairs

The University of Illinois at Chicago (UIC)


is a large, public, comprehensive research
university with 25,000 students located on
the edge of Chicagos vibrant downtown
the famous Loop. It has an explicit Great
Cities Commitment which is led by the
Department of Urban Planning and Public
Affairs. The Urban Planning and Policy
Program is the largest graduate planning
program in the U.S. with more than 200
students and a distinguished faculty.
http://www.uic.edu/cuppa

.........................................................................

.........................................................................

Wednesday, July 9,
8:00am 9:30am

Wednesday, July 9,
9:45am 11:15am

Panel Discussion: What


Does Diversity Amount to in
Chicago?

Panel Discussion: Chicagos


Plan for the 2016 Olympics

Moderator: BETANCUR, John J.


[University of Illinois at Chicago]
[email protected]

Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Great America I

Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Great America I

Closed to the press.

Presenters offer a comparative analysis of the


Washington and Daley administrations from the
Black and Latino perspectives. They address how
municipal government has contributed to the
conditions of blacks and Latinos by contrasting
both administrations in light of their support or
undermining of under represented groups; they
examine the opportunities they had in accessing
jobs, contracts, and basic services.

Skidmore, Owings & Merrill LLP (SOM), under


the direction of the City of Chicago and Chicago
2016, has been working to develop a plan for
Chicagos bid to host the 2016 Olympic Games.
Coordinating with dozens of architects, planners,
engineers, and construction firms, SOM has
been a key contributor to the planning effort that
resulted in Chicago being selected to represent
the United States in the international phase of the
bid. The plan carefully balances compactness with
integration into our city by placing most venues
within an easy walk of transit and close to both
downtown and the lakefront. Tom Kerwin and
Phil Enquist from SOM will discuss the Olympic
planning process and will share their thoughts
about the potential legacy of a successful bid.

ERRING, Cedric [University of Illinois at Chicago]


[email protected]
BETANCUR, John J. [University of Illinois at
Chicago] [email protected]
WHITE, Wanda [Former Deputy Commissioner,
City of Chicago Department of Economic
Development, Community Workshop on Economic
Development] [email protected]
GARCIA, Jesus [former Alderman and
State Senator and Director, Pilsen/Little
Village Economic Development Corporation]
[email protected]
LOPEZ, Jose [Director, Puerto Rican Cultural
Center of Chicago, Adjunct Instructor, Department
of Latin American Studies, University of Illinois at
Chicago]
RIGANTI, Patrizia [University of Nottingham]
[email protected]

14

Moderator: WINKLE, Curt [University of lllinois at


Chicago] [email protected]

Tom Kerwin is a Managing Partner in the Chicago


office of Skidmore, Owings & Merrill LLP and
oversees the firms involvement with Chicago
2016.
Phil Enquist is Partner in charge of planning and
urban design in the Chicago office of Skidmore,
Owings & Merrill LLP.

Sessions Highlights Highlights

Planning
Ideas and
Planning
Practices
Track 16
Sponsored by the
Journal, Planning
Theory & Practice,
published by
Routledge
This track takes a critical look at the
international diffusion of planning ideas and
practices, their impacts on planning practices
in different contexts, on the challenge of
situating planning practices, and on the
ethical issues of international exchange in
the planning field. The track is linked to a
book project, in production to celebrate the
tenth anniversary of the journal, Planning
Theory & Practice, in 2009. Published in
conjunction with the Royal Town Planning
Institute, London, the Journal offers an arena
for international debate and more effective
communication and sharing of ideas
between practitioners and academics.

.........................................................................

.........................................................................

Tuesday, July 8,
9:45am 11:15am

Wednesday, July 9,
8:00am 9:30am

16.1 Practices of Diffusion 1

16.4 Recognising Cultural and


Institutional Diversity 1

Moderator/Discussant: UPTON, Robert [Royal


Town Planning Institute] [email protected]
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Indiana
Global Exchabge And Local Specificities
[966]
HEALEY, Patsy [Newcastle University]
[email protected]
Poverty Truths: The Ethico-Politics Of
Knowledge In The New Global Order Of
Development [976]
ROY, Ananya [University of California, Berkeley]
[email protected]
Diffusion, Transformation And Deployment Of
Planning Concepts: The Progress Of Urban
Sustainability And Compact Cities Ideas In
Japan [979]
SORENSEN, Andre [University of Toronto]
[email protected]
Welfares Of The Future Versus Interests Of
The Status Quo Developmental Planning
For Asian Sustainable Urbanization [995]
ZHU, Jieming [National University of Singapore]
[email protected]

Moderator/Discussant: CAMPBELL, Heather


[University of Sheffield]
[email protected]
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Minnesota
A Trans-Pacific Planning Education In
Reverse: Reflections Of An American With
A Chinese Doctorate In Urban Planning And
Design [955]
ABRAMSON, Daniel B. [University of Washington]
[email protected]
Are We Same Or Different? The Evolving
Perceptions Of Development Challenges [977]
SANYAL, Bish [Massachusetts Institute of
Technology] [email protected]
Down To Earth: Recognizing The Inevitably
Situated Nature Of Planning Practice [991]
WATSON, Vanessa J. [University of Cape Town]
[email protected]

15

Highlights Session Highlights

Lincoln
Institute
of Land
Policy
Sponsored
Sessions
The Lincoln Institute of Land Policy is a
leading resource for key issues concerning
the use, regulation and taxation of land.
Providing high-quality education and
research, the Institute strives to improve
public dialogue and decisions about land
policy. Founded in 1974 and located in
Cambridge, Mass. the Lincoln Institute
organizes its work in planning and urban
form; economic and community development;
valuation and taxation; and international
land policy, with a special emphasis on Latin
America and China. Publications, online
information, and a range of interactive
resources and tools are available at the
website, www.lincolninst.edu.

.........................................................................

.........................................................................

Thursday, July 10,


9:45am 11:15am

Thursday, July 10,


1:15pm 2:45pm

Urbanization in China

Roundtable: People, places,


or ...? Debating the Ways
and Means of Community
Economic Development

Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Indiana Room


Discussant: ZHANG, Yang
[Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State
University]
Discussant: DING, Chengri Di
[University of Maryland] [email protected]

Moderator:GREENSTEIN, Roz
[Lincoln Institute of Land Policy]
[email protected]
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Indiana

Organizer: YANYUN MAN, Joyce


[China Program, Lincoln Institute of Land Policy]
[email protected]

CRANE, Randall
[University of California, Los Angeles]
[email protected]

Moderator: ZHANG, Ming


[University of Texas, Austin]
[email protected]

FAINSTEIN, Susan
[Harvard University] [email protected]

Chinas Urbanization: Impacts on Land Use


and Urban Development
ZHANG, Tingwei,
[University of Illinois at Chicago]
[email protected]
Aggomeration of Industries and Urban
Expansion in China
HE, Canfei [Peking University/Lincoln Institute
Center for Urban Development and Land Policy]
[email protected]
Capitalization of Bus vs. Rail Transit Access:
Evidence from Beijing, China?
ZHANG, Ming [University of Texas at Austin]
[email protected]
Urban Expansion in China?
HAN, Sun Sheng, [University of Melboune,
Australia] [email protected]

FESER, Edward (University of Illinois at UrbanaChampaign] [email protected]


ISSERMAN, Andrew M. (University of Illinois at
Urbana-Champaign] [email protected]
What is the purpose of local development
planning and how is it best carried out? Should
strategies aimed at low-wage labor markets, or
low-income residential neighborhoods, or fiscally
strained service districts focus their efforts on
place-conditioned assistance and incentives,
targeting those areas? Or should they instead
respond to the loud criticisms of many economists
that place-based aid is distortionary and badly
targeted by promoting pure-people assistance,
regardless of their location?

Put another way, is the debate between placebased and people-based strategies at all, or do
other questions of means or goals better describe
the important tradeoffs for practice?
Roundtable participants will react to a Lincoln
research project on this issue and then offer
their perspectives on the larger debate and its
usefulness for current community development
research and action.

16

Session Highlights Highlights


........................................................................
Thursday, July 10,
3:00pm 4:30pm
Roundtable: Inclusionary
Housing A U.S/European
Comparative Perspective
Moderator: JACOBS, Harvey M. [University of
Wisconsin-Madison] [email protected]
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Indiana Room
BRUNICK, Nicholas [Applegate & ThorneThomsen, P.C.] [email protected]
MALLACH, Alan [The Brookings Institution]
[email protected]
CALAVITA, Nico [San Diego State University]
[email protected]
Since the 1970s, inclusionary zoning, through
which provision of social housing has been linked
to the marketplace and developers provided
incentives to produce social housing, has been
part of the housing policy framework in the United
States. Similar transformations of economic and
social policy, and a breakdown of the traditional
barriers between the social housing sector and
the market have been a more recent phenomenon
in Europe. As that transformation has taken
place, largely during the past decade, inclusionary
housing has emerged as a major, continuing part
of the policy landscape in a number of different
European countries, including France, Ireland,

Italy, Spain and the United Kingdom. The form it


has taken in each country reflects the distinctive
features of that countrys land use regime and
social policy framework, including sharply
different approaches to critical questions such
as land value recapture, social inclusion and the
continued role of public financing and subsidies in
the provision of social housing.
The three presentations will explore these issues
in the European countries listed above as well
as in the United States, focusing on a number of
common themes and the manner in which each
country has arrived at different ways of both
framing and resolving these issues. Key themes
will include the relationship between inclusionary
requirements and land value, and the use of
inclusionary housing as a land value recapture
mechanism; the relationship between developers,
social housing entities and the public sector, and
the changing role of social housing entities (both
public and private) as methods of social housing
production change; the role of inclusionary
housing as a vehicle for social inclusion at
both the micro-scale (the individual building)
and the larger community scale; and the ways
in which inclusionary development strategies
are (or are not) integrated into the larger
community and regional planning frameworks.
These presentations will not only illuminate the
issues surrounding inclusionary housing in these
countries, but provide a perspective on the future
of social housing generally in Western Europe
and the United States.

.........................................................................
Thursday, July 10,
4:45pm 6:15pm
Roundtable: State Growth
Management Evaluation
Moderator: INGRAM, Gregory [Lincoln Institute
of Land Policy] [email protected]
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Indiana
KNAAP, Gerrit [University of Maryland College
Park] [email protected]
CLARK, Thomas A. [University of Colorado at
Denver] [email protected]
CARBONELL, Armando [Lincoln Institute of Land
Policy] [email protected]
Over the last several years, considerable
research has focused on evaluating state growth
management programs in both content and
results. Studies, however, have typically been
either statistical with little institutional context
or institutional with little quantitative analysis.
Comparisons rarely include states without growth
management programs nor do they typically
include more than a few states.
A collaborative research project initiated in Fall
2006 and sponsored by the Lincoln Institute of
Land Policy began evaluating the impacts of state
growth management programs. Evaluating change
across six themes in eight states, the integrated
evaluation of state growth management programs
incorporates both quantitative analysis and case
studies. The six themes include development
patterns, environmental quality, transportation,
affordable housing, fiscal impact, and planning
processes. The eight state case studies include
four states with state growth management
programs: Florida, Maryland, New Jersey and
Oregon; and four states without state growth
management programs: Colorado, Indiana, Texas
and Virginia.
Our preliminary findings to date support
two important conclusions: 1) The growth
management programs in individual states have
been most effective in those areas or themes that
have been given highest priority in the states
own program; and 2) No single state has been
successful across all indicators or themes. This
studys results will be summarized in a book to
be published by the Lincoln Institute in winter of
2009.

17

Highlights Mobile Tours

Wednesday
Mobile
Tours
Please meet in the hotel lobby and gather
near your tour sign. Tickets are required.

..........................................................................
1 Bus Tour
Public Housing: Transforming
What Into What?
Tour Leader: Janet Smith
Schedule: 12:30pm-4:00pm
The City of Chicago is implementing a multi-billion
dollar effort to demolish and rebuild 25,000 units
of public housing for the poor. The end result is
to be a collection of mixed-income communities
with both owner and renter occupied housing.
This plan is not without controversy or concern.
Chicago is short on affordable rental housing for
low-income families and is now experiencing a
serious crisis with mortgage foreclosures and
a stalled for-sale market. Many planners and
elected officials from Europe and the U.S. have
come to see the new development. Few, however,
have had the opportunity to talk to residents
and activists about what is being experienced
on the ground. This tour will take people to see
redeveloped sites, speak with planners and others
involved in the redevelopment, and to meet with
residents from Cabrini Green - one of the last
standing developments.

.........................................................................
2 Bus Tour
Green Chicago
Tour Leaders: Marty Jaffe and Moira Zellner
Schedule: 12:30pm-4:00pm
Discover why Chicago is becoming known worldwide as a leader in environmental innovation.
Begin with a brief discussion on greening issues
with representatives of Chicagos city government
while touring City Halls green roof, observing the
greening of the citys streets and infrastructure,
ending up at the Center for Green Technology,
to visit a showcase of green strategies and
technologies. Green Chicago

18

.........................................................................
3 Bus Tour
Urban Agriculture in Chicago
Tour Leader: Lynn Peemoeller
Schedule: 12:30pm-4:00pm
Visit three of Chicagos most interesting urban
agriculture projects and see different working
models. Learn how urban agriculture effects
economic and community development throughout
the city and how city policy can support these
projects.

..........................................................................
4 Bus Tourz
Cultural Heritage Tourism
Tour Leader: Doug Gills
Schedule: 12:30pm-4:00pm
Visit several Chicago neighborhoods and the
potential for the use of cultural heritage tourism
to work as a source of community building and
intergovernmental linkage around community
heritage sites and histories. We will visit
neighborhoods such as Bronzeville, North
Lawndale, Pilsen, and Chinatown to understand
how neighborhood cultural histories can be
used as tools for both economic and community
development.

.........................................................................
5 Bike Tour
of Chicagos Lakefront
Tour Leader: Curt Winkle
Schedule: 12:00pm-4:00pm
Come explore part of the citys 18 mile long
lakefront bike path and the communities that
surround it. Points of interest may include the
McDonalds Cycle Center at Millennium Park,
rolling past Navy Pier and Oak Street Beach,
touring through Lincoln Park, and a visit to a local
bike shop. The tour fee includes bike and helmet
rental.

.........................................................................
6 Bike Tour
of Industrial Chicago
Tour Leader: Rachel Weber
Schedule: 12:00pm-4:00pm
We will explore several of Chicagos inner-city
manufacturing districts by bike to experience
up-close the dramatic changes in the architecture,
urban design, and planning for industrial
production that have occurred within the last

century. Along the way, we will speak with city


planners about Chicagos Planned Manufacturing
District and environmental remediation programs,
local industrial councils about the threat of
residential encroachment, and business owners
and labor representatives about the challenges
of operating in high-cost urban locations in an
increasingly globalized economy. The tour fee
includes bike and helmet rental.

..........................................................................
7 Walking Tour
Millennium Park: A Cultural
Venue with an Economic
Impact
Tour Leader: Ed Uhlir
Schedule: 12:30pm-4:00pm
Preliminary Presentation: Illinois Room
The creation of Chicagos 25 acre Millennium
Park was a complex and unusual undertaking.
Through an unprecedented public/private
partnership an extraordinary outdoor cultural
experience was designed by some of the best
architects, landscape designers and artists in
the world including Frank Gehry, Anish Kapoor,
Jaume Plensa and Kathryn Gustafson. The
tour will provide a behind the scenes look at
its award winning designs and commentary on
the complexities and difficulties of managing a
large scale project by Millennium Parks Design
Director, Ed Uhlir. The discussion will also explain
that major economic benefits can result from
the creation of a signature park. The park was
designed to be universally accessible.

..........................................................................
8 Train Tour
CTA History by Train
Tour Leader: Mike Shiffer
Schedule: 11:30pm-4:00pm
Join us for an unusual opportunity to tour Chicago
via its elevated transit system (known locally as
the L) aboard our own chartered train! Since
1892, Chicagos L has been a cornerstone of the
regions transportation system. Its development
(and the subsequent reconstruction and extension
of several lines) closely matches Chicagos urban
dynamic. The narrated tour will cover several
lines throughout the city (traveling above, below
and at street level). It will include commentary by
noted historians on nearby land uses, the history
and technology of the L itself, and plans for the
future of Chicagos mass transit system. Dont
miss this unusual event!t

Mobile Tours Highlights

Friday
Mobile Tours

Tours Led by the


International
Planning History
Society

..........................................................................

.........................................................................

9 Bus Tour
Legacy of the Plan of Chicago

11 Walking Tour
Chicagos Moveable Bridges

Tour Leader: Dennis McClendon


Schedule: 12:30pm-4:00pm

Tour Leader: Thomas Powers


Schedule: 12:30pm-2:15pm

Daniel Burnham and Edward Bennetts 1909 vision


for the city is still revered but the plans actual
results are often misunderstood or forgotten.
This bus tour of the central city will look at
the Plans physical legacies: Navy Pier, North
Michigan Avenue, Northerly Island, a straightened
river, Ogden Avenue, Congress Parkway, Union
Station, Wacker Drive. Well look at projects
that greatly benefitted the city, at proposals that
later generations reconsidered, and at heroic
accomplishments that in the end meant little.

This walking tour, led by Thomas Powers, Deputy


Commissioner for the city of Chicago Department
of Transportation will provide an overview of
the history and operations of one of Chicagos
most recognizable pieces of infrastructure - the
moveable bridges that span the Chicago River. In
addition to describing the history, operations and
staffing requirements for the bridge system, tour
participants will have the opportunity to observe a
bridge in lift as part of the tour.

.........................................................................

.........................................................................

Tours organized and led by the IPHS are open


to ACSP-AESOP Joint Congress participants.
If you have an extended stay in Chicago, more
information and tickets for these tours can be
obtained at the ACSP-AESOP Joint Congress
Registration Desk anytime during the Congress.
Fees for these tours range from $15 - $30.

.........................................................................
Friday Morning, July 11
The timing of these tours conflicts with ACSPAESOP sessions. Please check your schedule.
Tour A - Hull House Walking Tour
Tour B - Millennium Park Walking Tour
Tour D - Public Housing Museum Walking Tour
Tour F - Chicago Old and New Walking Tour
Tour P - Legacy of the Chicago Plan

10 Walking Tour
Chicago Neighborhoods
through Food

12 Public Transit Tour


Chicago Metropolitan Agency
for Planning (CMAP) and the
Sears Tower Skydeck

.........................................................................

Tour Leader: Piyushimita (Vonu) Thakuriah


Schedule: 11:45am-4:15pm

Tour Organizer: Jieun Kim


Schedule: 12:00pm-4:30pm

Tour H - Chicago Old and New (Repeated)


Walking Tour

Chicago is known as the City of Big Shoulders


but is also unofficially known as the City of Big
Eaters. Come explore several of the citys unique
ethnic neighborhoods the way many Chicagoans
do - through traditions of food. We will have the
opportunity to visit several ethnic communities
throughout the city, and will taste our way across
them. Tour cost includes tasting portions at
several locations. Participants are welcome to
purchase additional items on their own.

Guests attending this tour will travel together


via public transit to the Sears Tower. What roles
can a regional planning agency, as an advisory
body, play when most planning decisions are
independently made by each municipality? The
essential role of CMAP is to coordinate and
integrate land-use and transportation planning
in Northeastern Illinois. To this end, CMAP is in
the process of creating its first comprehensive
plan for the seven county regions. This long-term
visionary plan calls for participatory planning to
facilitate regional decision making and consensus
building on regional priorities. This tour will be a
great opportunity to hear from CMAP staff about
the ongoing regional planning process as well
as to tour their offices at the Sears Tower. The
tour includes an admission ticket to the Skydeck
which offers the best views of the city of Chicago.
Please bring your photo id (drivers license, state
id, or passport) for Sears Tower security.

..........................................................................

Friday Afternoon, July 11


These do not conflict with ACSP-AESOP sessions.

Sunday Afternoon, July 13


Tour K - Hyde Park Urban Renewal Bus Tour
Tour L - Legacy of the Chicago Plan (repeated)
Bus Tour
Tour N - Transformation in Public Housing
Bus Tour
Tour O - Riverside and the West Suburbs
Bus Tour

19

Highlights book fair and job bank

Book Fair
and Book
Fair Caf
The ACSP-AESOP Joint Congress has
attracted 1000 scholars representing roughly
half the planning faculty in the U.S. and
Canada including sizeable clusters of faculty
from the AESOP planning programs across
the globe not to mention a substantial group
of doctoral students.
The Book Fair represents an excellent
opportunity for individual authors and publishers to display their wares and to speak
with potential authors, readers and adopters.
Daily continental breakfast and
continuous coffee and refreshments are
served in the Book Fair Caf area. The Job
Posting Boards, Job Bank, Conference
Message Center and a Research Poster
Display will also be housed in the center of
the Fair. Caf tables draw attendees to rest,
meet friends, and work on laptops during the
long days of sessions (sorry internet access
is not provided). Please visit the Fair, relax,
peruse and finally share your appreciation of
the exhibitors this year:

20

Exhibitors

Job Bank

Job Bank
Student Journal Table
American Planning Association
Ashgate Publishing Company
Brookings Institution Press
Center for American Places
Center for Urban Policy Research/
CUPR Press
Critical Planning, UCLA Urban Planning
Journal
Edward J. Bloustein School of Planning
and Public Policy
Elsevier
Guilford Publications
Island Press
Lincoln Institute of Land Policy
Liverpool University Press
MIT Press
Routlege
SAGE Publications
University of Pennsylvania Press
What if?, Inc.
Self-Published Authors Co-op Table
- Joaquin Casariego
- Richard Rubino and Earl Starnes

The Job Bank is an opportunity for


schools/programs to advertise (at no cost)
job openings as well as an opportunity for
students and faculty in planning who are in
the market to include their resumes (at no
cost). The Job Bank is located in the Book
Fair. Announcement Postings and Message
Center boards are available to aid in
communications with prospective employers
and employees.

Interview Suite
Reservations
Universities may conduct interviews for
new faculty in private suites at the hotel
during Congress hours. To make reservations
for an interview suite come to the Congress
Registration Desk to check for availability.
Two hour time slots can be reserved for
suites 8:00am through 5pm on Tuesday,
Wednesday and Thursday of the Congress.

AT A GLANCE

At a Glance

Hotel Floor Plans At a Glance

6th Floor Breakout Rooms

23

At a Glance Hotel Floor Plans

7th Floor Grand Ballroom

24

Hotel Floor Plans At a Glance

10th Floor
Function
Rooms

25

At a Glance Schedule At-a-Glance


Monday
Monday
9:00am-5:00pm

Registration Open

7th Floor Registration Desk

10:00am 5:00pm

Speaker Ready Room

Congress Registration

10:00am-5:00pm

Book Fair Set Up

7th Floor, Salon III

8:00am 3:00pm

Business Meetings

See pages 30-31

3:00pm 5:00pm

Joint Congress Plenary

7th Floor, Salon II

6:00pm-10:00pm

Opening Reception Cruise aboard the Odyssey


Motor coach transportation provided at 5:30pm

Navy Pier, Chicago

7:00am 5:30pm

Registration Open

7th Floor Registration Desk

7:00am 5:30pm

Book Fair Caf Open

7th Floor, Salon III

7:00am 8:00am

Continental Breakfast

Book Fair Caf

7:00am 5:30pm

Speaker Ready Room

Congress Registration

8:00am 9:30am

Session 1 Parallel Sessions

See pages 41-45

9:30am 9:45am

Break

Book Fair Caf & Foyers

9:45am 11:15am

Session 2 - Parallel Sessions

See pages 46-50

11:15am 12:00pm

Lunch on your own

12:00pm 1:00pm

Session A - Parallel Roundtables or Meetings

See pages 51-52

1:15pm 2:45pm

Session 3 - Parallel Sessions

See pages 53-57

3:00pm 4:30pm

Session 4 - Parallel Sessions

See pages 58-62

4:30pm 4:45pm

Break

Book Fair Caf & Foyers

4:45pm 6:15pm

AESOP General Assembly

7th Floor, Salon II

4:45pm 6:15pm

ACSP General Assembly & Awards Ceremony

7th Floor, Salon I

6:00pm-8:00pm

Intercontinental Student Reception

Fado Irish Pub

7:00am 5:30pm

Registration Open

7th Floor Registration Desk

7:00am 8:00am

Continental Breakfast

Book Fair Caf

7:00am 5:30pm

Book Fair Open

Book Fair Caf & Foyers

7:00am 5:30pm

Speaker Ready Room

Congress Registration

8:00am 9:30am

Session 5 - Parallel Sessions

See pages 65-68

9:30am 9:45am

Break

Book Fair Caf & Foyers

9:45am 11:15am

Session 6 - Parallel Sessions

See pages 69-74

Tuesday
Tuesday

Wednesday
Wednesday

26

Schedule At-a-Glance At a Glance


11:15am 12:00pm

Lunch on your own

11:15am 1:00pm

Faculty Womens Interest Group Luncheon

7th Floor, Salon 1

See page 18

Mobile Workshops

Staging in Hotel Main Lobby

7:00pm 9:00pm

Alumni and Publisher Receptions

See page 11

7:00am 5:30pm

Registration Open

7th Floor Registration Desk

7:00am 8:00am

Continental Breakfast

Book Fair Caf

7:00am 5:30pm

Speaker Ready Room

Congress Registration

8:00am 9:30am

Session 7 - Parallel Sessions

See pages 77-81

9:30am 9:45am

Break

Book Fair Caf & Foyers

9:45am 11:15am

Session 8 - Parallel Sessions

See pages 82-86

11:15am 12:00pm

Lunch on your own

12:00pm 1:00pm

Session B - Parallel Roundtables or Meetings

See pages 87-88

1:15pm 2:45pm

Session 9 - Parallel Sessions

See pages 89-93

3:00pm 4:30pm

Session 10 - Parallel Sessions

See pages 94-97

4:30pm 4:45pm

Break

Book Fair Caf & Foyers

4:45pm 6:15pm

Session 11 - Parallel Sessions

See pages 98-102

4:30pm 6:00pm

IPHS Plenary Open to Congress Attendees

7th Floor, Salon II

7:00am 11:30pm

Registration Open

7th Floor Registration Desk

7:00am 8:00am

Continental Breakfast

Book Fair Caf

7:00am 11:00am

Book Fair Open

Book Fair Caf & Foyers

7:00am 11:00am

Speaker Ready Room

Congress Registration

8:00am 9:00am

Session C Parallel Roundtables/Meetings

See pages 105-107

8:30am 12:00pm

IPHS Mobile Tours Open to Congress Attendees

Staging in Lobby

9:00am 9:15am

Break

Book Fair Caf & Foyers

9:15am 10:45am

Session 12 - Parallel Sessions

See pages 108-111

10:45am 11:00am

Break

Book Fair Caf & Foyers

11:00am 12:30pm

Session 13 - Parallel Sessions

See pages 112-116

Thursday
Thursday

Friday
Friday

Adjourn
12:30pm

Lunch on your own

See page 19

Joint Congress Mobile Tours

Staging in Hotel Main Lobby

27

At a glance table of sessions


Indiana

Iowa

Michigan

Michigan
State

Northwestern

Ohio
State

Purdue

Wisconsin

OHare

Illinois

Tuesday
Tuesday

8:00-9:30

open
OPEN

3.6

3.2

2.1

14.1

15.1

8.1

5.20

7.1

4.1

9:45-11:15

16.1
Highlight

3.1

3.3

2.2

14.2

15.2

8.2

6.1

7.3

4.2

12:00-1:00

16.12

3.24

FWIG
MTG

AESOP
Group

14.24

POCIG
MTG

AESOP
Group

AESOP
Group

AESOP
Group

4.19

1:15-2:45

16.2

3.8

3.4

2.3

14.3

15.3

8.3

6.2

7.2

4.3

3:00-4:30

16.3

3.7

3.5

2.4

14.4

15.4

8.4

6.4

7.4

4.4

8:00-9:30

10.5

3.9

6.13

2.5

14.5

15.5

8.5

6.5

7.5

4.14

9:45-11:15

10.6

3.10

YA

2.6

14.6

15.6

8.6

6.7

7.6

4.6

Thursday
Thursday

8:00-9:30

4.18

3.11

3.12

2.7

14.7

15.7

8.7

6.6

7.7

4.7

9:45-11:15

Lincoln

3.13

3.14

2.8

14.8

15.8

8.8

6.8

7.8

4.8

12:00-1:00

AESOP
Group

3.23

AESOP
Group

AESOP
Group

AESOP
Group

POCIG
MTG

GPEIG
MTG

6.14

9.13

4.20

1:15-2:45

Lincoln

3.15

3.16

2.9

14.9

15.9

8.9

6.9

7.9

4.9

3:00-4:30

Lincoln

3.17

3.18

2.10

14.10

15.10

8.10

6.10

7.11

4.10

4:45-6:15

Lincoln

3.19

3.20

2.11

14.11

15.11

8.12

6.11

7.12

4.11

8:00-9:00

10.9

MTG

16.11

16.10

open
OPEN

15.12

8.11

open
OPEN

14.17

PhD

9:15-10:45

open
OPEN

3.22

2.14

2.12

13.12

15.13

15.14

6.12

open
OPEN

4.17

11:00-12:30

10.8

3.21

2.15

2.13

13.13

15.16

15.15

open
OPEN

1.9

4.13

Wednesday

Friday
Friday

28

table of sessions At a glance


Minnesota

Lincolnshire I

Lincolnshire II

Great
America 1

Great
America II

Navy Pier

Huron

Water
Tower

Tuesday
Tuesday

8:00-9:30

10.1

9.1

5.1

1.1

12.5

14.14

6.3

13.1

9:45-11:15

10.2

9.4

5.2

1.2

12.1

14.15

PIP
MTG

13.2

12:00-1:00

JAPA
MTG

9.11

5.22

AESOP
Roundtable

12.4

PT&P
MTG

open
OPEN

13.16

1:15-2:45

10.3

9.2

5.3

1.3

12.6

14.16

11.1

13.3

3:00-4:30

10.4

9.6

5.4

1.4

12.7

14.19

11.2

13.4

8:00-9:30

16.4

5.14

5.5

Local
Host

12.9

1.5

MTG

13.6

9:45-11:15

16.5

5.16

5.6

Local
Host

12.8

1.6

Highlight

13.8

8:00-9:30

16.7

11.3

5.7

5.19

12.10

14.20

7.10

13.7

9:45-11:15

16.6

11.4

5.9

5.21

12.11

14.21

Highlight

13.5

12:00-1:00

9.9

11.5

MTG

GPEAN
MTG

12.3

MTG

SFIG
MTG

13.17

1:15-2:45

9.3

11.6

5.8

14.18

12.12

14.22

7.13

13.9

3:00-4:30

9.8

11.7

5.10

1.8

12.13

14.23

MTG

13.10

4:45-6:15

9.5

11.8

5.11

1.7

12.14

14.12

4.5

13.11

8:00-9:00

9.10

MTG

5.15

12.16

12.2

GPEAN
MTG

PT
MTG

not
available

9:15-10:45

9.7

13.14

5.12

5.17

12.15

GPEAN
MTG

4.15

not
available

11:00-12:30

4.12

13.15

5.13

5.18

14.13

GPEAN
MTG

4.16

not
available

Wednesday
Wednesday

Thursday
Thursday

Friday
Friday

29

At a Glance Business Meetings

Business Meetings
ACSP Meetings
Meeting Name

Day/Date/Time

Location

2009 (Virginia) ACSP 50th Conference


Committee Meeting

Wednesday, July 9, 8:00am-9:30am

Huron Room

2008 ACSP-AESOP Joint


Congress Committee

Thursday, July 10, 12:00pm-1:00pm

Lincolnshire II Room

2008 Track Chair Meeting

Thursday, July 10, 3:00pm-4:30pm

Huron Room

AESOP Meetings
Meeting Name

Day/Date/Time

Location

Executive Committee Meeting

Sunday, July 6, 1:00pm-6:00pm

River North Room

CoRep Meeting

Monday, July 7, 8:00am-12:00pm

Michigan/Michigan
State Rooms

French and British Planning Studies Group

Tuesday, July 8: 12:00pm-1:00pm

Purdue Room

Planning and Complexity Thematic Group

Tuesday, July 8: 12:00pm-1:00pm

Wisconsin Room

New Technologies in Planning


Thematic Group

Tuesday, July 8: 12:00pm-1:00pm

OHare Room

Planning Law and Property


Rights Thematic Group

Tuesday, July 8: 12:00pm-1:00pm

Michigan State Room

Resilience & Risk Mitigation Strategies


Thematic Group

Tuesday, July 8: 12:00pm-1:00pm,

Great America

Urban Design in Planning Thematic Group

Thursday, July 10: 12:00pm-1:00pm

Michigan State Room

Transnational and Cross-border


Planning Thematic Group

Thursday, July 10: 12:00pm-1:00pm

Michigan Room

Transport Planning and Policy: European


Experiences Thematic Group

Thursday, July 10: 12:00pm-1:00pm

Northwestern Room

Research Ethics and Planning Thematic Group Thursday, July 10: 12:00pm-1:00pm

Indiana Room

Resilience & Risk Mitigation Strategies


Thematic Group - Vulnerability vs. Resilience.
Visions for Cities Future Roundtable

Iowa Room

30

Thursday, July 10: 12:00pm-1:00pm

Business Meetings At a Glance

Journal Editorial Board Meetings


Meeting Name

Day/Date/Time

Journal of Planning Education and


Research Editorial Board (JPER)

Monday, July 7, 1:00pm-2:30pm

Michigan Room

HPD Editorial Advisory Board

Tuesday, July 8, 7:00am-8:00am

Great America I Room

Journal Progress in Planning

Tuesday, July 8, 9:45am-11:15am

Huron Room

Journal of the American Planning


Association (JAPA)

Tuesday, July 8, 11:30am-1:00pm

Minnesota Room

Planning Theory & Practice


Editorial Board

Tuesday, July 8, 11:30am-1:00pm

Navy Pier Room

Journal of Planning Theory

Friday, July 11, 8:00am-9:00am

Huron Room

Journal of Planning History

Friday, July 11, 7:30am-8:30am

Lincolnshire I

Meeting Name

Day/Date/Time

Location

GPEAN World Planning Schools Congress


Steering Committee, Part One

Sunday, July 6, 9:00am - 12:00pm

APA Headquarters,
Catherine Bauer Room

GPEAN Coordinating Committee,


Part One

Sunday, July 6, 1:00pm - 4:00pm

APA Headquarters,
Catherine Bauer Room

GPEAN Presidents Gathering

Tuesday, July 8, 11:30am-1:30pm

Presidential Suite 4524


Marriott Hotel

GPEAN Journal Editors Interest Group

Thursday, July 10, 12:00pm-1:00pm

Great America I Room

GPEAN Steering Committee, Part Two

Friday, July 11, 8:00am-10am

Navy Pier Room

GPEAN Coordinating Committee,


Part Two

Friday, July 11, 10:30am-12:30pm

Navy Pier Room

GPEAN Steering & Coordinating


Committee Combined Meeting

Friday, July 11, 2:30pm-4:30pm

Please see IPHS Program

Location

GPEAN Meetings

31

32

Special Interest At a Glance

Special Interest Group Events


Meeting Name

Day, Date, Time

Location

ACSP Global Planning Educators Interest


Group (GPEIG) - Business Meeting

Tuesday, July 8,
6:30pm - 7:15pm

Great America I

ACSP Global Planning Educators Interest Group (GPEIG) Meeting with HUDs Director of International Research

Thursday, July 10,


12:00pm-1:00pm

Purdue Room

ACSP Senior Faculty Interest Group


(SFIG) - Business Meeting and Roundtable

Thursday, July 10,


12:00pm-1:00pm

Huron Room

ACSP Planners of Color Interest Group (POCIG) Business Meeting

Tuesday, July 8,
12:00pm-1:00pm

Ohio State Room

ACSP Planners of Color Interest Group (POCIG) Roundtable

Thursday, July 10,


12:00pm-1:00pm

Ohio State Room

ACSP Faculty Womens Interest Group (FWIG) Business Meeting

Tuesday, July 8,
12:00pm-1:00pm

Michigan Room

ACSP Faculty Womens Interest Group (FWIG)


Luncheon

Wednesday, July 9,
11:15am-1:00pm

7th Floor, Salon I

AESOP Young Academics (YA) - Special Session

Wednesday, July 9,
9:45am-11:15am

Michigan Room

Shrinking Cities International Research


Network (SCiRN)

Monday, July 7,
8:00am-3:00pm

Minnesota Room

Organizational Meeting for a Food and


Agriculture Planning Interest Group

Friday, July 11,


8:00am-9:00am

Iowa Room

International Association of China


Planners (IACP)

Wednesday, July 9,
11:30am-1:00pm

Michigan Room

Please come visit with us


at the Local Host Session
organized by the IRRPP
On Wednesday, July 9, 8:00 am
in Great America I

The Institute for Research on Race and Public Policy is structured as a


campus-wide interdisciplinary research, policy and practice unit governed
by an Executive Board and an Administrative Council and located in the
Department of Urban Planning and Public Affairs. Chaired by the Provost,
the Administrative Council includes the deans of Education, Liberal Arts and
Sciences, Public Health, Social Work and Urban Planning and Policy and the
Vice Chancellor for External Affairs. The Executive Board consists of faculty
partners of IRRPP from a variety of disciplines throughout UICs campus.
Under the supervision of the Executive Board, the Director is responsible for
ensuring that the Institute meets its overall mission and vision and works
closely with its governors and partners to improve continuously its core
programs and to develop new ones. The Department of Urban Planning and
Public Affairs provides administrative support for the Institute.

33

At a Glance POSTER DISPLAY

Poster Display
in the
Book Fair Caf
7th Floor,
Marriott Hotel,
Grand Salon III

..........................................................................
Geographic Determinants Of
Truck Accidents In California,
1998-2004 [831]
MCFERRIN, Peter [University of Southern
California] [email protected]

..........................................................................
Urban Sprawl
In Estonia (EU) [448]
HIOB, Mart [Tallinn Technical University]
[email protected]

..........................................................................
Sustainability, Cities And
Gender: Comparative Studies
Of Gender And Urban
Regeneration In The European
Union [413]

..........................................................................

..........................................................................

Valuation Of Governmental
Guarantee In BOT
Infrastructure Project With
Real Option Analysis [807]

Culture, Creativity And


Innovation As Drivers Of
Development And Urban
Regeneration [998]

JUN, Jaebum [Texas A&M University]


[email protected]

ABER, Jasmin
[University of California, Berkeley]
[email protected]

SHAKAWY, M. Atef
[Texas A&M University]
[email protected]

Privacy Issues In Household


Travel Surveys [784]

Bridging The Implementation


Gap: Can Early Market
Involvement Provide For
Sustainable Infrastructure?
[999]

COTTRILL, Caitlin D.
[University of Illinois at Chicago]
[email protected]

LENFERINK, Sander
[University of Groningen]
[email protected]

THAKURIAH, Piyushimita
[University of Illinois at Chicago]
[email protected]

ARTS, Jos
[University of Groningen]
[email protected]

..........................................................................

..........................................................................

..........................................................................

Research On Town Planning In


Three Gorges Reservoir Area-A Case Study Of The Shizhu
Tujiazu Autonamous County In
Chongqing, China [993]
YAQI, Zhou
[Institute of Digital City and Urban Planning]
[email protected]

SHIBATA, Kuniko [London School of Economics


and Political Science]
[email protected]

ZHOU, Junqing
[Institute of Digital City and Urban Planning]
[email protected]

..........................................................................

..........................................................................

Contemporary Urban Design


In Brazil: Beyond Brasilia [942]

Learning To Talk Shop With


Other Professionals [814]

SIEMBIEDA, William J. [California


Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo]
[email protected]

KIRCHLER, Leslie B. [Indenpendent Scholar]


[email protected]

DEL RIO, Vicente [California Polytechnic State


University, San Luis Obispo]
[email protected]

..........................................................................
Walkability: An Evaluation Of
Existing Pedestrian Indices
[589]
MAGHELAL, Praveen K.
[Florida Atlantic University]
[email protected]

34

..........................................................................

