2008 Acsp-Aesop Program
2008 Acsp-Aesop Program
ORGANIZATIONAL LEADERSHIP
Ex Ofcio
Co-Representatives
ASSOCIATION OF
COLLEGIATE SCHOOLS
OF PLANNING
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
University of Oregon, Eugene
Welcome Messages
From the
AESOP President
Peter Ache
Peter Ache
Helsinki University of Technology
Welcome Messages
From the Chairs of
the Joint Congress
Steering Committee
Simin Davoudi
Curt Winkle
Martin Jaffee
HIGHLIGHTS
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.
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
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
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
11
Special
Sessions
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Tuesday,
4:45pm 6:15pm
Tuesday, July 8,
9:45am 11:15am
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Tuesday,
4:45pm 6:15pm
AESOP General Assembly
Room: 7th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Salon II
..........................................................................
Wednesday, July 9
9:45am 11:15am
12
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Wednesday, July 9,
9:45am 11:15am
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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
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Wednesday, July 9,
8:00am 9:30am
Wednesday, July 9,
9:45am 11:15am
14
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.
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Tuesday, July 8,
9:45am 11:15am
Wednesday, July 9,
8:00am 9:30am
15
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.
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Urbanization in China
Moderator:GREENSTEIN, Roz
[Lincoln Institute of Land Policy]
[email protected]
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Indiana
CRANE, Randall
[University of California, Los Angeles]
[email protected]
FAINSTEIN, Susan
[Harvard University] [email protected]
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
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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
Wednesday
Mobile
Tours
Please meet in the hotel lobby and gather
near your tour sign. Tickets are required.
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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.
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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
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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
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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.
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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
Friday
Mobile Tours
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9 Bus Tour
Legacy of the Plan of Chicago
11 Walking Tour
Chicagos Moveable Bridges
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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
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19
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
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
23
24
10th Floor
Function
Rooms
25
Registration Open
10:00am 5:00pm
Congress Registration
10:00am-5:00pm
8:00am 3:00pm
Business Meetings
3:00pm 5:00pm
6:00pm-10:00pm
7:00am 5:30pm
Registration Open
7:00am 5:30pm
7:00am 8:00am
Continental Breakfast
7:00am 5:30pm
Congress Registration
8:00am 9:30am
9:30am 9:45am
Break
9:45am 11:15am
11:15am 12:00pm
12:00pm 1:00pm
1:15pm 2:45pm
3:00pm 4:30pm
4:30pm 4:45pm
Break
4:45pm 6:15pm
4:45pm 6:15pm
6:00pm-8:00pm
7:00am 5:30pm
Registration Open
7:00am 8:00am
Continental Breakfast
7:00am 5:30pm
7:00am 5:30pm
Congress Registration
8:00am 9:30am
9:30am 9:45am
Break
9:45am 11:15am
Tuesday
Tuesday
Wednesday
Wednesday
26
11:15am 1:00pm
See page 18
Mobile Workshops
7:00pm 9:00pm
See page 11
7:00am 5:30pm
Registration Open
7:00am 8:00am
Continental Breakfast
7:00am 5:30pm
Congress Registration
8:00am 9:30am
9:30am 9:45am
Break
9:45am 11:15am
11:15am 12:00pm
12:00pm 1:00pm
1:15pm 2:45pm
3:00pm 4:30pm
4:30pm 4:45pm
Break
4:45pm 6:15pm
4:30pm 6:00pm
7:00am 11:30pm
Registration Open
7:00am 8:00am
Continental Breakfast
7:00am 11:00am
7:00am 11:00am
Congress Registration
8:00am 9:00am
8:30am 12:00pm
Staging in Lobby
9:00am 9:15am
Break
9:15am 10:45am
10:45am 11:00am
Break
11:00am 12:30pm
Thursday
Thursday
Friday
Friday
Adjourn
12:30pm
See page 19
27
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
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
Business Meetings
ACSP Meetings
Meeting Name
Day/Date/Time
Location
Huron Room
Lincolnshire II Room
Huron Room
AESOP Meetings
Meeting Name
Day/Date/Time
Location
CoRep Meeting
Michigan/Michigan
State Rooms
Purdue Room
Wisconsin Room
OHare Room
Great America
Michigan Room
Northwestern Room
Research Ethics and Planning Thematic Group Thursday, July 10: 12:00pm-1:00pm
Indiana Room
Iowa Room
30
Day/Date/Time
Michigan Room
Huron Room
Minnesota Room
Huron Room
Lincolnshire I
Meeting Name
Day/Date/Time
Location
APA Headquarters,
Catherine Bauer Room
APA Headquarters,
Catherine Bauer Room
Location
GPEAN Meetings
31
32
Location
Tuesday, July 8,
6:30pm - 7:15pm
Great America I
ACSP Global Planning Educators Interest Group (GPEIG) Meeting with HUDs Director of International Research
