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MODELING PLACE ATTACHMENT IN TWO NEIGHBORHOODS OF COLUMBUS, OHIONikrahei, Bardia January 2015 (has links)
No description available.
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Spatial and Migration Patterns of Housing Choice Voucher Program Households in the Walnut Hills, East Walnut Hills and Evanston neighborhoods in CincinnatiYin, Zhenxuan 10 September 2015 (has links)
No description available.
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Planning a just city: Examining waterfront redevelopment projects from a social justice perspectiveAvni, Nufar January 2018 (has links)
No description available.
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Rethinking the landlord: from ‘folk devil’ to a social relationKerrigan, Danielle January 2024 (has links)
No description available.
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E-Waste Management under Extended Producer Responsibility in Québec: Critical perspectives on local strategies, challenges, and opportunitiesLeclerc, Stephanie January 2024 (has links)
No description available.
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Visioning in Urban Planning- A Critical Review and SynthesisJanuary 2013 (has links)
abstract: Planners are often involved in the development of 'visions' for specific projects or larger plans. These visions often serve as guideposts for more specific plans or projects and the visioning process is important for involving community members into the planning process. This paper provides a review of the recent literature published about visioning and is intended to provide guidance for visioning activities in planning projects. I use the general term "vision" in reference to a desirable state in the future. The body of academic literature on visioning in planning has been growing over the last decade. However, the planning literature on visioning is diverse and dispersed, posing various challenges to researchers and planners seeking guidance for their own planning (research) activities. For one, relevant articles on visioning are scattered over different strands of literature ranging from traditional planning literature (Journal of the American Planning Association, Planning Practice and Research, etc.) to less traditional and intuitive sources (Futures, Journal of Cross-Cultural Psychology). Further, some of them not easily identifiable and may not be openly accessible via the Internet. Thus, our review intends to help collect and synthesize this literature and begin to provide guidance for the future of visioning in the field of planning. I do this by compiling visioning literature from different strands of the planning literature, synthesizing key insights into visioning in (urban) planning, undertaking exemplary appraisals of visioning approaches in planning against quality criteria, and deriving conclusions for visioning research and practice. From this review, I highlight areas of opportunity and ways forward in order to make visioning more effective and more influential for the future of communities throughout the world. / Dissertation/Thesis / M.U.E.P. Urban and Environmental Planning 2013
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Urban Agriculture in the Urban Landscape: An Analysis of Successful Urban Agriculture in the U.SGhimire, Surya P. January 2008 (has links)
No description available.
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Mapping upward mobility for residents of a mixed-income housing project in Salishan, WABoyde, Natasha P. 24 February 2016 (has links)
<p> Income-based public housing projects have typically resulted in concentrations of poverty which have left the most disadvantaged populations anchored to their homes with little to no upward mobility. In response, housing policies have shifted toward Mixed-Income designs that work to integrate populations of different social and financial class in effort to help those in the lowest socioeconomic status move up and out of poverty. One such housing project named Salishan lies south of Seattle, Washington in the city of Tacoma. This research employs GIS, participatory mapping, and other qualitative research methods to examine how Salishan residents are experiencing the services and programs that are targeted toward them. The data yielded in this study contradict those theorized benefits of greater social interaction and access to resources via Mixed-Income housing. The purpose of this research is to demonstrate the value of participatory methods for getting new kinds of data and informing policy.</p>
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The Adaptable City| The Use of Transit Investment and Congestion Pricing to Influence Travel and Location Decisions in LondonBroaddus, Andrea Lynn 07 April 2016 (has links)
<p> This dissertation investigates two key transportation policies influencing travel behavior and location decisions in London towards sustainability: bus priority and congestion charging. (Abstract shortened by ProQuest.) </p>
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Human Perceptions of Animals in the St. Louis Region| Prospects for a Transspecies CityTidball, Alex 09 August 2016 (has links)
<p> The transspecies city concept was developed in opposition to traditional anthropocentric urban policies. This research seeks to determine whether or not perceptions of survey participants taken from the St. Louis area are compatible with the goals of the transspecies city, which focus on integration of animals into human communities rather than their removal. The transspecies city also indicates a need for moral concern for animals in human actions which affect them. </p><p> Participant responses were classified into perception categories. These perceptions were then analyzed and discussed to determine their compatibility with the transspecies city, concluding that humanistic and moralistic perceptions are most compatible. Negativistic, naturalistic, and ecologistic perceptions all are found to have some incompatibilities with the transspecies city. In spite of these incompatibilities, this research concludes by examining the ways these perceptions could be addressed, or ways in which the transspecies city could modify itself to have a better chance at actualization.</p>
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