Here - Joint AESOP / ACSP Congress Dublin 2013
Transcription
Here - Joint AESOP / ACSP Congress Dublin 2013
AESOP / ACSP Joint Congress 2013 Planning for Resilient Cities and Regions July 15th/19th 2013 University College Dublin Ireland Preliminary Conference Programme (May 1, 2013) Table of Contents: (Click on the links below to go directly to the relevant section) 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. Congress Theme Congress Opening – Guests of Honour Keynotes with biographies and abstracts Congress Committees Joint Congress Committee Local Organizing Committee Conference Secretariat General schedule for the congress Assemblies and meetings General Assemblies Young Academics Network - AESOP Editorial Boards Thematic and Interest Groups Special Sessions Planning Technology Group - ACSP Congress Tracks and Co-chairs Sessions and Panels by Track Poster Presentations by Track Congress Theme Planning for Resilient Cities and Regions The Congress focuses on resilience which has become a new banner for various societal and related planning efforts in cities and regions across the globe. These efforts generally aim to sustain the urban and rural viability and improve the quality of life for their residents amidst the global economic and socio-political crisis and climate change. The concept of resilience relates to the degree to which various environments and systems can tolerate changing conditions and circumstances before adapting and reorganising around a new set of structures and processes. While the concept is sometimes understood only as resilience to climate change and geo environmental hazards, we propose its utility to planning and development be explored in broader terms – as an approach to the multifaceted nature of local and global challenges. In fact, one may consider the ability to adapt and change as an indicator of resilience. The field of planning has long had a role in mediating the relationships and dealing with the complex and multiscalar nature of development, drawing together environmental and ecological understanding with insights from social, economic and political theory, and applying these spatially in a built environment context. The contemporary challenges require innovative and sustainable solutions in the creation of more resilient and adaptive cities and regions, which balance economic competitiveness, environmental protection and social flourishing. These solutions derive in part from spatial planning, building on the roles of urban design, community engagement and technological innovations to ensure that urbanisation is managed in a sustainable manner. The 16 Congress tracks reflect the breadth of the planning field and will address the general theme of resilience implicitly and explicitly to varying extents, specificity, aspects and scales. There will be an opportunity to engage with the concept and explore its applicability and value in the planning and development research and practice. Given the Irish context and the rich learning experiences that its past and recent trends in urban and rural development offer, the general theme could also connect to the Celtic brand of resilience. In addition, there is an opportunity to examine planning issues from peripheral (edge) as well as "in between" positions and perspectives. This applies to Ireland as much as it does to the new EU accession countries in east and southeast Europe in particular. With the joint involvement of AESOP and ACSP, it is expected that the conversations will take special regard for cross-societal and crosscultural themes and promote exchanges between the American and European as well as participants from other continents. We hope that new and unique content will be infused to reflect the variety of local contexts and circumstances which offer true laboratories for studying planning issues and challenges. Congress Opening – Guests of Honour We are pleased to announce the 5th Joint AESOP-ACSP Congress will be opened by Ms. Jan O'Sullivan T.D., Minister for Housing and Planning and Dr. Hugh Brady, President of University College Dublin. http://www.labour.ie/janosullivan/ https://www.ucd.ie/president/biography/ From the congress organisers: Céad Míle Fáilte - A Hundred Thousand Welcomes! We cordially invite you to Dublin, one of the most exciting and dynamic European cities, and to the wonderful island of Ireland - the place of Celtic Tiger and Celtic Resilience. Come to: -hear and debate the latest in planning and policy research and practice; -visit sites of planning action and inaction - including new town development, urban cultural and waterfront regeneration, edge city development, post recession urbanscapes, social housing renewal, heritage preservation, transport planning and city