Agent-Based Modeling Of Infill


Development Dynamics In
Changing Urban Environment
[502]
KIM, Yuseung
[University of Colorado Denver]
[email protected]

..........................................................................
The 2006 Immigrant
Demonstrations In Los
Angeles, California [275]
VZQUEZ-CASTILLO, M. Teresa
[California State University, Northridge]
[email protected]

..........................................................................
Bridging Structure And
Agency: The Role Of Social
Cognition In Institutional
Change [666]
KIM, Annette M.
[Massachusetts Institute of Technology]
[email protected]

Session Titles by Track At a Glance

Session Titles
by Track
The numbering system given to identify sessions within each track
does not describe the status of a session nor provide any schedule
information. The numbers are purely for administrative identification
and tracking purposes by the Congress schedule organizers. You
will find when viewing the table of sessions, like a puzzle, as
sessions were moved from room to room and time slot to another
time slot during the scheduling process, the numbers lose much of
their sequential ordering. You may even see some session numbers
missing these missing sessions likely collapsed from withdrawal
of presenters.
Track 1
Gender, Ethnicity, And Diversity In Planning
Petra Doan, Florida, [email protected]
Francesco Lo Piccolo, Italy, [email protected]
1.1
1.2
1.3
1.4
1.5
1.6
1.7
1.8
1.9

Including Religion and Women in Planning. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 41


Gender Inclusion And Planning Processes. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 46
Skills To Bridge Gendered, Racial, And Ethnic Divides. . . . . . . . . . . . . 53
Ethnicity And Neighborhood Planning Processes. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 58
Gender, Ethnicity, And Public Spaces . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 65
Ethnicity And Formal And Informal Entrepreneurship. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 70
Gender And Ethnicity In Spatial Justice Movements. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 98
Making Places For Diverse Populations. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 94
Immigrants, Citizenship And Planning Policies. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 112

Track 2
Economic Development Track
Zenia Kotval, Michigan, [email protected]
Roelof Verhage, France, [email protected]
2.1 Economic Policy. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 41
2.2 Workforce And Social Issues. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 46
2.3 Workforce Development . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 53
2.4 Urban Decline & Revitalization. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 58
2.5 Urban Regeneration. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 65
2.6 Knowledge And Technology Based Development. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 70
2.7 Design Issues. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 77
2.8 Industrial Concentration And Clusters. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 83
2.9 Preservation And Renewal. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 89
2.10 Festivals/Event Hosting . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 94
2.11 Arts And Culture. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 98
2.12 Creative Policy. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 112
2.13 Community And Neighborhood Planning. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 113
2.14 People Stories And Impacts. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 108
2.15 Pre-Organized Session Junk Science: The Role Of
Secondary Markets In Urban Development. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 113

Track 3
Environmental Planning, Resources
Management And Climate Change
Petter Nss, Denmark, [email protected]
Stacey Swearingen White, Kansas, [email protected]
3.1 P re-Organized Session Planning For Reuse Of Contaminated Properties. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 47
3.2 Planning And Climate Change I
Measuring And Reducing Greenhouse Gas Emissions. . . . . . . . . . . . . 41
3.3 Planning And Climate Change II
Community Level Considerations. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 47
3.4 Planning And Climate Change III Governance Considerations . . . . . 54
3.5 Planning And Climate Change IV Adaptation Considerations. . . . . . 59
3.6 Planning Perspectives On Flooding And Floodplains. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 42
3.7 Disasters And Hazards Planning. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 59
3.8 Habitat And Biodiversity Planning. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 54
3.9 Institutions, Collaboration, And Policy Communities . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 66
3.10 Sustainability At The Local Level. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 70
3.11 Waste Management Issues And Analysis . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 77
3.12 Energy Analysis And Planning . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 78
3.13 Land Protection And Open Space Conservation. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 83
3.14 Environmentally-Oriented Development Approaches . . . . . . . . . . . . 83
3.15 Pursuing Sustainability In Large Cities. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 89
3.16 Urban/Rural Environmental And Spatial Perspectives. . . . . . . . . . . . 90
3.17 Analyzing Impacts In And Of The Built Environment. . . . . . . . . . . . . 95
3.18 Urban Form, Urban Policy, And The Environment. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 95
3.19 New Perspectives On Sustainability . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 99
3.20 Environmental Justice. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 99
3.21 Water And Water Quality Issues. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 113

Track 4
Governance, Capacity Building and
Participation
Alex Schwartz, New York, [email protected]
Lia Vasconcelos, Portugal, [email protected], [email protected]
4.1 Neighborhood Governance And Planning - Part 1. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 42
4.2 Neighborhood Governance And Planning - Part 2. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 47
4.3 Planning And Governance Reform In UK And New Zealand. . . . . . . . . 54
4.4 Dilemmas Of Citizen Participation. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 59
4.5 Governance, Planning And Urban Redevelopment Projects. . . . . . . . . 99
4.6 Network Governance. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 70
4.7 Intergovernmental Collaboration. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 78
4.8 Post-Disaster Planning And Governance. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 83
4.9 New Forms Of Governance . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 90
4.10 Planning And Ethnic Conflict. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 95
4.11 Transforming Practices And Governance. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 99
4.12 Public-Private Partnerships. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 113
4.13 Infrastructure And Governance. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 114
4.14 Governance In The Informal Sector . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 66
4.15 Knowledge, Experts, Governance, And Planning. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 109
4.16 Governance Of Nonprofit And Civic Organizations. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 114
4.17 Governance, Practices And Decision-Making . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 109
4.18 Governance, Culture And Theory . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 78
4.19 Roundtable Technologies And The Transformation Of Planning
Practice: Assessing Gains/Losses And Charting Next Steps. . . . . . 51
4.20 Roundtable The Limits To Nonprofit Radicalism
And Advocacy Planning: A Cross National Perspective. . . . . . . . . . . 88

35

At a Glance Session Titles by Track


Track 5
Housing And Community Development

Track 7
Land Use Policy And Governance

Kirk McClure, Kansas, [email protected]


Hugo Priemus, Netherlands, [email protected]

Rayman Mohamed, Michigan, [email protected]


Vesselina Troeva, Bulgaria, [email protected]

5.1 Cdcs And Public-Private Partnerships. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 42


5.2 Community Development Techniques. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 47
5.3 Hope VI & Public Housing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 54
5.4 Housing And Smart Growth. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 60
5.5 Housing Market Behavior And Demographic Challenges. . . . . . . . . . . 66
5.6 Housing Market Behavior And Price Models . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 71
5.7 Housing Market Behavior And The Environment . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 79
5.8 Housing Markets And Planning For Them. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 90
5.9 Housing Policy At The National Level. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 83
5.10 Immigrants And Housing Attainment. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 95
5.11 Immigrants And The Suburbs. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 99
5.12 Local Community Development . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 109
5.13 Location And Dispersal. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 114
5.14 Mortgages And Credit Market Problems. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 66
5.15 Neighborhood Regeneration And Inequality . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 105
5.16 Neighborhood Regeneration And Mixed Communities. . . . . . . . . . . 71
5.17 Neighborhood Regeneration And Segregation. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 109
5.18 Neighborhood Regeneration And The Inner City. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 114
5.19 Neighborhood Regeneration In The City Center. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 79
5.20 Inclusionary Programs And Dealing With NIMBY Forces . . . . . . . . . 42
5.21 Tax Credits And Preservation. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 84
5.22 Roundtable - The Mortgage Mess: Origins, Impacts,
And Prospects For Recovery. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 52

7.1 The Land And Its Laws And Institutions: Global Perspectives. . . . . . . 43
7.2 Emerging Methods In Land Use Planning. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 55
7.3 Metropolitan Development:
Perspectives From Asia, Europe, And North America. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 48
7.4 Do Planners Matter And Can Planning Make A Difference? . . . . . . . . 60
7.5 Urban Regeneration And Land Use Planning. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 67
7.6 Transportation And Land Use:
Making The Connection Or Losing The Plot?. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 72
7.7 Urban Sprawl: Trends And Issues In Europe And North America. . . . . 79
7.8 Housing: Bridging The Divide Between
Land Use Planning And Affordability. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 84
7.9 Assessing The Progress And Failures
Of Growth Management And Smart Growth. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 91
7.10 Planning Capacity And Participation: Forging The Links . . . . . . . . . . 80
7.11 Land Preservation: What Works,
What Does Not Work, And Is It Still A Good Idea?. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 96
7.12 Making The Place: Lessons From Asia, Europe, And North America.100
7.13 Managing The Metropolis: Lessons And Trends In The U.S.. . . . . . . 91

Track 6
International Development
And Transnational Planning

8.1 Land Use Modeling . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 43


8.2 Advancing Planning Methods . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 48
8.3 GIS Applications. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 55
8.4 Spatial Analysis. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 60
8.5 Visualization And Simulation. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 67
8.6 Analyzing The Built Environment. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 72
8.7 Modeling Land Use/Land Cover Change. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 80
8.8 Spatial Planning/Support Systems . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 84
8.9 Measuring Urban Form . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 91
8.10 Pre-Organized Session:Its All About The Evidence Stupid:
Qualitative Research In Urban Planning . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 96
8.11 Pre-Organized Session:Planning Support Systems. . . . . . . . . . . . . 106
8.12 Pre-Organized Session:National Employment Time-Series Panel. . . 36

Andreas Faludi, Netherlands, [email protected]


Keith Pezzoli, California, [email protected]
6.1 G
 lobalization Processes And Cities:
Going Beyond North/South Dialogue . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 48
6.2 Urban Governance In China. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 54
6.3 Urban Development In China. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 43
6.4 Progress In European Spatial Planning. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 60
6.5 Cross-Border Planning. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 67
6.6 Planning Culture. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 79
6.7 Networking For University-Based Research And Development. . . . . . 71
6.8 Informal Urban Development:
Policy And Planning In Critical Perspective. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 84
6.9 Spatial Planning And Community
Development In Indonesia, Thailand And South Korea. . . . . . . . . . . . . 90
6.10 Agro-Industry, Global Commodity Flows And Rural Development. . . 95
6.11 Strategies For Integrated Urban Development. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 100
6.12 Globalization, Territorality And Planning . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 110
6.13 Pre-Organized Session Dialogues:
Examining Planning Ideas In Practice. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 67
6.14 Roundtable Emergent Research Themes
On European Territorial Governance. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 88

36

Track 8
Methods For Spatial And Planning Analysis
Ming Zhang, Texas, [email protected]

Session Titles by Track At a Glance


Track 9
Planning Education

Track 12
Planning Theory And History Sessions

Howell Baum, Maryland, [email protected]


Kristina Nilsson, Sweden, [email protected]

Michael Gunder, Auckland, [email protected]

Teaching New Planning Skills And Roles . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 43


Teaching Interdisciplinarity In Planning. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 55
Planning Education Around The World. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 91
Educational Innovations. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 48
Ethical And Justice Issues In Planning Education. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 100
New Technology For Planning Education. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 60
How Students Think. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 110
Roundtable How Should Planners Try To Affect Society,
And How Can Universities Help Them Do That? Taking
Educational Outcomes Seriously. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 96
9.9 Roundtable Global Inventory Of Planning Education. . . . . . . . . . . . . 88
9.10 Roundtable Where Are We And Where Are We Going:
A Discussion Of Teaching And Research
On Environmental Justice And Just Sustainability . . . . . . . . . . . . . 106
9.11 Roundtable Whats Food Got To Do With It?
On Teaching Planners About Food Systems. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 52
9.13 Roundtable Transnational Exchange Programs. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 88

12.1 P re-Organized Session - Martin Meyerson:


Practitioner, Educator, Researcher. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
12.2 Roundtable Oxford Handbook Of Urban Planning: Sneak Preview.106
12.3 Roundtable Planning Theory: Text Or Context?. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 88
12.4 Roundtable Beyond The Ladder:
What Have We Learned About Community
Roles In US Community Development Initiatives? . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 52
12.5 Difference, Complexity And Social Learning. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 44
12.6 Spatial Doctrine And Vision. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 56
12.7 Epistemological Challenges And Diversions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 61
12.8 Justice, Morality And Trust. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 73
12.9 Public Realm And Management. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 68
12.10 Time And Space. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 80
12.11 Theories Of Transformation. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 85
12.12 Discursive Framings. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 92
12.13 Contemporary History . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 96
12.14 Actants And Technologies In History. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 101
12.15 Historical Artefacts And Their Dispossession. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 110
12.16 Informality, Process, Morality. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 106

Track 10
Planning And Human Health And Safety

Track 13: Regions And Regional Planning

9.1
9.2
9.3
9.4
9.5
9.6
9.7
9.8

Stefan Greiving, Germany, [email protected]


Lois Takahashi, California, [email protected]
10.1
10.2
10.3
10.4
10.5
10.6
10.8

Food And Supportive Environments For Health. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 44


School Siting And Childrens Physical Activity. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 49
Pre-Organized Session - School Siting And Healthy Communities. . 55
Measures And Techniques. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 61
Urban Natural Environment And Health. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 67
The Spatial Dimension Of Crime. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 72
Pre-Organized Session Issues In Post-Disaster Recovery Planning: A Global Perspective. . 115

Track 11
Planning Processes, Law, Administration,
And Dispute Resolution
Rachelle Alterman, Israel, alterman@techunix, technion.ac.il
Sanda Kaufman, Ohio, [email protected]
11.1
11.2
11.3
11.4
11.5

Compensation and Value Capture, 56


Theoretically Speaking. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 61
Making Planning Decisions. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 80
Planning In Transition Times. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 85
Roundtable - On The Future Of ADR In Planning Process
Research & Education: Engaging The Next Generation
Of Scholar/Practitioners And Researchers. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 88
11.6 Participatory Planning Decisions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 92
11.7 Participation, Politics And Law. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 96
11.8 Planning, Policies And Regulations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 101

Louis Albrecht, Belgium, [email protected]


Kate Foster, New York, [email protected]
13.1 Conference Theme Session: Bridging Regional Divides . . . . . . . . . . 44
13.2 Pre-Organized Session Shrinking Centers:
The Challenge Of Declining Cities . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 49
13.3 Pre-Organized Session Shrinking Edges:
The Challenge Of Declining Suburbs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 56
13.4 Regional Analysis Reconsidered. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 61
13.5 Reconsidering (Mega)-Regional Infrastructure . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 85
13.6 Tools Of Territorial Governance . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 68
13.7 Pre-Organized Session
Regional Resilience And Dealing With The Unforeseen. . . . . . . . . . 37
13.8 Planning The Sustainable Metropolis. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 73
13.9 Pre-Organized Session
Polycentric Governance And The Regional City. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 92
13.10 Strategy And Process In Regional Planning. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 97
13.11 Spatial Structure And Regional Outcomes. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 101
13.12 Higher-Level Policies And Regional Action. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 110
13.13 Regional Innovation Revisited. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 115
13.14 Regional Governance Revisited. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 111
13.15 Rural Regional Innovation. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 115
13.16 Roundtable - Resilience And Vulnerability
As Conceptual Frameworks For The Study Of Urban Regions . . . . 52
13.17 Roundtable - Shrinking Cities: New Label For An Old City Divide?. 88

37

At a Glance Session Titles by Track


Track 14
Transportation, Mobility, Connectivity
And Infrastructure Planning
Pantelis Skayannis, Greece, [email protected]
Ruth Steiner, Florida, [email protected]
14.1 Planning Major Infrastructure Projects. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 44
14.2 Pre-Organized Session:
Urban Freight Policy And Planning: A Comparative Analysis. . . . . . . 50
14.3 Cycle And Pedestrian Travel:
The Role Of Network Connectivity (Session 1 Of 2). . . . . . . . . . . . . . 56
14.4 Bicycle And Pedestrian Travel:
Modeling Travel Behavior (Session 2 Of 2). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 62
14.5 Understanding Travel Behavior And Transit Use . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 68
14.6 Understanding Travel Behavior:
Considering Childrens Travel And Neighborhood Characteristics. . . 73
14.7 Understanding Travel Behavior:
The Role Of Sustainable Transportation And Smart Growth. . . . . . . 81
14.8 Traffic Congestion: Perceptions, Actions And Measurement. . . . . . . 85
14.9 Private Public Partnerships:
The Public And Private Roles In Financing Infrastructure . . . . . . . . . 92
14.10 Modeling The Connection Between
Urban Form And Travel Behavior. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 97
14.11 Modeling Regional Land Use, Safety,
And Travel Patterns Using Diverse Methodologies. . . . . . . . . . . . 102
14.12 Assessing The Use Of Transit-Oriented
Development In The International Context. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 102
14.13 Planning For Transit-Oriented Development
In Urban And Suburban Contexts. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 116
14.14 Planning For The Diverse Environmental
Impacts Of Transport Project. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 45
14.15 T ransport Infrastructure And Urban Design:
Planning For Urban Centers And Urban Regions. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 50
14.16Influences On The Transit System Use:
Reliability, System Integration And Technology. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 57
14.17 T ransport Planning For The Elderly
And Special Needs Populations. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 106
14.18 S ocial, Economic, And Environmental
Costs And Benefits Of The Transport System. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 93
14.19 P lanning For The Safety Of All Users
Of The Transportation System. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 62
14.20 Intermodal Transport Planning For Airports, Rail And Trucks. . . . . 81
14.21 Tools For Assessing Land Use And Transportation Interactions. . . 86
14.22 Assessment And Participation
In The Transportation Planning Process. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 93
14.23 Land Use And Infrastructure. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 97
14.24 Roundtable: Designing New Planning Measures
Of Transportation System Performance. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 52

38

Track 15
Urban Design And Physical Planning
Taner Oc, United Kingdom, [email protected]
Steve Tiesdell, United Kingdom, [email protected]
15.1 Design Content And Quality. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 45
15.2 New Places In Changing Cities. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 50
15.3 New Urbanism Is It Maturing? . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 57
15.4 Challenges For Public Places . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 62
15.5 Reclaiming Public Spaces. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 68
15.6 Designs For Challenging Places, 74
15.7 Historic Cities Competing Through Design. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 81
15.8 Historic Cities Good Places?. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 86
15.9 Innovative Approaches. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 93
15.10 Streets Are For Walking. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 97
15.11 Cities And Places That Refuse To Die. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 102
15.12 Reassessing International Experience, 107
15.13 What Makes Public Space Public? . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 111
15.14 Tools For Urban Design . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 111
15.15 Placemaking. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 116
15.16 Managing Recovery And Change In Historic Cities. . . . . . . . . . . . 116

Track 16
Planning Ideas And Planning Practices:
A Critical Look At International Exchange
In The Planning Field
Sponsored by the journal, Planning Theory and
Practice/Routledge Publishers
Patsy Healey, Newcastle University, [email protected]
16.1 Practices Of Diffusion 1, 15
16.2 Practices Of Diffusion 2 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 57
16.3 Practices Of Diffusion 3 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 62
16.4 Recognising Cultural And Institutional Diversity 1, 15
16.5 Recognising Cultural And Institutional Diversity 2. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 74
16.6 Planning Histories And Global-Local Dynamics 1 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 86
16.7 Planning Histories And Global-Local Dynamics 2 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 81
16.10 Divided Cities. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 107
16.11 Roundtable Western Consensus-Building,
Eastern Contexts: Exploring The Challenges,
Surprises, Adaptations And Innovations. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 107
16.12 Roundtable The Ethics Of Standardising The Criteria
To Accredit International Planning Programmes:
A View From The Americas. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 52

CHRONOLOGICAL
SESSIONS,
ROUNDTABLES
AND MEETINGS

TUESDAY

Tuesday

8:009:30 am

CHRONOLOGICAL PAPER SESSIONS & ROUNDTABLES

Tuesday

Tuesday
Sessions
8:00 9:30 am
.............................................................................
1.1 Including Religion and
Women in Planning
Moderator/Discussant: MILES, Rebecca [Florida
State University] [email protected]
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Great America I
New Ethnic Places Of Worship And Planning
Challenges [1]
AGRAWAL, Sandeep K. [Ryerson University]
[email protected]
Muslims On The Fringe: Planning For An
Islamic School On The Outskirts Of Sydney,
Australia [6]
BUGG, Laura Beth [University of Sydney]
[email protected]
Urbanisation And The Un-Gendering Of
Inheritance Rights: The Case Of Tlokweng
Village, Botswana [17]
KALABAMU, Faustin T. [University of Botswana]
[email protected]

.............................................................................
2.1 Economic Policy
Moderator: LEVELT, Melika [University of
Amsterdam] [email protected]

7:00 8:00 am
.............................................................................
HPD Editorial
Advisory Board
Room: 3rd Floor, Cook

Discussant: RENSKI, Henry [University of


Massachusetts] [email protected]
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Michigan State
Land Value Taxation Revisited [52]
BOURASSA, Steven [University of Louisville]
[email protected]

New Economic Policies, The Local Level


And The State: The Case Of France [60]
DEMAZIRE, Christophe [Universite de Tours]
[email protected]
Territorialization Within The Global
Economic Flux: Possibilities For Spatial
Economic Planning Based On Commodity
Chain Analysis [83]
LEVELT, Melika [University of Amsterdam]
[email protected]

.............................................................................
3.2 Planning and Climate
Change I - Measuring and
Reducing Greenhouse Gas
Emissions
Moderator/Discussant:
WHEELER, Stephen M. [University of California,
Davis] [email protected]
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Michigan
Reducing Greenhouse Gases Along The
Transect [114]
ANDREWS, Clinton J. [Rutgers, The State
University of New Jersey] [email protected]
Planning For Climate Change: Emissions
Inventories And Government Jurisdictions
[136]
DRUMMOND, William J. [Georgia Institute of
Technology] [email protected]
YOUTIE, Jan [Georgia Institute of Technology]
[email protected]
Public Attitudes Toward Integrated
Strategies To Reduce Carbon Emissions [194]
WERNSTEDT, Kris [Virginia Polytechnic Institute
and State University] [email protected]

Supply Side And Distributional Equity Issues


In Economic Impacts Of Transportation
Investments [56]
CHATMAN, Daniel G. [Rutgers, The State
University of New Jersey] [email protected]

41

Tuesday

CHRONOLOGICAL PAPER SESSIONS & ROUNDTABLES

............................................................................. .............................................................................
3.6 Planning Perspectives on
Flooding and Floodplains

4.1 Neighborhood Governance


and Planning - Part 1

Moderator/Discussant:
ROTH, Michael [Dortmund University of
Technology] [email protected]

Moderator: The last presenter in this session.

Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Iowa


Mitigating Flood Impacts At The Local Level
In Texas And Florida [122]
BRODY, Samuel D. [Texas A&M University]
[email protected]
BERNHARDT, Sarah P. [Texas A&M University]
[email protected]
ZAHRAN, Sammy [Colorado State University]
[email protected]
HIGHFIELD, Wesley E. [Texas A&M University]
[email protected]
Analyzing The Impacts Of Typhoons And
Floods To Residential Stability In Korea [153]
IM, Jung-Soon [Kyonggi University]
[email protected]
KIM, Geunyoung [Kangnam University]
[email protected]
KIM, Jinwook [Seoul National University of
Technology] [email protected]
KIM, Sangwon [Kangnam University]
[email protected]
JUNG, Tae-Hwa [Kangnam Yniversity]
[email protected]
Mitigating Flood Damage Through Local
Comprehensive Planning In Florida [157]
KANG, Jungeun [Texas A&M University]
[email protected]
Planning Policy And Flood Risk: The
Implementation Of National Guidance Within
Local Planning [197]
WHITE, Iain [University of Manchester]
[email protected]

Discussant: VIDAL, Avis C. [Wayne State


University] [email protected]
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Illinois
Building Community Capacity And Social
Cohesion Through Resident-Led Evaluation:
The Example Of Stockwell Urban II Project
In London, UK [206]
BAILEY, Nicholas J. [University of Westminster]
[email protected]
A Collaborative-Project Memory Tool For
Participatory Planning [221]
DE LIDDO, Anna [Politecnico di Bari]
[email protected]
Bypassed By Broadband: Community
Participation In Infrastructure Planning [236]
KAYLOR, Charles H. [University of Michigan]
[email protected]
A Multi-Level Approach To Area Based
Policy. Changing Attitudes And Behaviour In
Urban Deprived Areas [250]
NIENHUIS, Ivo [University of Groningen]
[email protected]
DE ROO, Gert [University of Groningen]
[email protected]

.............................................................................
5.1 CDCs and Public-Private
Partnerships
Moderator: The last presenter in this session.
Discussant: None
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Lincolnshire II
The Role Of Housing Partnerships In
Affordable Housing [304]
GANAPATI, Sukumar [Florida International
University] [email protected]

42

8:009:30 am

A Tale Of Two Foundations: Family


Foundations And Community Development In
San Diego, California [350]
RABINOWITZ BUSSELL, Mirle [University of
California, San Diego] [email protected]
MARTINEZ-COSIO, Maria L. [University of Texas,
Arlington] [email protected]
Demand-Oriented Development Of
Affordable Housing The Example Of
Housing Co-Operatives In The Cities Of
Berlin And Erfurt, Germany [354]
SINNING, Heidi [University of Applied Sciences
Erfurt] [email protected]

.............................................................................
5.20 Inclusionary Programs
And Dealing With NIMBY
Forces
Moderator: The last presenter in this session.
Discussant: None
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Wisconsin
Inclusionary Zoning And Neighborhood
Racial And Economic Transition [329]
KONTOKOSTA, Constantine E. [Columbia
University] [email protected]
The Political Economy Of Manufactured
Home Parks: A Case Study Of Policy
Development In Oregon [359]
TREMOULET, Andree [Portland State University]
[email protected]

8:009:30 am

CHRONOLOGICAL PAPER SESSIONS & ROUNDTABLES

............................................................................. .............................................................................
6.3 Urban Development in
China
Moderator: ZHANG, Tingwei [University of
Illinois at Chicago] [email protected]
Discussant: FRIEDMANN, John [University of
British Columbia] [email protected]
Room: 10th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Huron
Decoding Chinas High-Tech Triangle:
Beijing, Shanghai, And Shenzhen [383]
FAN, Peilei [Michigan State University]
[email protected]
Building Globalization: Transnational
Architectural Production In Urban China
[410]
REN, Xuefei [Michigan State University]
[email protected]
Local State Entrepreneurialism In China:
Its Urban Representations, Institutional
Foundations And Policy Implications [421]
WANG, Lei [Columbia University]
[email protected]
Urban Infrastructure Financing And Regional
Economic Performance: The Case Of China
[425]
WU, Weiping [Virginia Commonwealth University]
[email protected]

7.1 The Land and its Laws


and Institutions: Global
Perspectives
Moderator: The last presenter in this session.
Discussant: JOURDAN, Dawn E. [University of
Florida] [email protected]
Room: 10th Floor, Marriott Hotel, OHare
Compensation Rights For Decline In Land
Values [429]
ALTERMAN, Rachelle [Technion- Israel Institute of
Technology] [email protected]

Tuesday

A New Approach To Model Real Estate


Development: Application Of Urbansim To
The Puget Sound Region [527]
WANG, Liming [University of Washington]
[email protected]
WADDELL, Paul [University of Washington]
[email protected]
To Couple Or Not To Couple: Integrating
Land-Use And Hydrologic Modeling To
Assess The Impacts Of Urbanization On
Ground-Water Sustainability [532]
ZELLNER, Moira [University of Illinois at Chicago]
[email protected]
REEVES, Howard W. [US Geological Survey]
[email protected]

.............................................................................

An Alternative Perspective On U.S.


European Property Rights And Land
Use Planning: Differences Without Any
Substance [452]
JACOBS, Harvey M. [University of WisconsinMadison] [email protected]

9.1 Teaching New Planning


Skills and Roles

.............................................................................

Discussant: BAUM, Howell S. [University of


Maryland College Park] [email protected]

8.1 Land Use Modeling


Moderator/Discussant: FERREIRA, Joseph
[Massachusetts Institute of Technology]
[email protected]
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Purdue
Spatial Interaction Model With Land Use
[487]
DENTINHO, Tomaz P. [Universidade dos Aores]
[email protected]
SILVEIRA, Paulo [University of the Azores]
[email protected]
Land Use Patterns And Access In Mexico
City [514]
ORTIZ-CHAO, Claudia G. [University College
London] [email protected],[email protected]

Moderator: FISCHLER, Raphael [McGill


University] [email protected]

Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Lincolnshire I


The Planning Expert As Stranger:
Implications For Pedagogy [534]
APOSTOL, Ileana [California State Polytechnic
University, Pomona] [email protected]
Education For Reflective Practice: Theory
And Application [539]
FISCHLER, Raphael [McGill University]
[email protected]
Internationalisation And Cooperation In
Delivering Planning Education Programmes
[540]
FRANK, Andrea I. [Cardiff University]
[email protected]

Conceptual Validation Of Real Estate


Development Processes In Spatial
Competition Modeling [526]
WALLACE, Lindsay [Auburn University]
[email protected]
CLAY, Michael J. [Auburn University]
[email protected]
HOLLEY, Paul [Auburn University]
[email protected]
HUNT, J.D. [University of Calgary]
[email protected]
ABRAHAM, J.E. [University of Calgary]
[email protected]

43

Tuesday

CHRONOLOGICAL PAPER SESSIONS & ROUNDTABLES

.............................................................................
10.1 Food and Supportive
Environments for Health
Moderator: MCLEAN, Beverly M. [University at
Buffalo] [email protected]
Discussant: None
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Minnesota
Personal And Environmental Correlates
Of Perceived Health Status And Health
Disparity [584]
LEE, Chanam [Texas A&M University]
[email protected]
KIM, Eun Jung [Texas A&M University]
[email protected]
Urban Public Markets: A Sustainable Food
Venue For Healthy Food Shopping [591]
MCLEAN, Beverly M. [University at Buffalo]
[email protected]
Does Change In The Built Environment
Influence Obesity? Results From A
Longitudinal Study [601]
RAJA, Samina [University at Buffalo]
[email protected]
MILLEN, Amy E. [University at Buffalo]
[email protected]

.............................................................................
12.5 Difference, Complexity
and Social Learning
Moderator/Discussant: HARPER, Tom
[University of Calgary] [email protected]
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Great America II
Cities Of Becoming: City-Making As
Contested Trajectories Of Difference [663]
GUNDER, Michael [University of Auckland]
[email protected]
HILLIER, Jean S. [University of Newcastle upon
Tyne] [email protected]

44

Waves Of Complexity. Theory, Models, And


Practice [680]
SILVA, Elisabete A. [University of Cambridge]
[email protected]
Spatial Justice: Towards Critical Spatial
Possibilities [682]
SOURELI, Konstantina [University of California,
Los Angeles] [email protected]
Planning, A Genre Approach [653]
DE HAAS, Wim [Ministry of Agriculture,
Netherlands] [email protected]

.............................................................................
13.1 Conference Theme
Session: Bridging Regional
Divides
Moderator/Discussant:
WU, Chung-Tong [University of Western Sydney]
[email protected]
Room: 10th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Water Tower
Costs Of Suburbanization: Effects Of
Residential Relocation On Household
Welfare Measures In Shanghai [710]
DAY, Jennifer E. [University of California,
Berkeley] [email protected]
CERVERO, Robert [University of California,
Berkeley] [email protected]
Booming Economies, Growing Inequalities:
Urban Polarization In The 2000s [715]
DOUSSARD, Marc [University of Illinois at
Chicago] [email protected]
Suburbs, Sprawl, Planning And Spatial
Justice As Viewed Through Developments In
Gauteng City Region, South Africa [732]
MABIN, Alan [University of the Witwatersrand]
[email protected]

8:009:30 am

............................................................................
14.1 Planning Major
Infrastructure Projects
Moderator: The last presenter in this session.
Discussant: None
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Northwestern
Placing The Megaregion In A Global
Context [786]
DOYLE, Jessica L. [Georgia Institute of
Technology] [email protected]
ROSS, Catherine L. [Georgia Institute of
Technology] [email protected]
BARRINGER, Jason [Georgia Institute of
Technology] [email protected]
LEONE DE NIE, Karen [Georgia Institute of
Technology] [email protected]
WOO, Myungje [Georgia Institute of Technology]
[email protected]
The Community Infrastructure Levy: A
Game Theoretic Analysis Of Managing
Infrastructure Provision Under Englands
Reformed Spatial Planning System [821]
LORD, Alexander D. [University of Liverpool]
[email protected]
Testing Transaction Cost Theory On Public
Goods [878]
WHITTINGTON, Jan [University of Washington]
[email protected]
Attempting To Bridge The Urban Divide In
Cities Of The Developing World. The Case
Of Lima, Peru [791]
FERNANDEZ-MALDONADO, Ana Maria [Delft
University of Technology] [email protected]

8:009:30 am

CHRONOLOGICAL PAPER SESSIONS & ROUNDTABLES

.............................................................................
14.14 Planning for the Diverse
Environmental Impacts of
Transport Project

............................................................................
15.1 Design Content and
Quality

Moderator/Discussant: STEINER, Ruth L.


[University of Florida] [email protected]

Moderator/Discussant: SIEMBIEDA, William J.


[California Polytechnic State University]
[email protected]

Room: 10th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Navy Pier

Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Ohio State

Unpacking Preference: A Bayesian/Social


Learning Approach To Auto Ownership
Decisions [875]
WEINBERGER, Rachel [University of Pennsylvania]
[email protected]
GOETZKE, Frank [University of Louisville]
[email protected]

Assessment Of The Design Content In Urban


Design Plans In Us Cities [886]
AL-DOURI, Firas A. [University of Nevada, Las
Vegas] [email protected]

Promoting Sustainability Through


Transportation Infrastructure: Is There A
Disconnect Between Policy And Design?
[877]
WHITE, Stacey S. [University of Kansas]
[email protected]
JOHNSON, Bonnie J. [University of Kansas]
[email protected]
Transportation Impacts On Childhood
Asthma Disparities [819]
LI, Jianling [The University of Texas at Arlington]
[email protected]
Evaluating The Cumulative Effects Of
Transport Projects [801]
HULL, Angela [Heriot-Watt University]
[email protected]

Tuesday

Defining And Delivering Quality In Urban


Environments [897]
CARMONA, Matthew [University College London]
[email protected]
DE MAGALHAES, Claudio S. [University College
London] [email protected]
Design Quality, Property Values And The
Urban Environment [899]
DE MAGALHAES, Claudio S. [University College
London] [email protected]
CARMONA, Matthew [University College London]
[email protected]
EDWARDS, Michael [University College London]
[email protected]
From Modernism To Modernism: A PostModernist Critique Of Fifty Years In Urban
Design Education And Practice [916]
MINETT, John [Independent Researcher]
[email protected]

45

Tuesday

CHRONOLOGICAL PAPER SESSIONS & ROUNDTABLES

9:4511:30 am

Tuesday
Sessions
9:45 11:30 am
............................................................................. .............................................................................
1.2 Gender Inclusion and
Planning Processes

2.2 Workforce and Social


Issues

Moderator/Discussant: SWEET, Elizabeth L.


[University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign]
[email protected]

Moderator: ISKANDER, Natasha [New York


University] [email protected]

Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Great America I


Respecting Gender And Culture: Dilemmas
Of Representation In Community Planning [3]
BEEBEEJAUN, Yasminah [University of Manchester]
[email protected]
GRIMSHAW, Lucy [University of the West of
England] [email protected]
Diversity Management In Spatial
Development: A New Approach Or Just
Changing The Perspective In Austrias
Planning Practice [13]
HIRSCHLER, Petra [Vienna University of
Technology] [email protected]
NEFF, Sabine [Vienna University of Technology]
[email protected]

.............................................................................
Journal Progress in Planning
Editorial Board Meeting
Room: 10th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Huron Room

.............................................................................
ACSP Special Tribute
Session Martin Meyerson:
Practitioner, Educator,
Researcher
Moderator: BIRCH, Eugenie L. [University of
Pennsylvania] [email protected]
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Great America II

46

How Can Equality Impact Assessments


Promote Equality? [37]
REEVES, Dory E. [University of Auckland]
[email protected]
KILOH, Bruce [Strathclyde Partnership for
Transport] [email protected]
HOWATT, Hilary [Howatt Associates] info@
hilaryhowatt.com,
Grassroots Womens Participation In Local
Governance: A Gender Budget Initiative In
Istanbul, Turkey [45]
YONDER, Ayse [Pratt Institute] [email protected]
(Re)Imagining The Collective Action:
Women, Inclusion And Urban Experience [29]
MONNO, Valeria [Politecnico di Bari]
[email protected]

Discussant:
MULLIN, John R. [University of Massachusetts
Amherst] [email protected]
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Michigan State
Informal Work And Protest: The Interactive
Effects Of Space, Production Practices, And
Immigration Law On Immigrant Employment
[76]
ISKANDER, Natasha [New York University]
[email protected]
Employer Sponsored Public Transit
Incentives In Atlanta, Ga: Winners, Losers,
Users, And Latent Demand [82]
LACHAPELLE, Ugo [University of British Columbia]
[email protected]
FRANK, Lawrence D. [University of British
Columbia] [email protected]
Hidden Talent: Skill Formation And Labor
Market Incorporation Of Latino Immigrants
In The United States [85]
LOWE, Nichola [University of North Carolina at
Chapel Hill] [email protected]
HAGAN, Jacqueline [University of North Carolina
at Chapel Hill] [email protected]
ISKANDER, Natasha N. [New York University]
[email protected]

9:4511:30 am

CHRONOLOGICAL PAPER SESSIONS & ROUNDTABLES

Tuesday

............................................................................. ............................................................................. .............................................................................


3.1 Pre-organized Session
Planning for Reuse of
Contaminated Properties
Moderator: WERNSTEDT, Kris [Virginia
Polytechnic Institute and State University]
[email protected]
Discussant: MEYER, Peter B. [University of
Louisville] [email protected]
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Iowa
Brownfield Redevelopment As Economic
Development: Re-Examining Goals,
Objectives And Outcomes [130]
COFFIN, Sarah L. [Saint Louis University]
[email protected]
GREEN LEIGH, Nancey [Georgia Institute of
Technology] [email protected]
The Role Of Collaborative Planning In The
Redevelopment Of Contaminated Sites [172]
MARSH, Eric L. [University of Texas at Austin]
[email protected]
Small Planning Disaster: An Environmental
Planning Case Study [181]
PAGE, G. W. [University at Buffalo]
[email protected]

.............................................................................
3.3 Planning and Climate
Change II - Community Level
Considerations
Moderator/Discussant:
BOSWELL, Mike [California Polytechnic State
University] [email protected]

4.2 Neighborhood Governance


and Planning - Part 2

5.2 Community Development


Techniques

Moderator: The last presenter in this session.

Moderator: The last presenter in this session.

Discussant: None

Discussant: None

Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Illinois

Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Lincolnshire II

Who Is Governing Neighbourhoods? [254]


PILL, Madeleine [Cardiff University]
[email protected]

An Affordable Housing Program In Texas:


Learning From The Developing World [308]
GIUSTI, Cecilia H. [Texas A&M University]
[email protected]

Governance And ParticipationEmpowerment And Institutional


Legitimization In A Critical Neighbourhood
[274]
VASCONCELOS, Lia T. [New University of Lisbon]
[email protected]
The Battle For Park East: Negotiating Social
And Economic Inclusiveness In Downtown
Milwaukee [284]
ZUPAN, Sandra [University of WisconsinMilwaukee] [email protected]

Rural Land Banking: The Possible Extension


Of A Urban Redevelopment Strategy To
A New Market For The Construction Of
Affordable Housing [323]
JOURDAN, Dawn E. [University of Florida]
[email protected]
VAN ZANDT, Shannon [Texas A&M University]
[email protected]
DIY Activity In A Post-Soviet Housing
Market: A Socio-Spatial Analysis Of Vilnius,
Lithuania [339]
MILSTEAD, Terence M. [Florida State University]
[email protected]
MILES, Rebecca [Florida State University]
[email protected]
The Unrealized Potential Of Heritage
Tourism As A Community Development Tool
For Our Urban Neighborhoods [356]
SMITH, Sheri L. [Kansas State University]
[email protected]
BRADFORD, Berkita [North Carolina Central
University] [email protected]

Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Michigan


Effect Of Planning On Climate Change
Management [142]
GROVER, Himanshu [Texas A&M University]
[email protected]
BRODY, Samuel D. [Texas A&M University]
[email protected]
ZAHRAN, Sammy [Colorado State University]
[email protected]
Identifying The Obstacles To CommunityLevel Climate Protection Planning [187]
RANDOLPH, John [Virginia Polytechnic Institute
and State University] [email protected]
PITT, Damian [Virginia Polytechnic Institute and
State University] [email protected]

47

Tuesday

CHRONOLOGICAL PAPER SESSIONS & ROUNDTABLES

.............................................................................
6.1 Session - Globalization
Processes and Cities: Going
Beyond North/South Dialogue
Moderator/Discussant: WU, Weiping [Virginia
Commonwealth University] [email protected]

Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Wisconsin
Place Production In Globalizing Middle
Eastern Cities [412]
SALAMA, Hussam H. [University of Southern
California] [email protected]
Leading Localities As If Communities Matter
[391]
HAMBLETON, Robin [University of the West of
England] [email protected]
The Globalization Of Planning Models A
Critique [419]
VAINER, Carlos B. [Federal University of Rio de
Janeiro] [email protected]

Planning And Density Patterns In The Four


Largest Canadian Metropolitan Regions:
Continental Trends And Regional Specificity
[444]
FILION, Pierre [University of Waterloo]
[email protected]
BUNTING, Trudi [University of Waterloo]
[email protected]

.............................................................................

Strategic Spatial Planning And Polycentric


Development: A View On Beijing [477]
TANG, Yan [Tsinghua University, China;
Technical University of Dortmund, Germany]
[email protected]
KUNZMANN, Klaus R. [Technical University of
Dortmund, Germany] [email protected]

Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Lincolnshire I

.............................................................................
8.2 Advancing Planning
Methods
Moderator: The last presenter in this session.
Discussant: None

.............................................................................

Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Purdue

7.3 Metropolitan
Development: Perspectives
from Asia, Europe, and North
America

Bridging The Gap Between Vision And


Reality: A Methodological Assessment
Tool For Long-Term Normative Planning
Implementation [493]
FRENKEL, SR., Amnon [Technion- Israel Institute
of Technology] [email protected]
YECHIELY, JR., Ofra [Technion- Israel Institute of
Technology] [email protected]

Moderator: The last presenter in this session.


Discussant: HAGUE, Cliff [UK ESPON Contact
Point] [email protected]
Room: 10th Floor, Marriott Hotel, OHare
Urban Planning At The Stages Of The
Metropolization: Issues, Actors And
Strategies In Marseilles And Montreal [440]
DOUAY, Nicolas [Universit de Paris-Diderot]
[email protected]
Metropolitan Government And Governance
In The Dutch Randstad: New Perspectives
And Lessons From Abroad [443]
EVERS, David [Netherlands Institute for Spatial
Research] [email protected]
DE VRIES, Jochem [University of Amsterdam]
[email protected]

48

9:4511:30 am

Methods Of Chronographic Analysis: A Case


Study [523]
STABILINI, Stefano P. [Politecnico di Milano]
[email protected]
CALZA, Giampiero [Politecnico di Milano]
[email protected]
Measuring Spatial Planning Outcomes:
Conceptual And Methodological Challenges
[528]
WONG, Cecilia [University of Manchester]
[email protected]
WATKINS, Craig [University of Sheffield]
[email protected]

9.4 Educational Innovations


Moderator: SCHOENWANDT, Walter [University
of Stuttgart] [email protected]
Discussant: PEEL, Deborah [University of
Liverpool] [email protected]

Planning Education Put To The Test:


Measurably Better Results In Solving
Complex Problems [541]
HEMBERGER, Christoph [University of Stuttgart]
[email protected]
GRUNAU, Jens-Peter [University of Stuttgart]
[email protected]
SCHOENWANDT, Walter [University of Stuttgart]
[email protected]
VOERMANEK, Katrin [University of Stuttgart]
[email protected]
SAIFOULLINE, Rinat [HTW Dresden
University of Applied Sciences]
[email protected]
VON DER WETH, Ruediger [HTW Dresden
University of Applied Sciences] weth@wiwi.
htw-dresden.de
Teaching Planning Practice: Assessing The
Mexico City Metrobus [556]
SANDS, Gary [Wayne State University]
[email protected]
REESE, Laura A. [Wayne State University]
[email protected]
Curriculum On Urban Planning And
Management In A Geo-information Science
Context: A Balancing Act [537]
DOPHEIDE, Emile [International Institute for Geoinformation Science and Earth Observation, ITC]
[email protected]
BRUSSEL, Mark [International Institute for Geoinformation Science and Earth Observation, ITC]
[email protected]
SLIUZAS, Richard [International Institute for Geoinformation Science and Earth Observation, ITC]
[email protected]
AMER, Sherif [International Institute for Geoinformation Science and Earth Observation, ITC]
[email protected]
TEN DAM, Ineke [International Institute for Geoinformation Science and Earth Observation, ITC]
[email protected]
BLOK, Connie [International Institute for Geoinformation Science and Earth Observation, ITC]
[email protected]

9:4511:30 am

CHRONOLOGICAL PAPER SESSIONS & ROUNDTABLES

Tuesday

............................................................................. ............................................................................. .............................................................................


10.2 School Siting and
Childrens Physical Activity
Moderator/Discussant: CHATMAN, Daniel G.
[Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey]
[email protected]
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Minnesota
Childhood Mobility And The Journey To
School In Urban And Suburban Spaces
[595]
MITRA, Raktim [University of Toronto]
[email protected]
BULIUNG, Ron [University of Toronto]
[email protected]
FAULKNER, Guy [University of Toronto]
[email protected]
HESS, Paul M. [University of Toronto]
[email protected]
The Association Between School Siting
And Adolescent Active Travel And Physical
Activity [603]
SLATER, Sandy [University of Illinois at Chicago]
[email protected]
EWING, Reid [University of Maryland College
Park] [email protected]
CHALOUPKA, Frank J. [University of Illinois at
Chicago] [email protected]
A Qualitative GIS Approach To Mapping
Urban Neighborhoods With Children To
Promote Physical Activity And Child-Friendly
Community Planning [607]
WRIDT, Pamela [University of Colorado at Denver]
[email protected]
Environmental Safety, Active Commuting To
School, And Childrens Health: How Are They
Related? [608]
ZHU, Xuemei [Texas A&M University]
[email protected]

12.1 Session - Martin


Meyerson: Practitioner,
Educator, Researcher
Moderator/Discussant:
BIRCH, Eugenie L. [University of Pennsylvania]
[email protected]
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Great America II
Martin Meyerson And The Joint Center For
Urban Studies Of MIT And Harvard [647]
BIRCH, Eugenie L. [University of Pennsylvania]
[email protected]
Martin Meyerson: Building The Middle
Range Bridge To Educate Professional
Planners [656]
FELD, Marcia M. [University of Rhode Island]
[email protected]
How Well Does Politics, Planning And
Public Interest Stand The Tests Of Time [668]
LANDIS, John [University of California, Berkeley]
[email protected]
Martin Meyerson: Biography Of A Planner
[673]
LIANG, Sisi [University of Pennsylvania]
[email protected]
BIRCH, Eugenie L. [University of Pennsylvania]
[email protected]

13.2 Pre-organized Session


- Shrinking Centers: The
Challenge of Declining Cities
Moderator: MARTINEZ-FERNANDEZ, Cristina
[University of Western Sydney]
[email protected]
Discussant:
WIECHMANN, Thorsten [Brandenburg Technical
University] [email protected]
Room: 10th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Water Tower
Bridging The Divide In Capitalist And PostSocialist Shrinking Cities [733]
MARTINEZ-FERNANDEZ, Cristina [Urban
Research Centre, University of Western Sydney]
[email protected]
RECKIEN, Diana [Potsdam Institute for
Climate Impact Research, Potsdam,]
[email protected]
Is The Role Of The Planner Changing In
Shrinking Cities? A Comparison Of Findings
From Youngstown, Ohio And Sudbury,
Ontario [758]
SCHATZ, Laura K. [University of Waterloo]
[email protected]
Reuse Of Urban Potential Sites With
Services In The Context Of Shrinking Cities
The Example Berlin [759]
SCHUELER, Daniela [Humboldt University, Berlin]
[email protected]
Shrinkage And Expansion In Peri-Urban
China: Case Study From Jiangsu Province
[767]
WU, Chung-Tong [University of Western Sydney]
[email protected]
ZHANG, Xiao-Lin [Nanjing Normal University]
[email protected]
CUI, Gong-Hao [Nanjing University]
[email protected]
CUI, Shu-Ping [Jiangsu Construction Commission]
[email protected]

49

Tuesday

CHRONOLOGICAL PAPER SESSIONS & ROUNDTABLES

............................................................................. .............................................................................
14.2 Pre-organized Session:
Urban Freight Policy and
Planning: A Comparative
Analysis

14.15 Transport Infrastructure


and Urban Design; Planning
for Urban Centers and Urban
Regions

Moderator/Discussant: OBRIEN, Thomas


[California State University, Long Beach]
[email protected]

Moderator/Discussant: RENNE, John L.


