Labor and Community Living wage, Live action Reprinted from The Nation by Robert Pollin Labor and community Not an Easy Marriage by Maryann Leshin Whither Planners Network? Are We Progressive Planners? by Ruth Yabes Promote International Networking and Local Action by […]
Watch Out! It’s Giuliani Time!
by Tom Angotti Seems wherever we New Yorkers go these days we hear about the great job “our”mayor’s doing. They say that Mayor Rudolph Giuliani has cleaned up the streets, cut the crime rate and pulled the city out of […]
Promote International Networking and Local Action
by Barbara Loevinger Rahder The value of Planners Network for me is the opportunity it provides for networking with progressive planners, academics, and activists in other places, and the support and ideas that these contacts offer my work locally. In […]
Are We Progressive Planners?
by Ruth Yabes What should Planners Network and progressive planners be doing? How can I possibly answer that question since I don’t feel I am a true progressive planner. I am embarrassed to admit this, but I don’t think I […]
Labor and Community: Not an Easy Marriage
by Maryann Leshin The prospect of bringing together labor and community at the PN 1999 Conference brings to mind several critical discrepancies between the agendas of these two groups. I see labor and community from the perspective of someone who […]
Labor and Community: Living Wage, Live Action
by Robert Pollin This past summer, security workers at LAX airport in Los Angeles began their first-ever union organizing drive. They were motivated, labor activists say, by the city’s foot-dragging in implementing a living-wage ordinance that had passed the previous […]
September/October 1998 Whither PN?
Columns and Opinion The Seventh Generation by Tom Angotti Collective Action by Patricia Nolan Feature Advocate for Progressive Planning Education by Cathy Klump Keep Networking by Gwen Urey Support Activists, Question Capitalism by Dick Platkin You Gotta Represent Dispersing Authority […]
You Gotta Represent Dispersing Authority to Dispersed Members
By John McCrory When we pause to consider what purpose Planners Network can usefully serve in the coming years, I think we must begin by recognizing the limits of a national organization such as ours. We must understand what PN […]
Support Activists, Question Capitalism
By Dick Platkin First, PN should be a source of analysis and technical resources for community struggles, especially those involving public budgets. For the past generation public investment in most urban programs has shrunk. This trend was already obvious in […]
Keep Networking
By Gwen Urey Planners Network was in the vanguard by conceiving of itself as a “network” in 1975. We have evolved technologically, holding ourselves together through old newsletter technology and the new pn-net and Web page. As these vehicles and […]
Advocate for Progressive Planning Education
By Cathy Klump Most planners stumble into planning en route to their perceived destiny as lawyers, doctors, English professors, and business people. For a number of reasons, the career aspiration of a more mainstream job gets excused, and in its […]
Collective Action
By Patricia Nolan “While we think and plan, we shouldn’t let thinking and planning get in the way of or substitute for doing.” When I decided to be a planner, a colleague and mentor of mine shared this thought with […]
From Whence and Whither PN?
by Tom Angotti [half] In the last couple of issues, we asked PN members to give us their views on what Planners Network and progressive planners should be doing. We got a variety of answers, which are printed in this […]
Review: William J. Wilson’s When Work Disappears
By Dick Platkin One of the most vexing problems facing progressive planners in the United States is the enduring poverty of America’s inner cities, made worse in recent years by the loss of jobs through technological change, downsizing, and capital […]
July/August 1998 Feminism, Gender, and Planning
Columns and Opinion The Seventh Generation: Special Issue on Feminism, Gender, and Planning by Ann Forsyth Do Equity Planners Care About Health Care ? by Patricia Nolan Feature Women Plan Toronto: Incorporating Gender Issues in Urban Planning by Barbara Loevinger Rahder […]
The Complexity of Gender A Caribbean Perspective
by Wanda I. Mills Community building and development efforts need to take into account differences among groups within communities. I propose a model that looks at how class, race, ethnicity, nationality, colonial status, sexuality and gender produce diverse relationships among […]
Cross-over Dreams Gender, Development and Community Development
by Claudia B. Isaac For some time, I have been thinking about the crossovers in my own practice and scholarship, where the distinct practices of “Gender and Development” and “Community Development” intersect. “Gender and Development” joins gender and economic development […]
Subscribing to Gender Internet Resources for Planners
by Stacy Harwood Over a year ago, I began “surfing the Web” for anything related to the intersection of women, gender or feminist theory and urban planning, loosely defined. Although a frustrating and time consuming process, I managed to uncover […]
Engendering Neoliberal Reform
by Amy Lind Many planners and development practitioners have recognized women’s work as an important source for community development and mobilization. A common message is, if a development project is to be successful, women must be involved. Yet it is […]
Lifting Women’s Voices, The Roofless Women’s Action Research Mobilization and Participatory Action Research
by Marie Kennedy How can progressive planners work more effectively with low-income women to address urgent issues they face, such as the increasing risk and conditions of homelessness? What alternative models of needs analysis and policy planning lend themselves to […]
Women Plan Toronto Incorporating Gender Issues in Urban Planning
by Barbara Loevinger Rahder Grassroots women can organize to change the way cities are planned and developed. Women Plan Toronto (WPT) is an example of how they can do it. WPT is a grassroots women’s organization that uses participatory methods to […]
Do Equity Planners Care About Health Care?
by Patricia A. Nolan I was standing in the lobby of the massive 918-bed Cook County Hospital complex in Chicago when it finally hit me. Here in the heart of one of the country’s largest public hospitals I was surrounded […]
Special Issue on Feminism, Gender, and Planning
by Ann Forsyth, Guest Editor Contemporary US feminism emerged in the 1960s and 1970s at the end of a period of dramatic residential suburbanization and urban renewal. In this context, feminist work from the planning and design professions in the […]
May/June 1998 Sustainability: Who Benefits?