bike scheme, capital projects; and - enjoy the Irish hospitality, beautiful landscapes and culture. WE ENCLOSE THE PRELIMINARY PROGRAMME WHICH PROMISES A RICH AND RELEVANT CONTENT AS A BASE FOR MANY CONSTRUCTIVE AND ENLIGHTENING DISCUSSIONS ABOUT THE STATUS AND PROSPECTS OF OUR VULNERABLE CITIES AND REGIONS. Keynotes with biographies and abstracts Professor Thomas Elmqvist Professor & Theme Leader Stockholm University & Stockholm Resilience Center Stockholm, Sweden Plenary session: Monday, July 15, 2013, 14:00 - 15:30 Biography Thomas Elmqvist, PhD, is a professor in Natural Resource Management at Stockholm University. His research is focused on ecosystem services, land use change, natural disturbances and components of resilience including the role of social institutions. He is coordinating a major interdisciplinary research theme as part of the Stockholm Resilience Centre focusing on governance and management of ecosystem services in urban landscapes, involving 12 cities around the world. Abstract: Urban Resilience– Why we Need to Focus on Scales One of the most debated and challenging concepts in urban development is resilience. How do we define it in an urban context, how is it related to sustainability and what are the implications of scale? In this presentation I will try to clarify the concept, discuss common misinterpretations and reflect on the many difficulties that remain in application in urban development. Cities are centers of production and consumption and urban inhabitants are reliant on resources and ecosystem services, from food, water and construction materials to waste assimilation, secured from locations around the world. Although cities can optimize their resource use, increase their efficiency, and minimize waste, they can never become fully self-sufficient. Therefore, individual cities cannot be considered sustainable or resilient without acknowledging and accounting for their teleconnections i.e. long-distance dependence and impact on resources and populations in other regions around the world. A too narrow focus on a single city is often counterproductive and may even be destructive since building resilience in one city often may erode it somewhere else with multiple negative effects across the globe. Further, from historical accounts we learn that while there are some cities that have actually failed and disappeared (e.g. Mayan cities); our modern era experience is that cities rarely if ever collapse and disappear. Rather, they may enter a spiral of decline, becoming non-competitive and losing their position in regional, national and even global systems of cities. However, through extensive financial and trading networks, cities have a high capacity to avoid abrupt change and collapse and applying the resilience concept at the local city scale is thus not particularly useful. Instead, when building resilience at the global scale, urban regions must take increased responsibility for implementing transformative solutions and through collaboration across a global system of cities, provide a transformative framework to manage resource chains. At regional and local scales resilience could more be seen as an approach (non-normative process) to meet the challenges of sustainable development (normative goal). Treating resilience as non-normative at these scales is preferable since knowledge about the components of resilience could be used to either build or erode resilience depending on whether a transformation is desirable or not in a specific context. Given the challenges of rapid global change, new innovative means of planning that deal with urban complexity and transformations are needed and insights into urban resilience may provide planning with a new language and metaphors for the dynamics of change in complex systems and new tools and methods for analysis and synthesis. Professor Susan S. Fainstein Senior Research Fellow, Harvard University Graduate School of Design Visiting Professor, Lee Kuan Yew School, National University of Singapore Plenary session: Thursday, July 18, 2013, 09:45 - 11:15 Biography Susan S. Fainstein is a Senior Research Fellow in the Harvard Graduate School of Design; she joined the faculty in 2006 as a professor of urban planning and retired from teaching in 2012. She is also a visiting professor at the Lee Kuan Yew School of the National University of Singapore. Her book The Just City was published in 2010 by Cornell University Press. Among her other books are The City Builders: Property, Politics, and Planning in London and New York; Restructuring the City; and Urban Political Movements. She has co-edited volumes on urban tourism (The Tourist City and Cities and Visitors), planning theory (Readings in Planning Theory), urban theory (Readings