[University of New Orleans] [email protected]

Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Northwestern


Truck Driver Environmental And Energy
AttitudesAn Exploratory Analysis [852]
SCHWEITZER, Lisa A. [University of Southern
California] [email protected]
The Elusive Quest: Urban Goods Movement
Policy In Canada And The United States [797]
HALL, Peter V. [Simon Fraser University]
[email protected]
OBRIEN, Thomas [California State University,
Long Beach] [email protected]
tSolving Multimodal Freight Challenges In
The Chicago And Upper Midwest Regions
[771]
WAIDLEY, Greg [ University of WisconsinMadison] [email protected]
BITTNER, Jason J. [University of WisconsinMadison] [email protected]
ADAMS, Teresa M. [University of WisconsinMadison] [email protected]

Room: 10th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Navy Pier


Taking It To The Streets: Traffic Engineering
Versus Urban Design In The Planning Of
Urban Boulevards [855]
SERDA, Daniel [University of Kansas]
[email protected]
Conceiving Infrastructure As A Mode Of
Urban Design [873]
VAN ACKER, Maarten A. [Katholieke Universiteit
Leuven] [email protected]

Planning And Design For Sports-Anchored


Districts: The Boston Experience [912]
LONG, Judith G. [Harvard University]
[email protected]
Theoretical Debate On Gated Community
(GC): Genesis, Controversies, And The Way
Forward [953]
XU, Miao [Cardiff University] [email protected]
YANG, Zhen [Cardiff University]
[email protected]

.............................................................................
16.1 Session Sponsored by the
Journal Planning Theory and
Practice/Routledge Publishers:
Practices of Diffusion 1
Moderator/Discussant: UPTON, Robert [Royal
Town Planning Institute] [email protected]
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Indiana

Rehabilitate The Road: How A Road Project


Become The Heart Of An Urban Project? The
Case Of Marseille (France) [818]
LEHEIS, Stphanie [Universit Paris Est]
[email protected]

Global Exchabge And Local Specificities


[966]
HEALEY, Patsy [Newcastle University]
[email protected]

Does Sprawl Affect Agglomeration


Economies? [828]
MATSUO, Miwa [Harvard University]
[email protected]

Poverty Truths: The Ethico-Politics Of


Knowledge In The New Global Order Of
Development [976]
ROY, Ananya [University of California, Berkeley]
[email protected]

.............................................................................
15.2 New Places in Changing
Cities
Moderator/Discussant:
NEMETH, Jeremy [University of Colorado at
Denver] [email protected]
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Ohio State
The Challenge Of An Aging Society: Using
Planning, Zoning And Design To Assist The
Elderly To Age In Place [894]
BOYLE, Robin M. [Wayne State University]
[email protected]
POWELL, Marlynne [Wayne State University]
[email protected]

50

9:4511:30 am

Diffusion, Transformation And Deployment Of


Planning Concepts: The Progress Of Urban
Sustainability And Compact Cities Ideas In
Japan [979]
SORENSEN, Andre [University of Toronto]
[email protected]

12:001:00 pm

CHRONOLOGICAL PAPER SESSIONS & ROUNDTABLES

Tuesday

Tuesday
Sessions
12:00 1:00 pm
............................................................................. .............................................................................
AESOP Thematic Group:
French and British Planning
Studies
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Purdue

3.24 Roundtable - The FoodEnergy-Climate Change Nexus


[121]

.............................................................................

Moderator: BORN, Branden M. [University of


Washington] [email protected]

AESOP Thematic Group:


Planning and Complexity

Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Iowa

Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Wisconsin

JUHASZ, Mark [University of Guelph]


[email protected]

.............................................................................
AESOP Thematic Group: New
Technologies in Planning
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Ohare

.............................................................................
AESOP Thematic Group:
Planning Law and Property
Rights

HUANG, Sonya [MIT] [email protected]

.............................................................................
4.19 Roundtable Technologies and the
Transformation of Planning
Practice: Assessing Gains/
Losses and Charting Next
Steps [257]

Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Michigan State

11:30 am 1:00 pm
.............................................................................

.............................................................................
AESOP Thematic Group:
French and British Planning
Studies

Journal of the American


Planning Association [JAPA]
Editorial Board Meeting

Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Purdue

Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Minnesota

ACSP Planners of Color


Interest Group [POCIG]
Business Meeting

.............................................................................
Planning Theory & Practice
Editorial Board Meeting
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Navy Pier

.............................................................................

Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Ohio State

.............................................................................

GPEAN Presidents Gathering

ACSP Faculty Womens


Interest Group [FWIG]
Business Meeting

Room: Marriott Hotel, Presidential Suite 4524

Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Michigan

.............................................................................

Moderator: RAMASUBRAMANIAN, Laxmi


[Hunter College, The City University of New York]
[email protected]
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Illinois
FERREIRA, Joseph [Massachussetts Institute of
Technology] [email protected]
KLOSTERMAN, Richard [The University of Akron]
[email protected]
SHIFFER, Michael [University of Illinois at
Chicago] [email protected]
YEH, Anthony G. [Centre of Urban
Planning and Environmental Management]
[email protected]

51

Tuesday

CHRONOLOGICAL PAPER SESSIONS & ROUNDTABLES

12:001:00 pm

............................................................................. ............................................................................. .............................................................................


5.22 Roundtable - The
Mortgage Mess: Origins,
Impacts, and Prospects for
Recovery [319]
Moderator: IMMERGLUCK, Dan [Georgia Institute
of Technology] [email protected]
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Lincolnshire II
ASHTON, Philip [University of Illinois at Chicago]
[email protected]
SCHWARTZ, Alex F. [New School University]
[email protected]
MANUEL, Aalbers [Columbia University]
[email protected]

.............................................................................
9.11 Roundtable - Whats
Food Got To Do With It? On
Teaching Planners About Food
Systems [547]
Moderator: NASR, Joseph L. [Ryerson University]
[email protected]
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Lincolnshire I
KAUFMAN, Jerome [University of WisconsinMadison] [email protected]
POTHUKUCHI, Kameshwari [Wayne State
University] [email protected]
RAJA, Samina [University at Buffalo]
[email protected]

52

12.4 Roundtable - Beyond the


Ladder: What Have We Learned
About Community Roles in
US Community Development
Initiatives? [650]
Moderator: BRATT, Rachel G. [Tufts University]
[email protected]
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Great America II
REARDON, Kenneth M. [Cornell University]
[email protected]
KRUMHOLZ, Norman [Cleveland State University]
[email protected]
SMITH, Janet L. [University of Illinois at Chicago]
[email protected]
BATES, Lisa K. [University of Illinois at UrbanaChampaign] [email protected]
LAI, Clement K. [Cornell University]
[email protected]

.............................................................................

13.16 Roundtable - Resilience


And Vulnerability As
Conceptual Frameworks For
The Study Of Urban Regions
[744]

14.24 Roundtable - Designing


New Planning Measures
of Transportation System
Performance [876]
Moderator: WELLAR, Barry [University of
Ottawa] [email protected]
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Northwestern
SEN, Lalita [Texas Southern University]
[email protected]
PAN, Qisheng [Texas Southern University]
[email protected]
HULL, Angela [Heriot Watt University]
[email protected]
WOUDSMA, Clarence [University of Waterloo]
[email protected]
BARSOTTI, Ed [League of Illinois Bicyclists]
[email protected]

.............................................................................
16.12 Roundtable - The Ethics
of Standardising the Criteria
to Accredit International
Planning Programmes: A View
from the Americas [984]

Moderator: MUELLER, Bernhard [Technical


University at Dresden] [email protected]

Moderator: VZQUEZ-CASTILLO, M. Teresa


[California State University, Northridge]
[email protected]

Room: 10th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Water Tower

Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Indiana

MORROW-JONES, Hazel A. [Ohio State


University] [email protected]
FOSTER, Kathryn A. [University at Buffalo]
[email protected]
SCHIAPPACASSE, Paulina [Technical University
at Dresden] Paulina.Schiappacasse@mailbox.
tu-dresden.de
PENDALL, Rolf [Cornell University]
[email protected]

VAINER, Carlos B. [Universidade Federal do Rio


de Janeiro - Instituto de Pesquisa e Planejamen]
[email protected]
IRAZABAL, Clara E. [Columbia University]
[email protected]
BETANCUR, John J. [University of Illinois at
Chicago] [email protected]
ARCHER, Carol [University of Technology,
Jamaica] [email protected]
ZHANG, Tingwei [University of Illinois at Chicago]
[email protected]
UPTON, Robert [Royal Town Planning Institute]
[email protected]

1:152:45 pm

CHRONOLOGICAL PAPER SESSIONS & ROUNDTABLES

Tuesday

Tuesday
Sessions
1:15 2:45 pm
............................................................................. .............................................................................
1.3 Skills to Bridge Gendered,
Racial, and Ethnic Divides
Moderator/Discussant: THOMAS, June M.
[University of Michigan] [email protected]
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Great America I
The Skills Agenda And The Competencies
For Managing Diversity And Space [11]
ELLIS, Geraint [Queens Univeristy Belfast]
[email protected]
MURTAGH, Brendan J. [Queens University
Belfast] [email protected]

2.3 Workforce Development


Moderator: NELSON, Marla [University of New
Orleans] [email protected]
Discussant: WHITE, Sammis [University of
Wisconsin-Milwaukee] [email protected]
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Michigan State
The Informality And Spatiality Of Skill
Formation Of Digital Content Industry
Workers [78]
JUNG, Namji [University of Sydney] namji@arch.
usyd.edu.au

Bridging The Divide: Who Plans Affects


What Is Planned [34]
PETRIE, Pattsi [University of Illinois at UrbanaChampaign] [email protected]
REEVES, Dory E. [university of auckland]
[email protected]

Taking The High Road Or Taking Care Of


Business? Debating Employer Engagement
In Workforce Development [99]
SCHROCK, Greg [University of Illinois at Chicago]
[email protected]

Higher Education, Diversity And The Effort


To Increase Underrepresented Groups In
Planning Schools [44]
WUBNEH, Mulatu [East Carolina University]
[email protected]

Job Chains And Career Ladders In The


Health Care Sector [108]
WOLF-POWERS, Laura [University of
Pennsylvania] [email protected]
NELSON, Marla [University of New Orleans]
[email protected]

53

Tuesday

CHRONOLOGICAL PAPER SESSIONS & ROUNDTABLES

.............................................................................
3.4 Planning and Climate
Change III - Governance
Considerations
Moderator/Discussant:
FRANK, Nancy [University of WisconsinMilwaukee] [email protected]
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Michigan

The Discourse Of Implementing The


Convention Of Biodiversity - Planning
Implications From A Swedish Perspective
[135]
DOVLN, Sylvia [Royal Institute of Technology
(KTH)] [email protected]

.............................................................................

Urbanizing Habitat Conservation Using


Urban Ecology Landscape Interventions [193]
VASISHTH, Ashwani [California State University,
Northridge] [email protected]

Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Lincolnshire II

Addressing Climate Change: Australian And


U.S. Planning Responses [145]
HAMIN, Elisabeth M. [University
of Massachusetts Amherst]
[email protected]
GURRAN, Nicole [University of Sydney] ngurran@
mail.usyd.edu.au

.............................................................................

Climate Change Governance Potentials


And Restrictions Of Actor Cooperation In
Metropolitan Areas [163]
KNIELING, Joerg [HafenCity University Hamburg]
[email protected]

Discussant: BAILEY, Nicholas J. [University of


Westminster] [email protected]

Forecast New Jersey: The Local Land Use


Climate For Change - Legal And Institutional
Barriers To Implementing A Climate Change
Agenda [189]
SCHECHTMAN, Judd [Rutgers, The State
University of New Jersey] [email protected]
Californias Climate Change Planning: Policy
Innovation And Structural Hurdles [196]
WHEELER, Stephen M. [University of California,
Davis] [email protected]

.............................................................................
3.8 Habitat and Biodiversity
Planning
Moderator/Discussant: MARCUCCI, Daniel J.
[East Carolina University] [email protected]
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Iowa
Modeling The Impacts Of Land Use Change
On Wildlife Habitat Fragmentation And
Genetic Diversity [120]
BENDOR, Todd K. [University of North Carolina at
Chapel Hill] [email protected]
WESTERVELT, James [U.S. Army Corps of
Engineers] [email protected].
mil
AURAMBOUT, Jean-Phillippe [Australian
Department of Primary Industries] Jeanphilippe.
[email protected]
MEYER, William [U.S. Army Corps of Engineers]
[email protected]

54

1:152:45 pm

4.3 Planning and Governance


Reform in UK and New
Zealand
Moderator: The last presenter in this session.

Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Illinois


Designing Institutional Arrangements
For Community Governance: Antipodean
Reflections On Experiences And Perceptions
Of Participants In Community Engagement
Processes [246]
MEMON, Pyar Ali [Lincoln University]
[email protected]
Devolution In The UK: Issues Of Community
Planning And Implications For Institutional
De-Congestion? [253]
PEMBERTON, Simon [University of Liverpool]
[email protected]
From Land Use To Spatial Planning:
Reflections On The First Four Years Of
Planning Reform In England [264]
SHAW, David P. [University of Liverpool]
[email protected]
LORD, Alexander D. [University of Liverpool]
[email protected]
Warped And Pluralized Planning: The Spirit
And Purpose Of Planning In Complex Times
[267]
TEWDWR-JONES, Mark [University College
London] [email protected]

5.3 Hope VI & Public Housing


Moderator: The last presenter in this session..
Discussant: None

Public Housing Redux: Clevelands MixedIncome Hope VI [322]


JONES, Mittie D. [Cleveland State University]
[email protected]
The Behavioural Pattern Of Neighbour
Relations In Singapore Public Housing [372]
YUEN, Belinda [National University of Singapore]
[email protected]
From Federal Policy To Urban Strategy:
Trajectories Of Public Housing In U.S. Cities
[328]
KLEIT, Rachel G. [University of Washington]
[email protected]
PAGE, Stephen B. [University of Washington]
[email protected]

.............................................................................
6.2 Urban Governance in
China
Moderator: WANG, Lei [Columbia University]
[email protected]
Discussant: MAJOOR, Stan J. [The University of
Hong Kong] [email protected]
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Wisconsin
Community-Building, Governance, PlaceMaking? The Shequ Construction Program In
China [384]
FRIEDMANN, John [University of British
Columbia] [email protected]
SHIEH, Leslie [University of British Columbia]
[email protected] Model Of Urban
Governance And Rights-Based Community
Conflicts: Recent Property Practices In City
Redevelopment In Urban China [414]
SHIH, Mi [Rutgers, The State University of New
Jersey] [email protected]
Developing The Chinese Planning TheoryPlanning Theory In The Age Of Diversity [426]
ZHANG, Tingwei [University of Illinois at Chicago]
[email protected]

1:152:45 pm

CHRONOLOGICAL PAPER SESSIONS & ROUNDTABLES

Tuesday

............................................................................. ............................................................................. .............................................................................


7.2 Emerging Methods in Land
Use Planning
Moderator: The last presenter in this session.
Discussant: SCHMIDT, Stephan [Cornell
University] [email protected]
Room: 10th Floor, Marriott Hotel, OHare
Imagining Community: Using SPI In
Development Planning [446]
GROSSARDT, Ted [University of Kentucky]
[email protected]
BLANDFORD, Ben [University of Kentucky]
[email protected]
RIPY, John [University of Kentucky] [email protected]
BAILEY, Keiron [University of Arizona]
[email protected]
Growth Management Evaluation Using
DMSP-OLS Nighttime Lights [458]
LEWIS, Selma [University of Maryland College
Park] [email protected]
LEWIS, Rebecca [University System of Maryland]
[email protected]
KNAAP, Gerrit [University of Maryland College
Park] [email protected]
The Plan-Process-Results (PPR)
Methodology For Planning Evaluation [465]
OLIVEIRA, Vitor M. [University of Oporto]
[email protected]
PINHO, Paulo [University of Oporto]
[email protected]
Using Deterministic Models For Long Range
Future Growth In An Urban/Rural Watershed
[474]
SPERRY, Stephen L. [Clemson University]
[email protected]

8.3 GIS Applications


Moderator/Discussant:
YANG, Jiawen [Georgia Institute of Technology]
[email protected]
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Purdue
Discovering Sustainable Urban
Neighborhoods [483]
BOSSARD, Earl G. [San Jose State University]
[email protected]
Optimizing Urban Greenways In Germanys
Ruhr Metropolis [492]
FINKE, Roland [Dortmund University of
Technology] [email protected]
Using GIS To Assess The Viability Of
Agritourism: A Case Study Of Southeastern
Michigan [524]
STOCKMANN, Deirdra [University of Michigan]
[email protected]
VANKA, Salila [University of Michigan]
[email protected]

.............................................................................
9.2 Teaching
Interdisciplinarity in Planning
Moderator/Discussant:
HOCH, Charles [University of Illinois at Chicago]
[email protected]
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Lincolnshire I
Collaboration Between Architects And
Planners In An Urban Design Studio:
Potential For Interdisciplinary Learning [542]
HIRT, Sonia A. [Virginia Polytechnic Institute and
State University] [email protected]
LUESCHER, Andreas [Bowling Green State
University] [email protected]
Studio Teaching Across The Disciplines,
From Art And Architecture To Urban
Designers And Planners [566]
ZEHNER, Robert [University of New South Wales]
[email protected]

10.3 Pre-organized Session


- School Siting and Healthy
Communities
Moderator: MILES, Rebecca [Florida State
University] [email protected]
Discussant: None.
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Minnesota
How Important Is Travel Mode To School In
Parents Housing Decisions? Connecting
School Siting, Residential Location Choice,
And School Travel [578]
FUKAHORI, Sayaka [University of Oregon]
[email protected]
YANG, Yizhao [University of Oregon]
[email protected]
SCHLOSSBERG, Marc A. [University of Oregon]
[email protected]
JOHNSON, Bethany [University of Oregon]
[email protected]
PARKER, Robert G. [University of Oregon]
[email protected]
Perceived School Quality And Its Influence
On Monetary Housing Value: Urban
Inequalities And The Health Of Communities
[580]
GIBSON, Huston J. [Florida State University]
[email protected]
Making The Case For School Concurrency
[590]
MARIA, Cahill [University of Florida]
[email protected]
STEINER, Ruth L. [University of Florida]
[email protected]
School Siting And Healthy Communities: A
Conceptual Framework [594]
MILES, Rebecca [Florida State University]
[email protected]
Understanding Institutional Impediments To
Walking And Bicycling To School [604]
STEINER, Ruth L. [University of Florida]
[email protected]
BEJLERI, Ilir [University of Florida] [email protected]
WHEELOCK, Jennifer [University of Florida]
[email protected]
BENITO, Perez [University of Florida]
[email protected]
FISCHMAN, Allison [University of Florida]
[email protected]

55

Tuesday

CHRONOLOGICAL PAPER SESSIONS & ROUNDTABLES

............................................................................. .............................................................................
11.1 Compensation and Value
Capture

12.6 Spatial Doctrine and


Vision

Moderator: The last presenter in this session.


Discussant: None

Moderator/Discussant: CRANE, Randall


[University of California, Los Angeles]
[email protected]

Room: 10th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Huron

Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Great America II

Property And Compensation: Control Of Land


Use And The Bundle Of Rights [612]
BOOTH, Philip [University of Sheffield]
[email protected]

Space And Place In Spatial Planning:


Juxtaposition Of Positivist Contents And
Poststructuralist Processes [652]
DAVOUDI, Simin [Newcastle University]
[email protected]

The Defeat Of Land Exactions In Polish Land


Use Law [622]
GDESZ, Miroslaw [The Regional Administrative
Court in Warsaw] Miroslaw.Gdesz@warszawa.
wsa.gov.pl
Contracting And Urban Regeneration [641]
VAN DER KRABBEN, Erwin [Radboud University
Nijmegen] [email protected]
BUITELAAR, Edwin [Radboud University Nijmegen]
[email protected]
LLOYD, Greg [University of Liverpool]
[email protected]
PEEL, Deborah [University of Liverpool]
[email protected]

Urban Complexity And Its Design


Approaches; A Historical And Theoretical
Overview And Expectations [658]
FLEURKE, Nikky [Technical University of Delft]
[email protected]
Disorder In The House: Dutch Planning
Doctrine Revisited [692]
VAN DER VALK, Arnold [Wageningen Agricultural
University] [email protected]
MEKKES, Petra [Wageningen Agricultural
University] [email protected]

.............................................................................
13.3 Pre-organized Session
- Shrinking Edges: The
Challenge of Declining
Suburbs
Moderator: FOL, Sylvie [Universit Paris 1
Panthon - Sorbonne] [email protected]
Discussant: MABIN, Alan [University
of Witwatersrand, South Africa]
[email protected]
Room: 10th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Water Tower
Guadalajaras Shrinking Silicon Valley: Latin
American Deindustrialization In The Latest
Global Shift [699]
AUDIRAC, Ivonne [Florida State University]
[email protected]
Declining Suburbs In The Paris Region : A
Fragmented Transformation Process [718]
FOL, Sylvie [Universit Paris 1 Panthon Sorbonne] [email protected]

56

1:152:45 pm

Inequality, Urban Shrinkage And Urban


Policies In Brazil [739]
MORAES, Sergio T. [Universidade do Vale do Itaja
- Univali] [email protected]
Processes Of Urban Growth And Shrinkage
The Example Of The San Francisco Bay
Area [750]
PALLAGAST, Karina M. [University of California,
Berkeley] [email protected]
Decline In The Berlins Suburbs [768]
ZAKIROVA, Betka [Free University of Berlin]
[email protected]

.............................................................................
14.3 Cycle and Pedestrian
Travel: The Role of Network
Connectivity (Session 1 of 2)
Moderator/Discussant: CLIFTON, Kelly
[University of Maryland] [email protected]
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Northwestern
Resolving The Links Between Actual
Pedestrian Movement And Street
Connectivity [779]
CARPENTER, Ann M. [Georgia Institute of
Technology] [email protected]
Measuring Non-Motorized Accessibility And
Connectivity: The Case Of A Rich Pedestrian
And Bicycling Network [865]
TAL, Gil [University of California, Davis]
[email protected]
HANDY, Susan [University of California, Davis]
[email protected]
Modeling Street Connectivity, Pedestrian
Movement And Land Use According
To Standard GIS Street Network
Representations: A Comparative Study [841]
OZBIL, Ayse N. [Georgia Institute of Technology]
[email protected]
PEPONIS, John [Georgia Institute of Technology]
[email protected]
STONE, JR., Brian [Georgia Institute of
Technology] [email protected]
Recreational Connectivity In A Contested
Area: Soft Mobility And Infrastructure
Planning In The Urban-Rural Fringe [803]
JAARSMA, Catharinus F. [Wageningen
Agricultural University] [email protected]
VAN DIJK, Terry [Wageningen Agricultural
University] [email protected]

1:152:45 pm

CHRONOLOGICAL PAPER SESSIONS & ROUNDTABLES

Tuesday

............................................................................. ............................................................................. .............................................................................


14.16 Influences on the
Transit System Use:
Reliability, System Integration
and Technology
Moderator/Discussant:
NEWMARK, Gregory L. [University of California at
Berkeley] [email protected]
Room: 10th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Navy Pier
Understanding Transit Service Reliability
And Service Restoration Strategies [842]
PENG, Zhong-Ren [University of Florida]
[email protected]
LYNDE, Eric [University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee]
[email protected]
CHEN, Wei-Ya [University of Florida]
[email protected]

15.3 New Urbanism - Is It


Maturing?

16.2 Practices of Diffusion 2

Moderator/Discussant: BOYLE, Robin M.


[Wayne State University] [email protected]

Moderator/Discussant:
ZHANG, Bing [China Academy of Urban Planning
and Design, China] [email protected];
or [email protected]

Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Ohio State


The Urban Design Problematique [907]
KAMEL, Nabil [Arizona State University]
[email protected]
Making Nice: Combining New Urbanism And
Low Impact Development At Seattles High
Point Redevelopment [908]
KARVONEN, Andrew P. [University of Texas at
Austin] [email protected]

Motorization And Sustainable Transport


Planning: An Asian Model [798]
HAN, Sun Sheng [The University of Melbourne]
[email protected]

Maturation Of New Urbanism In Atlanta:


Comparative Case Study Of The Post
Riverside And The Glenwood Park, Georgia
[909]
KIM, Jaecheol [Georgia Institute of Technology]
[email protected]

Clean Development Mechanism As A


New Source Of Financing Urban Transport
Projects In China: Potentials And Challenges
[781]
CHEN, Yang [Massachusetts Institute of
Technology] [email protected]
ZEGRAS, Chris [Massachusetts Institute of
Technology] [email protected]

New Urbanism And Travel Patterns:


Travel Pattern Difference In The New
Urbanist Community And The Conventional
Community [911]
LEE, Jaechoon [Ohio State University] lee.2826@
osu.edu
KIM, Suk-Kyung [Michigan State University]
[email protected]

Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Indiana


U-City For Urban Utopia? [959]
CHOI, Hyunsun [University of North Florida]
[email protected]
The Power Of The Model: Rotterdams
Struggle Against The Waterfront Rationale
[961]
DAAMEN, Tom [Delft University of Technology]
[email protected]
International Participation In Planning And
Urban Design In Provincial China [982]
TRIANTAFILLOU, Menelaos [University of
Cincinnati] [email protected]
EDELMAN, David [University of CIncinnati]
[email protected]
Womens Safety Audits And Walking School
Buses: The Diffusion/ De-Fusion Of Two
Radical Planning Tools [992]
WHITZMAN, Carolyn [University of Melbourne]
[email protected]

Does Walkability Matter? Testing The Effect


Of Path Walkability On Transit Users Mode
Choice And Acceptable Walking Distance To
The Station [923]
PARK, Sungjin [University of California, Berkeley]
[email protected]

57

Tuesday

CHRONOLOGICAL PAPER SESSIONS & ROUNDTABLES

3:004:30 pm

Tuesday
Sessions
3:00 4:30 pm
............................................................................. .............................................................................
1.4 Ethnicity and
Neighborhood Planning
Processes
Moderator/Discussant:
BEEBEEJAUN, Yasminah [University of Manchester]
[email protected]
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Great America I

4:45 6:15 pm
........................................................................
ACSP General Assembly and
Awards Ceremony
Room: 7th Floor, Marriott Hotel,
Grand Ballroom Salon I

........................................................................
AESOP General Assembly
Room: 7th Floor, Marriott Hotel,
Grand Ballroom Salon II

6:30 7:30 pm
......................................................................
ACSP Global Planning
Educators Interest Group
Business Meeting
Room: 7th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Great America I

......................................................................

Meeting: The Social


Message of Urban Planning
International Workshop 2009
Room: 7th Floor, Marriott Hotel,
Great America II

58

Multiculturalism And The Revanchist City:


Chungking Mansions, Hong Kong [8]
CHAKRAVARTY, Surajit [University of Southern
California] [email protected]
Documenting Changes Of Immigrant
Communities In Paris (1997-2006) In The Use
And Cultural Appropriation Of Public Spaces
[19]
LAVOIE, Caroline [Utah State University]
[email protected]
Night In The City: A Different Look In Town
Planning [30]
MOREIRA, Graa, A. [Technical University Lisbon]
[email protected]
Immigration As A Planning Issue: Towards
A Comparative Framework For Community
Development [41]
VITIELLO, Domenic [University of Pennsylvania]
[email protected]

2.4 Urban Decline &


Revitalization
Moderator/Discussant: REESE, Laura [Michigan
State University] [email protected]
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Michigan State
Requests For Proposals For Public Property
Development [70]
GORDON, David L. [Queens University at
Kingston] [email protected]
Urban Decline, Legacy Capital And
Agglomeration Economies [89]
PARK, In Kwon [Ohio State University]
[email protected]
VON RABENAU, Burkhard [Ohio State University]
[email protected]

3:004:30 pm

CHRONOLOGICAL PAPER SESSIONS & ROUNDTABLES

Tuesday

............................................................................. ............................................................................. .............................................................................


3.5 Planning and Climate
Change IV - Adaptation
Considerations
Moderator/Discussant: GOLDSTEIN, Bruce,
[Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State
University] [email protected]
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Michigan
Urban Heat Islands: A Climate Change
Adaptation Strategy For Montreal [124]
CHAN, Chee F. [McGill University]
[email protected]
LEBEDEVA, Julia [McGill University]
[email protected]
OTERO, Jose [McGill University]
[email protected]
RICHARDSON, Gregory [McGill University]
[email protected]
Climate Change Adaptation In The Context
Of Spatial Planning Institutional Means Of
Reducing Local Vulnerability In The Baltic
Sea Region [144]
HAANP, Simo [Helsinki University of
Technology] [email protected]
Mitigation And Adaptation Strategies To
Address Climate Change [169]
LONDON, James B. [Clemson University]
[email protected]

3.7 Disasters and Hazards


Planning

4.4 Dilemmas of Citizen


Participation

Moderator/Discussant: WERNSTEDT, Kris


[Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University]
[email protected]

Moderator: The last presenter in this session.

Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Iowa


Polyrational Land Policy For Extreme Floods
- Large Areas For Temporary Emergency
Retention [146]
HARTMANN, Thomas [Dortmund University of
Technology] [email protected]
Floods, Fire And The Future: Planning And
Natural Hazard Management On The Gold
Coast, Australia [175]
MINNERY, John R. [University of Queensland]
[email protected]
GILLEN, Michael J. [University of Queensland]
[email protected]
SMITH, Geoffrey [Latrobe University]
[email protected]
Community Economic Adjustment After
Major Disasters: Framework And Analysis
[199]
XIAO, Yu [University of Illinois at UrbanaChampaign] [email protected]

Discussant: VASCONCELOS, Lia [New University


of Lisbon] [email protected]
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Illinois
The Dynamics Of Participation: Modes Of
Governance And Increasing Participation In
Planning [213]
BROWNILL, Sue [Oxford Brookes University]
[email protected]
Is Mafia A Planning Issue? [260]
SAIJA, Laura [University of Catania]
[email protected]
GRAVAGNO, Filippo [University of Catania]
[email protected]
Privately Governed Neighbourhoods: The
Two Faces Of The Same Coin [262]
SANTOS CRUZ, Sara [University of Oporto]
[email protected]
PINHO, Paulo [University of Oporto]
[email protected]

59

Tuesday

CHRONOLOGICAL PAPER SESSIONS & ROUNDTABLES

.............................................................................
5.4 Housing and Smart
Growth

European Spatial Planning Turning Twenty


[422]
WATERHOUT, Bas [Delft University of Technology]
[email protected]

Moderator: The last presenter in this session.

.............................................................................

Discussant: None

7.4 Do Planners Matter


and Can Planning Make a
Difference?

Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Lincolnshire II


Is Smart Growth Smart For Low-Income
Households: A Study Of The Impact Of Four
Smart Growth Principles On The Supply Of
Affordable Housing [289]
AURAND, Andrew [University of Pittsburgh]
[email protected]

Moderator: The last presenter in this session.

Housing Preferences Of Key Groups In The


Helsinki Metropolitan Area [317]
ILMONEN, Mervi [Helsinki University of
Technology] [email protected]

Plan Implementation: The Reality Of Land


Use Planning In Auckland, New Zealand
[431]
BEATTIE, Lee [University of Auckland]
[email protected]

Integration Through Inclusionary Zoning: The


Experience Of Montgomery County Maryland
[342]
MUELLER, Elizabeth [University of Texas at Austin]
[email protected]

Preparing Persuasive Plans That Engage The


Future-- Does Mandating Plans Help? [435]
BUNNELL, Gene A. [University at Albany, SUNY]
[email protected]

Problems Related With The Development


Of The New Residential Zones In The Czech
Republic [369]
WITTMANN, Maxmilian [Brno University of
Technology] [email protected]

.............................................................................
6.4 Progress in European
Spatial Planning
Moderator/Discussant:
ZONNEVELD, Wil [Delft University of Technology]
[email protected]
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Wisconsin
Borderless Planning: Dream Or Reality? [380]
DOUCET, Philippe [Gephyres] [email protected]
How Maps Matter: On The Role Of Spatial
Information In European Spatial Policy
Processes [381]
DUEHR, Stefanie [TU Dortmund and Radboud
University Nijmegen] [email protected]
EU Territorial Governance And The
Innovation Cycle Of Planning: Time For
Sharing Benefits? [397]
JANIN RIVOLIN, Umberto [Politecnico di Torino]
[email protected]

60

Discussant: PAULSEN, Kurt [University of


Wisconsin-Madison] [email protected]
Room: 10th Floor, Marriott Hotel, OHare

Planners Can Matter! Revisiting Doubts


About Land Use Planners Influence On Land
Use Planning [476]
STEVENS, Mark R. [University of North Carolina at
Chapel Hill] [email protected]
BERKE, Philip R. [University of North Carolina at
Chapel Hill] [email protected]
SONG, Yan [University of North Carolina at Chapel
Hill] [email protected]

.............................................................................
8.4 Spatial Analysis
Moderator: The last presenter in this session.
Discussant: None
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Purdue
Thresholds Of Privacy In Urban Process
Modeling [490]
FALLER, Arnold [University of Technology Vienna]
[email protected]

3:004:30 pm

Preference Model: A Quantitative


Approach To Spatial Planning Decisions,
The Case Of Istanbul Metropolitan Area [521]
SERIN, Bilge [Middle East Technical University]
[email protected]
AKAR, Igdem [Istanbul Technical University]
[email protected]
Modeling The Relationship Between
Socioeconomic Development And Water
Pollution For Huaihe Basin [529]
XU, Jiangang [Nanjing University]
[email protected]
SHEN, Qing [University of Maryland College Park]
[email protected]
Measuring Spatial Inequality By Mean
Absolute Deviation And Resampling
Simulation: A Case Of Income Distribution
[530]
YI, Young-Jae [Texas A&M University]
[email protected]

.............................................................................
9.6 New Technology for
Planning Education
Moderator/Discussant: KLOSTERMAN, Richard
[What if?, Inc.] [email protected]
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Lincolnshire I
Mace Metadata For Architectural Contents
In Europe [535]
CAMMARATA, Andrea [Politecnico di Milano]
[email protected]
BOGANI, Elena [Politecnico di Milano]
[email protected]
ARLATI, Ezio [Politecnico di Milano]
[email protected]
Land Use Mapping And Suitability Analysis
Using GIS For Visual Communications: An
Educational Practice In A Computer Graphic
Studio [550]
PARK, Joungim [Texas A&M University]
[email protected]
Is Teaching With Itunes U Hip Or Hype? A
Pre/Post Evaluation Of Teaching Planning
Classes With Itunes U [554]
RETZLAFF, Rebecca C. [Auburn University]
[email protected]
GABER, John [Auburn University]
[email protected]

3:004:30 pm

CHRONOLOGICAL PAPER SESSIONS & ROUNDTABLES

.............................................................................
10.4 Measures and Techniques
Moderator/Discussant:
SCHWEITZER, Lisa [University of Southern
California] [email protected]
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Minnesota
Targeted Planning For Health: Comparison
Of Parcel Vs. Zip-Code Level Targeted
Screening For Childhood Lead Exposure [583]
KIM, Dohyeong [Duke University]
[email protected]
OVERSTREET, Alicia [Duke University]
[email protected]
MIRANDA, Marie Lynn [Duke University]
[email protected]
Localizing Experiential Knowledge With
SoftGIS Method Mapping Perceived
Safety And The Qualities Of Childfriendly
Environments [586]
KYTTA, Marketta [Helsinki University of
Technology] [email protected]
Assessment Of Available Research
Instruments For Measuring Physical Activity
[606]
WIETERS, Kathleen M. [Texas A&M University]
[email protected]
KIM, Jun-Hyun [Texas A&M University]
[email protected]
LEE, Chanam [Texas A&M University]
[email protected]
Is The Relationship Between Built
Environment And Obesity Scale Invariant?
An Empirical Investigation [592]
METAXATOS, Paul [University of Illinois at
Chicago] [email protected]

.............................................................................
11.2 Theoretically Speaking
Moderator: The last presentation in this session.
Discussant: None
Room: 10th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Huron

The Urban Project : Iterative And Negotiated


Process [632]
SEIGNEURET, Natacha Seigneuret
[Universit Pierre Mends France Grenoble]
[email protected]
DUARTE, Paulette [Universit Pierre Mends
France] [email protected]
Urbanization From Scratch, Comparing
Intentionality And Civic Engagement In
The New Developments Of Damascus And
Leidsche Rijn [642]
WIGGINS, Charles B. [University of San Diego]
[email protected]
JANSSEN-JANSEN, Leonie B. [University of
Amsterdam] [email protected]

.............................................................................
12.7 Epistemological
Challenges and Diversions
Moderator/Discussant: SAGER, Tore
[Norwegian University of Science and Technology]
[email protected]
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Great America II
Has The Idea Of Planning Theory Come To A
Dead End? [645]
ASMERVIK, Sigmund [The Norwegian University
of Life Sciences] [email protected]
HAGEN, Aksel [The Lillehammer University
College] [email protected]
OLSEN, Kjell [University of Stavanger]
[email protected]
Evidence-Based Practice: Epistemological
Challenges [659]
KRIZEK, Kevin [University of Colorado] Kevin.
[email protected]
FORSYTH, Ann [Cornell University]
[email protected]
SCHIVELY SLOTTERBACK, Carissa [University of
Minnesota] [email protected]

Tuesday

Comparing Plans For Chicago: The 1909


Burnham Plan And 2000 Metropolis 2020
Plan [679]
SHULER, John A. [University of Illinois at Chicago]
[email protected]

.............................................................................
13.4 Regional Analysis
Reconsidered
Moderator/Discussant: DEAS, Iain [University
of Manchester] [email protected]
Room: 10th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Water Tower
Towards A Relational Planning Approach:
Reconfiguring Planning In The Airport
Regions Of Amsterdam, Barcelona And
Munich [712]
DE JONG, Bart [Utrecht University]
[email protected]
DROSS, Michael [Technical University Mnchen]
[email protected]
SUAU, Pere [Universitat Autnoma de Barcelona]
[email protected]
The Symbolic Function Of Metropolitan
Areas - A Set Of Indicators For Planners To
Manage The Decision Making Process For
Metropolitan Areas [721]
HAMMER, Patricia M. [Dortmund University of
Technology] [email protected]
The Experts Set Out To Know The City:
Essential And Pertinent Facts For Regional
Planning And Their Use, 1907-2007 [726]
ISSERMAN, Andrew M. [University of Illinois]
[email protected]

A 21st Century Dialog With Daniel Burnham:


Urban Complexity, Order And Plan Making
[664]
HOCH, Charles [University of Illinois at Chicago]
[email protected]

How A Combination Of Two Theoretical


Perspectives Can Lead To More Effective
Management Of Decision-Making Processes
[624]
GILS, Marcel V. [Erasmus University/Strategy
Academy] [email protected]

61

Tuesday

CHRONOLOGICAL PAPER SESSIONS & ROUNDTABLES

.............................................................................
14.4 Bicycle and Pedestrian
Travel: Modeling Travel
Behavior (Session 2 of 2)
Moderator: CARPENTER, Ann [Georgia Institute
of Technology] [email protected]
Discussant: None
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Northwestern
A Meso-Scale Model Of Pedestrian Demand
[776]
CLIFTON, Kelly J. [University of Maryland College
Park] [email protected]
BURNIER, Carolina V. [University of Maryland
College Park] [email protected]
HUANG, Shuo [University of Maryland College
Park] [email protected]
KANG, Min Wook [University of Maryland College
Park] [email protected]
SCHNEIDER, Robert J. [University of California,
Berkeley] [email protected]
Pedestrians Quality Needs In Czech And
Moravian Urban Areas [851]
SCHMEIDLER, Karel R. [Transport Research
Centre] [email protected]

Hazards, Infrastructure Incidents And Social


Equity In Urban Areas [884]
ZIMMERMAN, Rae [New York University]
[email protected]
RESTREPO, Carlos E. [New York University]
[email protected]
SIMONOFF, Jeffrey S. [New York University]
[email protected]
NAPHTALI, Zvia S. [New York University]
[email protected]
CULPEN, Alison [New York University]
[email protected]
A Multivariate Analysis Of The Severity Of
Injury Sustained By Pedestrians Involved
In Collisions On City Streets In King County,
Washington, 1999-2004 [804]
JIAO, Junfeng [University of Washington]
[email protected]
MOUDON, Anne V. [University of Washington]
[email protected]
LIN, Lin [University of Washington]
[email protected]
Examing Human Factors and Safety Issues
from Accident Data in the Seoul Metro [812]
KIM, Geunyoung [Kangnam University]
[email protected]

.............................................................................

Cycling Mobility And Sustainable


Development In Rural Areas [834]
MOTA, Jose C. [University of Aveiro]
[email protected]
ROSA PIRES, Artur [University of Aveiro]
[email protected]
SANTINHA, Gonalo [University of Aveiro]
[email protected]

15.4 Challenges for Public


Places

.............................................................................

The Role Of Urban Design And Planning In


Countering Terrorism [898]
COAFFEE, Jon [University of Manchester]
[email protected]

14.19 Planning for the


Safety of All Users of the
Transportation System
Moderator/Discussant:
JAARSMA, Catharinus F. [Wageningen
Agricultural University] [email protected]
Room: 10th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Navy Pier
The Challenge Of Evacuating The Carless In
Five Major U.S. Cities [844]
RENNE, John L. [University of New Orleans]
[email protected]
SANCHEZ, Thomas [University of Utah]
[email protected]

62

Moderator/Discussant:
BUTINA-WATSON, Georgia [Oxford Brookes
University] [email protected]
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Ohio State

Lost Space: Security Zones And New York


Citys Shrinking Public Space [919]
NEMETH, Jeremy [University of Colorado]
[email protected]
HOLLANDER, Justin [Tufts University]
[email protected]
Contrasting Realities: The Role Of Designers
In Making Urban Green Open Spaces Useful
For Citizens [949]
TISMA, Alexandra [Netherlands Institute for
Spatial Research] [email protected]

3:004:30 pm

.............................................................................
16.3 Practices of Diffusion 3
Moderator/Discussant: SORENSEN, Andre
[University of Toronto] [email protected]
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Indiana
From Policy Transfer To Multilateral
Learning? Conceptualizing And Researching
The Diffusion Of Spatial Development Ideas
In European Cooperation Projects [960]
COLOMB, Claire M. [University College London]
[email protected]
Falsification Or Confirmation Bias?
Making Generalizations In International
Development Research [985]
VERMA, Niraj [University at Buffalo]
[email protected]
GANAPATI, Sukumar [Florida International
University] [email protected]
The New Generation Of National Spatial
Strategies: The Search For Novel
Conceptions Of Space And Spatial Position
[996]
ZONNEVELD, Wil [Technical University of Delft]
[email protected]
WATERHOUT, Bas [Technical University of Delft]
[email protected]
Culturised Planning For Cities - Constructing
An International Framework For Cultural
Capacity-Building in Planning Research [994]
YOUNG, Greg [University of Western Sydney]
[email protected]

Tuesday evening
sessions
4:45 6:15 pm
6:30 7:15 pm
See page 58

CHRONOLOGICAL
SESSIONS,
ROUNDTABLES
AND MEETINGS

WEDNESDAY

Wednesday

8:009:30 am

CHRONOLOGICAL PAPER SESSIONS & ROUNDTABLES

Wednesday

Wednesday
Sessions
8:00 9:30 am
WHITE, Wanda [Former Deputy Commissioner,
City of Chicago Department of Economic
Development, Community Workshop on Economic
Development] [email protected]
GARCIA, Jesus [former Alderman and
State Senator and Director, Pilsen/Little
Village Economic Development Corporation]
[email protected]
LOPEZ, Jose [Director, Puerto Rican Cultural
Center of Chicago, Adjunct Instructor, Department
of Latin American Studies, University of Illinois at
Chicago]
RIGANTI, Patrizia [University of Nottingham]
[email protected]

.............................................................................
1.5 Gender, Ethnicity, and
Public Spaces
Moderator: The last presentor in this session.

