Advocacy Plans
communities, especially those of color. He called for the democratization of planning by encouraging professionals to devote a portion of their time to preparing high-quality advocacy plans for marginalized communities. These advocacy plans, developed with a high level of citizen input, would offer Planning Commissions an alternate perspective in planning for specific neighborhoods, thereby, improving the quality of official plan-making for these areas.
The People’s Plan
Book I ACORN, University of Illinois, Cornell University, Columbia University, NSF I Pages 1 – 23 I Published 2006
The essence of politics is who gets what. Or call it distributive justice. The public planning process as a part of the political system is inextricably related to the distributional question facing communities in which planners work.
Ramapo Mountain: A New Community in Mahwah, New Jersey
Book I Garden Cities Development Corporation I Pages 1 – 33 I Published September 6,
1972
Ramapo Mountain is a new community proposed by Garden Cities Development Corporation. It will be located in Mahwah, New Jersey, thirty minutes from New York City.
The Vance Avenue Community Transformation Plan
Book I University of Memphis I Pages 1 – 105 I Published September 13, 2012
The suburbanization of population and jobs in the metro-I political regions is an accomplished fact. Rather than, fighting this movement, urban development policy’ should work with it to assure equal access to suburban land and jobs for all citizens of the regions.
South Memphis Revitalization Plan
Executive Summary I University of Memphis I Pages 1 – 17 I Published September, 2009
The suburbanization of population and jobs in the metro-I political regions is an accomplished fact. Rather than, fighting this movement, urban development policy’ should work with it to assure equal access to suburban land and jobs for all citizens of the regions.
Origins of the South Memphis Renaissance Colaborative
Book I University of Memphis I Pages 1 – 130 I Published 2009
The essence of politics is who gets what. Or call it distributive justice. The public planning process as a part of the political system is inextricably related to the distributional question facing communities in which planners work.
Advocacy Planning
Journal article I Marcia Marker Feld & Patricia Baron Pollak I Pages 3 – 6 I Published 2010
Advocacy planning represents a departure from scientific, objective, or rational planning, which was the dominant paradigm of the post-World War II era. It is premised upon the inclusion of the different interests involved in the planning process itself.
The Portland African American Leadership Forum “People’s Plan”
Book I Dr. Lisa K. Bates I Pages 1 – 138 I Published June 23, 2015
The Portland African American Leadership Forum envisions a world where people of African descent, enjoy the rights, resources and recognition to be a thriving, resilient and connected community.
“Lessons from El Barrio – The East Harlem Real Great Society/Urban Planning Studio: A Puerto Rican Chapter in the Fight for Urban Self-Determination.”
Journal Article I Louis Aponte- Pares, I Pages 399-420 I Published 1998
This article chronicles the early history of the East Harlem Real Great Society/Urban Planning Studio which was a collaborative effort by Puerto Rican activists and design professionals to enhance the quality of life in two important immigrant areas of New York Cities during the mid-1960s.
Articles About Advocacy Planning
Communities & Interests in Advocacy Planning
Journal article I Lisa R. Peattie I Pages 151 – 153 I Published spring, 1994
The essence of politics is who gets what. Or call it distributive justice. The public planning process as a part of the political system is inextricably related to the distributional question facing communities in which planners work.
Bridging Interests & Community
Advocacy Planning and the Challenges of deliberative Democracy
Journal article I John Forester I Pages 153 – 158 I Published spring, 1994
The suburbanization of population and jobs in the metro-I political regions is an accomplished fact. Rather than, fighting this movement, urban development policy’ should work with it to assure equal access to suburban land and jobs for all citizens of the regions.
The Evolution of Advocacy Planning
Journal article I Pierre Clavel I Pages 146 – 149 I Published spring, 1994
The suburbanization of population and jobs in the metro-I political regions is an accomplished fact. Rather than, fighting this movement, urban development policy’ should work with it to assure equal access to suburban land and jobs for all citizens of the regions.
We Shall Not Be Moved
Hank William Village and the Legacy of Advocacy Planning
Journal article I Roger Guy I Pages 159 – 175 I Published 2013
The essence of politics is who gets what. Or call it distributive justice. The public planning process as a part of the political system is inextricably related to the distributional question facing communities in which planners work.
Advocacy Planning in the Age of Trump: An Opportunity to Influence National Urban Policy
Journal article I Kenneth Reardon & Antonio Raciti I Pages 606-611 I Published 2019
The essence of politics is who gets what. Or call it distributive justice. The public planning process as a part of t… In 1965, Paul Davidoff, reflecting upon growing racial inequality in American society, wrote, ‘Advocacy and Pluralism in Planning’ which challenged several of the most important assumptions underlying the rational model of planning which dominated mid-century professional practice in the United States and Europe (Davidoff, 1965)….
Up Close and Personal
What One Planner Learned in a 55-Year Career That Has Paralleled the Major Events of the Time
Journal article I Floyd Lapp I Pages 60 – 68 I Published 2018
Growing up in a shifting urban environment during the major socioeconomic transition in the Bronx(NY) in the 1950s and 1960s, my interests in neighborhood change peaked with the changes in housing, the impact of urban renewal, the need for more open-space recreation, the arrival of the interstate highways, and the new faces of the population…
New York City’s Housing Crisis
Private Development and Public Need
Working Conference Agenda I Pratt Institute Center for Community and Environmental Development I Dec 12 1983
A working conference on the established of inclusionary zoning and a housing trust fund for affordable housing in New York.
The Case of Advocacy Planning: The limits for pluralism as a basis for policy and planning practice
Thesis: Degree of Master of City planning and Master of Architecture I Yanni Pyrgiotis I Published 1972
This thesis attempts to examine and explain the limitations of the outcomes of advocacy planning and to suggest ways through which these limitations can be overcome.
National Conference on Advocacy and Pluralistic Planning
Brochure I Paul Davidoff I January 10 and 11, 1969
On January 10 and 11, 1969 Paul Davidoff organized a national conference to consider the future of advocacy planning. The attached document is the program pressure for this event which was entitled, National Conference on Advocacy and Pluralistic Planning.
Inclusionary Zoning Moves Downtown: A legal Symposium
Brochure I Center for Metropolitan Action I November 14, 1983
On November 14, 1983, Center for Metropolitan Action, CUNY Graduate School , American Planing Association and Pratt Institute for Community and Environmental Development organized a conference on Inclusionary zoning .
Oakwood at Madison Corp v Towship of Madison
Docket No. L-7502-70 P.W (283 A.2d 353, 117 N.J. Super 11, 3 ERC 1541) (N.J. Super . Ct. October 27, 1971)
A municipality which zoned large tracts of land exclusively for low-density high-cost housing on the grounds that the township needed a “breathing spell” from fast population growth, may not use that zoning law as means of evading its fair proportion of the obligation to meet the housing need of its own population and of the region.
Development Activities