Search: City and Regional Planning, Urban Issues
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Collignon, Frederick
Submitted by cmjones on March 2, 2007 - 2:04pm.Name of Person:
Frederick Collignon
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Department:
City and Regional Planning, Associate Professor
Research Interests:
Frederick Collignon's most recent research has included the following: analyses documenting a huge shortage of urban recreational space in most U.S. cities due to increasing recreational activity of women and the loss of active recreational space to development and passive recreational parkland; a comparative study of the metropolitan planning activity by states in Australia; analysis via comparative study of cities in Europe, Australia and the U.S. of the use of hallmark events (such as the Olympics or Worlds' Fairs) for urban redevelopment; and an examination of the reasons behind the increasing financial dependence on public assistance of those with disability, especially the young.
Castells, Emanuel
Submitted by cmjones on February 27, 2007 - 12:42pm.Name of Person:
Emanuel Castells
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Department:
City and Regional Planning, Professor Emeritus
Research Interests:
Manuel Castells' current research focuses on the social and economic implications of Internet. He is also currently interested in the debate on new development strategies appropriate for the Information Age.
Achievements:
Manuel Castells was one of the intellectual founders of what came to be known as the New Urban Sociology. His main publications in this field are The City and the Grassroots, a comparative study of urban social movements and community organizations based on his field work in France, Spain, Latin America, and California, that received the C.Wright Mills Award in 1983, and The Informational City (Blackwell, 1989), an analysis of the urban and regional changes brought about by information technology and economic restructuring in the United States. In 1983 Castells undertook the study of economic and social transformations associated with the information technology revolution. The results of this work were published in his trilogy The Information Age: Economy, Society, and Culture (Blackwell): 1st volume, The Rise of the Network Society (1996, revised edition 2000); 2nd volume, The Power of Identity (1997); 3rd volume, End of Millennium (1998, revised edition 2000). The trilogy is translated into Spanish, French, Swedish, Chinese, Portuguese, Russian, Korean, Japanese, Croatian, Bulgarian, Turkish, and German. In 1998, Manuel Castells received the Robert and Helen Lynd Award from the American Sociological Association for his lifelong contribution in the field of community and urban sociology.
Castells, Emanuel
Submitted by cmjones on March 16, 2007 - 12:44pm.Name of Person:
Emanuel Castells
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Department:
Sociology, Professor Emeritus
Research Interests:
Manuel Castells' current research focuses on the social and economic implications of Internet. He is also currently interested in the debate on new development strategies appropriate for the Information Age.
Achievements:
Manuel Castells was one of the intellectual founders of what came to be known as the New Urban Sociology. His main publications in this field are The City and the Grassroots, a comparative study of urban social movements and community organizations based on his field work in France, Spain, Latin America, and California, that received the C.Wright Mills Award in 1983, and The Informational City (Blackwell, 1989), an analysis of the urban and regional changes brought about by information technology and economic restructuring in the United States. In 1983 Castells undertook the study of economic and social transformations associated with the information technology revolution. The results of this work were published in his trilogy The Information Age: Economy, Society, and Culture (Blackwell): 1st volume, The Rise of the Network Society (1996, revised edition 2000); 2nd volume, The Power of Identity (1997); 3rd volume, End of Millennium (1998, revised edition 2000). The trilogy is translated into Spanish, French, Swedish, Chinese, Portuguese, Russian, Korean, Japanese, Croatian, Bulgarian, Turkish, and German. In 1998, Manuel Castells received the Robert and Helen Lynd Award from the American Sociological Association for his lifelong contribution in the field of community and urban sociology.
Roy, Ananya
Submitted by cmjones on February 27, 2007 - 12:58pm.Name of Person:
Ananya Roy
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Department:
City and Regional Planning, Associate Professor
Research Interests:
Ananya Roy's current research project is entitled Povertyscape: The New Global Order of Aid, Debt, and Development
Achievements:
Ananya Roy is the author of City Requiem, Calcutta: Gender and the Politics of Poverty (University of Minnesota Press, 2003) and co-editor of Urban Informality: Transnational Perspectives from the Middle East, South Asia, and Latin America (Lexington Books, 2004). Her current research project is entitled Povertyscape: The New Global Order of Aid, Debt, and Development (Routledge, forthcoming). The project has already received several prestigious awards including the Hellman Faculty Award and the Prytanean Faculty Award, the latter being a research and leadership award given to one junior woman faculty member on the UC Berkeley campus each year. Roy teaches in the fields of comparative urban studies and international development. She currently serves as chair of the undergraduate Urban Studies major.