Purdue Room
Huron Room
Tuesday, July 8,
12:00pm-1:00pm
Tuesday, July 8,
12:00pm-1:00pm
Michigan Room
Wednesday, July 9,
11:15am-1:00pm
Wednesday, July 9,
9:45am-11:15am
Michigan Room
Monday, July 7,
8:00am-3:00pm
Minnesota Room
Iowa Room
Wednesday, July 9,
11:30am-1:00pm
Michigan Room
33
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]
ABER, Jasmin
[University of California, Berkeley]
[email protected]
SHAKAWY, M. Atef
[Texas A&M University]
[email protected]
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]
..........................................................................
..........................................................................
..........................................................................
ZHOU, Junqing
[Institute of Digital City and Urban Planning]
[email protected]
..........................................................................
..........................................................................
..........................................................................
Walkability: An Evaluation Of
Existing Pedestrian Indices
[589]
MAGHELAL, Praveen K.
[Florida Atlantic University]
[email protected]
34
..........................................................................
..........................................................................
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
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
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
Track 7
Land Use Policy And Governance
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
36
Track 8
Methods For Spatial And Planning Analysis
Ming Zhang, Texas, [email protected]
Track 12
Planning Theory And History Sessions
Track 10
Planning And Human Health And Safety
9.1
9.2
9.3
9.4
9.5
9.6
9.7
9.8
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
37
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
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
.............................................................................
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]
41
Tuesday
............................................................................. .............................................................................
3.6 Planning Perspectives on
Flooding and Floodplains
Moderator/Discussant:
ROTH, Michael [Dortmund University of
Technology] [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
.............................................................................
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
............................................................................. .............................................................................
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]
Tuesday
.............................................................................
.............................................................................
43
Tuesday
.............................................................................
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
.............................................................................
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
.............................................................................
14.14 Planning for the Diverse
Environmental Impacts of
Transport Project
............................................................................
15.1 Design Content and
Quality
Tuesday
45
Tuesday
9:4511:30 am
Tuesday
Sessions
9:45 11:30 am
............................................................................. .............................................................................
1.2 Gender Inclusion and
Planning Processes
.............................................................................
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
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
Tuesday
.............................................................................
3.3 Planning and Climate
Change II - Community Level
Considerations
Moderator/Discussant:
BOSWELL, Mike [California Polytechnic State
University] [email protected]
Discussant: None
Discussant: None
47
Tuesday
.............................................................................
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]
.............................................................................
.............................................................................
8.2 Advancing Planning
Methods
Moderator: The last presenter in this session.
Discussant: None
.............................................................................
7.3 Metropolitan
Development: Perspectives
from Asia, Europe, and North
America
48
9:4511:30 am
9:4511:30 am
Tuesday
49
Tuesday
............................................................................. .............................................................................
14.2 Pre-organized Session:
Urban Freight Policy and
Planning: A Comparative
Analysis
.............................................................................
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
.............................................................................