Column The Seventh Generation by Richard Milgrom Feature It’s Not Easy Being Green: Feminist Thoughts on Planning for Sustainability by Sherilyn MacGregor Sustainability is Not Enough by Peter Marcuse Sustaining Diversity: Participatory Design and Urban Space by Richard Milgrom Principles […]
MIDDLE EAST MILITARY DOLLARS AND OUR CITIES
by Richard Platkin North American cities pay dearly for U.S. military policy in the Middle East. According to the July 1997 issue of Foreign Affairs, the cost of the U.S. military presence in the Persian Gulf is between $30 to […]
Sustainable and Environmentally Just Societies
by Sandra Rodriguez Communities of color have much to contribute to sustainability because of their front-line experiences in struggles against environmental degradation and health risks they face in their neighborhoods and workplaces. The environmental issues faced by communities of color […]
PRINCIPLES OF ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE
by Jon Orcutt The First National People of Color Environmental Leadership Summit. October 24-27, 1991. Washington D.C. PREAMBLE WE, THE PEOPLE OF COLOR, gathered together at this multinational People of Color Environmental Leadership Summit, to begin to build a national […]
Sustaining Diversity Participatory Design and Urban Space
by Richard Milgrom “Sustaining diversity” can be interpreted in two different ways. First, there is a need to sustain the human diversity present in urban environments. Diversity has allowed cities to embrace difference, an essential ingredient in the promotion of […]
Sustainability is Not Enough
“Sustainability” as a goal for planning just doesn’t work. In the first place, sustainability is not a goal; it is a constraint on the achievement of other goals. No one who is interested in change wants to sustain things as […]
It’s Not Easy Being Green Feminist Thoughts on Planning for Sustainability
by Sherilyn MacGregor Recent interest in “sustainability” has overshadowed issues of social justice in planning. There is an implicit assumption that, in the face of impending ecological destruction, we’re all in this together. But, as Peter Marcuse argues, we are […]
Sustainability: Who Benefits?
by Richard Milgrom The term “sustainability” has become problematic. Some now argue that it is so overused as to be useless, co-opted by many for self-centered agendas. The four main articles in this issue of Planners Network attempt to come […]
March/April 1998 Regional Planning and Metropolitan Governance
Columns The Seventh Generation: Regional Planning and Reason by Thomas Angotti Feature NEW YORK CITY: The First Regional Government Still Cries for Planning The Case of Waste Management by John McCrory New York: RACE, CLASS & SPACE: A Historical Comparison […]
Portland, Oregon Who Pays the Price for Regional Planning? How to Link Growth Management and Affordable Housing
by Tasha Harmon The Portland Metro region is hailed all over as the mecca of growth management – a unique regional planning tool that limits suburban sprawl and central city disinvestment. But is growth management good for low-income people? Can […]
REGIONAL PROFILES: Metropolitan Governance and Regional Planning Four Cities, Four Approaches
by Dalila Hall Portland, Oregon’s Metro Metro is the only directly elected regional government in the United States. It serves more than 1.3 million residents in three counties, and 24 cities in the Portland, Oregon metropolitan area. Established in 1979 […]
New York: RACE, CLASS & SPACE A Historical Comparison of the Three Regional Plans for New York
by Tony Schuman and Elliott Sclar The raw material of American planning history derives from two concerns: the physical problems associated with regional growth and the social ones connected to race and class. New York, because it is simultaneously one […]
NEW YORK CITY: The First Regional Government Still Cries for Planning The Case of Waste Management
by John McCrory Proponents of regional governance as a means of correcting disparities between central cities and their suburbs can find a real-world test of their theories in New York City, which became the nation’s first major regional government one […]
Regional Planning and Reason
by Tom Angotti So you’re a planner? That’s just what we need. Ever hear that before? Why is it some people think planning can set things right? If cities are a mess, they think planning will bring order to chaos, […]
January/February 1998
Columns The Seventh Generation: Street Life and a Connection to the Land by Tom Angotti Feature Planners Can Plan to Plant by Ellen Kirby Commentary Two Corners of the Same Tent: A Response to Tom Angotti by Timothy Ross Review […]
Two Corners of the Same Tent, A Response to Tom Angotti
by Timothy Ross It is possible to support public housing as part of a broader progressive strategy — two corners of the same tent. However, Tom Angotti makes at least three mistakes in his response to my article. He suggests […]
PLANNERS CAN PLAN TO PLANT Community Gardens Fill Green Gaps in New York City
by Ellen Kirby New York City has the largest urban parks system in the United States. Covering some 26,000 acres, these parks serve a constituency of almost 9 million people, and provide park space equivalent to an eleven-foot-square plot for […]
The Seventh Generation Street Life and a Connection to the Land
by Tom Angotti HANOI, VIETNAM — If you love livable cities, hurry up to Hanoi. This city missed generations of “urban renewal” and, like Havana, lives in its history. I say hurry up because megaprojects from the global marketplace — […]