Dowall, David
Submitted by cmjones on February 27, 2007 - 12:56pm.Name of Person:
David Dowall
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Department:
City and Regional Planning, Professor
Research Interests:
David Dowall's research has focused on both domestic and international land management, housing policy, economic development strategy and infrastructure planning and finance.
Achievements:
City planning professor David Dowall assumed leadership of the IURD in 2004. He has worked with IURD since joining the Berkeley faculty in 1976. Over the years, his research has focused on both domestic and international land management, housing policy, economic development strategy and infrastructure planning and finance. Internationally, Dowall has carried out policy research and designed technical and financial assistance strategies for cities and regions in over 40 countries. Although he is known for his empirical and analytical work on urban land economics and infrastructure finance, he has spent over 20 years working with governments and nongovernmental organizations on neighborhood and urban development projects. He is author of Spatial Transformation in Cities of the Developing World: Multinucleation and Land-Capital Substitution in Bogota, Colombia (IURD, 1990).
Innes, Judith
Submitted by cmjones on February 27, 2007 - 12:53pm.Name of Person:
Judith Innes
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Department:
City and Regional Planning, Professor
Research Interests:
Judith Innes' recent interests have focused on collaborative policy making and action at the state and regional levels, particularly in environmental and growth policy. She also maintains a continuing interest in the use of information in planning and public policy and in how to improve this.
Achievements:
A specialist in developing indicators for urban sustainability, Judith Innes’ research includes collaborative processes in urban planning and land-use decisions. Relevant books include: Knowledge and Public Policy: The Search for Meaningful Indicators (Transaction Books, 1990), Indicators for Sustainable Communities: A Strategy Building on Complexity Theory and Distributed Intelligence (IURD, 1999) and Metropolitan Development as a Complex System: A New Approach to Sustainability.
Sustainable Communities
Submitted by cmjones on March 12, 2007 - 2:59pm.Department:
CY PLAN
Course Number:
254
Course Title:
Sustainable Communities
Instructor:
Duane
Description:
This course examines and explores the concept of sustainable development at the community level. The course has three sections: (1) an introduction to the discourse on sustainable development; (2) an exploration of several leading attempts to incorporate sustainability principles into plans, planning, and urban design; (3) an examination of European attempts to establish metropolitan patterns and urban designs for a more sustainable "green urbanism."
Units:
3
Course Type:
Graduate
Urban Design in Planning
Submitted by cmjones on March 12, 2007 - 2:55pm.Department:
CY PLAN
Course Number:
249
Course Title:
Urban Design in Planning
Instructor:
Macdonald
Description:
This seminar will focus on urban design in the planning process, the role of environmental surveys, methods of community involvement, problem identification, goal formulation and alternatives generation, environmental media and presentation, design guidelines and review, environmental evaluation and impact assessment. Case studies
Units:
3
Offered:
Fall
Course Type:
Graduate
Advanced Studio: Urban Design/Environmental Planning
Submitted by cmjones on March 12, 2007 - 2:54pm.Department:
CY PLAN
Course Number:
248
Course Title:
Advanced Studio: Urban Design/Environmental Planning
Instructor:
Bosselmann, Macdonald
Description:
Advanced problems in urban design and land use, and in environmental planning
Units:
5
Offered:
Spring
Course Type:
Graduate
Research Methods in Environmental Design
Submitted by cmjones on March 12, 2007 - 2:53pm.Department:
CY PLAN
Course Number:
C241
Course Title:
Research Methods in Environmental Design
Instructor:
Bosselmann
Description:
The components, structure, and meaning of the urban environment. Environmental problems, attitudes, and criteria. Environmental survey, analysis, and interview techniques. Methods of addressing environmental quality. Environmental simulation.
Units:
4
Offered:
Fall
Course Type:
Graduate