in Urban Theory), and gender (Gender and Planning) and has authored over 100 book chapters and articles in scholarly journals. Her research interests include planning theory, urban theory, urban redevelopment, and comparative urban policy focusing on the United States, Europe, and East Asia. She received the Distinguished Educator Award of the American Association of Collegiate Schools of Planning (ACSP), which recognizes lifetime career achievement, the Davidoff Book Award of the ACSP, and has been a resident fellow at the Rockefeller Foundation Center for Scholars at Bellagio. Professor Fainstein has been a professor of planning in the Graduate School of Architecture, Planning and Preservation at Columbia University and of planning in the Bloustein School of Planning and Public Policy at Rutgers University. She has held the Wibaut Chair for Distinguished International Visitors at the University of Amsterdam and visiting appointments at the University of the Witwatersrand, SA, the University of London, Cleveland State University, New York University, Queens University (Canada), and the University of British Columbia. She has served on numerous editorial boards, was an editor of the International Journal of Urban and Regional Research and of Ethnic and Racial Studies, and has served as a consultant to various public organisations. Susan received her A.B. from Harvard University in government, her M.A. from Boston University in African Studies, and her Ph.D. in political science from MIT. Abstract: Resilience and Justice Recently resilience seems to have displaced sustainability as the term encapsulating the aim of planners. Its connotations are unobjectionable to either the left or the right: that planning for cities and regions requires building in the capacity to bounce back from adverse circumstances. According to the mandate for this conference, the purpose of developing resilience is “to sustain the urban and rural viability and improve the quality of life for their residents amidst the global economic and socio-political crisis and climate change.” The concept of resilience responds to the damage recently wrought by hurricanes and earthquakes, even while it is being stretched to encompass economic crisis and social misery. The question is whether, by using the term to cover so much, it obfuscates the trade-offs involved and the resulting distributions of costs and benefits. For example, efforts to achieve resilience to climate change through developing natural buffers against sea level rise can result in the displacement of populations. Who will be displaced and what measures will be taken to replace lost housing and community are crucial questions not captured by the term resilience. The issue then is whether by using this term we are, as with sustainability, seeking an innocuous label to justify controversial actions, or whether it can be used to mobilize a political force for achieving more just outcomes. Professor Michael Batty Emeritus Professor of Planning University College London Chairman, Centre for Advanced Spatial Analysis (CASA) Plenary session: Thursday, July 18, 2013, 09:45 - 11:15 Biography Professor Michael Batty is Chair of the Centre for Advanced Spatial Analysis (CASA) at University College London. His research involves the development of computer models of cities and regions, and he has published numerous books and articles in this area, such as Cities and Complexity (MIT Press, 2005), which received the Alonso Prize of the Regional Science Association, and The New Science of Cities (MIT Press, 2013, in press, www.complexcity.info). He is editor of the journal Environment and Planning B: Planning and Design. This year he received the Lauréat Prix International de Géographie Vautrin Lud (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lauréat_Prix_International_de_Géographie_Vautrin_Lud). He was made a Fellow of the British Academy in 2001, received the CBE award in the Queen’s Birthday Honours in 2004 and elected a Fellow of the Royal Society in 2009 for his contributions to the mathematical modelling of cities. Abstract: Smart Cities and Big Data: How We Can Make Cities More Resilient to Crises Quite suddenly, computers have become embedded into cities in a ways that are generating more efficient functioning, particularly in energy and transport systems. At the same time, sensors streaming data, are giving rise to entirely new forms and patterns in the data that enable us to watch how cities and their populations are responding in almost real time. This ‘big data’ is consistent with the notion that our cities are becoming smarter, or rather their populations are becoming smarter, and there is a prospect that in becoming so, cities will become more sustainable in