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
12:001:00 pm
Tuesday
Tuesday
Sessions
12:00 1:00 pm
............................................................................. .............................................................................
AESOP Thematic Group:
French and British Planning
Studies
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Purdue
.............................................................................
.............................................................................
AESOP Thematic Group: New
Technologies in Planning
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Ohare
.............................................................................
AESOP Thematic Group:
Planning Law and Property
Rights
.............................................................................
4.19 Roundtable Technologies and the
Transformation of Planning
Practice: Assessing Gains/
Losses and Charting Next
Steps [257]
11:30 am 1:00 pm
.............................................................................
.............................................................................
AESOP Thematic Group:
French and British Planning
Studies
.............................................................................
Planning Theory & Practice
Editorial Board Meeting
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Navy Pier
.............................................................................
.............................................................................
.............................................................................
51
Tuesday
12:001:00 pm
.............................................................................
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
.............................................................................
.............................................................................
16.12 Roundtable - The Ethics
of Standardising the Criteria
to Accredit International
Planning Programmes: A View
from the Americas [984]
1:152:45 pm
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]
53
Tuesday
.............................................................................
3.4 Planning and Climate
Change III - Governance
Considerations
Moderator/Discussant:
FRANK, Nancy [University of WisconsinMilwaukee] [email protected]
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Michigan
.............................................................................
.............................................................................
.............................................................................
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
.............................................................................
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
Tuesday
.............................................................................
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]
55
Tuesday
............................................................................. .............................................................................
11.1 Compensation and Value
Capture
.............................................................................
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
.............................................................................
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
Tuesday
Moderator/Discussant:
ZHANG, Bing [China Academy of Urban Planning
and Design, China] [email protected];
or [email protected]
57
Tuesday
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
......................................................................
58
3:004:30 pm
Tuesday
59
Tuesday
.............................................................................
5.4 Housing and Smart
Growth
.............................................................................
Discussant: None
.............................................................................
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
.............................................................................
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
.............................................................................
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
.............................................................................
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
.............................................................................
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
.............................................................................
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]
61
Tuesday
.............................................................................
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]
.............................................................................
.............................................................................
62
Moderator/Discussant:
BUTINA-WATSON, Georgia [Oxford Brookes
University] [email protected]
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Ohio State
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
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]
.............................................................................
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]
65
Wednesday
............................................................................. .............................................................................
3.9 Institutions, Collaboration
and Policy Communities
.............................................................................
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
.............................................................................
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
............................................................................. .............................................................................
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]
.............................................................................
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
.............................................................................
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]
67
Wednesday
............................................................................. .............................................................................
12.9 Public Realm and
Management
Moderator/Discussant:
HOCH, Charles [University of Illinois at Chicago]
[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
.............................................................................
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
.............................................................................
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
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]
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]
69
Wednesday
.............................................................................
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
.............................................................................
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
.............................................................................
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
Wednesday
5.16 Neighborhood
Regeneration and Mixed
Communities
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]
71
Wednesday
9:4511:15 pm
72
Moderator/Discussant:
UMEMOTO, Karen [University of Hawaii at
Manoa] [email protected]
9:4511:15 pm
.............................................................................
.............................................................................
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
............................................................................. .............................................................................
15.6 Designs for Challenging
Places
Moderator/Discussant:
STEVENS, Quentin [University College of London]
[email protected]
Moderator/Discussant:
HEALEY, Patsy [Newcastle University]
[email protected]
74
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
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]
77
Thursday
8:009:30 am
4.7 Intergovernmental
Collaboration
Discussant: None
78
8:009:30 am
.............................................................................
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]
.............................................................................
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]
79
Thursday
............................................................................. .............................................................................
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]
.............................................................................
.............................................................................
80
8:009:30am
Moderator/Discussant:
DAVOUDI, Simin [Newcastle University]
[email protected]
8:009:30am
Thursday
Moderator/Discussant:
PENDLEBURY, John [Newcastle University]
[email protected]
Moderator/Discussant:
WARD, Stephen V. [Oxford Brookes University]
[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
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
82
9:4511:15 am
............................................................................. .............................................................................
