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Reconciling Oregon's Smart Growth goals with local policy choice| An empirical study of growth management, urban form, and development outcomes in Eugene, Keizer, Salem, and Springfield

<p>Oregon&rsquo;s Statewide Planning Goals embody Smart Growth in their effort to revitalize urban areas, finance environmentally responsible transportation systems, provide housing options, and protect natural resources; yet the State defers to its municipalities to implement this planning framework. This research focuses on Goal 14 (Urbanization), linking most directly to Smart Growth Principle 7 (Strengthen and Direct Development toward Existing Communities). It assesses Eugene&rsquo;s, Keizer&rsquo;s, Salem&rsquo;s, and Springfield&rsquo;s growth management policies that specifically target infill development of single family homes against this Goal and Principle. Though these municipalities must demonstrate consistency with the same Goals (see Supplemental File 1 for this context), this research questions whether sufficiently different policy approaches to curtailing sprawl yield significantly different results. The primary analytical method is a logistic regression that uses parcel-level data to understand how administration affects development by isolating these policies&rsquo; direct effects on observed outcomes (see Supplemental File 2 for this theory). </p>

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:PROQUEST/oai:pqdtoai.proquest.com:1555773
Date18 June 2014
CreatorsWitzig, Monica C.
PublisherUniversity of Oregon
Source SetsProQuest.com
LanguageEnglish
Detected LanguageEnglish
Typethesis

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