.............................................................................
2009 [Virginia] ACSP 50th
Conference Committee
Meeting
Room: 10th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Huron

.............................................................................
Panel Discussion: What
Does Diversity Amount to in
Chicago?
Moderator: BETANCUR, John J.
[University of Illinois at Chicago]
[email protected]
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Great America I
ERRING, Cedric [University of Illinois at Chicago]
[email protected]
BETANCUR, John J. [University of Illinois at
Chicago] [email protected]

Discussant: MONNO, Valeria [Politecnico di Bari]


[email protected]
Room: 10th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Navy Pier
Veiling The Public Space: A Spatial Analysis
From Early Republican Period In Turkey To
This Day [7]
AVDAR, Selin [Middle Eastern Technical
University] [email protected]
Re-Examining Womens Agency In Space:
Using A Gender Spatial Analysis To
Understand Womens Autonomous Position
In Public And Private Space [25]
MAROME, Wijitbusaba [University College
London] [email protected]

Politics On Parade: A Historical Study Of


South Bostons St. Patricks Day Parade [42]
WHITLOW, Annis [Massachusetts Institute of
Technology] [email protected]

.............................................................................
2.5 Urban Regeneration
Moderator: VERHAGE, Roelof [Universit Lyon 2]
[email protected]
Discussant: MULLIN, John [University of
Massachusetts] [email protected]
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Michigan State
Urban Dynamism By Renewing The Former
Industrial Sites Case Of Hungary [81]
KUKELY, Gyrgy [Centre for Regional
Studies, Hungarian Academy of Sciences]
[email protected]
Creative Destruction, Entrepreneurialism
And Rent-Gap Exploitation: Causes And
Implications Of The Urban Renewal Strategy
In The Peri-Central Space Of Santiago De
Chile (1990-2005) [84]
LOPEZ, Ernesto [University College London]
[email protected]
Urban Brownfield Regeneration In Turkey:
An Analysis Of A Case Study In Istanbul [96]
SAHIN, Ozlem [Istanbul Technical University]
[email protected]
GEZICI, Ferhan [Istanbul Technical University]
[email protected]
Realising Social And Physical Objectives
In Property-Led Urban Regeneration:
Experiences In Lyon (France) [104]
VERHAGE, Roelof [Universit Lyon 2] roelof.
[email protected]

Plural Paths For Interweaving Diversity In


Palermo [35]
PICONE, Marco [University of Palermo]
[email protected]
BONAFEDE, Giulia [University of Palermo]
[email protected]

65

Wednesday

CHRONOLOGICAL PAPER SESSIONS & ROUNDTABLES

............................................................................. .............................................................................
3.9 Institutions, Collaboration
and Policy Communities

4.14 Governance in the


Informal Sector

Moderator/Discussant: CONROY, Maria M.


[Ohio State University] [email protected]

Moderator: The last presentor in this session.

Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Iowa


Scaling Up Collaborative Environmental
Planning: An Examination Of The US Fire
Learning Network [123]
GOLDSTEIN, Bruce E. [Virginia Polytechnic
Institute and State University] [email protected]
BUTLER, William H. [Virginia Polytechnic Institute
and State University] [email protected]
Whos Making Decisions In Markets
For Ecosystem Services? Exploring
Collaboration In Water Quality Trading [129]
COCHRAN, Bobby [Portland State University]
[email protected]
The Disruption Of Policy Communities.
Transitions In Dam Politics In The
Netherlands And The United States [140]
GOVERDE, Henri J. [Radboud University Nijmegen]
[email protected]
MEIJERINK, Sander [Radboud University
Nijmegen] [email protected]
Institutional And Policy Implications Of The
Provision Of International Public Goods: The
Case Of Global Environmental Commons In
Brazil [186]
PUPPIM DE OLIVEIRA, Jose Antonio [University of
Santiago de Compostela] [email protected]
PINTO, Rogerio R. [Getulio Vargas Foundation]
[email protected]

Discussant: GUALINI, Enrico [Berlin University of


Technology] [email protected]
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Illinois
Reinventing The Wheel Or New Politics
Emerging From Conventional Tools? [218]
COSTA, Heloisa S. [Federal University of Minas
Gerais] [email protected]
Desiring Empowerment Through
Participatory Slum Upgrading: Evidence
From Post-Decentralization Indonesia [220]
DAS, Ashok K. [San Francisco State University]
[email protected]
Towards A New Urban Governance. Of
Garbage; The Contested Domain [237]
KHANOLKAR, Prasad S. [Cornell University]
[email protected]
Citizen Involvement In Decision-Making In
Developing Countries The Case Of Iran [247]
MOHAMMADI, Hamid [University of KasselUniversity of Yazd] [email protected]
AHMADIAN, Reza [Zanjan Azad University]
[email protected]
NOSRATI, Sepideh [Sari Payame Nour University]
[email protected]

.............................................................................
5.5 Housing Market Behavior
and Demographic Challenges
Moderator: The last presentor in this session.
Discussant: None
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Lincolnshire II
The Geodemographic Analysis Of
Residential Turnover And Neigbouhood
Change: The Case Of North West England
[293]
BROWN, Peter J. [University of Liverpool]
[email protected]
BATEY, Peter W. [University of Liverpool]
[email protected]
WHALLEY, Simon [Beacon Dodsworth Limited]
[email protected]
PEMBERTON, Simon [University of Liverpool]
[email protected]

66

8:009:30 Am

Regional Housing Needs Allocation: The


Southern California Approach [296]
CHOI, Simon [SCAG] [email protected]
WEN, Frank [Southern California Association of
Governments] [email protected]
CARRERAS, Joe [Southern California Association
of Governments] [email protected]
U.S. Housing Affordability And Crowding
Trends, 1985-2005 [297]
CRANE, Randall [University of California, Los
Angeles] [email protected]

.............................................................................
5.14 Mortgages and Credit
Market Problems
Moderator: The last presentor in this session.
Discussant: None
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Lincolnshire I
Developments Of Farmland Reverse
Mortgage System And Its Actuarial Model
[295]
CHO, Deokho [Daegu University]
[email protected]
MA, Seungryul [Government Employee Pension
Service] [email protected]
KIM, Gabtae [Korea Housing Finance Corporation]
[email protected]
Mortgage Market Excesses, Property
Flipping, And Property Tax Fairness [318]
IMMERGLUCK, Dan [Georgia Institute of
Technology] [email protected]
Comparative Analysis Between Two
Minority Groups Contract For Deed: A Unique
Form Of Subprime Lending [337]
MCBRIDE, Vickie L. [Texas Southern University]
[email protected]
The Challenge Of Foreclosure Prevention:
Lessons From New York City [352]
SCHWARTZ, Alex F. [The New School]
[email protected]

8:009:30 am

CHRONOLOGICAL PAPER SESSIONS & ROUNDTABLES

............................................................................. .............................................................................
6.5 Cross-border Planning
Moderator/Discussant: DE VRIES, Jochem
[University of Amsterdam] [email protected]
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Wisconsin
The Clash Of Territorialization? Spatial
Planning Co-Operation Between The EU And
Russia [385]
FRITSCH, Matti [University of Joensuu]
[email protected]
Improving Trans-National Cooperations
Through Planning Culture Interactions.
Raumplanung And Urbanistica A
Austro-Italian Confrontation [395]
HASELSBERGER, Beatrix [Vienna University of
Technology] [email protected].
ac.at
FABBRO, Sandro [University of Udine]
[email protected]
Bridging The National Divide: The Creation
Of A Cross-Border Region In The Lille
Metropolitan Area [406]
PARIS, Didier [University of Lille] paris.
[email protected]

.............................................................................
6.13 Pre-organized Session
- Dialogues: Examining
Planning Ideas in Practice
Moderator/Discussant: HARPER, Tom
[University of Calgary] [email protected]
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Michigan
Performance-Based Planning: A CrossNational Comparison [374]
BAKER, Douglas C. [Queensland University of
Technology] [email protected]
SIPE, Neil G. [Griffith University]
[email protected]
The New Landscapes Of The Post-Industrial
City [388]
GOSPODINI, Aspa [University of Thessaly]
[email protected]
Town Planning Versus Urbanismo [396]
HEBBERT, Michael [University of Manchester]
[email protected]
New Urbanism And Sprawl: A Toronto Case
Study [415]
SKABURSKIS, Andrejs [Queens University at
Kingston] [email protected]

7.5 Urban Regeneration and


Land Use Planning
Moderator: The last presentor in this session.
Discussant: DEWAR, Margaret E. [University of
Michigan] [email protected]
Room: 10th Floor, Marriott Hotel, OHare
Managing Underused Land And Directing
Redevelopment In Post-Katrina New Orleans
[442]
EHRENFEUCHT, Renia [University of New Orleans]
[email protected]
NELSON, Marla [University of New Orleans]
[email protected]
Planning For Industry In The Post Industrial
World [449]
DEMPWOLF, Scott [University of Maryland College
Park] [email protected]
HOWLAND, Marie [University of Maryland
College Park] [email protected]
COHEN, James R. [University of Maryland College
Park] [email protected]
Land Ownership And Governance In A
Large Scale Urban Development Project In
Helsinki [455]
KULONPALO, Jussi [University of Helsinki]
[email protected]

.............................................................................
8.5 Visualization and
Simulation
Moderator/Discussant: KAWAMURA, Kazuya
[University of Illinois at Chicago] [email protected]
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Purdue
Simulation And Investigation Of The Path
Dependency Of Transportation Policy [510]
LU, Yandan [University of Illinois at Chicago]
[email protected]
KAWAMURA, Kazuya [University of Illinois at
Chicago] [email protected]

Wednesday

Illumination Of Urban Space Using Digital


Simulation Methods, Exemplified On The
Unesco World Heritage Site Of Bamberg
[518]
REICHRATH, Martin [Technical University of
Kaiserslautern] [email protected]
ZEILE, Peter [Technical University of
Kaiserslautern] [email protected]
Spatial-Temporal Visualization Of Urban
Environments For Supporting The Designing
And Planning Process [531]
YIN, Li [University at Buffalo, SUNY]
[email protected]
SHIODE, Narushige [University at Buffalo]
[email protected]

.............................................................................
10.5 Urban Natural
Environment and Health
Moderator: The last presentor in this session.
Discussant: None
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Indiana
Green Infrastructure And Public Health: An
Evaluation Of The Florida Communities Trust
Open Space Acquisition Program [576]
COUTTS, Christopher J. [Florida State University]
[email protected]
Portlands Urban Health Penalty Continues
A Decade-Long Decline: Has Growth
Management Played A Role? [577]
FAN, Yingling [University of Illinois at Chicago]
[email protected]
SONG, Yan [University of North Carolina at Chapel
Hill] [email protected]
Urban Natural Environments, Health, And
Human Activities [582]
KIM, Jun-Hyun [Texas A&M University]
[email protected]
LEE, Chanam [Texas A&M University]
[email protected]

Recreational Travel And Its Consequences Applications Of An Agent-Based Simulation


To Open Space Planning [513]
MULLER, Brian H. [University of Colorado Denver]
[email protected]
Geovisualization And Spatial Structure: An
Example From The 2001 Census In The United
Kingdom [517]
RAE, Alasdair J. [University of Manchester]
[email protected]

67

Wednesday

CHRONOLOGICAL PAPER SESSIONS & ROUNDTABLES

............................................................................. .............................................................................
12.9 Public Realm and
Management

14.5 Understanding Travel


Behavior and Transit Use

Moderator/Discussant:
HOCH, Charles [University of Illinois at Chicago]
[email protected]

Moderator/Discussant: ISEKI, Hiroyuki


[University of Toledo] [email protected]

Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Great America I

Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Northwestern

The Politics Of Adopting Oregons Statewide


Planning Goals [644]
ADLER, Sy [Portland State University]
[email protected]

Understanding The Travel Behavior Of


Hispanics; A Pre-Requisite For Effective
Planning [847]
ROSENBLOOM, Sandra [University of Arizona]
[email protected]

Planning Analysis And Political Steering


With New Public Management [675]
SAGER, Tore [Norwegian University of Science
and Technology] [email protected]
The Citys Public Realm And New Forms Of
Enclosed Living In The Netherlands [687]
TENNEKES, Joost [Netherlands Institute for
Spatial Research] [email protected]

.............................................................................
13.6 Tools of Territorial
Governance
Moderator/Discussant: DA ROSA PIRES, Artur
[University of Aveiro] [email protected]
Room: 10th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Water Tower
Croatias New Regions How Do Locals
Cope With European Regional Policy
Requirements? [714]
DOKIC, Irena [The Institute of Economics, Zagreb]
[email protected]
SUMPOR, Marijana [The Institute of Economics,
Zagreb] [email protected]
Reflexive Governance On The Boundaries
Of `Local Practices: The Case Of The
Amsterdam Harbour [730]
LISSANDRELLO, Enza [University of Amsterdam]
[email protected]
Comparing Territorial Governance:
The Cases Of EU-Funded Sub-Regional
Programmes In Portugal And Italy [747]
OLIVEIRA, Carlos [University of Porto]
[email protected]
BREDA-VAZQUEZ, Isabel [University of Porto]
[email protected]

68

Interactions Between Race/Ethnicity And


Ethnic Change On Travel Behavior: South
Bay Case Study [806]
JOH, Kenneth [University of California, Irvine]
[email protected]
BOARNET, Marlon G. [University of California,
Irvine] [email protected]
NGUYEN, Mai T. [University of North Carolina at
Chapel Hill] [email protected]
FULTON, William [Solimar Research Group]
[email protected]
Getting By With A Little Help From My
Friends And Family: Immigrants And
Carpooling [859]
SMART, Michael J. [University of California, Los
Angeles] [email protected]
BLUMENBERG, Evelyn [University of California,
Los Angeles] [email protected]

.............................................................................
15.5 Reclaiming Public Spaces
Moderator/Discussant: CARMONA, Matthew
[University College London] [email protected]
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Ohio State
Flnerie Between Net And Place:
Possibilities For Participation In Planning
[888]
BANERJEE, Tridib [University of Southern
California] [email protected]
APOSTOL, Ileana [California State Polytechnic
University] [email protected]
ANTONIADIS, Panayotis [Universit Pierre et
Marie Curie, Paris 6] [email protected]
The Energy System As Part Of Public Space:
Effects And Perception In Three Swedish
Communities [902]
EKELUND, Bjrn [Architecture and infrastructure]
[email protected]

8:009:30 am

What Is Left Of Planning? Residual


Planning! [914]
MALLOY, Jennifer A. [University of Illinois at
Chicago] [email protected]
Pop Up City: Temporary Interventions For
Urban Vacancy [937]
SCHWARZ, Terry [Kent State University]
[email protected]

.............................................................................
16.4 Session Sponsored by
The Journal Planning Theory
and Practice/Routledge
Publishers: Recognising
Cultural and Institutional
Diversity 1
Moderator/Discussant:
CAMPBELL, Heather [University of Sheffield]
[email protected]
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Minnesota
A Trans-Pacific Planning Education In
Reverse: Reflections Of An American With
A Chinese Doctorate In Urban Planning And
Design [955]
ABRAMSON, Daniel B. [University of Washington]
[email protected]
Are We Same Or Different? The Evolving
Perceptions Of Development Challenges
[977]
SANYAL, Bish [Massachusetts Institute of
Technology] [email protected]
Down To Earth: Recognizing The Inevitably
Situated Nature Of Planning Practice [991]
WATSON, Vanessa J. [University of Cape Town]
[email protected]

9:4511:15 am

CHRONOLOGICAL PAPER SESSIONS & ROUNDTABLES

Wednesday

Wednesday
Sessions
9:45 11:15 am
............................................................................. .............................................................................
AESOP [YA] Young Academics
Roundtable: Getting The Most
Out Of The Paper Presenting
Experience
Moderator: BENNEWORTH, Paul [University of
Newcastle upon Tyne] [email protected]
Discussant: HASELSBERGER, Beatrix [Vienna
University of Technology] haselsberger@email.
archlab.tuwien.ac.at
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Michigan

.............................................................................
Panel Discussion: Chicagos
Plan for the 2016 Olympics
Moderator: WINKLE, Curt [University of lllinois at
Chicago] [email protected]

DE VRIES, Jochem [University of Amsterdam]


[email protected]
HEBBERT, Michael [University of Manchester]
[email protected]
HIRSCHLER, Petra [Vienna University of
Technology] [email protected]
NADIN, Vincent [Delft University of Technology]
[email protected]
PROSPERI, David [Florida Atlantic University]
[email protected]
SHAW, David [University of Liverpool]
[email protected]
VERHAGE, Roelof [Institut dUrbanisme de Lyon]
[email protected]

ACSP-AESOP Joint
Presidential Session: Planning,
Imagination And Transnational
Scholarship: A Tribute To
Peter H. Marris
Moderator: SANYAL, Bish [Massachusetts
Institute of Technology] [email protected]
Room: 10th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Huron Room
DANDEKAR, Hema [Arizona State University]
[email protected]
FAINSTEIN, Susan S. [Harvard University]
[email protected]
HAYDEN, Dolores [Yale University]
[email protected]
HOCH, Charles [University of Illinois at Chicago]
[email protected]
JACKSON, Maria-Rosario [Urban Institute]
[email protected]
MILLER, S.M. Mike [Boston University (retired)]
[email protected]
THROGMORTON, James A. [The University of
Iowa] [email protected]
WACHS, Martin [RAND Transportation, Space and
Technology Program] [email protected]

Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Great America I


Closed to the press.
Tom Kerwin is a Managing Partner in the Chicago
office of Skidmore, Owings & Merrill LLP and
oversees the firms involvement with Chicago
2016.
Phil Enquist is Partner in charge of planning and
urban design in the Chicago office of Skidmore,
Owings & Merrill LLP.

69

Wednesday

CHRONOLOGICAL PAPER SESSIONS & ROUNDTABLES

.............................................................................
1.6 Ethnicity and Formal and
Informal Entrepreneurship
Moderator: The last presenter in this session.
Discussant: None
Room: 10th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Navy Pier
Diversity And Ethnic Entrepreneurship In The
USA: [4]
BETANCUR, John J. [University of Illinois at
Chicago] [email protected]
BOWMAN, Philip J. [University of Michigan]
[email protected]
Immigrant Communities, Informality And
Planning In The United States [10]
DEVLIN, Ryan T. [University of California, Berkeley]
[email protected]
Spontaneity And Planned Intervention At
An Immigrants Leisure Space The So
Cristvo Market, Rio De Janeiro, Brazil [12]
GIACOMINI, Sonia M. [Catholic University of Rio
de Janeiro] [email protected]
Precarious Jobs, Vulnerable Workers, And
Migrant Civil Society [26]
MARTIN, Nina [University of Illinois at Chicago]
[email protected]

.............................................................................
2.6 Knowledge and
Technology Based
Development
Moderator: WILSON, Mark I. [Michigan State
University] [email protected]
Discussant: None
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Michigan State
Exploring Location Of Knowledge Based
Business Services As A Value Based
Professional Episode [49]
ARANYA, Rolee [Norwegian University of Science
and Technology] [email protected]
MEDALEN, Tor [Norwegian University of Science
and Technology] [email protected]

70

From U-City To Intelligent Development


Planning Practice [58]
COREY, Kenneth E. [Michigan State University]
[email protected]
JUNG, H. M. [Busan Metropolitan Government]
[email protected]
WILSON, Mark I. [Michigan State University]
[email protected]
Knowledge-Intensive Activity In U.S. Metro
Areas: An Occupation-Based Analysis Of
1990-2000 Trends [66]
FESER, Edward [University of Illinois at UrbanaChampaign] [email protected]
RENSKI, Henry [University of Massachusetts at
Amherst] [email protected]

.............................................................................
3.10 Sustainability at the
Local Level
Moderator/Discussant:
HAMIN, Elisabeth [University of Massachusetts]
[email protected]
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Iowa
Land Use Pressures And Sustainable Plans
In Ohio Townships [133]
CONROY, Maria M. [Ohio State University]
[email protected]
JUN, Hee-Jung [Ohio State University] jun.41@
osu.edu
Fighting Unsustainability In Northeastern
Portugal [134]
LOURENCO, Julia M. [University of Minho]
[email protected]
DANKO, Cristina C. [University of Minho]
[email protected]
Local Government Planning For Sustainable
Development: An Evolution In California [155]
JACOBSON, Thomas [Sonoma State University]
[email protected]
HINDS, Alex T. [County of Marin Community
Development Agency] [email protected]
Political Cultural And Local Sustainability
Effort In The US [182]
PATERSON, Robert [University of Texas at Austin]
[email protected]
SAHA, Devashree [University of Texas at Austin]
[email protected]

9:4511:15 am

Physical Planning For Sustainable


Community Development The Sufficiency
Economy Philosophy Approach For Rural
Communities In Northeastern, Thailand [183]
PECHPAKDEE, Pechladda [University College
London] [email protected]
CABANNES, Yves [University College London]
[email protected]

.............................................................................
4.6 Network Governance
Moderator: The last presenter in this session.
Discussant: None
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Illinois
Planning And Organizational Fields: The
Case Of Brownfield Redevelopment In The
South Bronx [216]
CONNOLLY, James J. [Columbia University]
[email protected]
STEIL, Justin [Columbia University]
[email protected]
Urban Planning And Public-Private
Partnerships [229]
GLASBERGEN, Pieter [Utrecht University]
[email protected]
Co-Management Of Indigenous Places:
Sustained Governance In Context [255]
PINEL, AICP, Sandra L. [University of Idaho]
[email protected]
PECOS, Jacob [Pueblo de Cochiti]
[email protected]

9:4511:15am

CHRONOLOGICAL PAPER SESSIONS & ROUNDTABLES

Wednesday

............................................................................. ............................................................................. .............................................................................


5.6 Housing Market Behavior
and Price Models
Moderator: The last presenter in this session.
Discussant: None
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Lincolnshire II
Does Subsidized Housing Affect Local
Schools? [300]
ELLEN, Ingrid G. [New York University]
[email protected]
SCHWARTZ, Amy [New York University]
[email protected]
STIEFEL, Leanna [New York University]
[email protected]
CHELLMAN, Colin [New York University]
[email protected]
The Impact Of Supportive Housing On
Surrounding Neighborhoods [306]
GEDAL, Michael [New York University]
[email protected]
BEEN, Vicki [New York University] BeenV@juris.
law.nyu.edu
ELLEN, Ingrid G. [New York University]
[email protected]
VOICU, Ioan [New York University] voicui@juris.
law.nyu.edu
Evaluation Of The Impact Of Private
Investment On Urban Neighborhood
Development: A Case Study Of The Third
Federal Savings And Loan Redevelopment In
Cleveland, Ohio [316]
HONG, Chansun [Cleveland State
University/American Planning Association]
[email protected]
Impact Of Mixed Use On House Prices
Disentangling Accessibility, Density And
Mixed Use [360]
TSAI, Yu-Hsin [University of Michigan]
[email protected]
LIU, Hsiao-Lan [National Chengchi University]
[email protected]
WANG, Dah-Lih [Feng Chia University]
[email protected]

5.16 Neighborhood
Regeneration and Mixed
Communities

6.7 Networking for Universitybased Research and


Development

Moderator: The last presenter in this session.

Moderator/Discussant: NADIN, Vincent [Delft


University of Technology] [email protected]

Discussant: None
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Lincolnshire I
Urban University Master Planning And
Community Integration: [286]
AMBORSKI, David P. [Ryerson University]
[email protected]
Promoting Mixed Communities Through
Balanced Lettings And Asset Management:
The English Experience [341]
MORRISON, Nicola C. [University of Cambridge]
[email protected]
JONES, Michael F. [University of Cambridge]
[email protected]
Reconnecting Ballymun: The Restructuring
Of A Socially Excluded Area Of Dublin [343]
MUIR, Jenny [Queens University Belfast]
[email protected]
KINTREA, Keith J. [University of Glasgow]
[email protected]
Re-Constituting The Social Through Urban
Renewal: Learning From The Experience Of
InIn, Ankara [346]
OZDIL, Hulya [Middle East Technical University]
[email protected]
OZDIL, Taner R. [The University of Texas at
Arlington, & Dallas Urban Solutions Center,
TAMUS] [email protected]

Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Wisconsin


Transnational Territorial Research In Europe:
A Review Of The European Spatial Planning
Observation Network And The Opportunities
It Offers To Researchers In Planning [389]
HAGUE, Cliff [UK ESPON Contact Point]
[email protected]
Global Cyberinfrastructure And
Sustainability: An Emerging Research
Agenda For Integrated City-Region Planning
[409]
PEZZOLI, Keith [University of California, San
Diego] [email protected]
RAVETZ, Joe [University of Manchester]
[email protected]
KINGSTON, Richard [University of Manchester]
[email protected]
DEAS, Iain [University of Manchester] Iain.
[email protected]
PELLOW, David N. [University of California, San
Diego] [email protected]
MOORE, Reagan [University of California, San
Diego] [email protected]
FAERMAN, Marcio [Rede Nacional de Ensino e
Pesquisa] [email protected]
PILSBURY, David [Worldwide Universities
Network] [email protected]
The University, The City, And The State:
International University Real Estate
Development [423]
WIEWEL, Wim [University of Baltimore]
[email protected]

71

Wednesday

CHRONOLOGICAL PAPER SESSIONS & ROUNDTABLES

9:4511:15 pm

............................................................................. ............................................................................. .............................................................................


7.6 Transportation and Land
Use: Making the Connection
or Losing the Plot?
Moderator: The last presenter in this session.
Discussant: THAKURIAH, Piyushimita [University
of Illinois at Chicago] [email protected]
Room: 10th Floor, Marriott Hotel, OHare
Transits Role In The Metro Density/Housing
Affordability Relation: A National Appraisal
And Lessons Learned [437]
CLARK, Thomas A. [University of Colorado Denver]
[email protected]
GNANASEKARAN, Shanmugapriya [University of
Colorado Denver] [email protected]
Density And Traffic: Connecting The Dots
[445]
FRENCH, Steven P. [Georgia Institute of
Technology] [email protected]
PEPONIS, John [Georgia Institute of Technology]
[email protected]
SCOPPA, Martin [Georgia institute of Technology]
[email protected]
The Paradox Of Highway-Building In A
Sustainable Region: Analysis Of Politics
And Planning In Metropolitan Vancouver
[478]
TOWNSEND, Craig [Concordia University]
[email protected]
SIEMIATYCKI, Matti [University of Glasgow]
[email protected]
BARRIEAU, Pierre [Concordia University]
[email protected]

72

8.6 Analyzing the Built


Environment

10.6 The Spatial Dimension of


Crime

Moderator: The last presenter in this session.


Discussant: None

Moderator/Discussant:
UMEMOTO, Karen [University of Hawaii at
Manoa] [email protected]

Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Purdue

Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Indiana

A Study On The Spatial Relationship


Between Mixed Land Use And Urban
Disaster-- A Case Study Of Tainan City [485]
CHANG, Hsueh-Sheng [Leader University] chs@
mail.leader.edu.tw
CHAO, Tzu-Yuan [Leader University]
[email protected]

Cities Under Observation. Social And


Civil Insecurities In Urban Italy: Policy
Orientations And Practices [572]
BRICOCOLI, Massimo [Politecnico di Milano]
[email protected]
SAVOLDI, Paola [Politecnico di Milano]
[email protected]

The Grandfather Clause Effect [491]


FERGUSON, Erik [American University of Sharjah]
[email protected]

Planning In The Face Of Terrorism:


Implications For Planning In The Post- 9/11
City [573]
BURKE, Jason R. [University of Toronto]
[email protected]

The Quadralogue Concept For Strategic


Projects Assessment [509]
LOURENCO, Julia M. [University of Minho]
[email protected]
PROSPERI, David C. [Florida Atlantic University]
[email protected]
A Methodological Framework For A Political
Approach Of Mixed Land Use, Tested In The
Urbanised Region Of Flanders, Belgium [516]
PISMAN, Ann [Hogeschool Antwerpen]
[email protected]
LEINFELDER, Hans [Ghent University]
[email protected]

Planning In The Face Of Urban Violence:


A Critical Appraisal From Rio De Janeiro
Conflict Zones [575]
COUTINHO MARQUES
DA SILVA, Rachel [Federal U. of Rio de Janeiro
-Prourb] [email protected]
The Profane Semiotic Of Urban Danger
Post 9/11 Planning For Safer Cities [585]
KOSKELA, Hille [University of Helsinki]
[email protected]
Exploring Spatial Dynamics Of Social
Inequality: Social Capital, Political
Participation And Neighborhood Safety [598]
NAM, Yunwoo [University of Nebraska - Lincoln]
[email protected]
ELDER, Kurt [University of Nebraska - Lincoln]
[email protected]

9:4511:15 pm

CHRONOLOGICAL PAPER SESSIONS & ROUNDTABLES

.............................................................................
.............................................................................

12.8 Justice, Morality and


Trust
Moderator/Discussant: GUNDER, Michael
[University of Auckland] [email protected]
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Great America II
Relativism And Planning: The Good, The Bad,
And The Ugly [683]
STEIN, Stanley M. [University of Calgary]
[email protected]
HARPER, Thomas L. [University of Calgary]
[email protected]
Trust And The Public Interest In The MicroPolitics Of Planning Practice [686]
TAIT, Malcolm [University of Sheffield]
[email protected]
Transforming Rubbertown: The
Rhetorical Construction Of Sustainability
And Environmental Justice In Louisville,
Kentucky [690]
THROGMORTON, James A. [University of Iowa]
[email protected]
Assessment of Equity in Middle Eastern
Water Allocation: The Case of the IsraeliJordanian Peace Treaty
ABUKAHTER, Ahmed [University of Texas at
Austin] [email protected]

13.8 Planning the Sustainable


Metropolis
Moderator/Discussant:
SCHOENWANDT, Walter [University of Stuttgart]
[email protected]
Room: 10th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Water Tower
State-Level Versus Metropolitan Land Use
Planning: Seeking The Right Scale For
Regional Decision-Making [704]
CHAKRABORTY, Arnab [University of Illinois at
Urbana-Champaign] [email protected]
KNAAP, Gerrit [University of Maryland College
Park] [email protected]

Thinking Metropolitan: Planning For


Sustainable Development In The Amsterdam
And Vancouver Metropolitan Regions [727]
JANSSEN-JANSEN, Leonie B. [University of
Amsterdam] [email protected]
HUTTON, Thomas A. [University of British
Columbia] [email protected]

Wednesday

............................................................................
14.6 Understanding Travel
Behavior: Considering
Childrens Travel and
Neighborhood Characteristics
Moderator/Discussant: ROSENBLOOM, Sandra
[University of Arizona] [email protected]
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Northwestern
Whos Taking The Kids To School? An
Examination Of Chauffeuring And Mode
Choice In The United States, 1977-2001 [830]
MCDONALD, Noreen [University of North Carolina
at Chapel Hill] [email protected]
What Drives Parents? A Context Sensitive
Inquiry Into Parents Mode Preferences On
The Journey To School [885]
ZUNIGA, Kelly D. [University of Colorado]
[email protected]
Parking And Walking Mode Choice [820]
LIU, Chao [University of Maryland College Park]
[email protected]
CLIFTON, Kelly J. [University of Maryland College
Park] [email protected]
BURNIER, Carolina [University of Maryland
College Park] [email protected]
Is Alternative Development Undersupplied?
An Examination Of Residential Preferences
And Choices Of Northern California Movers
[778]
CAO, Xinyu (Jason) [University of Minnesota]
[email protected]

73

Wednesday

CHRONOLOGICAL PAPER SESSIONS & ROUNDTABLES

............................................................................. .............................................................................
15.6 Designs for Challenging
Places

16.5 Recognising Cultural and


Institutional Diversity 2

Moderator/Discussant:
STEVENS, Quentin [University College of London]
[email protected]

Moderator/Discussant:
HEALEY, Patsy [Newcastle University]
[email protected]

Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Ohio State

Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Minnesota

Greenways In Mexican Cities: Is It


Possible In Non Planned Areas Colonias
Irregulares? [900]
DEMERUTIS, Juan [Universidad de Guadalajara]
[email protected]

Town Planners Still In Search Of A Role?


Initial Findings From An Ethnography Of
Planners In Australia [957]
BURTON, Paul A. [Griffith University]
[email protected]

Building The Image Of A New Suburban Life:


The Case Of Bahcesehir In Istanbul [903]
ERKUL, Fusun [University of Michigan]
[email protected]

Planning Spaces With Commons [962]


DAVY, Benjamin [TU Dortmund]
[email protected]

Seeking A Sustainable Design For Flood


Area Occupation: The Sao Paulo, Brazil Case
[925]
PESSOA, Denise F. [Centro Universitario Nove de
Julho- UNINOVE] [email protected]
Compare Planning Methods For
Neighborhoods: Case Study Of Stormwater
In The Woodlands, Texas [954]
YANG, Bo [Texas A&M University]
[email protected]
LI, Ming-Han [Texas A&M University]
[email protected]

74

Understanding The Idea(l)s Of Indian Identity


Through Urban Planning In Delhi [968]
MORENAS, Leon A. [Rensselaer Polytechnic
Institute] [email protected]
Knowledge Propagation The Possible
Contribution Of Open Source To Developing
And Sharing Planning Methodologies And
Practices In Different Contexts [981]
TIPPETT, Joanne [University of Manchester]
[email protected]

9:4511:15 pm

11:15 am 1:00 pm
.............................................................................
International Association
of China Planners (IACP)
Business Meeting
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Michigan

.............................................................................
Faculty Womens Interest
Group Luncheon
Room: 7th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Salon I

CHRONOLOGICAL
SESSIONS,
ROUNDTABLES
AND MEETINGS

THURSDAY

Thursday

8:009:30 am

CHRONOLOGICAL PAPER SESSIONS & ROUNDTABLES

Thursday

Thursday
Sessions
8:00 9:30 am
............................................................................. .............................................................................
2.7 Design Issues
Moderator: DAMMERS, Ed [Netherlands
Institute for Spatial Research] [email protected]
Discussant: KOTVAL, Zenia [Michigan State
University] [email protected]
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Michigan State
Does It Pay To Invest In Amenities Around
Offices? [59]
DAMMERS, Ed [Netherlands Institute for Spatial
Research] [email protected]
WETERINGS, Anet [Netherlands Institute for
Spatial Research] [email protected]
Creativity & Competitiveness Through
Design Policy [88]
MULLER, Larissa [University of Calgary]
[email protected]
MACLEOD, Douglas [Canadian Design Research
Network] [email protected]
COVO, David [McGill University]
[email protected]

3.11 Waste Management Issues and Analysis


Moderator/Discussant:
CARP, Jana [Appalachain State University]
[email protected]
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Iowa
In My Backyard! An Alternate Model For
Solid Waste Management [126]
CHETTIPARAMB, Angelique [Cardiff University]
[email protected]
CHAKKALAKKAL, Mary [Jan Shikshan Sansthan]
[email protected]
CHEDAMBATH, Rajan [Centre for
Heritage, Environment and Development]
[email protected]
Post-Nimbyism: Learning To Live With A
Landfill [170]
MACLAREN, Virginia W. [University of Toronto]
[email protected]
ATKINSON, Tanya [University of Toronto]
[email protected]
KRISHNAMURTHY, Vig [University of Toronto]
[email protected]
How Much E-Waste In Your Basement And
Attic? Results From A National Survey [180]
NIXON, Hilary [San Jose State University]
[email protected]
SAPHORES, Jean-Daniel [University of California,
Irvine] [email protected]
OGUNSEITAN, Oladele A. [University of California,
Irvine] [email protected]
SHAPIRO, Andrew [University of California, Irvine]
[email protected]

77

Thursday

CHRONOLOGICAL PAPER SESSIONS & ROUNDTABLES

8:009:30 am

............................................................................. ............................................................................. .............................................................................


3.12 Energy Analysis and
Planning

4.7 Intergovernmental
Collaboration

4.18 Governance, Culture and


Theory

Moderator/Discussant: DE ROO, Gert


[University of Groningen] [email protected]

Moderator: The last presenter in this session.

Moderator: The last presenter in this session.

Discussant: MUELLER, Elizabeth [University of


Texas] [email protected]

Discussant: None

Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Michigan


A Study On Policy Simulation Of Local
Renewable Energy Demand And Supply
System In Taijian Area, Taiwan [125]
CHAO, Tzu-Yuan S. [Leader University, Tainan]
[email protected]
YUE, Cheng-Dar [Leader University, Tainan]
[email protected]
A Model For Estimating Food Distribution
Requirements In The U.S. And Implications
On Food Security [151]
HUANG, Sonya Y. [Massachusetts Institute of
Technology] [email protected]
POLENSKE, Karen R. [Massachusetts Institute of
Technology] [email protected]
CANNING, Pat [U.S. Department of Agriculture]
[email protected]
ISMAIL, Ayman [Massachusetts Institute of
Technology] [email protected]
WATERS, Arnold [U.S. Department of Agriculture]
[email protected]
Biomass Production For Energy: Assessing
The Compatibility With Scenic And Cultural
Values Of Rural Landscapes On A Regional
Scale - A German Case Study [188]
ROTH, Michael [Dortmund University of
Technology] [email protected]
GRUEHN, Dietwald [Dortmund University of
Technology] [email protected]
KOLBE, Margret [Berlin University of Technology]
[email protected]
HENNEMANN, Bernhard [Berlin University of
Technology] [email protected]
Production Of Innovative Energies And
Conservation Of The Territorial Values: A
Possible Sinergy? [190]
SCHILLECI, Filippo [Universit degli Studi di
Palermo] [email protected]
MAROTTA, Paola [Universit degli Studi di
Palermo] [email protected]

78

Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Illinois


Bridging Institutional Analysis And
Collaborative Natural Resource
Management Theory: Lessons From The
Kawartha Highlands Local Stakeholders
Committee [209]
BARRY, Janice M. [University of British Columbia]
[email protected]
Participative Governance: Capacity
Building Through Pluralistic Policy Making
Processes [259]
ROSA PIRES, Artur [University of Aveiro]
[email protected]
SANTINHA, Gonalo [University of Aveiro]
[email protected]
MOTA, Jose C. [University of Aveiro] [email protected]
Blending Many Knowledges For Robust
Planning [234]
INNES, Judith [University of California, Berkeley]
[email protected]
BOOHER, David E. [California State University,
Sacramento] [email protected]

Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Indiana


Celebrating The Individual: Intentions For
Urban Development [212]
BOONSTRA, Beitske [TNO Netherlands
Organisation for Applied Scientific Research]
[email protected]
Can An Observatory In Action Approach
Help In Rethinking Planning Practices? [215]
CONCILIO, Grazia [Politecnico di Bari]
[email protected]
CELINO, Adele [Politecnico di Bari]
[email protected]
Culture, Episodes, Horizon, Project,
Innovation, Agenda: Institutions As Stopped
Arrows? [226]
FEDELI, Valeria [Politecnico di Milano]
[email protected]
Building Sustainability Through
Collaborative Planning [228]
GHOMASHCHI, Vahid [Town of Stratford]
[email protected]

8:009:30 am

CHRONOLOGICAL PAPER SESSIONS & ROUNDTABLES

.............................................................................
5.7 Housing Market Behavior
and the Environment
Moderator: The last presenter in this session.
Discussant: None
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Lincolnshire II
Does Wetlands Proximity Matter? Evidence
From Chatham County In Georgia [305]
GAO, Shan [Texas A&M University]
[email protected]
Urban Renewal For An Energy Efficient City
[330]
KURTH, Detlef [University of Applied Sciences
Stuttgart] [email protected]
Differential Impact Of Floodplains On Home
Prices: A Housing Submarket Approach [332]
LEE, Dalbyul [Georgia Institute of Technology]
[email protected]
FRENCH, Steven P. [Georgia Institute of
Technology] [email protected]
IMMERGLUCK, Dan [Georgia Institute of
Technology] [email protected]
Urban Green Spaces: A Place For
Community Integration? The Case Of Greater
Manchester, UK [325]
KAZMIERCZAK, Aleksandra [University of Salford]
[email protected]

.............................................................................
5.19 Neighborhood
Regeneration in the City
Center
Moderator: The last presenter in this session.
Discussant: None
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Great America I
Declining Retail In Innercity
Neighbourhoods In London. Business
Improvement Districts Strategies In Urban
Regeneration Processes [313]
GULLINO, Silvia [Kingston University London]
[email protected]

City Centre Housing In The UK: Prospects


And Policy Challenges In A Changing
Housing Market [331]
LAMBERT, Christine [University of the West of
England, Bristol] [email protected]
BODDY, Martin [University of the West of England,
Bristol] [email protected]
Community Of Trust: New Interpretation And
The Case Of Muslim Communities In Gaza
[344]
NAOMI, Carmon [Technion- Israel Institute of
Technology] [email protected]
JABAREEN, Yosef [Technion- Israel Institute of
Technology] [email protected]

.............................................................................
6.6 Planning Culture
Moderator/Discussant: DHR, Stefanie
[Radboud University Nijmegen and TU Dortmund]
[email protected]
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Wisconsin
Planning Culture: The Missing Link In
International Planning Studies [379]
DE VRIES, Jochem [University of Amsterdam]
[email protected]
Characterising European Spatial Planning
Systems [403]
NADIN, Vincent [Delft University of Technology]
[email protected]
STEAD, Dominic [Delft University of Technology]
[email protected]

Thursday

.............................................................................
7.7 Urban Sprawl: Trends and
Issues in Europe and North
America
Moderator: The last presenter in this session.
Discussant: OCONNELL, Derry [University
College Dublin] [email protected]
Room: 10th Floor, Marriott Hotel, OHare
The Politics Of Sprawl: Density, Zoning And
The 2006 Virginia Election [450]
HOWLETT, Marc A. [University of North Carolina
at Chapel Hill] [email protected]
Edgeless Villages: Urban Sprawl And
English Rural Settlements [461]
MARTINDALE, Katharine A. [Cambridge
University] [email protected]
Post- Socialist Sprawl: Explaining Land
Consumption Patterns In East Germany [469]
SCHMIDT, Stephan [Cornell University]
[email protected]
Containing Urban Sprawl? Comparing
Brownfield Reuse Policies In England And
Germany [470]
SCHULZE BAING, Andreas
[University of Manchester] Andreas.
[email protected]

Assessing The Convergence Of National


Spatial Planning Systems In Europe [416]
STEAD, Dominic [Delft University of Technology]
[email protected]
NADIN, Vincent [Delft University of Technology]
[email protected]
The Impact Of EU Regulations On Local
Planning Practice: The Case Of The
Netherlands [418]
TRIP, Jan J. [Delft University of Technology]
[email protected]
WATERHOUT, Bas [Delft University of Technology]
[email protected]
ZONNEVELD, Wil [Delft University of Technology]
[email protected]

79

Thursday

CHRONOLOGICAL PAPER SESSIONS & ROUNDTABLES

............................................................................. .............................................................................
7.10 Planning Capacity and
Participation: Forging the
Links
Moderator: The last presenter in this session.
Discussant: BALDUCCI, Alessandro [Polytechnic
University] [email protected]
Room: 10th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Huron
Deconstructing The Cooperation Conundrum:
An Analysis Of Cooperation Around Land Use
Issues In Michigan [438]
DAVID, Nina P. [University of Michigan]
[email protected]
Planning Capacity: Measures And
Implications [460]
LOH, Carolyn G. [University of Michigan]
[email protected]
In Atempt To Facilitate The Urban
Knowledge Arena [479]
TROEVA, Vesselina R. [University of
Architecture Civil Engineering and Geodesy]
[email protected]

.............................................................................
8.7 Modeling Land Use/Land
Cover Change
Moderator: HERBERT, Berneece S. [Alabama
A&M University] [email protected]
Discussant: PAN, Qisheng [Texas Southern
University] [email protected]

11.3 Making Planning


Decisions
Moderator: The last presenter in this session.
Discussant: None

The Production Of Castlefield Manchester:


Lefebvrian Insights [670]
LEARY, Michael E. [London South Bank University]
[email protected]
Chronotope And Rhythmanalysis [676]
SANDRA, Mallet [Institut dUrbanisme de Paris]
[email protected]

Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Lincolnshire I

.............................................................................

