"On October 15-16, 2012, a
symposium on planning for states and nation-states will be held in Dublin,
Ireland. The symposium will be jointly hosted by the School of Geography,
Planning and Environmental Policy at the University College Dublin, the National
Center for Smart Growth at the University of Maryland, and the Lincoln Institute
of Land Policy. The symposium will include paper presentations from leading
scholars from the US and Europe and responses from seasoned planning
practitioners at the regional, state, and national levels. The symposium will
offer fresh new information for those interested in comparative planning,
European spatial planning, state planning, regional planning and
intergovernmental planning relationships.
More information, including a
schedule of events, and some of the papers are now available at http://www.ucd.ie/gpep/events/seminarsworkshopsconferences/natplansymp2012/.
Additional papers, comments, and presentations will be posted prior to the
symposium.
Unfortunately, there are no more
available seats at the symposium, but the conference will be streamed over the
web. To catch the webstream go to the conference website and click on Watch
Online.
Inquiries about the symposium can be
sent to Gerrit Knaap (gknaap@umd.edu) or Zorica Nedovic-Budic (zorica.nedovic-budic@ucd.ie).
We hope to see you on
line.
Planning for States
and Nation-States: A TransAtlantic Perspective
Symposium
Overview
The
symposium, Planning for States and Nation-States: A TransAtlantic Perspective,
will examine the process, contents, and implementation of National Spatial
Strategies in Europe and State Development Plans and planning frameworks in the
United States. Such comparisons must be conducted carefully. State development
plans and frameworks in the United States and national spatial strategies in
Europe have distinctly different conceptual roots and administrative
foundations. European nations and US states are probably more different than
alike in geography, culture, economic structure, political institutions, and
other aspects that pertain to planning at the supra-local scale.
But
national spatial strategies and state development plans and frameworks face many
of the same challenges. As inherently intergovernmental endeavors, successful
implementation requires extensive vertical integration across various levels of
government, horizontal integration across functional agencies within each level
of government, and spatial articulation of concepts and policies at various
geographic scales. The comparison, therefore, is potentially
valuable.
Five
states and five nations will be represented and discussed. Specifically, state
case studies will include Delaware, New Jersey, and Maryland, all with some form
of state development plan, and Oregon and California, states with no explicit
state development plan but unique state planning frameworks. There will also be
an overview of state and federal planning frameworks in the US and an overview
of the European Spatial Development Strategy. Case studies from Europe will
include The Netherlands, Denmark, and Ireland, all with some form of national
spatial plan, and France and Great Britain, nations with no national plan but
unique national planning frameworks. For each case study, an academic will
present a paper followed by commentary from a local practitioner."
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