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El. knyga: Dialogical Planning in a Fragmented Society: Critically Liberal, Pragmatic, Incremental

  • Formatas: 374 pages
  • Išleidimo metai: 06-Feb-2018
  • Leidėjas: Routledge
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781351522342
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: 374 pages
  • Išleidimo metai: 06-Feb-2018
  • Leidėjas: Routledge
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781351522342
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The culmination of a critical study of neo-pragmatism philosophy and its application to planning, Dialogical Planning in a Fragmented Society begins with philosopher Stanley M. Stein's examination of neo-pragmatism and his thoughts on how it can be useful in the field of environmental design-specifically, how it can be applied to planning procedures and problems. Neo-pragmatism is an approach that has been, in the past, best expressed or implied in the writing of Hilary Putnam, Richard Rorty, and, in particular, Donald Davidson, John Rawls, and Ludwig Wittgenstein. Thomas L. Harper furthers this tradition by providing the context for this theoretical application from his academic background in economics and management as well as his practical experience with political decision-making processes, community planning, and economic development. The result is a fresh synthesis of ideas-a new approach to thinking about planning theory and its implications for, and relationship with, practice. Philosopher Michael Walzer has asserted that "philosophy reflects and articulates the political culture of its time, and politics presents and enacts the arguments of philosophy." Similarly, the authors view planning theory as planning reflected upon in tranquility, away from the tumult of battle, and planning practice as planning theory acted out in the confusion of the trenches. Each changes the other in a dynamic way, and the authors demonstrate the intimate and inextricable link between them.
Introduction I PLANNING SHOULD GIVE UP THE MODERNIST PARADIGM 1 The
Crisis in Modernist Planning 2 Modernistic ("Rational") Planning, PLANNING
SHOULD BE PRAGMATIC 3 Two Responses to Modernism: Postmodernism or
Neopragmatism 4 Out of the Postmodern Abyss: Postmodernist Themes III
PLANNING SHOULD BE CRI'TICALLY LIBERAL 5 Classical Liberalism and Planning 6
A Critical Liberal Perspective DIALOGICAL PLANNING IN A FRAGMENTED SOCIETY 7
Pragmatic Incrementalist Planning IV PLANNING SHOULD RECOGNIZE AN EMERGING
WAY 8 A Dialogical Planning Approach 9 A Dialogical Planning Approach:
Critiques and Questions 10 Dialogical Planning in Practice V PLANNING SHOULD
AvOID MODERNIST AND POSTMODERNIST TRAPS VI The Search for Clear Categories
and Universal Principles 12 The Radical Paradigm Shift 13 The Multicultural
Trap (Relativism) 14 The Rejection of Theory 15 Power, Trust, and Planning 16
Conclusion: Key Strengths of Dialogical Planning
Thomas L. Harper (Edited by) ,  Stanley M. Stein (Edited by)