The Legal Contradictions Manifest In The


Planning Of A Limited Territory. (The Case Of
The Canary Islands, Spain.) [533]
CACERES, SR., Eduardo [Universidad de Las
Palmas de Gran Canaria] [email protected]

13.7 Pre-organized Session


- Regional Resilience and
Dealing with the Unforseen

Design Of A Strategic Process Approach


For Complex Integrated Area Development
Projects [618]
DE KORT, Inge A.T. [University of Twente]
[email protected]
DEWULF, Geert P.M.R. [University of Twente]
[email protected]
BULT-SPIERING, Mirjam W.D. [University of
Twente] [email protected]
Corruption In Planning And Land
Development In Greece: Tales Of A
Contemporary Lernaean Hydra [629]
LALENIS, Konstantinos [University of Thessaly]
[email protected]
The Problem Of Institutional Design For
Resolving Conflict Between Planning
Policy And Local Democracy: Planning
Oversight And Appeal Bodies In Comparative
Perspective [640]
TAYLOR, Zack [University of Toronto]
[email protected]

Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Purdue

.............................................................................

Multi-Temporal And Spatial Analysis Of Land


Use And Land Cover Change In Madison
County Alabama [498]
HERBERT, Berneece S. [Alabama A&M University]
[email protected]

12.10 Time and Space

Future Strategies For The Application Of


Remote Sensing Data In Urban Planning The German Case [533]
ZIMMERMANN, Gabi [Dortmund University of
Technology] [email protected]

Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Great America II

80

8:009:30am

Moderator/Discussant:
DAVOUDI, Simin [Newcastle University]
[email protected]

The Contemporary City As A Changing


Architecture Of Time [649]
BONFIGLIOLI, Sandra R. [Politecnico di Milano]
[email protected]
MARCO, Albini [Politecnico di Milano]
[email protected]

Moderator: MORROW-JONES, Hazel A. [Ohio


State University] [email protected]
Discussant: CHAPPLE, Karen [University of
California at Berkeley] [email protected]
Room: 10th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Water Tower
Linking Resilience And Sustainability In
Ohio Township Planning [729]
JUN, Hee-Jung [Ohio State University] jun.41@
osu.edu
CONROY, Maria M. [Ohio State University]
[email protected]
Demographic Change A Challenge To
Urban-Regional Resilience In Europe [743]
MUELLER, Bernhard [Technical University at
Dresden] [email protected]
Stability Through Specialization And
Diversification What Contributes To
Resilient And Viable Small Town Centers In
The U.S.? [749]
OTTO, Andreas [Technical University at Dresden]
[email protected]
Dealing With Large Urban Distressed Areas
As A Means To Enhance Urban Resilience
-The Example Of Europe [751]
SCHIAPPACASSE, Paulina [Technical University
at Dresden] Paulina.Schiappacasse@mailbox.
tu-dresden.de

8:009:30am

CHRONOLOGICAL PAPER SESSIONS & ROUNDTABLES

Thursday

............................................................................. ............................................................................. .............................................................................


14.7 Understanding Travel
Behavior: The role of
Sustainable Transportation
and Smart Growth
Moderator/Discussant: HULL, Angela [HeriotWatt University] [email protected]
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Northwestern
Towards More Sustainable Transportation:
Do Policies Matter? [775]
BUEHLER, Ralph [Rutgers, The State University of
New Jersey] [email protected]
What Next For the Land Use - Travel
Behavior Link? Recentering the Suburbs
[772]
BOARNET, Marlon G. [University of California,
Irvine] [email protected]
JOH, Kenneth [University of California, Irvine]
[email protected]
NGUYEN, Mai T. [University of North Carolina at
Chapel Hill] [email protected]
SIEMBAB, Wally [Siembab Planning Associates]
FULTON, William [Solimar Research]
Overcoming Automobile Captivity: Can Land
Use Policy Affect Captive Automobile Travel
Behavior? [817]
LEE, Jae Su [Texas A&M University]
[email protected]

15.7 Historic Cities Competing


Through Design

16.7 Planning Histories and


Global-local Dynamics 2

Moderator/Discussant:
PENDLEBURY, John [Newcastle University]
[email protected]

Moderator/Discussant:
WARD, Stephen V. [Oxford Brookes University]
[email protected]

Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Ohio State

Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Minnesota

The Processes Work To Enhance The


Tourism Attractivenes Of Places Mixing
Of Cultural Difference And Consumption
Opportunities. The Case Of Paris New
Experiences For Distinctive Groups Of City
Users [906]
INGALLINA, Patrizia G. [Universit des Sciences et
Technologies de Lille] [email protected]

Lisbons Urbanism: Elements Of Applied


Urban Theory [958]
CAMARINHAS, Catarina T. [Universit Paris IV,
Institut durbanisme et damnagement de la
Sorbonne] [email protected]

Exacerbating The Divide: Dubais Waterfront


Developments [918]
MOUSTAFA, Amer [American University of
Sharjah] [email protected]
Istanbul: A City In The Process Improvement
And Regeneration Within The Context Of
International And National Development
[920]
OZTURK, Zeynep K. [Kadir Has University]
[email protected]
CENGIZ, Huseyin [Yildiz Technical University]
[email protected]
ATABAY, Semra H. [Yildiz Technical University]
[email protected]

New Tools To Build A Democratic City: An


Experience Of Strategic Planning In Low
Density Territories And Cities [974]
PLAISANT, Alessandro [LAMP - Universit di
Sassari] [email protected]
CECCHINI, Arnaldo [LAMP - Universit di Sassari]
[email protected]
Towards Garden City Wonderlands: New
Town Planning In 1950s Taiwan [989]
WANG, Yi-Wen [University of Nottingham]
[email protected]
HEATH, Tim [University of Nottingham]
[email protected]

.............................................................................
14.20 Intermodal Transport
Planning for Airports, Rail and
Trucks
Moderator/Discussant: SKAYANNIS, P. D.
[University of Thessaly] [email protected]
Room: 10th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Navy Pier
The Aerotropolis As A Normative Model Of
Urban Form [794]
FREESTONE, Robert [University of New South
Wales] [email protected]
BAKER, Douglas C. [Queensland University of
Technology] [email protected]
Making Truck-Rail Intermodal Competitive
[846]
ROOSA, Erin [University of Illinois at Chicago]
[email protected]
KAWAMURA, Kazuya [University of Illinois at
Chicago] [email protected]

81

Thursday

CHRONOLOGICAL PAPER SESSIONS & ROUNDTABLES

9:4511:15 am

Thursday
Sessions
9:45 11:15 am
............................................................................. .............................................................................
Session Sponsored by the
Lincoln Institute of Land
Policy: Urbanization in China
Organizer: YANYUN MAN, Joyce [China
Program, Lincoln Institute of Land Policy]
[email protected]
Moderator: ZHANG, Ming [University of Texas,
Austin] [email protected]
Discussant: ZHANG, Yang [Virginia Polytechnic
Institute and State University]
Discussant: DING, Chengri Di [University of
Maryland] [email protected]
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Indiana

Moderator: HASELSBERGER, Beatrix [Vienna


University of Technology] haselsberger@email.
archlab.tuwien.ac.at
Room: 10th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Huron
Assessment of Equity in Middle Eastern
Water Allocation: The Case of the IsraeliJordanian Peace Treaty
ABUKAHTER, Ahmed [University of Texas at
Austin] [email protected]
Urban Festivities, Cultural Events and
Sustainable Urban Development [54]
CERMAKOVA, Eva [Brno University of Technology]
[email protected]

Chinas Urbanization: Impacts On Land Use


And Urban Development
ZHANG, Tingwei, [University of Illinois at Chicago]
[email protected]

Who is Governing Neighborhoods? [254]


PILL, Madeleine [Cardiff University]
[email protected]

Agglomeration Of Industries And Urban


Expansion In China
HE, Canfei [Peking University/Lincoln Institute
Center for Urban Development and Land Policy]
[email protected]

The Articulation and Co-ordination of


National-level Planning Policy in Western
Europe: Lessons for Canada [763]
WEBB, Brian [Manchester University] brian.
[email protected]

Capitalization Of Bus Vs. Rail Transit Access:


Evidence From Beijing, China?
ZHANG, Ming [University of Texas at Austin]
[email protected]

Theoretical Debate on Gated Communities


(GCs): Genesis, Controversies, and the Way
Forward [953]
XU, Miao [Cardiff University] [email protected]

Urban Expansion In China?


HAN, Sun Sheng, [University of Melboune,
Australia] [email protected]

82

ACSP-AESOP Student Award


Paper Session

9:4511:15 am

CHRONOLOGICAL PAPER SESSIONS & ROUNDTABLES

............................................................................. .............................................................................

Thursday

2.8 Industrial Concentration


and Clusters

3.14 Environmentally-oriented
Development Approaches

Deliberative Planning In Disaster Recovery:


Re-Membering New Orleans [280]
WILSON, Patricia A. [University of Texas at
Austin] [email protected]

Moderator: DRUCKER, Joshua [University of


Illinois at Chicago] [email protected]

Moderator/Discussant: SHANDAS, Vivek


[Portland State University] [email protected]

.............................................................................

Discussant: DEMAZIRE, Christophe [Universite


de Tours] [email protected]

Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Michigan

Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Michigan State


How Do Music Industries Grow?
Concentration, Innovation And Expectations
[57]
CHU-SHORE, Jesse C. [Massachusetts Institute of
Technology] [email protected]
An Analysis Of Trends In Regional Industrial
Concentration In The U.S. And Implications
For Regional Economic Development [62]
DRUCKER, Joshua [University of Illinois at
Chicago] [email protected]

.............................................................................
3.13 Land Protection and
Open Space Conservation
Moderator/Discussant: OLSHANSKY, Robert B.
[University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign]
[email protected]
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Iowa
Conservation Easements Effects On Urban
Growth [166]
LAURIA, Mickey [Clemson University]
[email protected]
DYCKMAN, Caitlin S. [Clemson University]
[email protected]
Planning And Land Preservation In The
Northern Forest Region Of Maine, Vermont,
New Hampshire, And New York [179]
MOSCOVICI, Dan [University of Pennsylvania]
[email protected]

Civic Agriculture In The Farming Subdivision


[132]
COHEN, Nevin [The New School]
[email protected]
Conservation Subdivision Design: A
Magical Bullet To Environmentally Sensitive
Development? [139]
GOCMEN, Asli [University of Wisconsin-Madison]
[email protected]
Conservation-Based Development And
Watershed Stewardship Institutions: [147]
HIBBARD, Michael [University of Oregon]
[email protected]
LURIE, Susan [University of Oregon]
[email protected]

.............................................................................
4.8 Post-Disaster Planning and
Governance
Moderator: The last presenter in this session.
Discussant: FEDELI, Valeria [Politecnico di
Milano] [email protected]

5.9 Housing Policy at the


National Level
Moderator: The last presenter in this session.
Discussant: None
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Lincolnshire II
Urban Policy In The 21st Century [309]
GLICKMAN, Norman J. [Rutgers,
The State University of Newjersey]
[email protected]
WILSON, Robert H. [University of Texas at Austin]
[email protected]
Subsidized Housing Policy In The United
States [326]
KEATING, Dennis W. [Cleveland State University]
[email protected]
KRUMHOLZ, Norman [Cleveland State University]
[email protected]
Housing Finance Reform In Europe [349]
PRIEMUS, Hugo [Delft University of Technology]
[email protected]
ELSINGA, Marja G. [Delft University of
Technology] [email protected]

Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Illinois


A Proposal For Integrated Governance
Between Synergetic Dynamics Of Complex
Society: Synergic Administration [224]
DIKER, Nazire [Yildiz Technical University]
[email protected]
Governance Structures And Capacity
Building In The Post-Katrina Gulf Coast
Region [242]
LOWE, Jeffrey S. [Florida State University]
[email protected]
SHAW, Todd C. [University of South Carolina]
[email protected]
WOODS, Clyde A. [University of California, Santa
Barbara] [email protected]
From Emergency Recovery To Community
Driven Development: Urban Development
Suhareka/Kosova [266]
SVANDA, Nina [Vienna University of Technology]
[email protected]

83

Thursday

CHRONOLOGICAL PAPER SESSIONS & ROUNDTABLES

.............................................................................
5.21 Tax Credits and
Preservation
Moderator: The last presenter in this session.
Discussant: None
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Great America I
Assessing The Neighborhood Impacts
Of Low Income Housing Tax Credit
Development [298]
DENG, Lan [University of Michigan]
[email protected]
The Chicago Low-Income Housing Trust
Fund: Evolution, Performance And Prospects
[312]
GREENLEE, Andrew [University of Illinois at
Chicago] [email protected]
ANTHONY, Jerry [University of Iowa]
[email protected]
As Low-Income Housing Tax Credit
Developments Age, Can Homeownership Be
An Exit Strategy? [338]
MCCLURE, Kirk [University of Kansas]
[email protected]
GRUBE, Michael T. [McCormack
Baron Asset Management] Michael.
[email protected]

.............................................................................
6.8 Informal Urban
Development: Policy
and Planning in Critical
Perspective
Moderator/Discussant: DOAN, Petra [Florida
State University] [email protected]
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Wisconsin
Planning For Poverty Alleviation In Rapidly
Growing African Cities: Preliminary Findings
From Field Research In Lagos And Benin
City, Nigeria [373]
ACEY, Charisma [University of California, Los
Angeles] [email protected]
S.O.S. - The Sabotaging Of Slum Upgrading
In Sao Paulo [377]
CAROLINI, Gabriella Y. [Columbia University]
[email protected]

84

Informalization And The Changing


Landscape Of Cities In Bolivia [400]
KIRSHNER, Joshua D. [Cornell University]
[email protected]
BENERIA, Lourdes [Cornell University]
[email protected]
Urban Development And Housing In China
And Brazil [402]
LOOYE, Johanna W. [University of Cincinnati]
[email protected]

.............................................................................
7.8 Housing: Bridging the
Divide Between Land Use
Planning and Affordability
Moderator: The last presenter in this session.
Co-Discussant: KNAAP, Gerrit [University of
Maryland College Park] [email protected]
Co-Discussant: HACCOU, Huibert A. [The
Saxion Universities of Professional Education, The
Netherlands] [email protected]
Room: 10th Floor, Marriott Hotel, OHare
Estimating The Effects Of Land Cover On
Housing Prices With Bayesian Model
Averaging [432]
BJORN, Andrew M. [University of Washington]
[email protected]
Housing Associations And Land Use
Development In The Netherlands [434]
BUITELAAR, Edwin [Netherlands Institute for
Spatial Research] [email protected]
Are Local Authorities Planning For Housing
Sustainability And Affordability? A Survey Of
Land Use Regulations Across 100 Australian
Cities And Towns [447]
GURRAN, Nicole [University of Sydney] ngurran@
arch.usyd.edu.au
PHIBBS, Peter J. [University of Western Sydney]
[email protected]

9:4511:15 am

.............................................................................
8.8 Spatial Planning/Support
Systems
Moderator/Discussant: CLAY, Michael [Auburn
University] [email protected]
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Purdue
Spatial Planning For Sustainable CityRegions [507]
LEGATES, Richard T. [San Francisco State
University] [email protected]
Assessing Public Facility Networks
Efficiency Levels Through Synthetic
Accessibility Measures [515]
PHOTIS, Yorgos N. [University of Thessaly]
[email protected]
ATHANASSIOU, Fotini [University of Thessaly]
A Spatial Decision Support System For
Transportation Planning Using Urban
Indicators For The Chicago Area [522]
SRIRAJ, P. S. [University of Illinois at Chicago]
[email protected]
METAXATOS, Paul [University of Illinois at
Chicago] [email protected]
SWARUP, Tanushri [University of Illinois at
Chicago] [email protected]
DIRKS, Lise [University of Illinois at Chicago]
[email protected]
THAKURIAH, Piyushimita [University of Illinois at
Chicago] [email protected]
MINOCHA, Inshu [Wilbur Smith Associates]
[email protected]

9:4511:15 am

CHRONOLOGICAL PAPER SESSIONS & ROUNDTABLES

............................................................................. .............................................................................
11.4 Planning in Transition
Times

12.11 Theories of
Transformation

Moderator: The last presentator in this session.


Discussant: None

Moderator/Discussant:
HEBBERT, Michael [Manchester University]
[email protected]

Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Lincolnshire I

Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Great America II

The Instituting Of New Meanings To The


Urban Landscape [619]
DEMBSKI, Sebastian [University of Amsterdam]
[email protected]
SALET, Willem [University of Amsterdam]
[email protected]

Myth And Rationalization In Planning


History/Theory: The Case Of The Nave
Modernist Planner [651]
CAMPBELL, Scott D. [University of Michigan]
[email protected]

Regeneration In A New Context: A New Act


On Renewal And Its Implications On The
Planning Processes In Istanbul [620]
ENLIL, Zeynep [Yildiz Technical University]
[email protected]
DINCER, Iclal [Yildiz Technical University]
[email protected]
ISLAM, Tolga [Yildiz Technical University]
[email protected]
Cost Recovery And Game Theory: A Case
Of Land Development Process In The
Netherlands [637]
SAMSURA, Datuk Ary A. [Radboud University
Nijmegen] [email protected]
VAN DER KRABBEN, Erwin [Radboud University
Nijmegen] [email protected]
VAN DEEMEN, A.M.A. [Radboud University
Nijmegen] [email protected]
The Evolution Of The Planning Process
In Bulgaria `From Plan To Market To
Something In Between The Case Of The
Tourism Sector [639]
SLAEV, Alexander D. [Varna Free University]
[email protected]
ANDERSON, R. J. [Newcastle University]
[email protected]

Historia Magistra Of Planning...Or Not?


[660]
GIGLI, Federico R. [University of Rome La
Sapienza] [email protected]

Thursday

Identifying Megaregions In The US:


Implications For Infrastructure Investment
[766]
WOO, Myungje [Georgia Institute of Technology]
[email protected]
ROSS, Catherine, L. [Georgia Institute of
Technology] [email protected]
BARRINGER, Jason [Georgia Institute of
Technology] [email protected]
LEONE DE NIE, Karen [Georgia Institute of
Technology] [email protected]
WEST, Harry [Georgia Institute of Technology]
[email protected]
DOYLE, Jessica L. [Georgia Institute of
Technology] [email protected]

.............................................................................
14.8 Traffic Congestion:
Perceptions, Actions and
Measurement

Planning History As Argumentation:


Examining The Epistemological Frameworks
Of Historical Inquiry [662]
GREENSTEIN, Shana [University of Michigan]
[email protected]

Moderator: The last presentator in this session.

Cities, Planning And The Evolutionary


Paradigm [674]
MARSHALL, Stephen [University College London]
[email protected]

No Driving For A Day Per Week: Collective


Actions For Urban Traffic Congestion [811]
KIM, Youngkook [The Ohio State University]
[email protected]
GULDMANN, Jean-Michel [The Ohio State
University] [email protected]

.............................................................................
13.5 Reconsidering (Mega)Regional Infrastructure
Moderator/Discussant:
NEUMAN, Michael [Texas A&M University]
[email protected]
Room: 10th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Water Tower
Regional Distribution Pattern Of Privatized
And Foreign Investment Infrastructure
Projects In India [745]
MUKHOPADHYAY, Chandrima [Florida State
University] [email protected]
Mega-Regional Impacts Of Port Competition
[754]
POTTER, Cuz [Columbia University]
[email protected]
Federal Transportation Earmarking And
Metropolitan Planning In The U.S.: Coercion,
Cooptation, Or Collaboration [760]
SCIARA, Gian-Claudia [University of California,
Berkeley] [email protected]

Discussant: None
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Northwestern

Perceptions Of Congestion Pricing In The


Metropolitan Atlanta Region [770]
BARRINGER, Jason [Georgia Institute of
Technology] [email protected]
ROSS, Catherine L. [Georgia Institute of
Technology] [email protected]
GUENSLER, Randall, L. [Georgia Institute of
Technology] [email protected]
DOYLE, Jessica L. [Georgia Institute of
Technology] [email protected]
ZUYEVA, Lyubov [Georgia Institute of Technology]
[email protected]
BARRELLA, Elise [Georgia Institute of Technology]
[email protected]
Congestion And Accessibility: Whats The
Relationship? [832]
MONDSCHEIN, Andrew [University of California,
Los Angeles] [email protected]
BRUMBAUGH, Stephen [University of California,
Los Angeles] [email protected]
TAYLOR, Brian [University of California, Los
Angeles] [email protected]

85

Thursday

CHRONOLOGICAL PAPER SESSIONS & ROUNDTABLES

9:4511:15 am

............................................................................. ............................................................................. .............................................................................


14.21 Tools for Assessing
Land Use and Transportation
Interactions

15.8 Historic Cities - Good


Places?

16.6 Planning Histories and


Global-local Dynamics 1

Moderator/Discussant: PENG, Zhong-Ren


[University of Florida] [email protected]

Moderator/Discussant: MINETT, John


[Independent Researcher] [email protected]

Moderator/Discussant:
FRIEDMANN, John [University of British
Columbia] [email protected]

Room: 10th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Navy Pier

Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Ohio State

Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Minnesota

The Structural Accessibility Layer (Sal) A


Design Support Tool For Urban Mobility
Management [857]
SILVA, Ceclia [University of Oporto]
[email protected]
PINHO, Paulo [University of Oporto]
[email protected]

Politics Of Historic Preservation: Problems


And Prospects In A Progressive Midwestern
Town [887]
ANTHONY, Jerry [University of Iowa]
[email protected]

ECities In Transition: Spatial Planning In


Modern China [988]
WANG, Bing [Harvard University]
[email protected]

Support The Warrior Instead Of Manning


Equipment: Three Cases Of Developing
Planning Support Systems For Land Use And
Transport Planning [773]
BRMMELSTROET, Marco T. [University of
Amsterdam] [email protected]
Food For Thought And Thought For Food: An
Experiential Approach Towards Research In
Planning [862]
STRAATEMEIER, Thomas [University of
Amsterdam] [email protected]
HOETJES, Perry [University of Amsterdam]
[email protected]
BRMMELSTROET, Marco T. [University of
Amsterdam] [email protected]
BERTOLINI, Luca [University of Amsterdam]
[email protected]
The Politics Of Urban Transport In New
Zealand [835]
MUHAMMAD, Imran [Massey University]
[email protected]
ROSIER, Johanna [University of the Sunshine
Coast] [email protected]

86

Identity By Design [895]


BUTINA-WATSON, Georgia [Oxford Brookes
University] [email protected]
Good Living And Historic Cities: Some
Favourable Development [926]
PICCINATO, Giorgio [Roma Tre University]
[email protected]
Planning For Yesterday: Memorial
Masterplans In Five Cities [944]
STEVENS, Quentin [University College London]
[email protected]

Transnational Planners In A Post-Colonial


World [990]
WARD, Stephen V. [Oxford Brookes University]
[email protected]

12:001:00pm

CHRONOLOGICAL PAPER SESSIONS & ROUNDTABLES

Thursday

Thursday
Sessions
12:00 1:00 pm
............................................................................

............................................................................

ACSP Senior Faculty Interest


Group [FIG] Business Meeting
and Roundtable
Moderator: FELD, Marcia M. [University of
Rhode Island] [email protected]

ACSP Planners of Color


Interest Group [POCIG]
Roundtable: Do Race And
Ethnicity Have A Role In
Planning Scholarship?

Room: 10th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Huron

Moderator: HARPER-ANDERSON, Elsie [Chicago


Urban League] [email protected]

MEYER, Peter B. [University of Louisville]


[email protected]
PETRIE, Pattsi [University of Illinios, UrbanaChampaign] [email protected]

AESOP Thematic Group:


Urban Design in Planning

THOMAS, June M. [University of Michigan[


[email protected]
VZQUEZ-CASTILLO, M. Teresa [California State
University, Northridge] [email protected]
WUBNEH, Mulatu [East Carolina University]
[email protected]

Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Michigan State

............................................................................

............................................................................

............................................................................
.............................................................................
GPEAN Journal Editors
Interest Group Meeting
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Great America I

.............................................................................
ACSP-AESOP 2008 Joint
Congress Committee Meeting
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Lincolnshire II

............................................................................
ACSP Global Planning
Educators Interest Group
[GPEIG] Meeting With HUDs
Director of International
Research

Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Ohio State

AESOP Thematic Group:


Transnational and Crossborder Planning
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Michigan

............................................................................

AESOP Thematic Group:


Transport Planning and
Policy: European Experiences
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Northwestern

............................................................................
AESOP Thematic Group:
Research Ethics and Planning
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Indiana

3.23 AESOP Resilience &


Risk Mitigation Strategies
Thematic Group Roundtable:
Vulnerability vs. Resilience.
Visions for Cities Future [766]
Moderator: Hutter, Grard [Leibniz-Institute
of Ecological and Regional Development (IOER),
Dresden] [email protected]
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Iowa
Steiner, Frederick [University of Texas at Austin]
[email protected]
OLSHANSKY, Robert B. [University of Illinois at
Urbana-Champaign] [email protected]
Greiving, Stefan [Technische Universitt
Dortmund] [email protected]
Co-organizer: Colucci, Angela [Politecnico di
Milano, Italy] [email protected],
Co-organizer: Samakovlija, Marcella
[Politecnico di Milano, Italy] [email protected]

Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Purdue

87

Thursday

CHRONOLOGICAL PAPER SESSIONS & ROUNDTABLES

.............................................................................
4.20 Roundtable - The Limits
to Nonprofit Radicalism and
Advocacy Planning: A Cross
National Perspective [263]
Moderator: SEN, Siddhartha [Morgan State
University] [email protected]
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Illinois
KEATING, Dennis W. [College of Urban
Affairs, Cleveland State University]
[email protected]
ISAAC, Claudia B. [University of New Mexico]
[email protected]

.............................................................................

6.14 Roundtable - Emergent


Research Themes on European
Territorial Governance [382]
Moderator: FALUDI, Andreas [Delft University of
Technology] [email protected]

MEMON, Pyar Ali [Lincoln University]


[email protected]
SILVER, Christopher [University of Florida]
[email protected]
WATSON, Vanessa [University of Cape Town]
[email protected]

.............................................................................

9.13 Roundtable Transnational Exchange


Programs [552]
Moderator: PROSPERI, David C. [Florida Atlantic
University] [email protected]
Room: 10th Floor, Marriott Hotel, OHare
HIRSCHLER, Petra [Vienna University of
Technology] [email protected]
MORROW-JONES, Hazel A. [Ohio State
University] [email protected]
SCHIMAK, Gerhard [Vienna Univeersity of
Technology] [email protected]
TROEVA, Vesselina R. [University of
Architecture, Civil Engineering and Geodosy]
[email protected]

Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Wisconsin

.............................................................................

DAVOUDI, Simin [University of Newcastle]


[email protected]
GUALINI, Enrico [Berlin Technical University]
[email protected]
JANIN RIVOLIN, Umberto [Politecnico di Torino]
[email protected]
NADIN, Vincent [Delft University of Technology]
[email protected]
WATERHOUT, Bas [Delft University of Technology]
[email protected]
DUEHR, Stefanie [Radboud University Nijmegen]
[email protected]

11.5 Roundtable - The Future


of ADR in Planning Process
Research & Education:
Engaging the Next Generation
of Scholar/Practitioners and
Researchers [626]

.............................................................................
9.9 Roundtable - Global
Inventory of Planning
Education [559]
Moderator: STIFTEL, Bruce [Florida State
University] [email protected]
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Minnesota
DEMERUTIS ARENAS, Juan A. [Universidad de
Guadalajara] [email protected]
SOARES DE MOURA COSTA, Heloisa
[Universidade Federal de Minas Grais]
[email protected]
FRANK, Andrea I. [Cardiff University]
[email protected]
HARPER, Thomas L. [University of Calgary]
[email protected]

88

Moderator: KARTEZ, Jack D. [University of


Southern Maine] [email protected]
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Lincolnshire I
OZAWA, Connie [Portland State University]
[email protected]
ELLIOTT, Michael [Georgia Institute of Technology]
[email protected]

12:001:00 pm

.............................................................................
12.3 Roundtable - Planning
Theory: Text or Context?
[691]
Moderator: UMEMOTO, Karen [University of
Hawaii] [email protected]
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Great America II
ZAPATA, Marisa [University of Illinois at UrbanaChampaign] [email protected]
THROGMORTON, James A. [University of Iowa]
[email protected]
ROY, Ananya [University of California, Berkeley]
[email protected]
ALEXANDER, Ernest [University of WisconsinMilwaukee] [email protected]
NEUMAN, Michael C. [Texas A&M University]
[email protected]

.............................................................................
13.17 Roundtable - Shrinking
Cities: New Label for an Old
City Divide? [700]
Moderator: AUDIRAC, Ivonne [Florida State
University] [email protected]
Room: 10th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Water Tower
MORAES, Sergio T. [Universidade do Vale do
Itajai] [email protected]
ROTH, Helene [University of Rennes 2]
[email protected]
ABER, Jasmin [University of California, Berkeley]
[email protected]

1:152:45 pm

CHRONOLOGICAL PAPER SESSIONS & ROUNDTABLES

Thursday

Thursday
Sessions
1:15 2:45 pm
.............................................................................
Sponsored by the Lincoln
Institute of Land Policy:
Roundtable - People, Places,
or ...? Debating the Ways
and Means of Community
Economic Development
Moderator:GREENSTEIN, Roz [Lincoln

Environmental, Social And Economic


Impacts Of Historic Preservation In Kentucky
[69]
GILDERBLOOM, John I. [University of Louisville]
[email protected]
HANKA, Matthew [University of Louisville]
[email protected]
HOUSE, Erin [University of Kentucky]
[email protected]

Institute of Land Policy] [email protected]

.............................................................................

Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Indiana

3.15 Pursuing Sustainability in


Large Cities

CRANE, Randall [University of California, Los


Angeles] [email protected]

Moderator/Discussant: ANDREWS, Clinton J.


[Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey]
[email protected]

FESER, Edward (University of Illinois at UrbanaChampaign] [email protected]


ISSERMAN, Andrew M., (University of Illinois at
Urbana-Champaign] [email protected]

.............................................................................
2.9 Preservation and Renewal
Moderator: ABBOTT, Carl [Portland State
University] [email protected]
Discussant: VERHAGE, Roelof [Universite de
Lyon] [email protected]
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Michigan State
Working Waterfronts In North America:
Planning For Stability Or Change [47]
ABBOTT, Carl [Portland State University]
[email protected]
Can Urban Ecotourism Create Synergy
Between Urban Conservation And Economic
Development? A Case Study Of New York
Green Apple Map Project [55]
CHANG, Hsiutzu (Betty) [Rutgers,
The State University of New Jersey]
[email protected]

Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Iowa


New York Citys Long-Term Sustainability
Plan: Is It Smart Growth, Sustainable And
Just? [115]
ANGOTTI, Tom [Hunter College, The City
University of New York] [email protected]
Sustainable Development In Portugal, An
Analysis Of Lisbon And Porto [117]
BALSAS, Carlos J. [Arizona State University]
[email protected]
Compaction And Dispersion: The Urban
Sustainability Of Primate Cities In China [127]
CHIU, Rebecca L. [University of Hong Kong]
[email protected]
New York Citys Planyc Initiative: Does
Greener Really Mean Greater? [138]
FINN, Donovan P. [University of Illinois at UrbanaChampaign] [email protected]

89

Thursday

CHRONOLOGICAL PAPER SESSIONS & ROUNDTABLES

.............................................................................
3.16 Urban/Rural
Environmental and Spatial
Perspectives
Moderator/Discussant: BENDOR, Todd K.
[University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill]
[email protected]
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Michigan
The `Class Responses To Environmental
Issues; Who Needs To Be `Eco-Ed? [110]
ABDEL GALIL, Rania [University of Sheffield]
[email protected]
Beyond The Divide: Rural-Urban Transition
And The Co-Adaptive Capacity Of Planning,
The Case Of Haaglanden, The Netherlands
[152]
HUDALAH, Delik [University of Groningen]
[email protected]
WOLTJER, Johan [University of Groningen]
[email protected]
DE ROO, Gert [University of Groningen]
[email protected]
Greening The Urban Region; Spatial
Planning And The Econogical Redefinition Of
Space [158]
BARKER, Adam [University of Manchester]
[email protected]
KAZMIERCZAK, Aleksandra [University of Salford]
[email protected]

.............................................................................
4.9 New Forms of Governance
Moderator: The last presenter in this session.
Discussant: BALDUCCI, Alessandro [Polytechnic
University] [email protected]
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Illinois
Governance From Above And Below: Miamis
Response To Fiscal Crisis [240]
KOBES, Deborah [Massachusetts Institute of
Technology] [email protected]
Heterogeneity And Collective Action:
Evidence From Massachusetts [245]
MANVILLE, Michael [University of California, Los
Angeles] [email protected]

90

1:152:45 pm

Cities And The Territories Towards


Material Governance: Drawing Multilevel
Governance Through Practice And Projects
[276]
VELO, Francesco [University of Pavia]
[email protected]

.............................................................................

.............................................................................

Moderator/Discussant: LOOYE, Johanna


[University of Cincinnati] [email protected]

5.8 Housing Markets and


Planning for Them
Moderator:The last presenter in this session.
Discussant: None
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Lincolnshire II
The Multifaceted Perspective Of Modern
Housing [294]
CASARIEGO, Joaquin [University of Las Palmas]
[email protected]
GUERRA, Elsa [Casariego/Guerra, Arquitectos]
[email protected]
Do Planners Need To Understand Housing
Markets? [302]
FERRARI, Edward T. [University of Sheffield]
[email protected]
The Trade-Off Between Location And
Housing Quality In Residential Location
Decisions [327]
KIM, Moon Jeong [Ohio State University]
[email protected]
MORROW-JONES, Hazel A. [Ohio State
University] [email protected]

6.9 Spatial Planning and


Community Development in
Indonesia, Thailand and South
Korea

Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Wisconsin


Decentralization, Community Driven
Development And Elite Capture: Microcredit
And Community Board Participation In
Indonesia [375]
BEARD, Victoria A. [University of California, Irvine]
[email protected]
Spatial Planning In Indonesia: The Change
And Transformation After The Fall Of The
New Order Regime [411]
RUKMANA, Deden [Savannah State University]
[email protected]
Affordable Housing And Local Governance In
South Korea: A Fair Share Approach [407]
PARK, Woo-Suh [Yonsei University]
[email protected]
CHOI, Hyunsun [University of North Florida]
[email protected]
CHOI, Simon [SCAG] [email protected]

1:152:45 pm

CHRONOLOGICAL PAPER SESSIONS & ROUNDTABLES

.............................................................................
7.9 Assessing the Progress
and Failures of Growth
Management and Smart
Growth
Moderator: The last presenter in this session.
Co-Discussants: YANG, Yizhao [University of
Oregon] [email protected]
Co-Discussants: ANTHONY, Jerry [University of
Iowa] [email protected]
Room: 10th Floor, Marriott Hotel, OHare
Framing The Oregon Land Use Planning
Debate: An Examination Of Oregon Voters
Pamphlets, 1972-2007 [430]
BASSETT, Ellen M. [Portland State University]
[email protected]
Toward Compact Development? The
Limitations Of Contemporary State-Level
Growth Management In The U.S. [453]
KIM, Jae Hong [University of Illinois at UrbanaChampaign] [email protected]
DEAL, Brian [University of Illinois at UrbanaChampaign] [email protected]
Adding Spatial Dimension To Fiscal Impact
Analysis: Assessing The Benefits And Costs
Of `Smart Growth Development [472]
SHIN, Jung Ho [University of Maryland College
Park] [email protected]
Urban Sprawl And Concurrency Planning: A
Study Of Development Patterns In MiamiDade County, 1992-2000 [480]
YANG, Yizhao [University of Oregon]
[email protected]
ZHANG, Yang [University of Illinois at Springfield]
[email protected]

Metropolitan Visioning Efforts In The


Western U.S.: Review And Prospects [456]
LANDIS, John [University of Pennsylvania]
[email protected]
Managing Growth With Priority Funding
Areas: Promise, Politics And Performance
[457]
LEWIS, Rebecca [University of Maryland College
Park] [email protected]
KNAAP, Gerrit [University of Maryland College
Park] [email protected]
SOHN, Jungyul [Seoul National University]
[email protected]
Annexation As A Route To Municipal
Efficiency? [441]
EDWARDS, Mary M. [University of Illinois at
Urbana-Champaign] [email protected]
XIAO, Yu [University of Illinois at Urbana
Champaign] [email protected]

.............................................................................
8.9 Measuring Urban Form
Moderator/Discussant:
CAO, Jason Xinyu [University of Minnesota]
[email protected]
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Purdue
A Method For Measuring Network Distance
Using Network Shortest Distance And
Spatial Interpolation [481]
ARAFAT, Abdulnaser [University of Florida]
[email protected]
STEINER, Ruth L. [University of Florida]
[email protected]
BEJLERI, Ilir [University of Florida] [email protected]

Thursday

Street Layout And Connectivity: The


Evolutionary Consequences Of Normative
Models [497]
HAYNIE, S. D. [Georgia Institute of Technology]
[email protected]
BRAND, Julie [Georgia Institute of Technology]
[email protected]
MAMOLI, Myrsini [Georgia Institute of
Technology] [email protected]
PEPONIS, John [Georgia Institute of Technology]
[email protected]

.............................................................................
9.3 Planning Education
Around the World
Moderator: NAVARRO-DIAZ, Criseida [University
of Puerto Rico] [email protected]
Discussant: FRANK, Andrea I. [Cardiff University]
[email protected]
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Minnesota
Sustaining A Market-Driven Curriculum For
A Professional Degree: (Re)Defining The
Competencies, Ethos And Scope Planning
Education In Puerto Rico [548]
NAVARRO-DIAZ, Criseida [University of Puerto
Rico] [email protected]
Transportation-Planning Courses/Education
In The U.S.: Literature, Nationwide Survey,
And Findings [567]
ZHOU, Jiangping [University of Southern
California] [email protected]
SCHWEITZER, Lisa A. [University of Southern
California] [email protected]

Assessing The Impact Of Urban Form On


Property Values [488]
DIAO, Mi [Massachusetts Institute of Technology]
[email protected]

.............................................................................
7.13 Managing the Metropolis:
Lessons and Trends in the U.S.
Moderator/Discussant:
CLARK, Thomas A. [University of Colorado Denver]
[email protected]
Room: 10th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Huron
Do Local Governments Influence
Metropolitan Spatial Structure: Evidence
From The Los Angeles Region [428]
AGARWAL, Ajay [University of Southern
California] [email protected]

91

Thursday

CHRONOLOGICAL PAPER SESSIONS & ROUNDTABLES

.............................................................................
11.6 Participatory Planning
Decisions
Moderator: The last presenter in this session.
Discussant: None
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Lincolnshire I
Community Protest: Moving Beyond The
Nimby Framework [616]
COPPENS, Tom [Catholic University Leuven]
[email protected]
Anticipation In Planning And Public
Decisions [627]
KAUFMAN, Sanda [Cleveland State University]
[email protected]
SHMUELI, Deborah [University of Haifa]
[email protected]
Citizen Planning As Citizen Participation In
Local Representative Self Government [633]
NORTON, Richard K. [University of Michigan]
[email protected]
Anticipating Opposition To New
Technologies [635]
OZAWA, Connie P. [Portland State University]
[email protected]
Patras - European Cultural Capital Of 2006.
A Lost Chance In Urban Development And
Planning Context For The Trird Largest Greek
City [638]
SAPOUNAKIS, Aristeidis [University of Thessaly]
[email protected]
ATHANASOPOULOU, Evanthia [University of
Patras] [email protected]

.............................................................................
12.12 Discursive Framings
Moderator: VERMA, Niraj [University at Buffalo]
[email protected]
Discussant:.None
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Great America II
What Drives Cultural Festivals? The
Colonization Of The Lifeworld By The System
Within Cultural Festivals [677]
SHIN, Haeran [University College London]
[email protected]
STEVENS, Quentin [University College London]
[email protected]

92

Participation As Illusory Democracy: What


Role For Planning? [684]
STERNBERG, Ernest [University at Buffalo]
[email protected]
VERMA, Niraj [University at Buffalo]
[email protected]
Pink Crosses In Ciudad Jurez: Spaces Of
Memory In The City Of Feminicide [693]
VZQUEZ-CASTILLO, M. Teresa [California State
University, Northridge] [email protected]
Space And Social Justice [655]
FAINSTEIN, Susan S. [Harvard University]
[email protected]

.............................................................................
13.9 Pre-organized Session Polycentric Governance and
the Regional City
Moderator: PENDALL, Rolf [Cornell University]
[email protected]
Discussant: DAVOUDI, Simin [Newcastle
University] [email protected]
Room: 10th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Water Tower
Polycentric Regions: Comparing
Complementarity And Institutional
Governance In The San Francisco Bay Area,
The Randstad, And Emilia-Romagna [709]
COWELL, Margaret M. [Cornell University]
[email protected]
Immigrant Housing Patterns In Polycentric
Regions [724]
HOYEM, Rosanne M. [Cornell University]
[email protected]
PENDALL, Rolf [Cornell University]
[email protected]
Transit Planning In Polycentric Regions: The
Challenge Of Scale [731]
LOWE, Catherine [Cornell University]
[email protected]

1:152:45 pm

Economics, Government Policies And


Civil Society Movements Encourage The
Conservation Of Agricultural Lands In Three
Polycentric Regions: San Francisco Bay
Area, California, United States; EmiliaRomagna, Italy; And Randstad, Netherlands
[737]
MENDIZABAL, Anisa D. [Cornell University]
[email protected]
DAILEY, Julia M. [Cornell University]
[email protected]
PITTS, Jessica [Cornell University]
[email protected]
The Regional City: Howard, Stein, Calthorpe,
ESDP [753]
PENDALL, Rolf [Cornell University]
[email protected]

.............................................................................
14.9 Private Public
Partnerships: The Public and
Private Roles in Financing
Infrastructure
Moderator/Discussant:
WHITTINGTON, Jan [University of Washington]
[email protected]
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Northwestern
Delivering Transportation Infrastructure
Through Private-Public Partnerships: Are
Expectations Being Met? [856]
SIEMIATYCKI, Matti [University of Glasgow]
[email protected]
Protecting The Public Interest In Public
Private Partnerships For The Delivery Of
Mega Transport Projects: The Case Of
Athens Ring Road [808]
KAPAROS, George [University of Thessaly]
[email protected]
The Creation And Evolution Of Agreements
For Negotiating The Public Use Of Private
Assets In A Half Century Of Commuter Rail
Policy [783]
CORNILLIE, Thomas C. [The Ann Arbor
Transportation Authority] [email protected]
The New Transport Networks In Greece And
In The Region Of Thessaly: Is A New Spatial
Pattern Emerging? [858]
SKAYANNIS, P. D. [University of Thessaly]
[email protected]

1:152:45 pm

CHRONOLOGICAL PAPER SESSIONS & ROUNDTABLES

Thursday

............................................................................. ............................................................................. .............................................................................


14.18 Social, Economic, and
Environmental Costs and
Benefits of the Transport
System

14.22 Assessment and


Participation in the
Transportation Planning
Process

Moderator/Discussant:
WEINBERGER, Rachel [University of Pennsylvania]
[email protected]

Moderator: The last presenter in this session.

Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Great America I


Outcome-Based Evaluation Of Employment
Transportation Programs: Assessment Of Net
User, Non-User And Societal Benefits [868]
THAKURIAH, Piyushimita [University of Illinois at
Chicago] [email protected]
SRIRAJ, P. S. [University of Illinois at Chicago]
[email protected]
PERSKY, Joseph J. [University of Illinois at
Chicago] [email protected]
TANG, Lei [University of Illinois at Chicago]
[email protected]
Geographic Equity In Public Transit
FinanceCosts And Benefits In The
Provision Of Regional Transit Service: A
Case Study Of Toledo Area Regional Transit
Authority [861]
STOLL, Micheal [University of Toledo]
[email protected]
ISEKI, Hiroyuki [University of Toledo]
[email protected]
Shocking Suburbia: Oil Vulnerability,
Housing Debt And The Urban Geography Of
Six U.S. Cities [785]
DODSON, Jago [Griffith University]
[email protected]
SIPE, Neil G. [Griffith University]
[email protected]

Discussant:
BRMMELSTROET, Marco T. [University of
Amsterdam] [email protected]
Room: 10th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Navy Pier
Transit In Texts: The Medias Role In The
Planning Process [845]
RIDOUT, John S. [Clemson University]
[email protected]
JESSEE, Amy [Clemson University]
[email protected]
Business Response To Road Pricing In The
Netherlands: Developing A Conceptual
Framework Using Grounded Theory [824]
MAHENDRA, Anjali [Massachusetts Institute of
Technology] [email protected]
Up-Front Assessment Of Needs [836]
NAESS, Petter [Aalborg University]
[email protected]

15.9 Innovative Approaches


Moderator/Discussant: TIESDELL, Steve
[University of Glasgow] [email protected].
ac.uk
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Ohio State
Visual Simulation And Large Projects
Evaluation [889]
ARCIDIACONO, Andrea [Politecnico di Milano]
[email protected]
PIGA, Barbara [Politecnico di Milano]
[email protected]
A Specific Urban Design Method Organized
In Order To Bridge The Divide In The Cities.
Theory And Demonstrations On Real Cases
[892]
BARBIANO DI BELGIOJOSO, Alberico [Politecnico
di Milano] [email protected]
Noos. Not Only One Solution. An Urban
Design Process [922]
PALAZZO, Danilo [Politecnico di Milano]
[email protected]
Bridging Interfaces [936]
SCHREURS, Jan E. [Catholic University Leuven]
[email protected]
Visual Exposure And Visual Openness
Analysis Model Used As Evaluation Tool
Along The Urban Design Development
Process [940]
SHACH-PINSLY, Dalit [University of Washington]
[email protected]

Coping With Peak Oil And Global Warming


In Australian Cities [796]
GLAZEBROOK, Garry J. [University of Technology,
Sydney] [email protected]
NEWMAN, Peter [Curtin University of Technology]
[email protected]

93

Thursday

CHRONOLOGICAL PAPER SESSIONS & ROUNDTABLES

3:004:30 pm

Thursday
Sessions
3:00 4:30 pm
............................................................................. .............................................................................
1.8 Making Places for Diverse
Populations
Moderator: The last presenter in this session.
Discussant: LO PICCOLO, Francesco [Universit
degli Studi di Palermo] [email protected]
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Great America I
Diver-Cities: Towards The Integration Of
Multiple Identities [20]
LEON GOMEZ, Noemi [Institut dUrbanisme de
Paris] [email protected]

............................................................................
ACSP-AESOP 2008 Track
Chair Meeting
Room: 10th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Huron Room

............................................................................
Sponsored by the Lincoln
Institute of Land Policy:
Roundtable - Inclusionary
Housing-A U.S./European
Comparative Perspective
Moderator: JACOBS, Harvey M. [University of
Wisconsin-Madison] [email protected]
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Indiana
BRUNICK, Nicholas [Applegate & ThorneThomsen, P.C.] [email protected]
MALLACH, Alan [The Brookings Institution]
[email protected]
CALAVITA, Nico [San Diego State University]
[email protected]

94

Who Will Live Here? Planning And


Development Perspectives On Diversity In A
New Urbanism Community [33]
PERROTT, Katherine [Dalhousie University]
[email protected]
GRANT, Jill [Dalhousie University]
[email protected]
Bidding On Urbanity With Business
Improvement Districts [39]
SCHALLER, Susanna F. [Cornell University]
[email protected]

2.10 Festivals/Event Hosting


Moderator: SUN, Jian [Fort Hays State
University] [email protected]
Discussant: WILSON, Mark [Michigan State
University] [email protected]
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Michigan State
Sports Activities And Their Reflection Onto
The Urban Economy: European Champions
League Example [53]
CENGIZ, Huseyin [Yildiz Technical University] prof.
[email protected]
ERYILMAZ, Semiha Sultan [Yildiz Technical
University] [email protected]
Urban Festivities, Cultural Events And
Sustainable Urban Development. Which
Cultural `Festive Policies For Territorial
Development? [54]
CERMAKOVA, Eva [University of Technology Brno
and French Planning Institute; Paris VIII University]
[email protected]
Regional Development And Economic
Shocks: Assessing The Impact Of Hosting
Mega Sports Events On Regional Economic
Growth [92]
PIRES DE MATOS, Pedro [University of Cambridge]
[email protected]
How Do Mega-Events Impact Local
Economic Development: A Comparative
Study Of Beijing And Shanghai [102]
SUN, Jian [Fort Hays State University]
[email protected]
YE, Lin [Roosevelt University] [email protected]

3:004:30 pm

CHRONOLOGICAL PAPER SESSIONS & ROUNDTABLES

Thursday

............................................................................. ............................................................................. .............................................................................


3.17 Analyzing Impacts in and
of the Built Environment

4.10 Planning and Ethnic


Conflict

Moderator/Discussant: SOLITARE, Laura [Texas


Southern University] [email protected]

Moderator: The last presenter in this session.

Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Indiana


Using Social Costs To Distinguish Among
Alternative Land-Use Futures [160]
PALLATHUCHERIL, Varkki G. [American University
of Sharjah] [email protected]
KIM, Jae Hong [University of Illinois at UrbanaChampaign] [email protected]
DEAL, Brian [University of Illinois at UrbanaChampaign] [email protected]
Determining The Carbon Impacts Of A
Vehicular Bridge Project [171]
MARCUCCI, Daniel J. [East Carolina University]
[email protected]
JORDAN, Lauren M. [East Carolina University]
[email protected]
The Dynamics Of Urban Transformation
Methods For The To Assessment Of Long
Term Environmental Impacts Regarding The
Building Stock [184]
PETER, Markus [University Karlsruhe]
[email protected]

Discussant: SCHWARTZ, Alex F. [The New


School] [email protected]

Moderator/Discussant:
PALLAGAST, Karina M. [University of California at
Berkeley] [email protected]

Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Illinois

Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Wisconsin

New Urbanism And Contested Latino


Immigrant Urban Centers [232]
GONZALEZ, Erualdo [California State University,
Fullerton] [email protected]

Overcoming Conflict In The Indian


Himalayas: A Post-Capitalist Paradigm For
Rural Planning? [378]
CHALANA, Manish [University of Washington]
[email protected]
NOLL, Eric [University of Washington]
[email protected]

Transforming Urban Planning & Governance


In Contested Space: The Intersection
Between Regeneration & Reconciliation In
Belfast [256]
RAFFERTY, Gavan [Queens University Belfast]
[email protected]

.............................................................................
5.10 Immigrants and Housing
Attainment
Moderator: The last presenter in this session.
Discussant: None

.............................................................................

Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Lincolnshire II

3.18 Urban Form, Urban


Policy and the Environment

Neighbourhood Development In
Transnationality: A Comparison Between
Randstad Holland, Buenos Aires And Sao
Paulo [292]
BOELENS, Luuk [University of Utrecht] Luuk.
[email protected]
ROCCO, Roberto [Delft University of Technology]]
[email protected]

Moderator/Discussant: LARSEN, Larissa


[University of Michigan] [email protected]
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Michigan
Sustainable Communities And Schools [162]
KING, Lester [Texas Southern University]
[email protected]
Are Ontarios Municipal Official And
Secondary Plan Policies Sufficient For
Protecting Their Natural Systems In The
Long Term? [173]
MCWILLIAM, Wendy J. [McWilliam
Landscape Design and Planning]
[email protected]
Urban Form And Water Demand: How Zoning
Influences Water Consumption [191]
SHANDAS, Vivek [Portland State University]
[email protected]

6.10 Agro-Industry, Global


Commodity Flows and Rural
Development

The Path To American Dream: Housing


Tenure Choice And Housing Conditions Of
Chinese American Households [335]
LI, Yanmei [Western Kentucky University]
[email protected]
Housing Attainment And Location Behavior
Of Second And Third Generation Immigrants
In San Francisco [347]
PAMUK, Ayse [San Francisco State University]
[email protected]

95

Thursday

CHRONOLOGICAL PAPER SESSIONS & ROUNDTABLES

.............................................................................
7.11 Land Preservation: What
Works, What Does Not Work,
and Is It Still a Good Idea?
Moderator/Discussant:
LINKOUS, Evangeline R. [University of
Pennsylvania] [email protected]
Discussant: HIRT, Sonia A. [Virginia Polytechnic
Institute and State University] [email protected]
Room: 10th Floor, Marriott Hotel, OHare
Questioning Land Preservation For
Agriculture In Michigan [433]
BRINKMAN, P. Anthony [University of Nevada,
Reno] [email protected]
BUGG, John A. [Michigan Department of Natural
Resources] [email protected]
Explaining The Adoption Of Transferable
Development Rights Programs In Florida
[459]
LINKOUS, Evangeline R. [University of
Pennsylvania] [email protected]
The Reaction Of Planning Institutions To
Land Preservation Needs And Development
Pressures: A Comparative Study [475]
STAV, Tamy [Nijmegen Radboud University]
[email protected]

.............................................................................
8.10 Pre-organized Session:
Its All About the Evidence
Stupid: Qualitative Research
in Urban Planning
Moderator/Discussant: GABER, John [Auburn
University] [email protected]
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Purdue
Integrated Qualitative And Quantitative
Urban Systems Analysis With The Analytic
Network Process [482]
BANAI, Reza [University of Memphis]
[email protected]
Taking In Data From All Sides: Open
Community Observation Projects [495]
GABER, John [Auburn University]
[email protected]

96

Systematising The Qualitative: A MetaFramework For The Development Of


Evolutionary Generalisations [511]
MAGINN, Paul J. [University of Western Australia]
[email protected]

3:004:30 pm

Urban Rehabilitation Societies: The


Portuguese Case - Characteristics And
Potentials [617]
COSTA, Joo Pedro T. [TU Lisbon] joao.
[email protected]

............................................................................. .............................................................................
9.8 Roundtable - How Should
Planners Try to Affect Society,
and How Can Universities
Help Them Do That? Taking
Educational Outcomes
Seriously [536]
Moderator/Discussant:
BAUM, Howell S. [University of Maryland College
Park] [email protected]
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Minnesota
FRIEDMANN, John [University of British
Columbia] [email protected]
TEITZ, Michael B. [University of California,
Berkeley] [email protected]
WACHS, Martin [Rand Corporation]
[email protected]
DALTON, Linda [California State University, East
Bay] [email protected]

.............................................................................

11.7 Participation, Politics


and Law
Moderator: The last presenter in this session.
Discussant: NORTON, Richard K. [University of
Michigan] [email protected]
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Lincolnshire I
The Right To Be Heard In Administrative Law
Compared With Planning Law: A CrossNational Evaluation [615]
CARMON, Dafna [Technion- Israel Institute of
Technology] [email protected]
ALTERMAN, Rachelle [Technion- Israel Institute of
Technology] [email protected]

12.13 Contemporary History


Moderator/Discussant:
LANDIS, John [University of Pennsylvania]
[email protected]
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Great America II
Logics Of Allocation Of The Built
Environment And Natural Property Rights
[648]
BLANCO, Andres G. [Cornell University]
[email protected]
Cityplan Eindhoven And The Death Of The
Modern City [654]
DOEVENDANS, Kees [Technical University
Eindhoven] [email protected]
SCHRAM, Anne [Technical University of
Eindhoven] [email protected]
Planning For U.S. Public Housing: The Quest
For Social Equity [689]
THOMAS, June M. [University of Michigan]
[email protected]

3:004:30 pm

CHRONOLOGICAL PAPER SESSIONS & ROUNDTABLES

.............................................................................
13.10 Strategy and Process in
Regional Planning
Moderator/Discussant: FABBRO, Sandro
[University of Udine] [email protected]
Room: 10th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Water Tower
Strategic Planning In Collaborative Settings
- The Case Of Weisseritz-Regio [725]
HUTTER, Grard [Leibniz Institute of Ecological
and Regional Development] [email protected]
SCHANZE, Jochen [Leibniz Institute of Ecological
and Regional Development] [email protected]
WIRTH, Peter [Leibniz Institute of Ecological and
Regional Development] [email protected]
Planning Without Plans Strategy Absence
As Virtue In Regional Planning [764]
WIECHMANN, Thorsten [BTU Cottbus]
[email protected]

How Does Accessibility Matter In


Residential Choice? An Application Of A
Time-Space Prism Constrained Measure
Of Accessibility In A Household Residence
Choice Model For The Puget Sound Region
[816]
LEE, Brian H. [University of Washington]
[email protected]
WADDELL, Paul [University of Washington]
[email protected]
PENDYALA, Ram M. [Arizona State University]
[email protected]
How Local Is Main Street? An Analysis Of
Trips To Commercial Streets In Montreal
[789]
EL-GENEIDY, Ahmed [McGill University]
[email protected]
TTREAULT, Paul [McGill University]
[email protected]

.............................................................................

.............................................................................

14.23 Land Use and


Infrastructure

14.10 Modeling the


Connection Between Urban
Form and Travel Behavior

Moderator/Discussant: MCDONALD, Noreen


[University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill]
[email protected]

Moderator/Discussant:
ZHANG, Ming [University of Texas at Austin]
[email protected]

Room: 10th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Navy Pier

Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Northwestern


Innovation In The Practice Of Travel Demand
Modeling: An Historical Examination [838]
NEWMARK, Gregory L. [University of California,
Berkeley] [email protected]
Impact Of Workplace Built Environment On
Travel Behavior Of Employees [837]
NEOG, Dristi [Florida State University]
[email protected]
Dynamic Transit Network Models
Incorporating Real-Time Transit Information
[882]
SHEN, Qing [University of Maryland College Park]
[email protected]
ZHANG, Feng [University of Maryland College
Park] [email protected]

Solving Conflicting Goals Between


Transport, Risks And Urban Planning:
Integrating Cost-Effectiveness In The
Institutional Framework [874]
VAN DER VLIES, Vincent [Radboud University
Nijmegen] [email protected]
Space For Mobility: A Paradigm Shift In
Dutch Transport Infrastructure Planning?
[864]
STRUIKSMA, Rik [University of Groningen]
[email protected]
ARTS, Jos [University of Groningen]
[email protected]

Thursday

Impact Of Restrictive Parking Policies On


City Centers [826]
BEEKMANS, Jasper [Radboud University
Nijmegen] [email protected]
MARTENS, Karel [Radboud University Nijmegen]
[email protected]
Comparing The Impact Of Parking And
Housing Density On Rail Transit Ridership
[787]
DUNCAN, Michael [University of North Carolina at
Charlotte] [email protected]

.............................................................................
15.10 Streets are for Walking
Moderator/Discussant: REEVE, Alan R. [Oxford
Brookes University] [email protected]
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Ohio State
Measuring Walkability Around Elementary
Schools: A Comparison Of Urban Form
Indices In Four Florida Counties [893]
BEJLERI, Ilir [University of Florida] [email protected]
STEINER, Ruth L. [University of Florida]
[email protected]
WHEELOCK, Jennifer [University of Florida]
[email protected]
PEREZ, Benito [University of Florida]
[email protected]
FISCHMAN, Allison [University of Florida]
[email protected]
Not Density Nor Mixed Uses, But Street
Patterns And Topography: Urban Form
Differences Of Walkable Neighborhoods In
Seoul, Korea [924]
PARK, Sohyun [Seoul National University]
[email protected]
CHOI, Yeemyung [Seoul National University]
[email protected]
SEO, Hanlim [Seoul National University]
[email protected]

The Land Beneath Your Wheels: A


Comprehensive Approach To Valuing
Transportation Infrastructure Lands In
Canadian Cities [879]
WOUDSMA, Clarence [University of Waterloo]
[email protected]
LITMAN, Todd [Victoria Transport Policy Institute]
[email protected]

97

Thursday

CHRONOLOGICAL PAPER SESSIONS & ROUNDTABLES

4:456:15 pm

Thursday
Sessions
4:45 6:15 pm
.............................................................................
Sponsored by the Lincoln
Institute of Land Policy:
Roundtable - State Growth
Management Evaluation
Moderator: INGRAM, Gregory [Lincoln Institute
of Land Policy] [email protected]
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Indiana
KNAAP, Gerrit [University of Maryland College
Park] [email protected]
CLARK, Thomas A. [University of Colorado at
Denver] [email protected]
CARBONELL, Armando [Lincoln Institute of Land
Policy] [email protected]

.............................................................................
1.7 Gender and Ethnicity in
Spatial Justice Movements
Moderator/Discussant:
FAINSTEIN, Susan S. [Harvard University]
[email protected]
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Great America I
An Environmental Justice Analysis:
Superfund Sites And Surrounding
Communities In Illinois [23]
MARANVILLE, Angela R. [University of Illinois at
Springfield] [email protected]
TING, Tih-Fen [University of Illinois at Springfield]
[email protected]
ZHANG, Yang [University of Illinois at Springfield]
[email protected]
Evaluating Environmental Justice In
Planning Analysis [28]
MILLER, Donald H. [University of Washington]
[email protected]

98

Social Movement Towards Spatial Justice:


Citizens And The City [43]
WILSON, Barbara [University of Texas at Austin]
[email protected]
Planning, Diversity And Gender Justice: The
Centrality Of Reproduction, Redistribution
And Politics [21]
LEVY, Caren [University College London]
[email protected]

.............................................................................
2.11 Arts and Culture
Moderator: The last presenter in the session.
Discussant: VERHAGE, Roelof [Universite de
Lyon] [email protected]
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Michigan State
Planning For A Family-Friendly Arts Region?
[68]
FRISCH, Michael [University of Missouri-Kansas
City] [email protected]
BOHRER, Darren [University of Missouri-Kansas
City] [email protected]
Urban Implications Of Cultural Policy
Networks [93]
PONZINI, Davide [Politecnico di Milano]
[email protected]

4:456:15 pm

CHRONOLOGICAL PAPER SESSIONS & ROUNDTABLES

............................................................................. .............................................................................
3.19 New Perspectives on
Sustainability
Moderator/Discussant: DOVLN, Sylvia [Royal
Institute of Technology (KTH)] [email protected]
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Iowa
The Tautological Trap In Sustainability
Planning: What You See Is What You Get
[131]
COFFMAN, Makena [University of Hawaii]
[email protected]
UMEMOTO, Karen [University of Hawaii]
[email protected]

4.5 Governance, Planning


and Urban Redevelopment
Projects
Moderator: The last presenter in the session.
Discussant: MORGADO, Sofia [LUOTP-TU Lisbon]
[email protected]
Room: 10th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Huron
Making Cadastral Modernization Work.
Building A Land Management Based
Municipal Reform In Mexico [227]
FLORES, Sergio A. [UNAM] [email protected]

Environmental Planning In Habermasian


Space: Social Construction And Discourse
Of Different Categories Of Nonprofit
Organizations [154]
IMAM, Amna [University of Southern California]
[email protected]

Strategic Urban Projects As `Reflective


Modes Of Governance? Contrasting Frames
In Current Urban Transformations In Berlin
[233]
GUALINI, Enrico [Berlin University of Technology]
[email protected]

Addressing The Sustainable Development


Conundrum: Prescription For An
Enlightenment Principle Of Sustainability
[164]
KOLO, Jerry [American University of Sharjah]
[email protected]

The Barcelona Model Revisited: The Forum


Urban Development [243]
MAJOOR, Stan J. [University of Amsterdam]
[email protected]

Developing Sustainable Development


Indicators In Portugal: Lessons From
National, Regional And Local Experiences
[185]
PIRES, Sara M. [University of Aveiro]
[email protected]
FIDLIS, Teresa [University of Aveiro]
[email protected]

.............................................................................

3.20 Environmental Justice


Moderator/Discussant: AGYEMAN, Julian
[Tufts University] [email protected]
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Michigan
Community Benefits Agreements: Evaluating
A Promising Technique To Promote
Environmental Justice [165]
LARSEN, Larissa S. [University of Michigan]
[email protected]
Are Racial And Socioeconomic Conditions
Of Neighborhoods Associated With
Brownfield Cleanup Prioritization? [167]
LEE, Sangyun [University of Michigan]
[email protected]

Making The Vision Concrete: Implementation


Of Downtown Redevelopment Plans [258]
ROBERTS, Michael B. [University of California,
Davis] [email protected]

.............................................................................

4.11 Transforming Practices


and Governance
Moderator: The last presenter in the session.
Discussant: None.

Thursday

Process Coaching In Village Renewal


Experiences Gathered In A Pilot Project In
Burgenland (Austria) [241]
LINZER, Helena [Vienna University of Technology]
[email protected]
VOIGT, Andreas [Vienna University of Technology]
[email protected]
Cohesive Communities Or Commuter
Spaces? Re-Evaluating The Impact Of Rural
Town Environments On Collaborative Health
Planning With Indigenous Communities [277]
VILCHES, Silvia L. [University of British Columbia]
[email protected]

.............................................................................
5.11 Immigrants and the
Suburbs
Moderator: The last presenter in the session.
Discussant: None
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Lincolnshire II
The Effects Of Involuntary Relocation
On Foreign Born And Native Born Public
Housing Residents [285]
ALLEN, Ryan P. [University of Minnesota]
[email protected]
GOETZ, Edward [University of Minnesota]
[email protected]
Immigrating, Assimilating, Cashing In?
Analyzing House Prices In Immigrant
Suburbs [288]
ANACKER, Katrin B. [Metropolitan Institute]
[email protected]
Immigrant Clusters In U.S. Suburbia [314]
HANLON, Bernadette [University of Maryland
Baltimore County] [email protected]

Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Illinois


Utopiatyping New Tools & Strategies For
Citizen Participation In Urban Development
[223]
DELMAN, Thomas F. [Aarhus School of
Architecture] [email protected]
LOESSING, Tobias [Aarhus School of Architecture]
[email protected]
LYKKE-OLESEN, Andreas [Aarhus School of
Architecture] [email protected]
NIELSEN, Rune [University of Aarhus] [email protected]

99

Thursday

CHRONOLOGICAL PAPER SESSIONS & ROUNDTABLES

............................................................................. .............................................................................
6.11 Strategies for Integrated
Urban Development
Moderator/Discussant: BEARD, Victoria A.
[University of California, Irvine] [email protected]
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Wisconsin
Applying The Barcelona Model: Integrated
Urban Development Strategies In The
Historic Center Of Quito [392]
HANLEY, Lisa M. [Cornell University]
[email protected]
Microfinance And Household Welfare In
India And Malawi [401]
LASTARRIA-CORNHIEL, Susana [University of
Wisconsin-Madison] [email protected]
SHIMAMURA, Yasuharu [University of WisconsinMadison] [email protected]
Population Growth, Housing And
Infrastructure Provision In Peri-Urban Accra,
Ghana [404]
ODURO, Charles [Florida State University]
[email protected]
DOAN, Petra [Florida State University] pdoan@
garnet.acns.fsu.edu
An Exercise In Futility? Urban Planning In
Pacific Island Countries [417]
STOREY, Donovan S. [University of Queensland]
[email protected]

7.12 Making the Place:


Lessons from Asia, Europe,
and North America
Moderator/Discussant:
HEBBERT, Michael [University of Manchester]
[email protected]
Room: 10th Floor, Marriott Hotel, OHare
The Production Of Space And The Making
Of Places In Asia: 167 Years Of Harbour
Reclamation In Hong Kong [464]
NG, Mee-Kam [University of Hong Kong]
[email protected]
Land Use And Urban Form Without Zoning:
Investigating Three Neighborhoods In
Houston [467]
QIAN, Zhu [Texas A&M University]
[email protected]
Planning Context And Urban Intensification
Outcomes: Sydney Versus Toronto [471]
SEARLE, Glen H. [University of Technology,
Sydney] [email protected]
FILION, Pierre [University of Waterloo]
[email protected]
Learning From English Practices Of Area
Development: The `Place-Shaping Role Of
Local Government [473]
SMITH, Nick P. [University of the West of England,
Bristol] [email protected]
SHORT, Michael J. [University of the West of
England, Bristol] [email protected]

.............................................................................

8.12 Pre-organized Session:


National Employment Time
Series Panel
Moderator: KROLL, Cynthia A. [University of
California, Berkeley] [email protected]
Discussant: None
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Purdue
Tracing Scattered And Vanished Local
Businesses: A Methodological Exploration
[499]
HUDSPETH, Nancy [University of Illinois at
Chicago] [email protected]
The Economic Effect Of Californias
Enterprise Zones [505]
KOLKO, Jed [Public Policy Institute of California]
[email protected]

100

4:456:15 pm

NEUMARK, David B. [UC-Irvine]


[email protected]
Boom, Bust, And Regroup: The Multimedia
Industrys Impact On The San Francisco Bay
Area [506]
KROLL, Cynthia A. [University of California,
Berkeley] [email protected]
Progressive Cities In The Regional Context:
The Impact Of Urban Living Wage Laws
On The Spatial Distribution Of Jobs Within
California Metropolitan Areas [508]
LESTER, T. W. [University of California, Berkeley]
[email protected]
Business As Usual In Californias Suburbs?
Exploring The Dynamics Of Firm Births And
Relocations, 1990-2005 [512]
MAKAREWICZ, Carrie [University of California,
Berkeley] [email protected]
CHAPPLE, Karen [University of California,
Berkeley] [email protected]
HINKLEY, Sara [University of California, Berkeley]
[email protected]

.............................................................................
9.5 Ethical and Justice Issues
in Planning Education
Moderator: PEEL, Deborah [University of
Liverpool] [email protected]
Discussant: None
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Minnesota
A Positive Duty To Promote Disability
Equality Bridging The Educational Divide?
[551]
PEEL, Deborah [University of Liverpool]
[email protected]
Teaching Diversity In Urban Planning: From
The Discipline To Our Departments Diversity
Code [560]
SWEET, Elizabeth L. [University of Illinois at
Urbana-Champaign] [email protected]
Taking It To The Streets: Experiential
Learning Through The Living Laboratory Of
Downtown Selma Alabama [563]
WILSON, Constance J. [Alabama A&M University]
[email protected]

4:456:15 pm

CHRONOLOGICAL PAPER SESSIONS & ROUNDTABLES

Thursday

............................................................................. ............................................................................. .............................................................................


11.8 Planning, Policies and
Regulations

12.14 Actants and


Technologies in History

13.11 Spatial Structure and


Regional Outcomes

Discussant: None

Moderator/Discussant: THOMAS, June M.


[University of Michigan] [email protected]

Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Lincolnshire I

Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Great America II

Moderator/Discussant: CHAKRABORTY, Arnab


[University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign]
[email protected]

Delivering Spatial Planning: Implementation


And Infrastructure Delivery In English Local
Development Frameworks (LDFS) [611]
BAKER, Mark [University of Manchester]
[email protected]
HINCKS, Stephen [University of Manchester]
[email protected]

The Production City: Daqing As A Industrial


Model Under Mao And Beyond [665]
HOU, Li [Harvard University] [email protected]

Moderator:The last presenter in the session.

A Framework For Evaluating Local


Government Performance Based Planning In
Queensland, Australia [621]
FREW, Travis G. [Queensland University of
Technology] [email protected]
BAKER, Douglas C. [Queensland University of
Technology] [email protected]
Big-Box Retail Planning In The Greater
Toronto Area: Assessing The Impact Of The
Ontario Municipal Board [625]
HERNANDEZ, Tony [Ryerson University]
[email protected]
WEBBER, Steven M. [Ryerson University]
[email protected]
Programming, Budgeting And Accounting
Land Development By Local Authorities In
The Netherlands [628]
KORTHALS ALTES, Willem K. [Delft University of
Technology] [email protected]

Clarence Stein The Community Architect


As Transitional Figure [669]
LARSEN, Kristin E. [University of Florida]
[email protected]
Jaqueline Tyrwhitt, New Media And Mid
Century Discourse On Mediating Urban
Networks [678]
SHOSHKES, Ellen S. [Portland State University]
[email protected]
The Politics Of Technology Adoption: Water
Metering In Progressive Era Chicago [681]
SLOAN, Mellini [Florida State University]
[email protected]

Room: 10th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Water Tower


Subcenters In Polycentric Regions: The Case
Of Dallas-Fort Worth Metropolitan Area [698]
ANJOMANI, Ardeshir [University of Texas at
Arlington] [email protected]
AL-SHAMMARI, Maher [University of Texas at
Arlington] [email protected]
Valuing Environmental Quality: A SpaceBased Strategy [703]
CARRUTHERS, John I. [US Department
of Housing and Urban Development]
[email protected]
CLARK, David [Marquette University]
[email protected]
Central City And Subcenter Attributes In
Metropolitan Ohio [706]
CHIN, Jae Teuk [Ohio State University] chin.78@
osu.edu
Strategic Interaction Among Local
Governments Revisited: The Case Of
Building Permits [736]
MCLAUGHLIN, Ralph B. [University of California,
Irvine] [email protected]

101

Thursday

CHRONOLOGICAL PAPER SESSIONS & ROUNDTABLES

4:45-6:15pm

............................................................................. ............................................................................. .............................................................................


14.11 Modeling Regional
Land Use, Safety, and Travel
Patterns Using Diverse
Methodologies
Moderator: The last presenter in this session.
Discussant: None
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Northwestern
Discursive Modelling For Land UseTransport Integration: An Explorative Case
Study From Perth, Western Australia [850]
SCHEURER, Jan [Curtin University of Technology]
[email protected]
Using Choice Experiment Design To Estimate
Ridership Effect Of Real-Time Transit
Traveler Information Systems [867]
TANG, Lei [University of Illinois at Chicago]
[email protected]
THAKURIAH, Piyushimita (Vonu) [University of
Illinois at Chicago] [email protected]
Linking Highway Improvements To Patterns
Of Regional Growth And Land Use With
Quasi-Experimental Research Design [795]
FUNDERBURG, Richard G. [University of Iowa]
[email protected]
NIXON, Hilary [San Jose State University]
[email protected]
BOARNET, Marlon G. [University of California,
Irvine] [email protected]
FERGUSON, Gavin [University of Iowa]
[email protected]
Future Travel Demand And Its Implications
For Transportation Infrastructure Investments
In The Texas Triangle [883]
ZHANG, Ming [University of Texas at Austin]
[email protected]
CHEN, Binbin [University of Texas at Austin]
[email protected]

102

14.12 Assessing the Use of


Transit-Oriented Development
in the International Context
Moderator: The last presenter in this session.
Discussant: None
Room: 10th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Navy Pier
Interpretation And Urban Project For
Infrastructural Strata In A Metropolitan
Context: sete Rios And The Ring Railroad
Line In Lisbon, Portugal [849]
SANTOS, Joo Rafael [Technical University of
Lisbon] [email protected]
How To Make BTOD More Successful? [780]
CHEN, Xueming [Virginia Commonwealth
University] [email protected]
Sustaining The Momentum - Using Mega
Events As Catalysts For Enhancing Urban
Transport [810]
KASSENS, Eva [Massachusetts Institute of
Technology] [email protected]

15.11 Cities and Places that


Refuse to Die
Moderator/Discussant:
WAGNER, Jacob [University of Missouri, Kansas
City] [email protected]
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Ohio State
Evaluating Regeneration In Historic
Contexts: The UK Experience [928]
REEVE, Alan R. [Oxford Brookes University]
[email protected]
The Return Of The City That Refused To
Die? An Evaluation Of Glasgows Continuing
Urban Renaissance [948]
TIESDELL, Steve A. [University of Glasgow]
[email protected]

FRIDAY

CHRONOLOGICAL
SESSIONS,
ROUNDTABLES
AND MEETINGS

Friday

4:456:15 pm

CHRONOLOGICAL PAPER SESSIONS & ROUNDTABLES

Friday

Friday
Sessions
8:00 9:00 pm
............................................................................. .............................................................................
Journal of Planning Theory
Editorial Board Meeting

5.15 Neighborhood
Regeneration and Inequality

Room: 10th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Huron Room

Moderator: The last presenter in this session.

.............................................................................

Discussant: None

Organizational Meeting for a


Food and Agriculture Planning
Interest Group
Moderator: NASR, Joseph L. [Ryerson University]
[email protected]
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Iowa Room

.............................................................................
PhD Matriculation Roundtable
Hosted by the ACSP Student
Board Representatives

Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Lincolnshire II


Housing Dilemmas Of The Displaced: A
Case Study Of Problems Following The 2005
Flooding Of New Orleans [333]
LEVINE, Joyce N. [Florida Atlantic University]
[email protected]
Public Attitudes Toward Affordable Housing:
How Perceptions Of Race And Class
Influence Views [358]
TIGHE, Jenna R. [University of Texas at Austin]
[email protected]

Co-organizer: CHEN, Yang [Massachusetts


Institute of Technology] [email protected]

8:00 10:00 am

Co-organizer: ABUKAHTER, Ahmed [University


of Texas at Austin] [email protected]
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Illinois Room

.............................................................................
GPEAN Steering Committee,
Part Two
Room: 10th Floor, Marriott Hotel,
Navy Pier

105

Friday

CHRONOLOGICAL PAPER SESSIONS & ROUNDTABLES

8:009:00 am

............................................................................. ............................................................................. .............................................................................


8.11 Pre-organized Session:
Planning Support Systems

Moderator: KLOSTERMAN, Richard [What if?,


Inc.] [email protected]
Discussant: None.
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Purdue
Operationalizing A Land Use Model For A
Regional Planning Support System: The
Land-Use Evolution And Impact Assessment
Model (Leam) [486]
DEAL, Brian [University of Illinois at UrbanaChampaign] [email protected]
PALLATHUCHERIL, Varkki G. [University of Illinois
at Urbana-Champaign] [email protected]
A New Tool For A New Planning [504]
KLOSTERMAN, Richard [What if?, Inc.]
[email protected]

.............................................................................
9.10 Roundtable- Where are
We and Where Are We Going?
A Discussion of Teaching and
Research on Environmental
Justice and Just Sustainability
[558]
Moderator: SOLITARE, Laura [Texas Southern
University] [email protected]
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Minnesota
AGYEMAN, Julian [Tufts University]
[email protected]
FORSYTH, Ann [Cornell University]
[email protected]
SCHWEITZER, Lisa A. [University of Southern
California] [email protected]

106

12.2 Roundtable - Oxford


Handbook of Urban Planning:
Sneak Preview/Critique [695]

14.17 Transport Planning for


the Elderly and Special Needs
Populations

Moderator: WEBER, Rachel [University of Illinois


at Chicago] [email protected]

Moderator/Discussant:
SMART, Michael J. [University of California, Los
Angeles] [email protected]

Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Great America II


CRANE, Randall [University of California, Los
Angeles] [email protected]

.............................................................................
12.16 Informality, Process,
Morality
Moderator/Discussant:
CHATTIPARAMB, Angelique [Cardiff University]
[email protected]
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Great America I
Strategic Curation [671]
LEHTOVUORI, Panu [Helsinki University of
Technology] [email protected]
Moral Autonomy And Justice In Planning
[672]
LESHINSKY, Rebecca [The University of
Melbourne] [email protected]
The City Is Informal: The Contested
Conditions Of Everyday Life In Belfast,
Chicago And Kolkata [667]
KUNDU, Ratoola [University of Illinois at Chicago]
[email protected]
PERRY, David [University of Illinois at Chicago]
[email protected]
GAFFIKIN, Frank [Queens University of Belfast]
[email protected]

Room: 10th Floor, Marriott Hotel, OHare


Transportation Planning By Marketing A
Strategy For The Multimodal Mobility Of
Elderly People [809]
KASPER, Birgit [Dortmund University of
Technology] [email protected]
SCHUBERT, Steffi [Bkforschung - Agency
for Municipal Research and Consulting]
[email protected]
Role Of Transportation In Employment
Outcomes Of The Disadvantaged [880]
YI, Chang [University of Texas at Austin]
[email protected]
Current Agency Practices And The Potential
For Sharing Transportation Services Among
The General Public And People Who
Require Substantial Assistance With Their
Disabilities And Special Needs [788]
DUNNING, Anne E. [Clemson University]
[email protected]
NOCKS, Barry [Clemson University]
[email protected]

8:009:00 am

CHRONOLOGICAL PAPER SESSIONS & ROUNDTABLES

Friday

............................................................................. ............................................................................. .............................................................................


15.12 Reassessing
International Exprerience

16.10 Divided Cities

Moderator/Discussant: GOSPODINI, Aspa


[University of Thessaly] [email protected]

Moderator/Discussant:
CAMPBELL, Heather [University of Sheffield]
[email protected]

Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Ohio State

Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Michigan State

Brasilia & Putrajaya: New Towns, National


Capitals, Or Utopian Representations Of
Power? [913]
MACEDO, Joseli [University of Florida]
[email protected]
TRAN, Levu Vincent [University of Florida]
[email protected]

Bridging A Divided City: A Redevelopment


Strategy In Caracas Metropolitan Region
[975]
RODRIGUEZ-GARZA, Roberto [University of New
Mexico] [email protected]

Integrated Urban Spatial Design As A


Harmonious Media: Bridging The Divide
Between `Old And `New In Traditional
Chinese Towns And Cities [946]
TANG, Yue [University of Nottingham]
[email protected]
HEATH, Tim [University of Nottingham]
[email protected]

16.11 Roundtable - Western


Consensus-building, Eastern
contexts: Exploring the
Challenges, Surprises,
Adaptations and Innovations
[964]
Moderator: FORESTER, John [Cornell University]
[email protected]
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Michigan
FULLER, Boyd W. [National University of
Singapore] [email protected]
KIM, Dong-Young [KDI] [email protected]
LEE, Andrew [Peking University]
[email protected]
MATSUURA, Masahiro [University of Tokyo]
[email protected]

107

Friday

CHRONOLOGICAL PAPER SESSIONS & ROUNDTABLES

9:1510:45 am

Friday
Sessions
9:15 10:45 am
............................................................................. .............................................................................
2.14 People, Stories and
Impacts

3.22 Shoreline/Coastal Issues


in Environmental Planning

Moderator: WHITE, Sammis B. [University of


Wisconsin-Milwaukee] [email protected]

Moderator/Discussant: BRODY, Sam [Texas


A&M University] [email protected]

Discussant: SCHROCK, Greg [University of


Illinois at Chicago] [email protected]

Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Iowa

Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Michigan


The Two Faces Of Debt: An Examination Of
American Indebtedness Over Three Decades
[67]
FREEMAN, Allison T. [UNC - Center for Community
Capital] [email protected]
GRIDER, William B. [UNC - Center for Community
Capital] [email protected]
RATCLIFFE, Janneke [UNC - Center for Community
Capital] [email protected]
QUERCIA, Roberto G. [University of North Carolina
at Chapel Hill] [email protected]
Rebuilding Milwaukee: The Role Of College
Degrees [107]
WHITE, Sammis B. [University of WisconsinMilwaukee] [email protected]

108

A Comparative Assessment Of Emerging U.S.


Coastal Policy & Planning Strategies [137]
DYCKMAN, Caitlin S. [Clemson University]
[email protected]
ST. JOHN, Courtney [Clemson University]
[email protected]
ALLEN, Jeffrey [Clemson University]
[email protected]
LONDON, James B. [Clemson University]
[email protected]
Environmental Planning Implications Of
Tourism Development: The Mexican Pacific
Riviera [178]
IRAZABAL, Clara E. [Columbia University]
[email protected]
MORAN, Oscar [University of Southern California]
[email protected]
Planning For Shoreline Access And Use
In A Changing Metropolitan And Global
Environment [192]
THOMPSON, Robert H. [University of Rhode
Island] [email protected]
DALTON, Tracey [University of Rhode Island]
[email protected]

9:1510:45 am

CHRONOLOGICAL PAPER SESSIONS & ROUNDTABLES

Friday

............................................................................. ............................................................................. .............................................................................


4.15 Knowledge, Experts,
Governance and Planning

5.12 Local Community


Development

Moderator: The last presenter in this session.

Moderator: The last presenter in this session.

Discussant: None

Discussant: None

Room: 10th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Huron

Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Lincolnshire II

Strategic Planning As A Field Of Practices


[207]
BALDUCCI, Alessandro [Polytechnic University]
[email protected]

What Helps Or Hinders Nonprofit Developers


In Reusing Vacant, Abandoned, And
Contaminated Property? Findings From
Detroit And Cleveland [299]
DEWAR, Margaret E. [University of Michigan]
[email protected]

Universities And Community Engagement:


Addressing The Causes Of Social Exclusion
[210]
BENNEWORTH, Paul [University of Newcastle
Upon Tyne] [email protected]

.............................................................................
4.17 Governance, Practices
and Decision-making
Moderator: The last presenter in this session.
Discussant: None
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Illinois
Back To The Basics? [204]
ALBRECHTS, Louis [KU Leuven] Louis.
[email protected]
Strengthening City Regions By Stimulating
Local Activities In Shrinking Peripheries?
- The Role Of Scenarios For Regional
Governance In European States [279]
WEITH, Thomas [University of Potsdam] weith@
rz.uni-potsdam.de

Housing Associations And Local Community


Development: A UK Perspective [357]
SMITH, Robert [Cardiff University] [email protected].
uk
Community Development And Public Health:
Exploring The Synergies [364]
VIDAL, Avis C. [Wayne State University]
[email protected]
BROWN, Larry [Columbia University]
[email protected]
KRAFT, Kate [Wholonomy Consulting]
[email protected]

5.17 Neighborhood
Regeneration and Segregation
Moderator: The last presenter in this session.
Discussant: None
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Great America I
Neighborhood Diversity, Metropolitan
Segregation, And Gentrification: What Are
The Links In The US? [303]
FREEMAN, Lance [Columbia University]
[email protected]
From Ethnic Enclave Residence To Ethnic
Niche Employment? Understanding Latino
Immigrants Longer Commutes [336]
LIU, Cathy Yang [University of Southern California]
[email protected]
Patterns Of Inequality: The Distribution Of
Housing Opportunity In The United States
[362]
VAN ZANDT, Shannon [Texas A&M University]
[email protected]

Planning For Family Friendly Cities [366]


WARNER, Mildred [Cornell University]
[email protected]
ISRAEL, Evelyn [Cornell University]
[email protected]

The Greening Of Chicago: Environmental


Leaders And Organizational Learning
In The Transition Toward A Sustainable
Metropolitan Region [282]
YOUNG, Robert F. [University of Oregon]
[email protected]
Making Creative Industry Clusters: Urban
Governance In Shanghai [283]
ZHENG, Jie [Hong Kong University]
[email protected]

109

Friday

CHRONOLOGICAL PAPER SESSIONS & ROUNDTABLES

9:1510:45 am

............................................................................. ............................................................................. .............................................................................


6.12 Globalization,
Territorality and Planning
Moderator/Discussant: HAGUE, Cliff [UK
ESPON Contact Point] [email protected]
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Wisconsin
Urban Manaus: Restructuring, Globalization
And Socio-Spatial Segregation In The
Amazon [387]
GOLDSTEIN, Gisele V. [Virginia Polytechnic
Institute and State University] [email protected]
BROWDER, John [Virginia Polytechnic Institute
and State University] [email protected]
Planning And Global Homogenisation [398]
JEROME, Kristine P. [Queensland University of
Technology] [email protected]
Korea In Transition Economic Impacts Of
9-11 Terrorist Attack To Tour Industry Of
Korea [399]
KIM, Geunyoung [Kangnam University]
[email protected]

.............................................................................
9.7 How Students Think
Moderator: YABES, Ruth J. [Arizona State
University] [email protected]
Discussant: None
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Minnesota
Site Planning For Planners: The View From
The Other Side [543]
JOHNSON, Bonnie J. [University of Kansas]
[email protected]
Did I Miss Something? How Have Our
Students Attitudes About Education
Changed? [557]
SEIDEL, Andrew D. [Texas A&M University]
[email protected]
SMITH, Sheri L. [Kansas State University]
[email protected]
Integrating Sustainability Into Planning
Courses: Building The Basis For Discussion
[565]
YABES, Ruth J. [Arizona State University] Ruth.
[email protected]
PIJAWKA, David [Arizona State University]
[email protected]

110

12.15 Historical Artefacts and


Their Disposession

13.12 Higher-level Policies and


Regional Action

Moderator/Discussant: STEIN, Stanley M.