diverse ways, and particularly more resilient to crises. There is a dark side to all of this too in that new data is also generating problems of privacy and confidentiality and there are important limits to how well information systems can be integrated with one another in enabling cities to function better. Our record on integrating such systems is not good. Nevertheless, the smart city is here to stay and this talk will present ongoing research in CASA and London, particularly focusing on the data that are available from our automated public transport system where 85 percent of the 4 or 5 million trips made each day in Greater London are captured in real time using the Oyster card system. What this data lets us do is trace crises on the transport system and opens new possibilities with respect to ways in which we might respond to these kinds of events. Additional topics and work to be demonstrated involves an exploration on how diseases are transmitted, the impact that public bikes systems are having on how we switch modes of transport, and various other ways in which we can move around the city using entirely automated data systems that are now available to us, even including data from social media. This vision of the smart city is also shifting our focus away from the long term to the immediate, the very short term, and this is likely to affect our quest to understand the city, plan it better, and to refocus our efforts on generating an effective knowledge base for urban planning. Professor Peter Clinch Jean Monnet Professor of Economic Integration / Environmental and Public Policy, Vice-President for Innovation, University College Dublin Plenary session: Friday, July 19, 2013, 11:45 - 13:15 Biography Professor Peter Clinch is currently Vice President of University College Dublin (UCD) with responsibility for Innovation. He also holds the Jean Monnet Professorship of European Economic Integration as well as being UCD Professor of Public Policy. Between 2008 and 2011, Peter served as Special Policy Adviser to the Irish Prime Minister (Taoiseach) based at Government Buildings. During this time, he was responsible for advising on medium-term economic policy, enterprise and environmental policy. In addition to serving, inter alia, Cabinet Committees on Economic Renewal, Climate Change and Energy Security, and Science, Technology and Innovation, he participated in bilaterals between the Prime Minister and Ministers and was a member of Irish Government delegations to the European Council, the UN General Assembly, Davos World Economic Forum, Asia-Europe Meetings, a series of overseas trade missions, as well as the Prime Ministerial delegations to meet Heads of States, including US President Obama and Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao. Peter continues to provide advice to government including, inter alia, membership of the Innovation Fund Ireland advisory board to the Prime Minister and Membership of the Government’s National Competitiveness Council. Abstract: The Spatial Implications of the European Debt Crisis and Related Policy Responses This recent global economic and financial crisis, the subsequent European debt crisis and the related policy responses of governments and European institutions, have had dramatic economic and social implications. This keynote address considers the spatial implications of these impacts. A range of economic indicators are examined. Comparisons are drawn with major historical events with significant economic consequences to assess the relative impact of the recent financial crisis. Finally, the spatial economic implications of proposed policy solutions, including the introduction of a pan-European fiscal mechanism, are explored. Mr. Jan Olbrycht (Invited) Member of the European Parliament for the Silesian Voivodeship Vice-chair of the European Parliament's Committee on Regional Development Member of European People's Party -- Civic Platform Plenary session: Friday, July 19, 2013, 11:45 - 13:15 Congress Committees Joint Congress Committee Kristina L Nilsson, AESOP Past-President, Co-chair Department of Civil, Environmental and Natural Resources Engineering Lulea University of Technology, Sweden [email protected] Charles Connerly, ACSP President, Co-chair School of Urban and Regional Planning, University of Iowa University of Iowa, USA [email protected] Simin Davoudi, ACSP-AESOP 2008 Co-chair School of Architecture, Planning and Landscape Newcastle University, UK [email protected] Gert de Roo, AESOP President, Co-Chair Department of Urban & Regional Planning, Faculty of Spatial Sciences University of Groningen, The Netherlands [email protected] Zenia Kotval, School of Planning Design and Construction Michigan State University [email protected] Zorica