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Review 08
Fast Forward: City Planning in a Hyper Dynamic World.
Published in 2012, with the occasion of the 48th ISOCARP Congress in Perm, Russia. Editors: Shi Nan, China & Chris Gossop, UK Flyer | Table of Contents | Have a look inside the Review
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Review 09
Frontiers of Planning: Visionary futures for human settlements
Published in 2013, with the occasion of the 49th ISOCARP Congress in Brisbane, Australia. Editors: Jim Colman, Australia & Chris Gossop, UK Table of Contents| Have a look inside the Review
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Book
This year Review of World Planning Practice (Volume 17) is devoted to the past winners of the ISOCARP Award for Excellence. As a result of the long-term effort, the publication elucidates 16 winning entries rewarded in the last 16 award editions. Interested to learn how some of the most successful planning proposals and urban design projects evolved through time? -
e-Book
This year Review of World Planning Practice (Volume 17) is devoted to the past winners of the ISOCARP Award for Excellence. As a result of the long-term effort, the publication elucidates 16 winning entries rewarded in the last 16 award editions. Interested to learn how some of the most successful planning proposals and urban design projects evolved through time? -
Book
This Review of World Planning Practice (Volume 18), titled Towards Healthy Cities: Urban Governance, Planning and Design for Human Well-being, adds to the enormous debate on the role of cities and the phenomenon of urbanisation during the pandemic triggered by the coronavirus. The papers selected for this Review open up different perspectives, some utopian, as it should be when one talks about innovating and changing the city, and others more founded on paths tested in other urban phenomena, such as urban regeneration, the fight against social exclusion, the quest for sustainability, and the design of public spaces. -
e-Book
This Review of World Planning Practice (Volume 18), titled Towards Healthy Cities: Urban Governance, Planning and Design for Human Well-being, adds to the enormous debate on the role of cities and the phenomenon of urbanisation during the pandemic triggered by the coronavirus. The papers selected for this Review open up different perspectives, some utopian, as it should be when one talks about innovating and changing the city, and others more founded on paths tested in other urban phenomena, such as urban regeneration, the fight against social exclusion, the quest for sustainability, and the design of public spaces.