- Radical planning
Radical planning is a stream of
urban planning which seeks to manage development in anequitable andcommunity -based manner.The seminal text to the radical planning movement is "Foundations for a Radical Concept in Planning" (1973), by
Stephen Grabow andAllen Heskin . Grabow and Heskin provided a critique of planning as elitist, centralising and change-resistant, and proposed a new paradigm based upon systems change, decentralization, communal society, facilitation of human development and a consideration of ecology. Grabow and Heskin were joined by "Head of Department of Town Planning" from thePolytechnic of the South Bank Shean McConnell , and his 1981 work "Theories for Planning".In 1987
John Friedman entered the fray with "Planning in the Public Domain: From Knowledge to Action", promoting a radical planning model based on “decolonization”, “democratization”, “self-empowerment” and “reaching out”. Friedman described this model as an “agropolitan development” paradigm, emphasising the re-localisation ofprimary production andmanufacture . In “Toward a Non-Euclidian Mode of Planning" (1993) Friedman further promoted the urgency of decentralizing planning, advocating a planning paradigm that is normative, innovative, political, transactive and based on a Social learning approach to knowledge and policy.References
* [http://ius.uwinnipeg.ca/WIRA/Aberley%20Radical%20Planning%20Outline.doc A Short Introduction to Radical Planning Theory and Practice] , Doug Aberley Ph.D. MCIP, Winnipeg Inner City Research Alliance Summer Institute, June 2003
*McConnell, Shean. "Theories for Planning", 1981, David & Charles, London.
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