Routledge Handbook of Comparative Planning Law
Rachelle Alterman(Editor)
Routledge (Publisher)
1st Edition
Will be published approx. on 1. January 2027
Book
Hardback
448 pages
978-1-138-95879-1 (ISBN)
Description
The Routledge Handbook of Comparative Planning Law brings together the most up-to-date research on the regulation of land use and development from across the globe. The book offers a theoretical and critical perspective to understand the history and roles of planning laws through 20 different country reports. These contributions are written by top planning law scholars from around the world. Taking a bold step, the book encompasses countries located in different parts of the world, different legal-families, different developmental levels, varying densities and geographies, and differing cultures. The purpose of the breadth is to demonstrate that planning laws come in many shapes and colors, and can work or fumble in many contexts.
The book looks not only at the broad-brush institutional structure, but also at specifics such as types of plans and legal issues that surround them, discretion for interim decisions and flexibility, instruments of land subdivision, development controls (building permits), environmental-impact controls, financial implications of planning controls, enforcement in law and practice, the time factor in procedures, public hearings and appeals, and the roles of the courts. Such complex analysis cannot be undertaken without a firm conceptual framework on which to "hang" the systematic survey and analysis of each of the country reports. A robust framework enables a systematic comparison and evaluation across countries. In this way, readers will be able to understand not only a particular country's planning law as a whole, but also to consider potential transferability of specific instruments to their own national context. The Handbook is an invaluable resource to aide scholars, professionals and students in engaging with the complexities of planning law.
The book looks not only at the broad-brush institutional structure, but also at specifics such as types of plans and legal issues that surround them, discretion for interim decisions and flexibility, instruments of land subdivision, development controls (building permits), environmental-impact controls, financial implications of planning controls, enforcement in law and practice, the time factor in procedures, public hearings and appeals, and the roles of the courts. Such complex analysis cannot be undertaken without a firm conceptual framework on which to "hang" the systematic survey and analysis of each of the country reports. A robust framework enables a systematic comparison and evaluation across countries. In this way, readers will be able to understand not only a particular country's planning law as a whole, but also to consider potential transferability of specific instruments to their own national context. The Handbook is an invaluable resource to aide scholars, professionals and students in engaging with the complexities of planning law.
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
London
United Kingdom
Publishing group
Taylor & Francis Ltd
Target group
College/higher education
Professional and scholarly
Postgraduate and Undergraduate
Illustrations
100 s/w Abbildungen
100 Illustrations, black and white
Dimensions
Height: 254 mm
Width: 178 mm
ISBN-13
978-1-138-95879-1 (9781138958791)
Copyright in bibliographic data is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or its licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Content
Part One: Rationale and conceptual framework
Why planning law? Why comparative analysis? Rachelle Alterman
The rise and dissemination of planning laws - history in a nutshell (maybe RA)
Theoretical framework for analysis and comparison RA
Part Two: National reports - tentative list (a leading planning-law expert in each). Probably 16-18 among the following:
USA (each State has its own planning and zoning laws; will select one of the more "typical" states with a traditional system; probably a Midwest state). Dwight Merriam, Patricia Salkin, (NO shortage of alternative in the USA especially).
Canada - One province - Ontario or Alberta Eran Kaplinsky.
Columbia - Juan Felipe Pinilla
Brazil - Edesio Fernandes or Betania Alfonsin
UK (England and Wales) - Michael Perdue (or alternatives, Rachael Walsh)
Spain - Angel Manuel Moreno or Marta Lora Tamayo Vallve
Portugal - Claudio Monteiro
France (tentative - difficult to find an English-writing expert)
Netherlands - Fred Hobma (several alternatives)
Denmark - Helle Tegner Anker
Finland - Ari Ekroos
Germany - Gerd Schmidt-Eischteadt
Austria - Karin Hiltgartner
Poland - Miroslaw Gdetz
Greece - Georgina Giannakourou
Turkey - H. Burak Gemalmaz or Cenk Sahin
Israel - Rachelle Alterman
India - Sony Pellissery
China - TBD (I am in process of connecting)
Australia (New South Wales) - Andrew Kelly
Part Three: Comparative Analysis
Similarities and differences as a toolkit RA
Evaluation and beyond RA
Why planning law? Why comparative analysis? Rachelle Alterman
The rise and dissemination of planning laws - history in a nutshell (maybe RA)
Theoretical framework for analysis and comparison RA
Part Two: National reports - tentative list (a leading planning-law expert in each). Probably 16-18 among the following:
USA (each State has its own planning and zoning laws; will select one of the more "typical" states with a traditional system; probably a Midwest state). Dwight Merriam, Patricia Salkin, (NO shortage of alternative in the USA especially).
Canada - One province - Ontario or Alberta Eran Kaplinsky.
Columbia - Juan Felipe Pinilla
Brazil - Edesio Fernandes or Betania Alfonsin
UK (England and Wales) - Michael Perdue (or alternatives, Rachael Walsh)
Spain - Angel Manuel Moreno or Marta Lora Tamayo Vallve
Portugal - Claudio Monteiro
France (tentative - difficult to find an English-writing expert)
Netherlands - Fred Hobma (several alternatives)
Denmark - Helle Tegner Anker
Finland - Ari Ekroos
Germany - Gerd Schmidt-Eischteadt
Austria - Karin Hiltgartner
Poland - Miroslaw Gdetz
Greece - Georgina Giannakourou
Turkey - H. Burak Gemalmaz or Cenk Sahin
Israel - Rachelle Alterman
India - Sony Pellissery
China - TBD (I am in process of connecting)
Australia (New South Wales) - Andrew Kelly
Part Three: Comparative Analysis
Similarities and differences as a toolkit RA
Evaluation and beyond RA