Nedovic-Budic, Chair, Local Organising Committee School of Geography, Planning & Environmental Policy University College Dublin [email protected] Gerhard Schimak, AESOP Conferences Officer Faculty of Planning and Architecture Vienna University of Technology, Austria [email protected] Pantoleon Skayannis, AESOP Past Conferences Officer Department of Planning and Regional Development, Faculty of Engineering University of Thessaly, Greece [email protected] June M. Thomas, ACSP Vice President Urban and Regional Planning Program University of Michigan, USA [email protected] Stacey Swearingen White, ACSP Conference Chair Graduate Program in Urban Planning University of Kansas, USA [email protected] Local Organizing Committee Zorica Nedovic-Budic, Chair, UCD [email protected] http://www.ucd.ie/gpep/staff/professorzoricanedovic-budic/ Declan Redmond, Co-chair, UCD [email protected] http://www.ucd.ie/gpep/staff/drdeclanredmond/ Mark Scott, Co-chair, UCD [email protected] http://www.ucd.ie/gpep/staff/drmarkscott/ Richard Waldron, PhD student representative, UCD [email protected] http://www.ucd.ie/gpep/staff/mrrichardwaldron/ Dick Gleeson, Dublin City Planner [email protected] http://www.academyofurbanism.org.uk/who/directors/gleeson.html http://www.dublincity.ie/Pages/Welcome/MainPage.html Linda Fox Rogers, PhD student representative, UCD [email protected] http://www.ucd.ie/gpep/staff/mrslindafox-rogers/ Congress Secretariat Susan Nolan Odyssey Convention Ireland E: [email protected] T: + 353 1 4974866 Mai Olden Odyssey Convention Ireland E: [email protected] T: + 353 1 4974866 Héléna Benessis Odyssey Convention Ireland E : [email protected] T: + 353 1 4974866 Claire McDermott Odyssey Convention Ireland E : [email protected] T: + 353 1 4974866 General Schedule Assemblies and Meetings Sunday, July 14 (full day) Monday, July 15, 11:00-13:00 Monday, July 15, 17:45-19:00 Tuesday, July 16, 8:00-9:30 Tuesday, July 16, 9:45-11:15 Tuesday July 16, 14:15-15:45 Tuesday July 16, 16:15-17:45 Tuesday July 16, 18:00-19:30 Tuesday July 16, 18:00-19:30 Wednesday July 17, 9:45-11:15 Wednesday July 17, 11:45-13:15 Wednesday July 17, 14:00-18:00 Thursday July 18, 8:00-9:30 Thursday July 18, 11:45-13:15 Thursday July 18, 11:45-13:15 Thursday July 18, 11:45-13:15 Thursday July 18, 14:15-15:30 Thursday July 18, 14:15-15:30 Thursday July 18, 16:30-18:00 Thursday July 18, 18:15-19:30 Thursday July 18, 18:15-19:30 AESOP Executive Committee AESOP Council of Country Representatives Forum: Journal Editors ACSP Review and Appraisal Committee Editorial Board: Planning Theory Editorial Board: Urban Design and Planning Editorial Board: European Planning Studies Editorial Board: Economic Policy Reform Forum: AESOP Young Academics Network ACSP Faculty Women Interest Group (FWIG) Editorial Board: Dialogues in Planning ACSP Planning Technology Group Editorial Board: Planning Theory & Practice Editorial Board: Town Planning Review Special Session: European Research Council Congress Committees and Track Co-chairs ACSP General Assembly AESOP General Assembly Forum: Publishers Editorial Board: Journal of Planning Education and Research AESOP YAN General Assembly Ardmore House, UCD A003 Health Sciences Building C004 Health Sciences Building B109/110 Health Sciences Building B109/110 Health Sciences Building B109/110 Health Sciences Building B109/110 Health Sciences Building B109/110 Health Sciences Building Th116 Veterinary Medicine Building B109/110 Health Sciences Building B109/110 Health Sciences Building A003 Health Sciences Building B109/110 Health Sciences Building B109/110 Health Sciences Building Th116 Veterinary Medicine Building A006 Health Sciences Building B004 Health Sciences Building B005 Health Sciences Building Th116 Veterinary Medicine Building B109/110 Health Sciences Building C004 Health Sciences Building AESOP Thematic Groups (Room: C115 Health Sciences Building) Tuesday, July 16, 8:00-9:30 Tuesday, July 16, 9:45-11:15 Tuesday, July 16, 11:45-13:15 Tuesday July 16, 14:15-15:45 Tuesday July 16, 16:15-17:45 Tuesday July 16, 18:00-19:30 Wednesday July 17, 8:00-9:30 Wednesday July 17, 9:45-11:15 Wednesday July 17, 11:45-13:15 Thursday July 18, 8:00-9:30 Thursday July 18, 11:45-13:15 Thursday July 18, 16:30-18:00 Thursday July 18, 18:15-19:30 Friday July 19, 8:00-9:30 TG1: Planning and Complexity TG2: New Technologies and Planning TG3: Planning, Law and Property Rights TG4: Transnational and Cross-border Planning TG5: Urban Design in Planning TG6: Transportation Planning and Policy TG7: Research Ethics in Planning TG8: Resilience and Risks Mitigation Strategies TG9: French and British Planning Studies TG10: Evaluation in Planning TG11: Monitoring of the European Landscape Convention TG12: Sustainable Food Planning TG13: Urban Cultures