[University of Calgary] [email protected]

Moderator/Discussant: CARRUTHERS, John


[U.S. Department of Housing and Urban
Development] [email protected]

Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Great America II


Garden City Governance New Pieces
In The Mosaic Discovered Since German
Unification [657]
FISCHER, Karl F. [University of Kassel]
[email protected]
Peri-Urban Dispossession In The United
States: Trends In Black Family Land Loss
[694]
VERA, Lisa [Florida State University]
[email protected]
Regional Divide: The Regional Planning
Association Of America And The Regional
Plan Of New York And Its Environs [696]
WESLEY, Joan M. [Jackson State University]
[email protected]
Telling History With Diverse Voices In
Suburbia [697]
WHITAKER, Ana Maria C. [California
State Polytechnic University, Pomona]
[email protected]

Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Northwestern


Metropolitan Planning In Brazil: Trajectory
And Perspective [708]
COSTA, Geraldo M. [Federal University of Minas
Gerais] [email protected]
MAGALHES, Felipe N. [Federal University of
Minas Gerais] [email protected]
Multi-Level Planning In Italy Between
Regional Polycentric Strategies And
National Infrastructural Platforms [716]
FABBRO, Sandro [University of Udine]
[email protected]
MESOLELLA, Anna [University of Naples]
[email protected]
The Articulation And Co-Ordination Of
National-Level Planning Policy In Western
Europe: Lessons For Canada [763]
WEBB, Brian [University of Manchester] brian.
[email protected]

9:1510:45 am

CHRONOLOGICAL PAPER SESSIONS & ROUNDTABLES

Friday

............................................................................. ............................................................................. .............................................................................


13.14 Regional Governance
Revisited

15.13 What Makes Public


Space Public

Moderator/Discussant: FOSTER, Kathryn A.


[University at Buffalo] [email protected]

Moderator/Discussant: AREFI, Mahyar


[University of Cincinnati] [email protected]

Moderator/Discussant:
COAFFEE, Jon [Manchester University]
[email protected]

Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Lincolnshire I

Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Ohio State

Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Purdue

Governance Shifts And The City-Region:


Implications For The Democratic Deficit [702]
BUSER, Michael [University of the West of
England, Bristol] [email protected]

Transformation Of Public Space [896]


CAN, Isin [University of Nottingham]
[email protected]

Urban Design And Planning Ideas, The


Generators Of Layers In The Urban Spatial
Systems [891]
AZIMZADEH, Mir [University of Gothenburg]
[email protected]

The Search For Territorial Fixes In SubNational Governance: The Politics Of The
City-Region In Manchester, England [713]
DEAS, Iain [University of Manchester] Iain.
[email protected]
Governance And Effectiveness In Regional
Planning: An Analysis Of North American,
European And Australasian Practice [735]
MAYERE, Severine [Queensland University of
Technology] [email protected]
HEYWOOD, Phil [Queensland University of
Technology] [email protected]
MARGERUM, Richard D. [University of Oregon]
[email protected]

A Proposal To Investigage Spatial Properties


Of The Street As A Place Of Seeing And To
Be Seen. Case of Amsterdam [939]
SEZER, Ceren [Technical University of Delft]
[email protected]
What Makes Public Space Public?
Reconciling Divergent Perspectives On
Public Space [951]
VARNA, Georgiana M. [University of Glasgow]
[email protected]

15.14 Tools for Urban Design

Enhancing Innovation Activity Through


Urban Planning [933]
RUOPPILA, Sampo [Net Effect Ltd]
[email protected]
LEHTOVUORI, Panu [Helsinki University of
Technology] [email protected]
Presenting The Past: The Impact Of Urban
Morphology In Shaping Urban Change [934]
SANDERS, Paul S. [Queensland University of
Technology] [email protected]

111

Friday

CHRONOLOGICAL PAPER SESSIONS & ROUNDTABLES

11:0012:30 pm

Friday
Sessions
11:00 12:30 am
............................................................................. .............................................................................
1.9 Immigrants, Citizenship
and Planning Policies
Moderator: The last presenter in this session.

Moderator: BARBER, Austin [University of


Birmingham] [email protected]

Discussant: ELLIS, Geraint [Queens Univeristy


Belfast] [email protected]

Discussant: FORMOSI, Michael [University of


Massachusetts] [email protected]

Room: 10th Floor, Marriott Hotel, OHare

Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Michigan State

Immigration And Urban Policies In Italy: The


State Of Recent Debate And A Case-Study In
Turin [5]
BRIATA, Paola [Politecnico di Milano]
[email protected]

Night: Opportunities And Innovation In The


Territory (I) [48]
ALVES, Teresa [CEG University of Lisboa]
[email protected]

City Planning And Anti-Immigrant Politics


[18]
KNOWLES-YANEZ, Kim [California State
University San Marcos] [email protected]

10:30 am12:30 pm
.............................................................................
GPEAN Coordinating
Committee, Part Two,
Room: 10th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Navy Pier

112

2.12 Creative Policy

Diversity In The City: New Planning


Challenges In Inner Urban Areas Of Southern
Italy [22]
LO PICCOLO, Francesco [Universit degli Studi
di Palermo, Dipartimento Citt e Territorio]
[email protected]
LEONE, Davide [Universit degli Studi di Palermo,
Dipartimento Citt e Territorio] [email protected]
Whose Future? Differentiating Between
Latino And White Experiences When
Planning Regional Futures [46]
ZAPATA, Marisa A. [University of Illinois Urbana
Champaign] [email protected]

Creative Tensions: Reconciling Economic


And Re-Urbanisation Ambitions In The
Planning Of City Districts [50]
BARBER, Austin [University of Birmingham]
[email protected]
Theory And Practice Of The Creative City
Thesis: The Cases Of Amsterdam And
Rotterdam [95]
ROMEIN, Arie [Delft University of Technology]
[email protected]
TRIP, Jan J. [Delft University of Technology]
[email protected]
Urban Planning In The Promotion Of Modern
Industry: A Case Study Of Dafen Village Of
Shenzhen In China [109]
ZHOU, Sibei [University of Hong Kong]
[email protected]

11:0012:30 pm

CHRONOLOGICAL PAPER SESSIONS & ROUNDTABLES

.............................................................................
2.13 Community and
Neighborhood Planning
Moderator: MEYER, Peter B. [University of
Louisville] [email protected]
Discussant: None
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Michigan State
The Built Environment As An Important
Feature For Office Firm Location Decisions:
Results Of A Survey [63]
ELGAR, Ilan [University of California, Berkeley]
[email protected]
Re-Visiting Neighborhood Indicators: An
Application For The City Of Des Moines [73]
HADDAD, Monica A. [Iowa State University]
[email protected]
JESKE, Karen Q. [Neighborhood Development
Corporation] [email protected]
The History Of Arts Economic Development:
An Evolving Strategy For Downtown And
Neighborhood Revitalization [77]
JOHNSON, Amanda [University of Pennsylvania]
[email protected]
Local Economic Development Returns To
Converting To A Low Carbon Economy: A
Rationale For Subsidizing Sustainability [86]
MEYER, Peter B. [University of Louisville]
[email protected]

.............................................................................
2.15 Pre-organized Session
- Junk Science: The Role of
Secondary Markets in Urban
Development
Moderator/Discussant: WEBER, Rachel
[University of Illinois at Chicago] [email protected]
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Michigan

Regulating The (Street) Market [87]


MORALES, Alfonso [University of WisconsinMadison] [email protected]
Do Business Improvement Areas Make A
Difference? Assessing Bia And Non-Bia
Streets In Ottawa, Canada [71]
GREEN, Ilja [McGill University]
[email protected]
EL-GENEIDY, Ahmed [McGill University]
[email protected]

.............................................................................
3.21 Water and Water Quality
Issues
Moderator/Discussant: PAGE, William G.
[University at Buffalo] [email protected]
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Iowa
Mixed-Method Assessment Of Stream
Function In A Human-Dominated Setting [141]
GREVE, Adrienne I. [California Polytechnic State
University] [email protected]
Section 404 Permitting In Coastal Texas: A
Longitudinal Analysis Of The Relationship
Between Wetland Alteration And Peak
Streamflows [148]
HIGHFIELD, Wesley E. [Texas A&M University]
[email protected]
Predicting The Impact Of Land Use Change
On Stormwater Runoff: An Evaluation Of
GIS- And Web-Based Community Planning
Tools [174]
MEDNICK, Adam C. [University of WisconsinMadison] [email protected]

Friday

.............................................................................
4.12 Public-private
Partnerships
Moderator: The last presenter in this session.
Discussant: None
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Minnesota
Withdrawal Or Reinvention? The Changing
Role Of State Agents In Portuguese Urban
Governance In Face Of Increasing Demands
For Public Accountability [208]
BAPTISTA, Idalina [University of California,
Berkeley] [email protected]
The Role Of Local Strategic Partnerships In
Facilitating Environmental Sustainability In
The UK [225]
EDOZIEN, Glory [University of Reading]
[email protected]
Communivercity San Jos: A Partnership For
Service, Learning And Empowerment [261]
SALAZAR, Dayana [San Jose State University]
[email protected]
MATHUR, Shishir [San Jose State University]
[email protected]
Methodology And Examples Of UserSensitive Service Design And Planning [278]
WALLIN, Sirkku [Helsinki University of Technology]
[email protected]
HORELLI, Liisa [Helsinki University of Technology]
[email protected]

Integrating A Cellular Urban Growth Model


With Non-Point Source Nutrient Loading
Model [176]
MITSOVA-BONEVA, Diana P. [University of
Cincinnati] [email protected]
WANG, Xinhao [University of Cincinnati] Xinhao.
[email protected]

Wasted Space, Cool Place: The Cultural


Reappropriation of Obsolete Properties
WEBER, Rachel [University of Illinois at Chicago]
[email protected]

113

Friday

CHRONOLOGICAL PAPER SESSIONS & ROUNDTABLES

.............................................................................
4.13 Infrastructure and
Governance
Moderator: The last presenter in this session.
Discussant: None
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Illinois
Stakeholder Trust And Learning In Regional
Watershed Partnerships [244]
MANDARANO, Lynn [Temple University]
[email protected]
Complex Decision Making Process Of
Infrastructure Investment In Indonesian
Public Private Partnership Arrangements
[249]
MUSTAJAB, Mohammad [University of Groningen]
[email protected]
PELLENBARG, Piet H. [University of Groningen]
[email protected]
DIJK, Jouke V. [University of Groningen] jouke.
[email protected]
Bridging The Town [251]
NILSSON, Kristina L. [Swedish University of
Agricultural Sciences] [email protected]

.............................................................................
4.16 Governance of Nonprofit
and Civic Organizations
Moderator: The last presenter in this session.
Discussant: None
Room: 10th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Huron
Organisational Change In Groundwork UK: A
Search For Increased Efficiency Or Greater
Legitimacy? [235]
JEFFERY, Philip R. [University of Liverpool]
[email protected]
SHAW, David P. [University of Liverpool]
[email protected]
MARRS, Rob [University of Liverpool]
[email protected]

114

11:0012:30 pm

The Closing Of The Catholic Churches: The


Springfield Massachusetts Plan [248]
MULLIN, John R. [University of Massachusetts
Amherst] [email protected]
FORMOSI, Michael [University of Massachusetts]
[email protected]
KOTVAL, Zenia [Michigan State University]
[email protected]

The Effect Of School Quality And Spending


On Housing Choice [315]
HANSEN, Eric [University of Illinois Urbana
Champaign] [email protected]
CHAKRABORTY, Arnab [University of Illinois at
Urbana-Champaign] [email protected]
DEAL, Brian [University of Illinois at UrbanaChampaign] [email protected]

The Mechanisms Of Self-Help Circulation


Through The Community Fund By And For
Non-Profit Organizations In Japan [270]
UCHIDA, Naomi [Waseda University]
[email protected]

.............................................................................

.............................................................................
5.13 Location and Dispersal
Moderator: The last presenter in this session.
Discussant: None
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Lincolnshire II
Back To Black...And Green? Evidence Of A
Downtown Housing Boom In Louisville, Ky,
2000-2006 [287]
AMBROSIUS, Joshua D. [University of Louisville]
[email protected]
GILDERBLOOM, John I. [University of Louisville]
[email protected]
HANKA, Matthew J. [University of Louisville]
[email protected]
Diaspora As Urban Policy: A Dispersal
Simulation Model For Minneapolis-St.Paul,
Philadelphia, And The San Francisco Bay
Area [290]
AUSTIN, Mason [University of California,
Berkeley] [email protected]
CHAPPLE, Karen [University of California,
Berkeley] [email protected]
GOETZ, Edward [University of Minnesota]
[email protected]

5.18 Neighborhood
Regeneration and the Inner
City
Moderator: The last presenter in this session.
Discussant: None
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Great America I
University Driven Revitalization In Inner City
Neighborhoods: A Quantitative Empirical
Analysis [301]
ETIENNE, Harley F. [Georgia Institute of
Technology] [email protected]
Urban Development And Diversity: The
Complexities Of Planning For Sustainable
Residential Neighbourhoods In The Inner
City [367]
WEINGAERTNER, Carina [University
of Birmingham, Edgbaston]
[email protected]
BARBER, Austin [University of Birmingham,
Edgbaston] [email protected]

11:0012:30 pm

CHRONOLOGICAL PAPER SESSIONS & ROUNDTABLES

Friday

............................................................................. ............................................................................. .............................................................................


10.8 Pre-organized Session
- Issues in Post-disaster
Recovery Planning; A Global
Perspective

13.13 Regional Innovation


Revisited

13.15 Rural Regional


Innovation
Moderator/Discussant: AUDIRAC, Ivonne
[Florida State University] [email protected]

Moderator: The last presenter in this session.

Moderator/Discussant::
JANSSEN-JANSEN, Leonie [University of
Amsterdam] [email protected]

Discussant: None

Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Northwestern

Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Indiana

From The Creative To The Vital City And


Region [719]
FUCHS, Anthony [Technical University Delft]
[email protected]
READ, Stephen [Technical University Delft]
[email protected]

Rental Housing Market Recovery In PostKatrina New Orleans [570]


BATES, Lisa K. [University of Illinois at UrbanaChampaign] [email protected]
Understanding Stakeholder Participation In
Post-Disaster Recovery [574]
CHANDRASEKHAR, Divya [University
of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign]
[email protected]
Barriers To Participatory Planning In PostDisaster Housing Reconstruction [579]
GANAPATI, Emel [Florida International University]
[email protected]
GANAPATI, Sukumar [Florida International
University] [email protected]
Following The Money: Impact Of World
Bank Programmatic Conditions On Housing
Recovery In Post-Earthquake Urban Kutch,
India [597]
MUKHERJI, Anuradha [University of California,
Berkeley] [email protected]
Land Banking In New Orleans [599]
OLSHANSKY, Robert B. [University of Illinois at
Urbana-Champaign] [email protected]
GREEN, Timothy F. [University of Illinois at UrbanaChampaign] [email protected]

Housing Market Dynamics, Land Use


Patterns And Sustainability In Island
Economies: The Tale Of Five Regional
Economic Development Initiatives In The
Knowledge and Services Economy [746]
NAVARRO-DIAZ, Criseida [University of Puerto
Rico] [email protected]
Regional Competitiveness And Quality Of
Life: The Case Of Portland And Stuttgart [728]
JESSEN, Johann [University of Stuttgart] johann.
[email protected]
MAYER, Heike [Virginia Polytechnic Institute and
State University] [email protected]
The Regional Innovative Actions Programme
And Policy Planning: Lessons From A
Southern European Region [756]
RODRIGUES, Carlos J. [University of Aveiro]
[email protected]
ROSA PIRES, Artur [University of Aveiro] [email protected]

Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Lincolnshire I


Land Use Management By Innovative
Regional Planning [701]
BADER, Johannes [University of Stuttgart] bader@
igp.uni-stuttgart.de
SCHOENWANDT, Walter L. [University of
Stuttgart] [email protected]
JUNG, Wolfgang [University of Stuttgart] jung@
igp.uni-stuttgart.de
Regional And Local Planning In Scandinavia
[723]
HARVOLD, Kjell [NIBR] [email protected]
NORDAHL, Berit [NIBR] [email protected]
Social Capital And Collective Action In
North Western Ontario, A Resource Region
In Decline [748]
ORTIZ-GUERRERO, Cesar E. [University of
Waterloo] [email protected]
Examining The Impact Of Agglomeration
Of Rural Settlements On Poverty In Rural
Bangladesh A Spatial Econometric
Approach [762]
UDDIN, A.K.M. Riaz [University of Illinois at
Urbana-Champaign] [email protected]
HEWINGS, Geoffrey J. [University of Illinois at
Urbana-Champaign] [email protected]

Inter-Metropolitan Differences In The Local


Exchange Of Technological Information:
Evidence From Patent Citations [761]
SONN, Jung Won [University College London]
[email protected]

115

Friday

CHRONOLOGICAL PAPER SESSIONS & ROUNDTABLES

11:0012:30 pm

............................................................................. ............................................................................. .............................................................................


14.13 Planning for TransitOriented Development in
Urban and Suburban Contexts
Moderator: The last presenter in this session.
Discussant: None
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Great America II
Effect Of Sub-Urban Transit Oriented
Developments On Residential Property
Values [827]
MATHUR, Shishir [San Jose State University]
[email protected]
FERRELL, Christopher E. [Dowling Associates, Inc.]
[email protected]
Exploring The Spatial Development
Dynamics Of Station Areas In Tokyo [782]
CHORUS, Paul [University of Amsterdam]
[email protected]
BERTOLINI, Luca [University of Amsterdam]
[email protected]
An Evaluation Of Integrated Planning Around
The Privatised Rail Network In Britain [799]
HAYWOOD, Russell [Sheffield Hallam University]
[email protected]

15.15 Placemaking
Moderator/Discussant: NEUMAN, Michael
[Texas A&M University] [email protected]
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Purdue
Revisiting Placemaking: Comparative Case
Studies From Boston And Istanbul [890]
AREFI, Mahyar [University of Cincinnati]
[email protected]
Deciphering Design Codes: A Study Of
Regulatory Framework For Place-Making In
The US And The UK [927]
POLAKIT, Kasama [Florida Atlantic University]
[email protected]
The Urban Design Studio And Its
Implications For Place-Making Processes:
The Case Of Carnegie Mellons Urban
Laboratory Studio And Remaking Cities
Institute [932]
RICO-GUTIERREZ, Luis [Carnegie Mellon
University] [email protected]
ROY, K. Renee [Carnegie Mellon University]
[email protected]

15.16 Managing Recovery and


Change in Historic Cities
Moderator/Discussant:
HEBBERT, Michael [Manchester University]
[email protected]
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Ohio State
Simulation Analysis Of Historical LargeScale Fires In Kanazawa Castle Town [915]
MASUTA, Tatsuo [Kanazawa Institute of
Technology] [email protected]
TANI, Akihiko [Kanazawa Institute of Technology]
[email protected]
NAGANO, Siniciro [Kanazawa Institute of
Technology] [email protected]
SHIMOKAWA, Yuici [Kanazawa Institute of
Technology] [email protected]
Managing Change In Urban World Heritage
Sites [941]
SHORT, Michael J. [University of the West of
England, Bristol] [email protected]
PENDLEBURY, John R. [University of Newcastle
upon Tyne] [email protected]
WHILE, Aidan [University of Sheffield]
[email protected]
Restoration Of Historical Area Struck By
Major Earthquake - Attempt To Designate
Kuroshima In Japan As National Historic
District [947]
TANI, Akihiko [Kanazawa Institute of Technology]
[email protected]
MASUTA, Tasuo [Kanazawa Institute of
Technology] [email protected]
NAGANO, Shinichiro [Kanazawa Institute of
Technology] [email protected]
Planning For Disaster Recovery In A
Heritage City: The New New Orleans?
[952]
WAGNER, Jacob [University of Missouri-Kansas
City] [email protected]

116

REFERENCE

Reference

Presenter Information Reference

Presenter
Information

the number of duplicate forms of participation. We hope you


understand our collective problem of trying to provide the greatest
number of opportunities for participation at the highest level of
quality feasible.
Individual Presentation Schedules

Congress Registration
& Check-in
The Joint Congress Registration Desk is located on the 7th floor of
the Marriott Hotel. The Registration Desk will be staffed during the
following hours:
Monday, July 7. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9:00am 5:00pm
Tuesday, July 8. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7:00am 5:30pm
Wednesday, July 9. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7:00 am 5:30 pm
Thursday, July 10 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7:00 am 5:30 pm
Friday, July 11. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7:00am 11:30am

*
*

*The Joint Congress Registration desk is also the registration desk

for the International Planning History Societys 13th Conference as of


Thursday, July 10th and will be open extended hours on Thursday to
accommodate the early arrivals for this event as well as arrivals on
Friday morning.

Last Minute
Changes Document
Every attendee will be given the Last Minute Program Changes
document as they check-in at the Joint Congress Registration Desk.
This document will provide updates that occurred after program
publishing for presentation withdrawals from sessions, change of
presenters for papers, paper title changes, co-author name additions,
discussant changes, and more. Please use this document to update
your printed program in order to minimize confusion!

Presenter Policies
and Guidelines
Multiple Placements on the Program
Abstract submissions for the Joint Congress well exceeded the
amount of time slots and hotel space available to our group.
The Congress participation policy is as follows: one formal
presentation (either in a pre-organized session or an individual
paper session), one discussant role, and one roundtable. This allows
individuals three placements on the program. Please understand one
role is not interchangeable with another, for example, two paper
presentations and one roundtable but no discussant role is not
allowed. We will ask you to limit your paper presentations to one.
Track chairs were provided some leniency as the Congress dates
drew closer in regard to the duplicate discussant role confirmations
given the number of sessions they were managing, and the amount of
changes required at the last minute.
The notion behind this policy is to allow space in the program for
as many people to participate as is humanly possible by restricting

The Congress committee scheduled 272 sessions for more than


1000 faculty and student presenters in 17 rooms in each of 16 time
slots over four days and no one wants the early morning time slot
or the Friday slots. We appreciate your understanding of just how
difficult it is to make changes to the schedule. Presenters unable to
present at the scheduled time notified the Conference Manager and
withdrew from the program.
Presentation Tips
In a paper session, you will have 15 minutes to present your work.
In 15 minutes you can typically present about five double-spaced
pages at a pace that listeners can comfortably follow.
D
 o not attempt to read your paper. Dont turn your back to the
audience to read a projected text and dont read out loud what your
audience can read for itself.
Indicate at the beginning of your talk if you are willing to send your
paper by email when you return home.
C oncentrate on what is new, interesting and different rather than
providing full theory and methodology.
T he Congress does not expect to publish a proceeding book and,
therefore, did not publish style, spelling and usage guidelines.
If you have any concerns about setting up your presentation, please
take advantage of the Speaker Ready Room and conference/audio
visual staff to assist you before your scheduled presentation. A.V.
technicians will be available for projector equipment failures in
session rooms if they occur, but shouldnt be tied down to assisting
you with your laptop the minute before your presentation. That
being said, if you do experience trouble at the very minute youre to
present (it happens!) please step aside immediately and offer the
time to another presenter while you work out your trouble and
dont hesitate to ask us for help. We will do what it takes to get
you up and going.
Congress CD of Papers
The ACSP-AESOP Joint Congress Committee provided a compact
disk of Congress (unedited) abstracts and final papers of authors
willing to be included. In considering whether to take advantage
of this opportunity, authors were warned of a potential pitfall in
providing the final paper via the conference compact disk. The issue
is that some peer-reviewed journals (many in the U.S.) consider
such reproduction to be prior publication and will not review for
publication a paper disseminated in this way. It was suggested
authors discuss this issue with the editor of a publication outlet they
were targeting prior to submitting the final paper for inclusion.

119

Reference Presenter Information


Audio Visual Equipment
Available For Presenters
Pre-Set Equipment
The Congress supplies data projectors for every session room.
Any other audio visual equipment requests will be at the presenters
expense.
Presentation rooms are staffed by student volunteers, but these
volunteers are not trained on the use of the equipment. The audio
visual company providing the projectors will have limited staff on site
to assist with technical difficulty and will be working in 17 different
rooms. In other words, we strongly recommend making yourself
comfortable with this type of projector before your presentation.
A data projector is available in the Speaker Ready Room at the
Congress Registration desk.
Laptop Protocol
Laptops are NOT provided. You must bring your own. If you dont
have one, be prepared to borrow one from a friend. If you dont have
any friends, well be glad to introduce you to someone!
Speaker Ready-Room
The Speaker Ready-Room will have the same equipment available
as in the presentation rooms for those authors wishing to become
more familiar with it or to practice presentations. Please be patient
with your fellow presenters. We also ask that in fairness to everyone;
please limit your time using the equipment. The Speaker Ready Room
will also have a computer station set with PowerPoint and Microsoft
Word software, a CD R/W drive, and USB ports for portable hard
drives. This computer will not have internet access. It is strictly for
double-checking your presentation. The Congress does not provide
data storage materials. You may not take this laptop to use for your
presentation.
Internet Access
Internet access is not provided by the Congress in the Speaker
Ready Room. The Marriott can provide wireless internet access for a
fee. Please call or visit the hotels front desk.

Instructions for
Moderators and Discussants
For individual paper sessions and pre-organized paper sessions,
an attempt was made to appoint and confirm a moderator and a
discussant for session management. Moderators are generally
assigned from the pool of presenters who are scheduled to be in the
room and is most often the last presenter in the session. Discussants
are invited from the area of expertise, and generally are not
presenters of a paper already scheduled for the session. Roundtable
sessions are assigned a moderator responsible for the flow of the
discussion.

120

Moderator Instructions
A
 rrive at the session room five minutes prior to the scheduled
starting time and introduce yourself to the presenters. Practice
pronunciation of last names if possible!
S tudent room attendants have been appointed to session rooms.
This person will help you contact necessary parties to take care of
the audiovisual equipment, room temperature control, and to assist
you and the presenters at any time.
L ook on the front table or podium for the yellow and red cards to
assist you with letting presenters know their time frame. Please
return these cards to the front of the room when the session is
completed. Show the yellow card to the presenter when 5 minutes
of presentation time is left. Show the red card when time is over.
Be firm in your request to end the presentation in fairness to all
other presenters.
For each paper, introduce the author and the title of the paper.
Introduce the discussant.
In managing the question-and-answer-time, please ask questioners
to identify themselves and to keep their comments as short as
possible to allow the presenters to respond in full.
P lease ensure the session finishes on time. Sessions that overrun
will affect next sessions.
In case you are presenting a paper yourself during the session you
are moderating, we strongly recommend you present at the end of
the session, even if this means altering from the printed program
slightly. The efficient management of the session will benefit from
it. When presenting your paper ask one of the other presenters to
manage your time using the cards.
Discussant Instructions
It is the role of the discussant to raise points of discussion from
the papers before opening the discussion to include the audience.
The review should be brief enabling time for questions and
responses. Discussants are only required to respond with comments
to papers they have had a chance to review in advance of the
Congress, but certainly may comment on others if possible. Students
and young faculty truly benefit from your effort. Thank you!

Practical Information Reference

Practical
Information
For Your Stay
Emergencies
The emergency number for medical, fire and police is 911.
The Poison Help hotline 1-800-222-1222 serves as a key medical
information resource and helps reduce costly emergency room visits.
The hotel suggests taking note of fire exits and stair cases when you
arrive at your hotel room. It is strongly recommended you do not use
elevators if fire is present. The Marriott stands more than 50 stories
tall. If you cannot walk stairs, please inform the front desk of your
need for a sleeping room on a lower level of the hotel.
Electricity
Europe and most other countries in the world use a voltage which
is twice that of the US. It is between 220 and 240 volts, whereas in
Japan and in most of the Americas the voltage is between 100 and
127 volts.
Plug Adapters: The plug of a Continental European appliance will
not fit into an outlet in the United States without the appropriate
adapter. This is a handy web site reference for this information:
http://users.pandora.be/worldstandards/electricity.htm#trick
For the future, to know the local voltage in the country youre
going to is to take a look at the glass of an ordinary light bulb or stop
at a supermarket and note what is printed on a light bulb packet.
Language
The language of the ACSP-AESOP Joint Congress is English. We
will have a representative at the Local Host Information desk who
speaks some Spanish, French and Portuguese.
Currency and Credit Card Usage
The currency of the United States is the dollar, and the currency
of the Congress is the dollar. The currency exchange rate table
below was found at the home page of http://www.xe.com/ on
June 5, 2008. Foreign currency will not be accepted in shops or any
retail environments. Credit cards are widely accepted in almost any
environment. The Congress only accepts Mastercard and Visa.

Medical Matters
If you need to consult a doctor during your stay, contact the Hotel
Front Desk. The hotel has an immediate response person who will
respond to your request for help. They cannot dispense medicine,
diagnose or treat you, but can offer simple assistance and referral
to professional medical personnel when necessary. In the event of
a medical emergency, call 911 immediately. There may be special
instructions on the hotel phone for this purpose.
Public Holiday
The 4th of July holiday is a public holiday in the United States.
Banks may be closed on this day, but given the tourist base in the
Michigan Avenue area, most retail shops will remain open.
Tips and Gratuities
T he acceptable tip for food servers, cocktail servers and bartenders
is 15 to 20 percent of the total bill.
W
 hen hiring a taxi, limo or shuttle, it is common practice to tip
15 percent of the total fare. If the driver spends more than a few
minutes loading or unloading your bags or helping you in or out of
the car, 20 percent would be appropriate.
If a skycap at the airport checks your bags, tip $1 for each bag. If
hitching a ride through the terminals on an electric cart, tip the
driver $2 per person.
U
 pon arrival at your hotel, you may leave your car with the valet
without tipping. However, when the car is returned to you, tipping
a couple of dollars is appropriate.
If a doorman transports your luggage from your car to the hotel
lobby, $1 a bag is an acceptable tip. He would also appreciate a $2
tip when hailing you a cab.
B ellboys are accustomed to the same tipping standards.
W
 hen requesting dinner reservations, event tickets, or general
advice, expect to tip the concierge anywhere from $5 to $10.
G
 ratuity is usually attached to hotel services such as room service
and spa treatments, so look carefully at your bill. If no tip is added,
tip 15 to 20 percent.
H
 otel maid service tips can vary from $1 to $10 a day, depending
on the mess you created in the room.
This information found at: http://www.lifescript.com/channels/
healthy_living/Life_Tips/the_ultimate_tipping_guide_your_guide_
to_tipping_etiquette.asp?page=1&trans=1

121

Reference Track Descriptions

Track Descriptions
Track 1
Gender, Ethnicity and
Diversity in Planning
Petra Doan, Florida, [email protected]
Francesco Lo Piccolo, Italy, [email protected]
Contemporary society is divided into a veritable archipelago of
minority and plural groups. The complex inter-weaving of the
multiple experiences, processes and people involved making up
this urban dimension is an established fact: differences (in age,
ethnicity, gender, class, religion and culture) are so evident in cities
on various scales and levels of intensity. The Gender, Ethnicity and
Diversity in Planning track explores the variety of methods, issues,
and topics addressed when groups of difference analyze, develop
and implement plans and planning activities. All aspects of diversity
are encouraged in this track from race, ethnicity, gender, sexual
orientation to geography, physical or cognitive disability, and class.
We encourage papers and discussions on planning research and
pedagogy that seek to identify and/or redress these differences.
It could be said that reflections on minorities and the city force us
to reconsider a number of principles which have been neglected or
only partially dealt with by the planning debate, beginning with the
concepts of equality and inequality, dignity and autonomy, political
responsibility and representation. So it is possible to argue that what
is at the present time denied or opposed on the political front can
nevertheless be achieved through local action by social movements,
and even by participation in government, in the transformation of
the city, enhancing in this way the mediating role of cities. Such
actions assume the role and the characteristics of a true plan for
emancipation, which refers to the ethical dimension of the planning
discipline that we would like to highlight in the contributions and
debate of our track.

Track 2
Economic Development
Zenia Kotval, Michigan, [email protected]
Roelof Verhage, France, [email protected]
The Economic Development Track solicits papers that help tell
the economic development story as it evolves in the 21st century.
We focus on issues of land, labor, capital, business acumen
and entrepreneurship. Globalisation and metropolisation have
fundamentally changed the competitive environment in the
post-fordist era. Planning authorities have adapted their policies
and activities to the new context. This adaptation concerns the

122

objectives: to improve their position on the hit-parades of attractive


cities and regions, even remote provincial towns invest in quality of
life, and plan creative districts. It also concerns the organisation:
urban regeneration projects are planned in order to create value,
strategic partnerships are being developed in order to mobilise
private parties. The emphasis on economic development in planning
policies poses questions concerning repartition of wealth, equity,
and trickle down effects. In the light of the theme of the conference
celebrating the city, bridging the divide these questions are
particularly relevant. Cities are considered as the engines for
economic growth, but what about the repartition of the benefits of
this growth? This track invites scholars, theoretic and pragmatic, to
present their work on these issues in a manner that will help us to
improve the quality of life of our citizens.

Track 3
Environmental Planning,
Resources Management and
Climate Change
Petter Nss, Denmark, [email protected]
Stacey Swearingen White, Kansas, [email protected]
The theme of Track 3, Environmental Planning, Resource
Management and Climate Change, encompasses different
geographical levels and includes a number of substantive
issues, methodologies and social processes of importance for
environmentally conscious planning and management. The track
theme also comprises ethical foundations and implications of
environmental policy and resource management. Exploration
into structural and cultural conditions influencing planning for
environmental and sustainability objectives is a further component
of the theme. We welcome papers contributing to on-going debates,
and in particular papers opening up new and important topics of
discussion. As an issue of mounting global importance, climate
change, including both emission-reduction and adaptation strategies,
is one such topic. In general, papers based on interdisciplinary
integration of knowledge are much appreciated. Recognizing that
development during recent years, as measured by several indicators,
has proceeded in the opposite direction of environmental objectives
in many countries, we especially encourage papers throwing light on
the causes of gaps between environmental goals and implemented
strategies, and ways to overcome barriers to environmentally
sustainable development.

Track Descriptions Reference


Track 4
Governance, Capacity
Building and Participation

Track 6
International Development and
Transnational Planning

Alex Schwartz, New York, [email protected]


Lia Vasconcelos, Portugal, [email protected], [email protected]

Andreas Faludi, Netherlands, [email protected]


Keith Pezzoli, California, [email protected]

This track invites contributions on a diversity of issues related to


planning processes, including crisis in democracy, organizational
development, leadership, conflict resolution, empowerment, diversity,
multiculturalism, and identity. Governance gained good currency
across many fields, including planning. However a definition of
governance has remained elusive, as the concept assumes a diversity
of meanings, including: the minimal State; corporate governance;
new public management; or self-organized networks. In any case,
governance has assumed a growing relevance since new forms of
governing collective affairs are emerging to reconfigure the relation
of State - Market - Civil Society. More conceptually, the urgent need
to respond to the insufficiencies of the representative democracy
led to the reformulation of the role played by the State and other
instances. The challenges planning faces today in a complex and
fragmented networked society call for creative, innovative, and
unconventional ways to successfully deal with these new settings.
A multitude of questions emerge. Are the emerging forms of
governance more adequate to deal with the issues planning faces
today? Are they more flexible, more democratic and more adaptive
to the new realities? Do they enhance the capacity building needed
to sustain action over time? What kind of challenges do these new
forms of governance represent in terms of representativeness and
accountability? We invite contributions that articulate this diversity
of issues in a reflective manner, accounting for experiences and case
studies and encouraging a debate on the relationships between
governance, capacity building and participation.

This track encourages papers/roundtables focused on European


issues and international development planning (including developing
countries). The developing countries emphasis supports comparative
scholarship as well as in-depth analysis of specific countries,
regions, rural contexts, cities and networks against the backdrop
of globalization. Developing countries share attributes that create
unique challenges for planning, such as their recent independence
and nation-building efforts, their position vis- is other developed
countries in the global economy, similar demographic profiles and
rates of urbanization, inadequate infrastructure, large indigenous
populations and systems of land tenure, and their relationships
with the large international institutions. There are also significant
differences among developing countries (e.g., diverse planning
cultures). The transnational planning emphasis, in a European
context, includes the 27 Member States of the European Union
co-operating in efforts aimed at enabling territorial cohesion,
which adds territorial integration (i.e., geographic cohesion) to the
quest for economic and social cohesion as articulated by the EU
goal of balanced competitiveness and sustainable development.
Transnational planning also involves multinational agreements and
collaborative interventions at the scale of transborder city-regions.
Papers could address questions like: What does territorial cohesion
mean in different contexts and at different spatial scales? How does
national planning in the U.S.A. compare with territorial cohesion
policy in the EU? The track encourages comparative work that can
foster bi-directional flows of knowledge and culture among nations of
the global north and south.

Track 5
Housing and Community
Development
Kirk McClure, Kansas, [email protected]
Hugo Priemus, Netherlands, [email protected]
The Housing and Community Development track accepts papers
broadly addressing any aspect of housing and community
development. In the housing area, papers address issues of housing
policy and programs designed to correct market failures in the
provision of affordable housing. In the community development
area, papers examine issue of neighborhood change whether it is
revitalization, stabilization, gentrification, growth or decline. The
track especially seeks papers that examine the mediating role of
cities in bridging the divides between racial, ethnic, religious or
national groups.

123

Reference Track Descriptions


Track 7
Land Use Policy and Governance
Rayman Mohamed, Michigan, [email protected]
Vesselina Troeva, Bulgaria, [email protected]
Papers in the Land Use Policy and Governance Track generally
address issues such as how and where land is developed, the
impacts of regulations on the use of land, and the role of different
actors in the land development process. Submitted papers can
employ a variety of methods, including, but not limited to, statistical
analyses, detailed case studies, and policy evaluations. The scale of
analysis also varies widely, from jurisdiction-level studies, to regional
analyses, even as far as comparisons between cities or regions on
different parts of the globe.
We invite contributions that focus on key issues as they relate to
land use planning and policy, such as: the changing institutional
landscape; relationships between different levels of governance
and between public and non-public actors; the internal and external
dynamics of partnerships and participation; integrated approaches to
land use policy in support of effective governance in social, economic
and political contexts; innovative tools and methods for growth
management in an era of competition among regions for investments;
know-how and the best practices of knowledge transfer; and the
implementation of information and communications technologies
(ICTs). Presenters are encouraged to think about potential
collaborations with authors on both sides of the Atlantic.

Track 8
Methods for Spatial and Planning
Analysis
Ming Zhang, Texas, [email protected]
Quantitative, qualitative, and mixed methods for urban studies
and planning; GIS mapping, spatial analysis, and planning support
system; statistical and computational modeling of urban and regional
environment; and information technologies and cities.

Track 9
Planning Education
Howell Baum, Maryland, [email protected]
Kristina Nilsson, Sweden, [email protected]
The Planning Education Track accepts papers that illuminate and
help improve understanding of the purposes of planning education
and the uses of curriculum and pedagogy as strategies for serving
these purposes. Papers should refer to and build on literature and/or
practical experience in education, teaching, learning, and planning.
Reflective accounts or evaluations of educational practice, critiques
of contemporary educational practices, and proposals for more
focused and influential educational practices are welcome.

124

Track 10
Planning and Human Health and
Safety
Stefan Greiving, Germany, [email protected]
Lois Takahashi, California, [email protected]
The Planning and Human Health and Safety track attempts to raise
the visibility of work by planning scholars and practitioners that
focuses on assessing, managing and/or influencing the publics
health, safety and security. This includes a wide variety of topics such
as investigations into the impact of the built environment as well
as spatial structures on health, safety and security; studies refining
concepts and/or measures for use in this emerging field; assessments
of the health impacts of environmental change; studies focusing on
spatial inequalities and access to health; planning for disasters/risks
or assessing the vulnerability of affected populations on different
spatial scales and studies addressing communication and discourse
about disasters/risks.

Track 11
Planning Process, Law,
Administration and Dispute
Resolution
Rachelle Alterman, Israel, alterman@techunix, technion.ac.il
Sanda Kaufman, Ohio, [email protected]
Planning Process, Law and Dispute Resolution focuses on the
nature, design and management of decision making processes;
plan administration; the development, content, implementation,
and effects of laws and regulations, participatory processes; and
the management of conflicts surrounding plans and planning.
Topics might include land use controls and property rights, statutory
planning systems, public participation approaches, implementation
and quality, and conflict resolution in planning decisions, and the
roles of planning institutions. The focus may be on a particular
country or cross-nationally. Contributors are reminded that
participants to the Joint Congress come from countries with different
legal and planning systems. Therefore, country-specific legal
structures and/or participatory and conflict resolution procedures
should be made accessible to all.

Track Descriptions Reference


Track 12
Planning Theory and History:
Bridges and Divisions in Planning
Theory and History
Michael Gunder, Auckland, [email protected]
Planning theory and history tend to construct sets of ideas into
disparate categories for analysis and, often at the same time,
produce bridges between and among previously unconnected
concepts. We propose that concepts of interconnectivity and unity as
well as diversity and difference of planning thought and philosophy
be explored both historically and theoretically in this track. What
are the discourses and forces shaping both general and particular
conceptualizations of difference and universality? How has historical
planning practice engaged with the new? How can planning theory
provide mechanisms to deal with what yet is to be experienced or
even articulated? What are the dominant bridges and divisions in
contemporary and historical planning thought? While we welcome
all abstracts and papers having to do with planning theory and
planning history, we invite prospective presenters to consider these
questions in their work.

Track 13
Regions and Regional Planning
Louis Albrecht, Belgium, [email protected]
Kate Foster, New York, [email protected]
As city-regions reinforce their fundamental significance in a
globalized world, the 2008 Joint Congress of ACSP and AESOP in the
multicultural, politically complex, economically robust city-region of
Chicago offers an especially rich opportunity for regional scholars and
practitioners to reconsider the nature, role, debates and prospects
of regions and regional planning. The track welcomes individual or
pre-organized paper sessions, poster presentations and roundtable
discussions on a range of regional topics, including governance,
inter- and intra-regional relations, regional economic development,
international comparisons of regional policy, process and practice,
rural regions, and region-scale consideration of land use, growth
and decline, transportation, industrial development, service delivery,
identity, place-making, environmental change and social issues.
All methodologies, including quantitative analyses, detailed case
studies, theoretical work and comparative studies, are welcome. The
Joint Congress theme, Bridging the Divide, Celebrating the City,
invites particular consideration of regional equity and governance;
analyses and insights on addressing economic, social, political, legal,

racial/ethnic, and sectoral (e.g., public, private, nonprofit, academic)


divisions within regions; the role of cities or other institutions
as regional centers, mediators and identity makers; and regional
leadership and relations with higher level government structures.
Contributions that offer cross-national comparative insights are
especially welcome. While contributions of all kinds are invited,
if space is limited track chairs will give preference to papers and
sessions most aligned with the conference theme.

Track 14
Transportation, Mobility,
Connectivity and Infrastructure
Planning
Pantelis Skayannis, Greece, [email protected]
Ruth Steiner, Florida, [email protected]
This track invites papers dealing with all forms of infrastructure (e.g.,
communications and energy) and transport from the point of view
of spatial planning. Because spatial planning is multidisciplinary we
expect a wide range of quality papers derived from and reflecting
different perspectives. Authors are invited to submit interesting,
innovative and high quality theoretical empirical work related to
the following areas of interest: 1) Technological advancements,
including paradigm shifts which contribute to global proximity and
connectivity; 2) Liberalization and privatization and other related
regulatory trends for infrastructure financing and provision; 3) The
adequacy of infrastructure planning and systems for all citizens
irrespective of their socioeconomic or demographic status or location;
4) Issues related to infrastructure such as land use, technology,
safety, international connectivity; and 5) The impact of infrastructure
systems on the design of urban form of cities. Authors should not
restrict themselves to these specific issues. We welcome discussion
of the socioeconomic, political or technical dimensions of these and
related areas from a variety of perspectives and methodologies.

125

Reference Track Descriptions


Track 15
Urban Design and Physical
Planning
Taner Oc, United Kingdom, [email protected]
Steve Tiesdell, United Kingdom, [email protected]
The Urban Design and Physical Planning track solicits papers that
explore the different but intimately related dimensions of placemaking and place-shaping through urban design and physical
planning strategies and actions that join-up and add coherence and
quality to otherwise disparate and uncoordinated developments.The
track encourages a holistic approach that neither focuses on a limited
checklist of urban design and, at a larger spatial scale, physical
planning criteria nor excludes important and emerging areas/aspects.
All papers should be grounded in the appropriate urban design
and physical planning literature and theory. In-depth, evaluations
of urban design and physical planning projects and outcomes are
welcome, together with papers exploring urban design and physical
planning processes in ways that contribute to and enhance our
understanding of place making. Papers exploring the role of design
and physical planning actions and policy tools in the real estate
development process are especially welcome.

