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E-grāmata: Handbook on Planning and Complexity

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Deepening the scientific debate on planning and complexity, this Handbook combines theoretical discussion about planning and governance with modelling complex behaviour in space and place. Linking planning and complexity as a way of understanding dynamic change and non-linear development within cities, it presents critical new insights on complex urban behaviour.

Building on the notion that cities have fractal-like structures, chapters look at their behaviour as complex adaptive systems, with co-evolving trajectories and transformative forces. The Handbook offers new perspectives, concepts, methods and tools for understanding the inter-relations between complexity and planning, including: adaptive planning, non-linear types of rationality, governance and decision-making, and different methods of experimental learning.

Planning, complexity, urban studies and social geography scholars will appreciate the examples of complex urban behaviour and urban planning throughout the Handbook. This will also be an important read for modellers in urban development, urban policy makers and spatial planners.





Contributors include: E.R. Alexander, Y. Asami, M. Batty, R. Beunen, B. Boonstra, S.D. Campbell, S. Cozzolino, M. Duineveld, S. Eräranta, N. Frantzeskaki, T. Ishikawa, W. Jager, D. Loorbach, S. Moroni, C. Perrone, J. Portugali, W. Rauws, N.A. Salingaros, K. Van Assche, A. van Nes, S. Verweij, T. Von Wirth, M. Zellner,

Recenzijas

'The editors have brought together leading and upcoming experts in complexity and planning to create this 'state of the art' volume. It is wide ranging, thought provoking and comprehensive, covering the latest theoretical debates in complexity and planning, international and national applications, and even localised planning issues. It is a 'must read' for anyone working in planning and complexity and will undoubtedly be a benchmark for the next wave of works on complexity and planning and policy-making in general.' --Robert Geyer, Lancaster University, UK'This excellent collection of chapters makes a direct contribution to understanding how planning interventions can interact with and rise above the self-organising forces of complexity and uncertainty. The threads of governance, rationality, modelling, communication, contextualisation and adaptability are interwoven across different chapters. By breaking down the divide between technical and political approaches, between theory and methods, the book is charged with positive energy and inspirational ideas to pursue more discursive and non-linear thinking in spatial planning.' --Cecilia Wong, University of Manchester, UK

'This volume critically engages complexity thinking to identify possibilities for the reinvention of spatial planning as a meshwork of complementary mutual interrelations, purposeful interventions and subjective interactions. The book is an important source for scholars interested in pushing forward the frontiers of theoretical reasoning and practical modelling in the dynamic, non-linear world in which we live.' --Jean Hillier, RMIT University, Australia

List of contributors
ix
Preface xi
1 Introduction to the Handbook on Planning and Complexity
1(18)
Gert de Roo
2 Complexity, institutions and institutional design
19(16)
Ernest R. Alexander
3 A multi-level rationality model for planning behaviour
35(31)
Gert de Roo
Camilla Perrone
4 Post-contingency: considering complexity as a matter of choice
66(19)
Christian Zuidema
5 Adaptive planning and the capacity to perform in moments of change
85(25)
Gert de Roo
Ward Rauws
Christian Zuidema
6 Rationalities for adaptive planning to address uncertainties
110(41)
Gert de Roo
Ward Rauws
Christian Zuidema
7 Strategy in complexity: the shaping of communities and environments
151(20)
Kristof Van Assche
Raoul Beunen
Martijn Duineveld
8 Social complexities in collaborative planning processes
171(15)
Susa Eraranta
9 Conditions of actions in complex social-spatial systems
186(17)
Stefano Moroni
Stefano Cozzolino
10 Information adaptation as the link between cognitive planning and professional planning
203(17)
Juval Portugali
11 Self-organization and spatial planning in the face of the European Refugee Crisis
220(17)
Beitske Boonstra
12 Urban living labs as inter-boundary spaces for sustainability transitions?
237(21)
Timo von Wirth
Niki Frantzeskaki
Derk Loorbach
13 Planning with(in) complexity: pathways to extend planning with complex systems modelling
258(21)
Moira Zellner
Scott D. Campbell
14 Simplification and spatial thinking in the modeling and planning of complex urban environments
279(23)
Tom Ishikawa
Yasushi Asami
15 Complexity in design: optimal location through spatial averaging
302(16)
Michael Batty
16 Fractals: a multiscale approach in regional and urban planning strategies
318(16)
Claudia Yamu
Akkelies van Nes
17 Qualitative Comparative Analysis for analyzing spatial planning processes
334(19)
Stefan Verweij
Christian Zuidema
18 Planning, complexity, and welcoming spaces: the case of campus design
353(20)
Nikos A. Salingaros
19 Simulating community dynamics for transitional urban planning processes
373(14)
Wander Jager
Claudia Yamu
Index 387
Edited by Gert de Roo, Professor in Spatial Planning, University of Groningen, the Netherlands, Claudia Yamu, Department of Built Environment, Oslo Metropolitan University, Norway and Christian Zuidema, Associate Professor in Environmental Planning, Department of Spatial Planning & Environment, University of Groningen, the Netherlands