Spelling suggestions: "subject:"rural planning"" "subject:"aural planning""
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Urban metamorphosis of Arab-Muslim cities : with particular reference to At-Taif City, Saudi ArabiaAl-Shareef, Mohammad Muslat January 1988 (has links)
No description available.
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The Islamic city : a pattern of neigbourhood quarters; a case study of the Madinah of RabatKhaled, Azzam January 1993 (has links)
No description available.
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The transformation of squatter settlements into authorised apartment blocks : a case study of Ankara, TurkeyOzdemir, Nihan January 1999 (has links)
No description available.
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Approaches to public intervention in shaping the urban environment 1919-1939 : a comparative study of county borough expenditures and policies for housing, highways, parks, town planning and industrial promotion between the WarsWard, Stephen V. January 1983 (has links)
No description available.
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Nigeria's urban open spaces : an inquiry into their evolution, planning and landscape qualitiesFalade, J. B. January 1985 (has links)
No description available.
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Informal dispute resolution - an evaluation of user satisfaction with town planning mediation and hearings in New South Wales and England and WalesStubbs, M. D. January 1998 (has links)
No description available.
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The political economy of local authority land transactions : A study of local authority land ownership and development activity and its relations to local policy objectives, 1947-1982Montgomery, J. R. January 1984 (has links)
No description available.
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The effectiveness of the UK planning system in delivering sustainable development via urban intensificationWilliams, Katie January 1997 (has links)
No description available.
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The politics of urban development in New Bombay : the role of the government in urban land and housing and its effect on the socio-economic development of a new townJacquemin, Alain Raymond Albert January 1998 (has links)
No description available.
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Strategies for the regional planning of the minerals industry in Southern Africa : the case of the SADCCJourdan, P. P. January 1990 (has links)
The Southern African Development Coordination Conference (SADCC) was launched in 1980 and includes all of the states of southern Africa with the exception of South Africa. It seeks to promote regional development through collective self-reliance. The region is exceptionally rich in mineral resources and, as a whole, the SADCC falls within the classification of a "minerals economy'. The minerals sector currently has the role of providing the state with foreign exchange and revenues as almost all minerals are exported. Due to the small size (population, economy, resources) of each SADCC state it would be difficult to redeploy their minerals sector from its current colonial role to that of providing the foundation for resource-based industrialisation. However, the regional context provides greater possibilities for delinking and the initiation of an autonomous and sustained development process. Strategies for the regional planning of the sub-continental minerals sector are numerous and could include the substitution of mineral and mineral-based imports; the development of basic fertiliser minerals for regional agricultural sector, the regional rationalisation of the iron, steel and ferro-alloys sector to provide the basic inputs for an indigenous capital goods sector; the retention of further value-added in the region through cross-border mineral beneficiation and mineral transformation projects; the regional rationalisation of mining and mineral processing manpower training programmes; intra-regional cooperation in mineral exploration projects and the establishment of regional research and development facilities to localise mining technologies; the creation of mineral finance mechanisms that bring together the resources of the region allowing investment in major minerals development projects without resorting to the transnational companies; the development of a regional minerals fiscal and legislative regime to maximise the capture of mineral rents by the state and the establishment of a regional strategy towards the mining transnational corporations. However, to realise these regional objectives the SADCC will have to move on from its current project approach to greater trade integration with some form of currency convertibility. The project approach served the region well for the rehabilitation of the infrastructure, but for realisation of the full potential of the regional mineral sector as the basis for industrialisation, greater regional integration would be necessary.
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