126

Track 16
Planning Ideas and Planning
Practices: A Critical Look at
International Exchange in the
Planning Field
Sponsored by the journal, Planning Theory and
Practice, Routledge publishers
Patsy Healey, Newcastle University, [email protected]
This track takes a critical look at the international diffusion of
planning ideas and practices, their impacts on planning practices in
different contexts, on the challenge of situating planning practices,
and on the ethical issues of international exchange in the planning
field. The Track is linked to a Book project, in production to celebrate
the tenth anniversary of the Journal, PlanningTheory and Practice,
in 2009. Published in conjunction with the Royal Town Planning
Institute, London, the Journal offers an arena for international debate
and more effective communication and sharing of ideas between
practitioners and academics. Implicitly, the role of the Journal has
been to contribute to strengthening an international community of
scholarship around the emerging practices of spatial planning. This
has enormous potential benefits, in increasing the knowledge-ability
of those involved in planning activity worldwide. But there are also
many hazards, as theories, methods and practices developed in one
context are not necessarily transferable to another. So what are the
risks and requirements in strengthening an international planning
community?

127

Reference Author/Participation Index

Author/
Participation
Index

A
ABBOTT, Carl, 89
ABDEL GALIL, Rania, 90
ABER, Jasmin, 34, 88
ABRAHAM, J.E, 43
ABRAMSON, Daniel B., 15, 68
ABUKAHTER, Ahmed, 73, 82, 105
ACEY, Charisma, 84
ADAMS, Teresa M., 50
ADLER, Sy, 68
AGARWAL, Ajay, 91
AGRAWAL, Sandeep K., 41
AGYEMAN, Julian, 99, 106
AHMADIAN, Reza, 66
AICP, Sandra L., 70
AL-DOURI, Firas A., 45
AL-SHAMMARI, Maher, 101
ALBRECHTS, Louis, 109
ALEXANDER, Ernest, 88
ALLEN, Jeffrey, 108
ALLEN, Ryan P., 99
ALTERMAN, Rachelle, 43, 96
ALVES, Teresa, 112
AMBORSKI, David P., 71
AMER, Sherif, 48
ANACKER, Katrin B., 99
ANDERSON, R. J., 85
ANDREWS, Clinton J., 41, 89
ANGOTTI, Tom, 89
ANJOMANI, Ardeshir, 101
ANTHONY, Jerry, 84, 86, 91
ANTONIADIS, Panayotis, 68
APOSTOL, Ileana, 43, 68
ARAFAT, Abdulnaser, 91
ARANYA, Rolee, 70
ARCHER, Carol, 52
ARCIDIACONO, Andrea, 93
AREFI, Mahyar, 111, 116
ARLATI, Ezio, 60

128

ARTS, Jos, 34, 97


ASHTON, Philip, 52
ASMERVIK, Sigmund, 61
ATABAY, Semra H., 81
ATHANASOPOULOU, Evanthia, 92
ATHANASSIOU, Fotini, 84
ATKINSON, Tanya, 77
AUDIRAC, Ivonne, 56, 88, 115
AURAMBOUT, Jean-Phillippe, 54
AURAND, Andrew, 60
AZIMZADEH, Mir, 111

B
BAILEY, Keiron, 55
BAILEY, Nicholas J., 42, 54
BAKER, Douglas C., 67, 81, 101
BAKER, Mark, 101
BALDUCCI, Alessandro, 80, 90, 109
BALSAS, Carlos J., 89
BANAI, Reza, 96
BANERJEE, Tridib, 68
BARBER, Austin, 112, 114
BARBIANO DI BELGIOJOSO, Alberico, 93
BARKER, Adam, 90
BARRELLA, Elise, 85
BARRIEAU, Pierre, 72
BARRINGER, Jason, 44, 85
BARRY, Janice M., 78
BARSOTTI, Ed, 52
BASSETT, Ellen M., 91
BATES, Lisa K., 52, 115
BATEY, Peter W., 66
BAUM, Howell S., 43, 96
BEARD, Victoria A., 90, 100
BEATTIE, Lee, 60
BEEBEEJAUN, Yasminah, 46, 58
BEEKMANS, Jasper, 97
BEEN, Vicki, 71
BEJLERI, Ilir, 55, 91, 97
BENDOR, Todd K., 54, 90
BENERIA, Lourdes, 84
BENITO, Perez, 55
BENNEWORTH, Paul, 69, 109
BERKE, Philip R., 60
BERNHARDT, Sarah P., 42
BERTOLINI, Luca, 86, 116
BETANCUR, John J., 14, 52, 65, 70
BIRCH, Eugenie L., 46, 49
BITTNER, Jason J., 50
BJORN, Andrew M., 84
BLANCO, Andres G., 96

BLANDFORD, Ben, 55
BLOK, Connie, 48
BLUMENBERG, Evelyn, 68
BOARNET, Marlon G., 68, 81, 102
BODDY, Martin, 79
BOELENS, Luuk, 95
BOGANI, Elena, 60
BOHRER, Darren, 98
BONAFEDE, Giulia, 65
BONFIGLIOLI, Sandra R., 80
BOOHER, David E., 78
BOONSTRA, Beitske, 78
BOOTH, Philip, 56
BORN, Branden M., 51
BOSSARD, Earl G., 55
BOSWELL, Mike, 47
BOURASSA, Steven, 41
BOWMAN, Philip J., 70
BOYLE, Robin M., 50, 57
BRADFORD, Berkita, 47
BRAND, Julie, 91
BRATT, Rachel G., 52
BREDA-VAZQUEZ, Isabel, 68
BRIATA, Paola, 112
BRICOCOLI, Massimo, 72
BRINKMAN, P. Anthony, 96
BRODY, Sam, 108
BRODY, Samuel D., 42, 47
BRMMELSTROET, Marco T., 86, 93
BROWDER, John, 110
BROWN, Larry, 109
BROWN, Peter J., 66
BROWNILL, Sue, 59
BRUMBAUGH, Stephen, 85
BRUNICK, Nicholas, 17, 94
BRUSSEL, Mark, 48
BUEHLER, Ralph, 81
BUGG, John A., 96
BUGG, Laura Beth, 41
BUITELAAR, Edwin, 56, 84
BULIUNG, Ron, 49
BULT-SPIERING, Mirjam W.D., 80
BUNNELL, Gene A., 60
BUNTING, Trudi, 48
BURKE, Jason R., 72
BURNIER, Carolina V., 62, 73
BURTON, Paul A., 74
BUSER, Michael, 111
BUTINA-WATSON, Georgia, 62, 86
BUTLER, William H., 66

Author/Participation Index Reference


C
CABANNES, Yves, 70
CACERES, SR., Eduardo, 80
CALAVITA, Nico, 17, 94
CALZA, Giampiero, 48
CAMARINHAS, Catarina T., 81
CAMMARATA, Andrea, 60
CAMPBELL, Heather, 15, 68, 107
CAMPBELL, Scott D., 85
CAN, Isin, 111
CANNING, Pat, 78
CAO, Jason Xinyu, 91
CAO, Xinyu, 73
CARBONELL, Armando, 17, 98
CARMON, Dafna, 96
CARMONA, Matthew, 45, 68
CAROLINI, Gabriella Y., 84
CARP, Jana, 77
CARPENTER, Ann M., 56, 62
CARRERAS, Joe, 66
CARRUTHERS, John, 110
CASARIEGO, Joaquin, 90
AVDAR, Selin, 65
CECCHINI, Arnaldo, 81
CELINO, Adele, 78
CENGIZ, Huseyin, 81, 94
CERMAKOVA, Eva, 82, 94
CERVERO, Robert, 44
CHAKKALAKKAL, Mary, 77
CHAKRABORTY, Arnab, 73, 101, 114
CHAKRAVARTY, Surajit, 58
CHALANA, Manish, 95
CHALOUPKA, Frank J., 49
CHAN, Chee F., 59
CHANG, Hsiutzu, 89
CHANG, Hsueh-Sheng, 72
CHAO, Tzu-Yuan S., 72, 78
CHAPPLE, Karen, 80, 100, 114
CHATMAN, Daniel G., 41, 49
CHATTIPARAMB, Angelique, 106
CHEDAMBATH, Rajan, 77
CHELLMAN, Colin, 71
CHEN, Binbin, 102
CHEN, Wei-Ya, 57
CHEN, Xueming, 102
CHEN, Yang, 57, 105
CHETTIPARAMB, Angelique, 77
CHIU, Rebecca L., 89
CHO, Deokho, 66
CHOI, Hyunsun, 57, 90
CHOI, Simon, 66, 90

CHOI, Yeemyung, 97
CHU-SHORE, Jesse C., 83
CLARK, David, 101
CLARK, Thomas A., 17, 72, 91, 98
CLAY, Michael J., 43, 84
CLIFTON, Kelly J., 56, 62, 73
COAFFEE, Jon, 62, 111
COCHRAN, Bobby, 66
COFFIN, Sarah L., 47
COFFMAN, Makena, 99
COHEN, James R., 67
COHEN, Nevin, 83
COLOMB, Claire M., 62
COLUCCI, Angela, 87
CONCILIO, Grazia, 78
CONNOLLY, James J., 70
CONROY, Maria M., 66, 70, 80
COPPENS, Tom, 92
COREY, Kenneth E., 70
CORNILLIE, Thomas C., 92
COSTA, Geraldo M., 110
COSTA, Heloisa S., 66
COSTA, Joo Pedro T., 96
COTTRILL, Caitlin D., 34
COUTTS, Christopher J., 67
COVO, David, 77
COWELL, Margaret M., 92
CRANE, Randall, 16, 56, 66, 89, 106
CUI, Gong-Hao, 49
CUI, Shu-Ping, 49
CULPEN, Alison, 62

D
DA SILVA, Rachel, 72
DAAMEN, Tom, 57
DAILEY, Julia M., 92
DALTON, Linda, 96
DALTON, Tracey, 108
DAMMERS, Ed, 77
DANDEKAR, Hema, 69
DANKO, Cristina C., 70
DAS, Ashok K., 66
DAVID, Nina P., 80
DAVOUDI, Simin, 56, 80, 88, 92
DAVY, Benjamin, 74
DAY, Jennifer E., 44
DE HAAS, Wim, 44
DE JONG, Bart, 61
DE KORT, Inge A.T., 80
DE LIDDO, Anna, 42
DE MAGALHAES, Claudio S., 45

DE OLIVEIRA, Jose Antonio, 66


DE ROO, Gert, 42, 78, 90
DE VRIES, Jochem, 48, 67, 69, 79
DEAL, Brian, 91, 95, 106, 114
DEAS, Iain, 61, 71, 111
DEL RIO, Vicente, 34
DELMAN, Thomas F., 99
DEMAZIRE, Christophe, 41, 83
DEMBSKI, Sebastian, 85
DEMERUTIS, Juan, 74
DEMERUTIS ARENAS, Juan A., 88
DEMPWOLF, Scott, 67
DENG, Lan, 84
DENTINHO, Tomaz P., 43
DER VLIES, Vincent, 97
DER WETH, Ruediger, 48
DEVLIN, Ryan T., 70
DEWAR, Margaret E., 67, 109
DEWULF, Geert P.M.R, 80
DIAO, Mi, 91
DIKER, Nazire, 83
DINCER, Iclal, 85
DING, Chengri Di, 16, 82
DIRKS, Lise, 84
DOAN, Petra, 84, 100
DODSON, Jago, 93
DOEVENDANS, Kees, 96
DOKIC, Irena, 68
DOPHEIDE, Emile, 48
DOUAY, Nicolas, 48
DOUCET, Philippe, 60
DOUSSARD, Marc, 44
DOVLN, Sylvia, 54, 99
DOYLE, Jessica L., 44, 85
DROSS, Michael, 61
DRUCKER, Joshua, 83
DRUMMOND, William J., 41
DUARTE, Paulette, 61
DUEHR, Stefanie, 60, 88
DHR, Stefanie, 79
DUNCAN, Michael, 97
DUNNING, Anne E., 106
DYCKMAN, Caitlin S., 83, 108

E
EDELMAN, David, 57
EDWARDS, Mary M., 91
EDWARDS, Michael, 45
EHRENFEUCHT, Renia, 67
EKELUND, Bjrn, 68
EL-GENEIDY, Ahmed, 97, 113

129

Reference Author/Participation Index


ELDER, Kurt, 72
ELLEN, Ingrid G., 71
ELLIOTT, Michael, 88
ELLIS, Geraint, 53, 112
ELSINGA, Marja G., 83
ENLIL, Zeynep, 85
ENQUIST, Phil, 14, 69
ERKUL, Fusun, 74
ERRING, Cedric, 65
ERYILMAZ, Semiha Sultan, 94
EVERS, David, 48
EWING, Reid, 49

F
FABBRO, Sandro, 67, 97, 110
FAERMAN, Marcio, 71
FALLER, Arnold, 60
FALUDI, Andreas, 88
FAN, Peilei, 43
FAN, Yingling, 67
FAULKNER, Guy, 49
FEDELI, Valeria, 78, 83
FELD, Marcia M., 49, 87
FERGUSON, Erik, 72
FERGUSON, Gavin, 102
FERNANDEZ-MALDONADO, Ana Maria, 44
FERRARI, Edward T., 90
FERREIRA, Joseph, 43, 51
FESER, Edward, 16, 70, 89
FIDLIS, Teresa, 99
FILION, Pierre, 48, 100
FINKE, Roland, 55
FINN, Donovan P., 89
FISCHER, Karl F., 110
FISCHLER, Raphael, 43
FISCHMAN, Allison, 55, 97
FLEURKE, Nikky, 56
FLORES, Sergio A., 99
FOL, Sylvie, 56
FORESTER, John, 107
FORMOSI, Michael, 112, 114
FORSYTH, Ann, 61, 106
FOSTER, Kathryn A., 52, 111
FRANK, Andrea I., 43, 88, 91
FRANK, Lawrence D., 46
FRANK, Nancy, 54
FREEMAN, Allison T., 108
FREEMAN, Lance, 109
FREESTONE, Robert, 81
FRENCH, Steven P., 72, 79
FRENKEL, SR., Amnon, 48

130

FREW, Travis G., 101


FRIEDMANN, John, 43, 54, 86, 96
FRISCH, Michael, 98
FRITSCH, Matti, 67
FUKAHORI, Sayaka, 55
FULLER, Boyd W., 107
FULTON, William, 68, 81
FUNDERBURG, Richard G., 102

G
GABER, John, 60, 96
GAFFIKIN, Frank, 106
GANAPATI, Sukumar, 42, 62, 115
GAO, Shan, 79
GARCIA, Jesus, 14, 65
GDESZ, Miroslaw, 56
GEDAL, Michael, 71
GEZICI, Ferhan, 65
GHOMASHCHI, Vahid, 78
GIACOMINI, Sonia M., 70
GIBSON, Huston J., 55
GIGLI, Federico R., 85
GILDERBLOOM, John I., 89, 114
GILLEN, Michael J., 59
GILS, Marcel V., 61
GIUSTI, Cecilia H., 47
GLASBERGEN, Pieter, 70
GLAZEBROOK, Garry J., 93
GLICKMAN, Norman J., 83
GNANASEKARAN, Shanmugapriya, 72
GOCMEN, Asli, 83
GOETZ, Edward, 99, 114
GOETZKE, Frank, 45
GOLDSTEIN, Bruce E., 59, 66
GOLDSTEIN, Gisele V., 110
GONZALEZ, Erualdo, 95
GORDON, David L., 58
GOSPODINI, Aspa, 67, 107
GOVERDE, Henri J., 66
GRANT, Jill, 94
GRAVAGNO, Filippo, 59
GREEN LEIGH, Nancey, 47
GREENLEE, Andrew, 84
GREENSTEIN, Roz, 16, 89
GREENSTEIN, Shana, 85
GRIDER, William B., 108
GRIMSHAW, Lucy, 46
GROSSARDT, Ted, 55
GROVER, Himanshu, 47
GRUBE, Michael T., 84
GRUEHN, Dietwald, 78

GUALINI, Enrico, 66, 88, 99


GUENSLER, Randall, 85
GUERRA, Elsa, 90
GULDMANN, Jean-Michel, 85
GULLINO, Silvia, 79
GUNDER, Michael, 44, 73
GURRAN, Nicole, 54, 84

H
HAANP, Simo, 59
HACCOU, Huibert A., 84
HAGAN, Jacqueline, 46
HAGEN, Aksel, 61
HAGUE, Cliff, 48, 71, 110
HALL, Peter V., 50
HAMBLETON, Robin, 48
HAMIN, Elisabeth M, 70
HAMIN, Elisabeth M., 54
HAMMER, Patricia M., 61
HAN, Sun Sheng, 16, 57, 82
HANDY, Susan, 56
HANKA, Matthew, 89, 114
HANLEY, Lisa M., 100
HANLON, Bernadette, 99
HARPER-ANDERSON, Elsie, 87
HARPER, Thomas L., 73, 88
HARPER, Tom, 44, 67
HARTMANN, Thomas, 59
HASELSBERGER, Beatrix, 67, 69, 82
HAYDEN, Dolores, 69
HAYNIE, S. D., 91
HE, Canfei, 16, 82
HEALEY, Patsy, 15, 50, 74
HEATH, Tim, 81, 107
HEBBERT, Michael, 67, 69, 85, 100, 116
HEMBERGER, Christoph, 48
HENNEMANN, Bernhard, 78
HERBERT, Berneece S., 80
HERNANDEZ, Tony, 101
HESS, Paul M., 49
HEYWOOD, Phil, 111
HIBBARD, Michael, 83
HIGHFIELD, Wesley E., 42, 113
HILLIER, Jean S., 44
HINCKS, Stephen, 101
HINDS, Alex T., 70
HINKLEY, Sara, 100
HIOB, Mart, 34
HIRSCHLER, Petra, 46, 69, 88
HIRT, Sonia A., 55, 96
HOCH, Charles, 55, 61, 68-69

Author/Participation Index Reference


HOETJES, Perry, 86
HOLLANDER, Justin, 62
HOLLEY, Paul, 43
HONG, Chansun, 71
HOU, Li, 101
HOUSE, Erin, 89
HOWATT, Hilary, 46
HOWLAND, Marie, 67
HOWLETT, Marc A., 79
HOYEM, Rosanne M., 92
HUANG, Shuo, 62
HUANG, Sonya Y., 51, 78
HUDALAH, Delik, 90
HUDSPETH, Nancy, 100
HULL, Angela, 45, 52, 81
HUNT, J.D., 43
HUTTER, Grard, 87, 97
HUTTON, Thomas A., 73

I
ILMONEN, Mervi, 60
IM, Jung-Soon, 42
IMAM, Amna, 99
IMMERGLUCK, Dan, 52, 66, 79
INGALLINA, Patrizia G., 81
INGRAM, Gregory, 17, 98
INNES, Judith, 78
IRAZABAL, Clara E., 52, 108
ISAAC, Claudia B., 88
ISEKI, Hiroyuki, 68, 93
ISKANDER, Natasha N. , 46
ISLAM, Tolga, 85
ISMAIL, Ayman, 78
ISRAEL, Evelyn, 109
ISSERMAN, Andrew M., 16, 61, 89

J
JAARSMA, Catharinus F., 56, 62
JABAREEN, Yosef, 79
JACKSON, Maria-Rosario, 69
JACOBS, Harvey M., 17, 43, 94
JACOBSON, Thomas, 70
JANIN RIVOLIN, Umberto, 60, 88
JANSSEN-JANSEN, Leonie B., 61, 73
JEROME, Kristine P., 110
JESSEE, Amy, 93
JIAO, Junfeng, 62
JOH, Kenneth, 68, 81
JOHN, Courtney, 108
JOHNSON, Bethany, 55

JOHNSON, Bonnie J., 45, 110


JONES, Michael F., 71
JONES, Mittie D., 54
JORDAN, Lauren M., 95
JOURDAN, Dawn E., 43, 47
JUHASZ, Mark, 51
JUN, Hee-Jung, 70, 80
JUN, Jaebum, 34
JUNG, H. M., 70
JUNG, Namji, 53

K
KALABAMU, Faustin T., 41
KAMEL, Nabil, 57
KANG, Jungeun, 42
KANG, Min Wook, 62
KAPAROS, George, 92
KARTEZ, Jack D., 88
KARVONEN, Andrew P., 57
KASPER, Birgit, 106
KASSENS, Eva, 102
KAUFMAN, Jerome, 52
KAUFMAN, Sanda, 92
KAWAMURA, Kazuya, 67, 81
KAYLOR, Charles H., 42
KAZMIERCZAK, Aleksandra, 79, 90
KEATING, Dennis W., 83, 88
KERWIN, Tom, 14, 69
KHANOLKAR, Prasad S., 66
KILOH, Bruce, 46
KIM, Annette M., 34
KIM, Dohyeong, 61
KIM, Dong-Young, 107
KIM, Eun Jung, 44
KIM, Gabtae, 66
KIM, Geunyoung, 42, 62, 110
KIM, Jae Hong, 91, 95
KIM, Jaecheol, 57
KIM, Jinwook, 42
KIM, Jun-Hyun, 61, 67
KIM, Moon Jeong, 90
KIM, Sangwon, 42
KIM, Youngkook, 85
KIM, Yuseung, 34
KING, Lester, 95
KINGSTON, Richard, 71
KINTREA, Keith J., 71
KIRCHLER, Leslie B., 34
KIRSHNER, Joshua D., 84
KLEIT, Rachel G., 54
KLOSTERMAN, Richard, 51, 60, 106

KNAAP, Gerrit, 17, 55, 73, 84, 91, 98


KNIELING, Joerg, 54
KNOWLES-YANEZ, Kim, 112
KOBES, Deborah, 90
KOLBE, Margret, 78
KOLKO, Jed, 100
KOLO, Jerry, 99
KONTOKOSTA, Constantine E., 42
KORTHALS ALTES, Willem K., 101
KOSKELA, Hille, 72
KOTVAL, Zenia, 77, 114
KRAFT, Kate, 109
KRISHNAMURTHY, Vig, 77
KRIZEK, Kevin, 61
KROLL, Cynthia A., 100
KRUMHOLZ, Norman, 52, 83
KUKELY, Gyrgy, 65
KULONPALO, Jussi, 67
KUNDU, Ratoola, 106
KUNZMANN, Klaus R., 48
KURTH, Detlef, 79
KYTTA, Marketta, 61

L
LACHAPELLE, Ugo, 46
LAI, Clement K., 52
LALENIS, Konstantinos, 80
LAMBERT, Christine, 79
LANDIS, John, 49, 91, 96
LARSEN, Kristin E., 101
LARSEN, Larissa, 95, 99
LASTARRIA-CORNHIEL, Susana, 100
LAURIA, Mickey, 83
LAVOIE, Caroline, 58
LEARY, Michael E., 80
LEBEDEVA, Julia, 59
LEE, Andrew, 107
LEE, Brian H., 97
LEE, Chanam, 44, 61, 67
LEE, Dalbyul, 79
LEE, Jae Su, 81
LEE, Jaechoon, 57
LEE, Sangyun, 99
LEGATES, Richard T., 84
LEHEIS, Stphanie, 50
LEHTOVUORI, Panu, 106, 111
LEINFELDER, Hans, 72
LENFERINK, Sander, 34
LEON GOMEZ, Noemi, 94
LEONE, Davide, 112
LEONE DE NIE, Karen, 44, 85

131

Reference Author/Participation Index


LESHINSKY, Rebecca, 106
LESTER, T. W., 100
LEVELT, Melika, 41
LEVINE, Joyce N., 105
LEVY, Caren, 98
LEWIS, Rebecca, 55, 91
LEWIS, Selma, 55
LI, Jianling, 45
LI, Yanmei, 95
LIANG, Sisi, 49
LIN, Lin, 62
LINKOUS, Evangeline R., 96
LINZER, Helena, 99
LISSANDRELLO, Enza, 68
LITMAN, Todd, 97
LIU, Cathy Yang, 109
LIU, Chao, 73
LIU, Hsiao-Lan, 71
LLOYD, Greg, 56
LO PICCOLO, Francesco, 94, 112
LOESSING, Tobias, 99
LOH, Carolyn G., 80
LONDON, James B., 59, 108
LONG, Judith G., 50
LOOYE, Johanna W., 84, 90
LOPEZ, Ernesto, 65
LOPEZ, Jose, 14, 65
LORD, Alexander D., 44, 54
LOURENCO, Julia M., 70, 72
LOWE, Catherine, 92
LOWE, Jeffrey S., 83
LOWE, Nichola, 46
LU, Yandan, 67
LUESCHER, Andreas, 55
LURIE, Susan, 83
LYKKE-OLESEN, Andreas, 99
LYNDE, Eric, 57

M
MA, Seungryul, 66
MABIN, Alan, 44, 56
MACEDO, Joseli, 107
MACLAREN, Virginia W., 77
MACLEOD, Douglas, 77
MAGALHES, Felipe N., 110
MAGHELAL, Praveen K., 34
MAGINN, Paul J., 96
MAHENDRA, Anjali, 93
MAJOOR, Stan J., 54, 99
MAKAREWICZ, Carrie, 100
MALLACH, Alan, 17, 94

132

MALLOY, Jennifer A., 68


MAMOLI, Myrsini, 91
MANUEL, Aalbers, 52
MANVILLE, Michael, 90
MARANVILLE, Angela R., 98
MARCO, Albini, 80
MARCUCCI, Daniel J., 54, 95
MARGERUM, Richard D., 111
MARIA, Cahill, 55
MAROME, Wijitbusaba, 65
MAROTTA, Paola, 78
MARSH, Eric L., 47
MARSHALL, Stephen, 85
MARTENS, Karel, 97
MARTIN, Nina, 70
MARTINDALE, Katharine A., 79
MARTINEZ-COSIO, Maria L., 42
MARTINEZ-FERNANDEZ, Cristina, 49
MATSUO, Miwa, 50
MATSUURA, Masahiro, 107
MAYERE, Severine, 111
MCBRIDE, Vickie L., 66
MCCLURE, Kirk, 84
MCDONALD, Noreen, 73, 97
MCFERRIN, Peter, 34
MCLAUGHLIN, Ralph B., 101
MCLEAN, Beverly M., 44
MCWILLIAM, Wendy J., 95
MEDALEN, Tor, 70
MEIJERINK, Sander, 66
MEKKES, Petra, 56
MEMON, Pyar Ali, 54, 88
MENDIZABAL, Anisa D., 92
MESOLELLA, Anna, 110
METAXATOS, Paul, 61, 84
MEYER, Peter B., 47, 87, 113
MEYER, William, 54
MILES, Rebecca, 41, 47, 55
MILLEN, Amy E., 44
MILLER, Donald H., 98
MILSTEAD, Terence M., 47
MINETT, John, 45, 86
MINNERY, John R., 59
MINOCHA, Inshu, 84
MIRANDA, Marie Lynn, 61
MITRA, Raktim, 49
MOHAMMADI, Hamid, 66
MONDSCHEIN, Andrew, 85
MONNO, Valeria, 46, 65
MOORE, Reagan, 71
MORAES, Sergio T., 56, 88
MORAN, Oscar, 108
MOREIRA, Graa A., 58

MORENAS, Leon A., 74


MORGADO, Sofia, 99
MORRISON, Nicola C., 71
MORROW-JONES, Hazel A., 52, 80, 88, 90
MOSCOVICI, Dan, 83
MOTA, Jose C., 62, 78
MOUDON, Anne V., 62
MOUSTAFA, Amer, 81
MUELLER, Bernhard, 52, 80
MUELLER, Elizabeth, 60, 78
MUHAMMAD, Imran, 86
MUIR, Jenny, 71
MUKHOPADHYAY, Chandrima, 85
MULLER, Brian H., 67
MULLER, Larissa, 77
MULLIN, John R., 46, 65, 114
MURANO, JR., 34
MURTAGH, Brendan J., 53

N
NADIN, Vincent, 69, 71, 79, 88
NAESS, Petter, 93
NAM, Yunwoo, 72
NAOMI, Carmon, 79
NAPHTALI, Zvia S., 62
NASR, Joseph L., 52, 105
NAVARRO-DIAZ, Criseida, 91, 115
NEFF, Sabine, 46
NELSON, Marla, 53, 67
NEMETH, Jeremy, 50, 62
NEOG, Dristi, 97
NEUMAN, Michael C., 85, 88, 116
NEUMARK, David B., 100
NEWMAN, Peter, 93
NEWMARK, Gregory L., 57, 97
NG, Mee-Kam, 100
NGUYEN, Mai T., 68, 81
NIELSEN, Rune, 99
NIENHUIS, Ivo, 42
NIXON, Hilary, 77, 102
NOCKS, Barry, 106
NOLL, Eric, 95
NORTON, Richard K., 92, 96
NOSRATI, Sepideh, 66

O
OBRIEN, Thomas, 50
OCONNELL, Derry, 79
ODURO, Charles, 100
OGUNSEITAN, Oladele A., 77

Author/Participation Index Reference


OLIVEIRA, Carlos, 68
OLIVEIRA, Vitor M., 55
OLSEN, Kjell, 61
OLSHANSKY, Robert B., 83, 87, 115
ORTIZ-CHAO, Claudia G., 43
OTERO, Jose, 59
OTTO, Andreas, 80
OVERSTREET, Alicia, 61
OZAWA, Connie P., 88, 92
OZBIL, Ayse N., 56
OZDIL, Hulya, 71
OZDIL, Taner R., 71
OZTURK, Zeynep K., 81

P
PAGE, G. W., 47
PAGE, Stephen B., 54
PALAZZO, Danilo, 93
PALLAGAST, Karina M., 56, 95
PALLATHUCHERIL, Varkki G., 95, 106
PAMUK, Ayse, 95
PAN, Qisheng, 52, 80
PARIS, Didier, 67
PARK, In Kwon, 58
PARK, Joungim, 60
PARK, Sohyun, 97
PARK, Sungjin, 57
PARKER, Robert G., 55
PATERSON, Robert, 70
PAULSEN, Kurt, 60
PECHPAKDEE, Pechladda, 70
PECOS, Jacob, 70
PEEL, Deborah, 48, 56, 100
PELLOW, David N., 71
PEMBERTON, Simon, 54, 66
PENDALL, Rolf, 52, 92
PENDLEBURY, John, 81, 116
PENDYALA, Ram M., 97
PEPONIS, John, 56, 72, 91
PEREZ, Benito, 97
PERROTT, Katherine, 94
PERRY, David, 106
PERSKY, Joseph J., 93
PESSOA, Denise F., 74
PETER, Markus, 95
PETRIE, Pattsi, 53, 87
PEZZOLI, Keith, 71
PHIBBS, Peter J., 84
PHOTIS, Yorgos N., 84
PICCINATO, Giorgio, 86
PICONE, Marco, 65

PIGA, Barbara, 93
PIJAWKA, David, 110
PILL, Madeleine, 47, 82
PILSBURY, David, 71
PINHO, Paulo, 55, 59, 86
PINTO, Rogerio R., 66
PIRES, Sara M., 99
PIRES DE MATOS, Pedro, 94
PISMAN, Ann, 72
PITT, Damian, 47
PITTS, Jessica, 92
PLAISANT, Alessandro, 81
POLENSKE, Karen R., 78
PONZINI, Davide, 98
POTHUKUCHI, Kameshwari, 52
POTTER, Cuz, 85
POWELL, Marlynne, 50
PRIEMUS, Hugo, 83
PROSPERI, David C., 69, 72, 88

Q
QIAN, Zhu, 100
QUERCIA, Roberto G., 108

R
RABINOWITZ BUSSELL, Mirle, 42
RAE, Alasdair J., 67
RAFFERTY, Gavan, 95
RAJA, Samina, 44, 52
RAMASUBRAMANIAN, Laxmi, 51
RANDOLPH, John, 47
RATCLIFFE, Janneke, 108
RAVETZ, Joe, 71
REARDON, Kenneth M., 52
RECKIEN, Diana, 49
REESE, Laura A., 48, 58
REEVE, Alan R., 97, 102
REEVES, Dory E., 46, 53
REEVES, Howard W., 43
REICHRATH, Martin, 67
REN, Xuefei, 43
RENNE, John L., 50, 62
RENSKI, Henry, 41, 70
RESTREPO, Carlos E., 62
RETZLAFF, Rebecca C., 60
RICHARDSON, Gregory, 59
RIDOUT, John S., 93
RIGANTI, Patrizia, 14, 65
RIPY, John, 55
ROBERTS, Michael B., 99

ROCCO, Roberto, 95
RODRIGUEZ-GARZA, Roberto, 107
ROMEIN, Arie, 112
ROOSA, Erin, 81
ROSA PIRES, Artur, 62, 68, 78, 115
ROSENBLOOM, Sandra, 68, 73
ROSIER, Johanna, 86
ROSS, Catherine L., 44, 85
ROTH, Helene, 88
ROTH, Michael, 42, 78
ROY, Ananya, 15, 50, 88
RUKMANA, Deden, 90
RUOPPILA, Sampo, 111

S
SAGER, Tore, 61, 68
SAHA, Devashree, 70
SAHIN, Ozlem, 65
SAIFOULLINE, Rinat, 48
SAIJA, Laura, 59
SALAMA, Hussam H., 48
SALET, Willem, 85
SAMAKOVLIJA, Marcella, 87
SANCHEZ, Thomas, 62
SANDERS, Paul S., 111
SANDRA, Mallet, 80
SANDS, Gary, 48
SANTINHA, Gonalo, 62, 78
SANTOS, Joo Rafael, 102
SANTOS CRUZ, Sara, 59
SANYAL, Bish, 15, 68-69
SAPHORES, Jean-Daniel, 77
SAPOUNAKIS, Aristeidis, 92
SAVOLDI, Paola, 72
SCHALLER, Susanna F., 94
SCHANZE, Jochen, 97
SCHATZ, Laura K., 49
SCHECHTMAN, Judd, 54
SCHEURER, Jan, 102
SCHIAPPACASSE, Paulina, 52, 80
SCHILLECI, Filippo, 78
SCHIMAK, Gerhard, 88
SCHIVELY SLOTTERBACK, Carissa, 61
SCHLOSSBERG, Marc A., 55
SCHMEIDLER, Karel R., 62
SCHMIDT, Stephan, 55, 79
SCHNEIDER, Robert J., 62
SCHOENWANDT, Walter, 48, 73, 115
SCHRAM, Anne, 96
SCHREURS, Jan E., 93
SCHROCK, Greg, 53, 108

133

Reference Author/Participation Index


SCHUBERT, Steffi, 106
SCHUELER, Daniela, 49
SCHULZE BAING, Andreas, 79
SCHWARTZ, Alex F., 52, 66, 95
SCHWARTZ, Amy, 71
SCHWARZ, Terry, 68
SCHWEITZER, Lisa A., 50, 61, 91, 106
SCOPPA, Martin, 72
SEARLE, Glen H., 100
SEIDEL, Andrew D., 110
SEIGNEURET, Natacha, 61
SEN, Lalita, 52
SEN, Siddhartha, 88
SEO, Hanlim, 97
SERDA, Daniel, 50
SERIN, Bilge, 60
SEZER, Ceren, 111
SHACH-PINSLY, Dalit, 93
SHANDAS, Vivek, 83, 95
SHAPIRO, Andrew, 77
SHAW, David P., 54, 69, 114
SHAW, Todd C., 83
SHEN, Qing, 60, 97
SHIBATA, Kuniko, 34
SHIEH, Leslie, 54
SHIFFER, Michael, 51
SHIH, Mi, 54
SHIMAMURA, Yasuharu, 100
SHIN, Haeran, 92
SHIN, Jung Ho, 91
SHIODE, Narushige, 67
SHMUELI, Deborah, 92
SHORT, Michael J., 100, 116
SHOSHKES, Ellen S., 101
SHULER, John A., 61
SIEMBAB, Wally, 81
SIEMBIEDA, William J., 34, 45
SIEMIATYCKI, Matti, 72, 92
SILVA, Ceclia, 86
SILVA, Elisabete A., 44
SILVEIRA, Paulo, 43
SILVER, Christopher, 88
SIMONOFF, Jeffrey S., 62
SINNING, Heidi, 42
SIPE, Neil G., 67, 93
SKABURSKIS, Andrejs, 67
SKAYANNIS, P. D., 81, 92
SLAEV, Alexander D., 85
SLATER, Sandy, 49
SLIUZAS, Richard, 48
SLOAN, Mellini, 101
SMART, Michael J., 68, 106
SMITH, Geoffrey, 59

134

SMITH, Janet L., 52


SMITH, Nick P., 100
SMITH, Robert, 109
SMITH, Sheri L., 47, 110
SOARES DE MOURA COSTA, Heloisa, 88
SOHN, Jungyul, 91
SOLITARE, Laura, 95, 106
SONG, Yan, 60, 67
SORENSEN, Andre, 15, 50, 62
SOURELI, Konstantina, 44
SPAZIANTE, Agata, 34
SPERRY, Stephen L., 55
SRIRAJ, P. S., 84, 93
STABILINI, Stefano P., 48
STAV, Tamy, 96
STEAD, Dominic, 79
STEIL, Justin, 70
STEIN, Stanley M., 73, 110
STEINER, Frederick, 87
STEINER, Ruth L., 45, 55, 91, 97
STERNBERG, Ernest, 92
STEVENS, Mark R., 60
STEVENS, Quentin, 74, 86, 92
STIEFEL, Leanna, 71
STIFTEL, Bruce, 88
STOCKMANN, Deirdra, 55
STOLL, Micheal, 93
STOREY, Donovan S., 100
STRAATEMEIER, Thomas, 86
STRUIKSMA, Rik, 97
SUAU, Pere, 61
SUMPOR, Marijana, 68
SUN, Jian, 94
SVANDA, Nina, 83
SWARUP, Tanushri, 84
SWEET, Elizabeth L., 46, 100

T
TAIT, Malcolm, 73
TAL, Gil, 56
TANG, Lei, 93, 102
TANG, Yan, 48
TANG, Yue, 107
TAYLOR, Brian, 85
TAYLOR, Zack, 80
TEITZ, Michael B., 96
TEN DAM, Ineke, 48
TENNEKES, Joost, 68
TTREAULT, Paul, 97
TEWDWR-JONES, Mark, 54
THAKURIAH, Piyushimita, 34, 72, 84, 93, 102

THOMAS, June M., 53, 87, 96, 101


THOMPSON, Robert H., 108
THROGMORTON, James A., 69, 73, 88
TIESDELL, Steve A., 93, 102
TIGHE, Jenna R., 105
TING, Tih-Fen, 98
TIPPETT, Joanne, 74
TISMA, Alexandra, 62
TOWNSEND, Craig, 72
TRAN, Levu, 107
TREMOULET, Andree, 42
TRIANTAFILLOU, Menelaos, 57
TRIP, Jan J., 79, 112
TROEVA, Vesselina R., 80, 88
TSAI, Yu-Hsin, 71

U
UMEMOTO, Karen, 72, 88, 99
UPTON, Robert, 15, 50, 52

V
VAINER, Carlos B., 48, 52
VAN ACKER, Maarten A., 50
VAN DEEMEN, A.M.A., 85
VAN DER KRABBEN, Erwin, 56, 85
VAN DER VALK, Arnold, 56
VAN DIJK, Terry, 56
VAN ZANDT, Shannon, 47, 109
VANKA, Salila, 55
VARNA, Georgiana M., 111
VASCONCELOS, Lia T., 47, 59
VASISHTH, Ashwani, 54
VAZQUEZ-CASTILLO, M. Teresa, 34, 52, 87,
92
VELO, Francesco, 90
VERA, Lisa, 110
VERHAGE, Roelof, 65, 69, 89, 98
VERMA, Niraj, 62, 92
VIDAL, Avis C., 42, 109
VILCHES, Silvia L., 99
VITIELLO, Domenic, 58
VOERMANEK, Katrin, 48
VOICU, Ioan, 71
VOIGT, Andreas, 99
VON RABENAU, Burkhard, 58

W
WACHS, Martin, 69, 96
WADDELL, Paul, 43, 97

Author/Participation Index Reference


WAGNER, Jacob, 102, 116
WAIDLEY, Greg, 50
WALLACE, Lindsay, 43
WANG, Bing, 86
WANG, Dah-Lih, 71
WANG, Lei, 43, 54
WANG, Liming, 43
WANG, Yi-Wen, 81
WARD, Stephen V., 81, 86
WARNER, Mildred, 109
WATERHOUT, Bas, 60, 62, 79, 88
WATERS, Arnold, 78
WATKINS, Craig, 48
WATSON, Vanessa, 88
WEBB, Brian, 82, 110
WEBBER, Steven M., 101
WEBER, Rachel, 106, 113
WEINBERGER, Rachel, 45, 93
WEITH, Thomas, 109
WELLAR, Barry, 52
WEN, Frank, 66
WERNSTEDT, Kris, 41, 47, 59
WESLEY, Joan M., 110
WEST, Harry, 85
WESTERVELT, James, 54
WETERINGS, Anet, 77
WHALLEY, Simon, 66
WHEELER, Stephen M., 41, 54
WHEELOCK, Jennifer, 55, 97
WHITAKER, Ana Maria C., 110
WHITE, Iain, 42
WHITE, Sammis B., 53, 108
WHITE, Stacey S., 45
WHITE, Wanda, 14, 65
WHITLOW, Annis, 65
WHITTINGTON, Jan, 44, 92
WHITZMAN, Carolyn, 57
WIECHMANN, Thorsten, 49, 97
WIETERS, Kathleen M., 61
WIEWEL, Wim, 71
WIGGINS, Charles B., 61
WILSON, Barbara, 98
WILSON, Constance J., 100
WILSON, Mark I., 70, 94
WILSON, Patricia A., 83
WILSON, Robert H., 83
WIRTH, Peter, 97
WITTMANN, Maxmilian, 60
WOLF-POWERS, Laura, 53
WOLTJER, Johan, 90
WONG, Cecilia, 48
WOO, Myungje, 44, 85
WOODS, Clyde A., 83

WOUDSMA, Clarence, 52, 97


WRIDT, Pamela, 49
WU, Chung-Tong, 44, 49
WU, Weiping, 43, 48
WUBNEH, Mulatu, 53, 87

ZHU, Jieming, 15
ZHU, Xuemei, 49
ZIMMERMAN, Rae, 62
ZIMMERMANN, Gabi, 80
ZONNEVELD, Wil, 60, 62, 79
ZUNIGA, Kelly D., 73
ZUPAN, Sandra, 47
ZUYEVA, Lyubov, 85

XIAO, Yu, 59, 91


XU, Jiangang, 60
XU, Miao, 50, 82

Y
YABES, Ruth J., 110
YANG, Bo, 74
YANG, Jiawen, 55
YANG, Yizhao, 55, 91
YANG, Zhen, 50
YANYUN MAN, Joyce, 16, 82
YAQI, Zhou, 34
YE, Lin, 94
YECHIELY, Jr., Ofra, 48
YEH, Anthony G., 51
YI, Chang, 106
YI, Young-Jae, 60
YIN, Li, 67
YONDER, Ayse, 46
YOUNG, Greg, 62
YOUNG, Robert F., 109
YOUTIE, Jan, 41
YUE, Cheng-Dar, 78
YUEN, Belinda, 54

Z
ZAHRAN, Sammy, 42, 47
ZAKIROVA, Betka, 56
ZAPATA, Marisa A., 88, 112
ZEGRAS, Chris, 57
ZEHNER, Robert, 55
ZEILE, Peter, 67
ZELLNER, Moira, 43
ZHANG, Bing, 57
ZHANG, Feng, 97
ZHANG, Ming, 16, 82, 97, 102
ZHANG, Tingwei, 16, 43, 52, 54, 82
ZHANG, Yang, 16, 82, 91, 98
ZHENG, Jie, 109
ZHOU, Jiangping, 91
ZHOU, Junqing, 34
ZHOU, Sibei, 112

135

BENEFACTORS
The University of Illinois at Chicago (UIC) is a large, public,
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than 200 students and a distinguished faculty.
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The Lincoln Institute of Land Policy is a leading resource for key
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Planning Ideas and Planning Practices, Track 16: A critical look at international
exchange in the planning field sponsored by the journal, Planning, Theory &
Practice, published by Routledge.
This track takes a critical look at the international diffusion of planning ideas and practices, their impacts on planning practices in different contexts, on the challenge of situating planning practices, and on the ethical issues of international exchange in the planning
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more effective communication and sharing of ideas between practitioners and academics.

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