From the beginnings of human association, social planning has been an accepted method for effecting improvements in community, regional, and national life. In Law and Economy in Planning, Walter Firey has made a start in the development of an intellectual framework that will give meaning to the craft of planning and establish a relationship between practice and first principles.
In this study he investigates basic elements of this framework existing in two normative orders: the state, in which a collectivity has the obligation to enforce obedience; and the market, in which the individual has the right to be rational. These normative orders, whose laws are formulated in the disciplines of jurisprudence and economics, have a common concern with the utilization of scarce means to given ends.
These orders, the state and the market, are formulated by the art of planning and have a common relationship to the natural order, which cannot be planned, but only predicted, and which is explained by the science of planning. To bridge the gap between the natural order and the normative order is the function of a philosophy of planning, for which an intellectual framework-of necessity interdisciplinary-is essential.
This study is the culmination of several years of research in the fields of planning and social theory. During the course of this research Firey came to appreciate more and more keenly the need for an interdisciplinary formulation of the planning process and, with this, the need for a philosophical foundation for interdisciplinary work. A year's fellowship at the Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences at Stanford gave him the opportunity to develop his ideas bearing on this subject and to put them in writing.
Sprache
Verlagsort
Zielgruppe
Produkt-Hinweis
Maße
Höhe: 216 mm
Breite: 140 mm
Dicke: 8 mm
Gewicht
ISBN-13
978-0-292-74087-7 (9780292740877)
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Schweitzer Klassifikation
Walter Firey (1916-2014) was Professor of Sociology at the University of Texas at Austin.
Preface
I. The Pure Theory of Planning
Planning as a Normative Phenomenon
The Epistemological Status of Planning
II. The Legal Component of Planning
The Pure Theory of Law
The Basic Legal Norm
Legal Transactions and the Limits to Authority
III. The Economic Component of Planning
The Theory of General Economic Equilibrium
The Basic Economic Norm
The Contract and the Limits to Rationality
IV. Efficacy and Value in Plans
The Concept of Value
The Mediate Norm
The Dual Source of the Validity of Plan Norms
V. The Structure of Value in Plans
Possible Combinations of Value in Planning
Types of Planning
The Sanctions of Plans
The Limits of Effective Planning
VI. Conformity to Plans
Conformity as a Correspondence between Plan and Reality
Characteristics of Conforming and Nonconforming Behavior
The Complementarity of Obedience Rationality
The Variable Ratio between Want Gratification and Want Deprivation
The Behavioral Significance of Sanctions
Obedience and Rationality in Different Types of Plans
Stability Plans
Developmental and Allocative Plans
Individual Developmental Plans
Governmental Developmental Plans
Individual Allocative Plans
Governmental Allocative Plans
Anomalous Activities and the Resistance to Plans
VII. The Reality of Planning
Index