The Renaissance of Comprehensive Planning: The Oregon Case |
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Authors: | Ben Padrow Sumner Sharpe Edward Sullivan |
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Affiliation: | 1. Portland State University , USA;2. Urban Studies , Portland State University , USA |
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Abstract: | During the last decade, a popular pastime among planners and others has been to discredit the comprehensive plan and the process by which such plans are developed. Advocacy planning, strategic planning, policy planning, social planning, etc., were suggested alternatives to the traditional focus of planning-the comprehensive plan, The reasons for criticism were varied, but basically they boiled down to the fact that plans often ended up on shelves collecting dust. Plans failed as continuing guides to a wide variety of decisions since they were static end-state conceptions a supposedly better world. Plans and their associated regulatory devices were found inadequate to control or limit the effects of the market-plans were simply ineffective tools. So the searcH began for alternatives or modifications to the comprehensive plan. |
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