This course undertakes a detailed, comparative examination of the history, and possible futures of, planning in a global context. It examines planning in diverse settings and highlights the ways in which planning has been and might be conceived and practiced across the Global North and South. It seeks to introduce students to the wide variety of planning paradigms, approaches and techniques that have been deployed by planners and other actors who create and are affected by plans. The course highlights the differences and similarities in the way planning has been conceived and undertaken across geographies. It pays particular attention to the debates, trade-offs, compromises and tensions that have dominated the way planners have approached their work and how they conceptualize and plan for the future. Rather than focusing on descriptions of key events or people (although those are covered too), the course is structured around a number of important analytic themes that can help students understand the work of planners across a wide range of temporal, geographic, political, economic and cultural settings.
Comparative Perspectives on Planning History and Futures
Course Code
PLAN 500
Level
Master's
Eligibility
Enrolled in MCRP
Instructor
Keywords
500, plan 500, mcrp, master of community and regional planning, history, futures, historical, future, icp, indigenous community planning, social justice, Comparative Perspectives on Planning History and Futures, comparative perspectives, planning history, planning history and futures
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