ABSTRACT

Focusing on recent regional policy and important planning debates across the English regions, this book analyzes the issues, disputes and tensions that have arisen in regional planning in the new millennium. With a range of local case studies to ground the argument in local as well as regional planning, the authors here build on a range of theoretical insights including state theory and governance, political ecology, governmentality and collaborative planning. Drawing particularly on a discourse approach, the empirical sections examine a range of major controversies from the past five years of regional planning, including:

  • the socio-political resistance to new housing on Greenfield sites
  • alternative approaches to promoting sustainable urban development and policies for urban renaissance 
  •  policies on redirecting or constraining economic expansion in high-pressure growth areas
  • the social and political bases of new planning technologies for protecting the environment, including sustainability appraisals.

part 1|1 pages

The re-emergence of the regions in spatial planning

part |1 pages

Conclusions

chapter 4|33 pages

Environmental quality and natural resources

From environmental protectionism towards an integrated approach to sustainable development

part 5|2 pages

Finding places for new housing

chapter |5 pages

Greenfield development options

chapter 6|6 pages

Towards an urban renaissance?

chapter |11 pages

Urban migration and urban renaissance

chapter |4 pages

Sustainable communities?

chapter 7|7 pages

Regional economic development, regional planning and sustainable development

Divergences and convergences in approach

chapter 8|15 pages

Looking to the future

Regions, spatial strategies and sustainable development