Thursday
3.14 Environmentally-oriented
Development Approaches
.............................................................................
.............................................................................
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]
.............................................................................
4.8 Post-Disaster Planning and
Governance
Moderator: The last presenter in this session.
Discussant: FEDELI, Valeria [Politecnico di
Milano] [email protected]
83
Thursday
.............................................................................
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
.............................................................................
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
............................................................................. .............................................................................
11.4 Planning in Transition
Times
12.11 Theories of
Transformation
Moderator/Discussant:
HEBBERT, Michael [Manchester University]
[email protected]
Thursday
.............................................................................
14.8 Traffic Congestion:
Perceptions, Actions and
Measurement
.............................................................................
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
85
Thursday
9:4511:15 am
Moderator/Discussant:
FRIEDMANN, John [University of British
Columbia] [email protected]
86
12:001:00pm
Thursday
Thursday
Sessions
12:00 1:00 pm
............................................................................
............................................................................
............................................................................
............................................................................
............................................................................
.............................................................................
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
............................................................................
............................................................................
AESOP Thematic Group:
Research Ethics and Planning
Room: 6th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Indiana
87
Thursday
.............................................................................
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]
.............................................................................
.............................................................................
.............................................................................
.............................................................................
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
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
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
.............................................................................
.............................................................................
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]
89
Thursday
.............................................................................
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
.............................................................................
.............................................................................
1:152:45 pm
.............................................................................
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]
.............................................................................
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
.............................................................................
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]
.............................................................................
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
.............................................................................
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
.............................................................................
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
.............................................................................
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
Thursday
Moderator/Discussant:
WEINBERGER, Rachel [University of Pennsylvania]
[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]
93
Thursday
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
3:004:30 pm
Thursday
Moderator/Discussant:
PALLAGAST, Karina M. [University of California at
Berkeley] [email protected]
.............................................................................
5.10 Immigrants and Housing
Attainment
Moderator: The last presenter in this session.
Discussant: None
.............................................................................
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]
95
Thursday
.............................................................................
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
3:004:30 pm
............................................................................. .............................................................................
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]
.............................................................................
3:004:30 pm
.............................................................................
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]
.............................................................................
.............................................................................
Moderator/Discussant:
ZHANG, Ming [University of Texas at Austin]
[email protected]
Thursday
.............................................................................
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]
97
Thursday
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
.............................................................................
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
............................................................................. .............................................................................
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]
.............................................................................
.............................................................................
Thursday
.............................................................................
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]
99
Thursday
............................................................................. .............................................................................
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]
.............................................................................
100
4:456:15 pm
.............................................................................
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
Thursday
Discussant: None
101
Thursday
4:45-6:15pm
102
FRIDAY
CHRONOLOGICAL
SESSIONS,
ROUNDTABLES
AND MEETINGS
Friday
4:456:15 pm
Friday
Friday
Sessions
8:00 9:00 pm
............................................................................. .............................................................................
Journal of Planning Theory
Editorial Board Meeting
5.15 Neighborhood
Regeneration and Inequality
.............................................................................
Discussant: None
.............................................................................
PhD Matriculation Roundtable
Hosted by the ACSP Student
Board Representatives
8:00 10:00 am
.............................................................................
GPEAN Steering Committee,
Part Two
Room: 10th Floor, Marriott Hotel,
Navy Pier
105
Friday
8:009:00 am
.............................................................................
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
Moderator/Discussant:
SMART, Michael J. [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]
8:009:00 am
Friday
Moderator/Discussant:
CAMPBELL, Heather [University of Sheffield]
[email protected]
107
Friday
9:1510:45 am
Friday
Sessions
9:15 10:45 am
............................................................................. .............................................................................
2.14 People, Stories and
Impacts
108
9:1510:45 am
Friday
Discussant: None
Discussant: None
.............................................................................
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
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]
109
Friday
9:1510:45 am
.............................................................................
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
9:1510:45 am
Friday
Moderator/Discussant:
COAFFEE, Jon [Manchester University]
[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]
111
Friday
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.
10:30 am12:30 pm
.............................................................................
GPEAN Coordinating
Committee, Part Two,
Room: 10th Floor, Marriott Hotel, Navy Pier
112
11:0012:30 pm
.............................................................................
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
.............................................................................
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]
113
Friday
.............................................................................
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
.............................................................................
.............................................................................
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
Friday
Moderator/Discussant::
JANSSEN-JANSEN, Leonie [University of
Amsterdam] [email protected]
Discussant: None
115
Friday
11:0012:30 pm
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]
116
REFERENCE
Reference
Presenter
Information
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
*
*
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
119
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
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
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
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 6
International Development and
Transnational Planning
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
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 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,
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
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
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
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
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
E
EDELMAN, David, 57
EDWARDS, Mary M., 91
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EHRENFEUCHT, Renia, 67
EKELUND, Bjrn, 68
EL-GENEIDY, Ahmed, 97, 113
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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
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FRENCH, Steven P., 72, 79
FRENKEL, SR., Amnon, 48
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GABER, John, 60, 96
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GAO, Shan, 79
GARCIA, Jesus, 14, 65
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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
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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
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GROVER, Himanshu, 47
GRUBE, Michael T., 84
GRUEHN, Dietwald, 78
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
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HANLEY, Lisa M., 100
HANLON, Bernadette, 99
HARPER-ANDERSON, Elsie, 87
HARPER, Thomas L., 73, 88
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HARTMANN, Thomas, 59
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HAYDEN, Dolores, 69
HAYNIE, S. D., 91
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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
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HIRSCHLER, Petra, 46, 69, 88
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I
ILMONEN, Mervi, 60
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INGALLINA, Patrizia G., 81
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J
JAARSMA, Catharinus F., 56, 62
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JACOBSON, Thomas, 70
JANIN RIVOLIN, Umberto, 60, 88
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JESSEE, Amy, 93
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JOHNSON, Bethany, 55
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KALABAMU, Faustin T., 41
KAMEL, Nabil, 57
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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
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KERWIN, Tom, 14, 69
KHANOLKAR, Prasad S., 66
KILOH, Bruce, 46
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KIM, Dohyeong, 61
KIM, Dong-Young, 107
KIM, Eun Jung, 44
KIM, Gabtae, 66
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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
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KIRSHNER, Joshua D., 84
KLEIT, Rachel G., 54
KLOSTERMAN, Richard, 51, 60, 106
L
LACHAPELLE, Ugo, 46
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LALENIS, Konstantinos, 80
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LARSEN, Kristin E., 101
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LASTARRIA-CORNHIEL, Susana, 100
LAURIA, Mickey, 83
LAVOIE, Caroline, 58
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NEUMARK, David B., 100
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RIPY, John, 55
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ROMEIN, Arie, 112
ROOSA, Erin, 81
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ROSENBLOOM, Sandra, 68, 73
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S
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V
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W
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Y
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Z
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135
BENEFACTORS
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.
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The Lincoln Institute of Land Policy is a leading resource for key
issues concerning the use, regulation and taxation of land. Providing highquality 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.
The Chicago Council on Global Affairs, founded in 1922 as The Chicago
Council on Foreign Relations, is a leading independent, nonpartisan organization committed to influencing the discourse on global issues through contributions to opinion and policy formation, leadership dialogue, and public learning.
The Chicago Council brings the world to Chicago by hosting public programs
and private events featuring world leaders and experts with diverse views on a
wide range of global topics. Through task forces, conferences, studies, and leadership dialogue, the Council also takes Chicago's ideas and opinions to the
world.
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 UIC's 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.
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
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.