and Public Spaces TG14: Planning / Conflict Congress Tracks & Co-Chairs Co-Chairs Congress Tracks AESOP ACSP Heather Campbell Niraj Verma University of Sheffield, UK Virginia Commonwealth Univ. Mervi Ilmonen Stacy Harwood Aalto University, Finland Univ. of Illinois, Urbana-Champ. Stefan Greiving Caitlin Dyckman Technical Univ. Dortmund, Germany Clemson University Natasa Pichler-Milanovic Katrin Anacker University of Ljubljana, Slovenia George Mason University Ela Babalik Sutcliffe Kelly Clifton Middle East Technical Univ., Turkey Portland State University Lia Vasconcelos Sanda Kaufman Univer. Nova de Lisboa, Portugal Cleveland State University Kostantinos Lalenis Carolyn Loh University of Thessaly, Greece Wayne State University Anna Geppert Charlie Hoch Sorbonne, France University of Illinois Chicago 9. Design and History of the Urban Environment Zeynep Enlil Jason Brody Yildiz Technical University, Turkey Kansas State University 10. International Planning, Cross-border and Inter-regional Cooperation Andreas Faludi Neema Kudva TU Delft, The Netherlands Cornell University 11. Spatial and Planning Analysis Methods in a Digital World Michele Campagna Jeff Brown University of Cagliari, Sardinia, Italy Florida State University 12. Planning for Urban Regions in Transition, Growth and Shrinkage Maros Finka David Lewis Bratislava University, Slovakia University at Albany 13. Urban and Regional Economic Planning under Prosperity and Austerity Micheal Getzner Elizabeth Currid-Halkett TU Vienna, Austria University of Southern California 1. Advances in Planning Theory and Practice 2. Planning for Gender, Diversity, and Justice 3. Environment, Energy and Climate Change 4. Housing, Regeneration and Community Development in Time of Crisis 5. Transport and Infrastructure Planning 6. Governance, Institutions and Civic Initiatives 7. Land Use Policy and Planning 8. Innovation in Planning Education Jason Corburn University of California, Berkeley 14. Planning for Risks - Health, Safety and Security Tim Townshend Andre Sorensen University of Newcastle, UK University of Toronto 15. Planning Law, Regulation and Dispute Resolution Rachelle Alterman Richard (Dick) Norton Technion, Israel University of Michigan Karen Foley Mark Lapping University College Dublin University of Southern Maine 16. Rural and Landscape Planning Sessions and Panels by Track TRACK 1 : Advances in Planning Theory and Practice SESSION 1-1 Moderator Mon July 15th 16:00 – 17:30 Room: Th114 Paradigms of Planning Research Heather Campbell -- University of Sheffield, UK SESSION 1-2 Moderator Tues July 16th 08:00 - 09:30 Room: Th114 Innovations and Government SESSION 1-3 Moderator Tues July 16th 09:45 -11:15 Room: Th114 From Theory to Practice SESSION 1-4 Moderator Social Justice in Planning Addressing Dilemmas of Planning Innovation: Perspectivism, Contextualization and Tailored Investments Federico Savini – University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands, Willem Salet – University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands The problem of case studies and philosophy in planning research: a call for a new way of research Malcolm Tait – University of Sheffield, UK, Kiera Chapman –UK Planning in Absence: on knowledge, data, process and muddling through Neema Kudva – Cornell University, US TBD ‘Un-traded Interdependencies’ as a Useful Theory of Regional Economic Development: a comparative study of innovation in Dublin and Beijing John Powers – Columbia University, US Shared spatial strategies: Reflections on collaborative planning approaches from the experience of the CODE 24 initiative. Ilaria Tosoni – ETH Zurich, Switzerland Technical rationality and decision-making rationality: elastic urban planning under the condition of China’s market economy Min Zhou – Huazhong University of Science and Technology, China, Kaixuan Lin – Jiangsu Institute of Urban Planning and Design, China, Yaping Huang – Huazhong University of Sciences and Technology, China Urban planning, management and power in the face of crisis Thijs Koolmees – University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands, Stan Majoor – Amsterdam Institute of Social Science Research, The Netherlands, Willem Salet – Amsterdam Institute of Social Science Research, The Netherlands The resurgence of ‘government’: recent spatial policy initiatives and the new legitimacy crisis Peter Brand – Universidad Nacional de Colombia, Colombia, Paul Watson – UK Planning Officers Society, UK TBD Contingencies for Insurgent Planning Practices Pranita Shrestha – Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Norway, Rolee Aranya – Norwegian University of Science and Technology. Norway The relationship between theory and practice in urban planning: reflections on a Brazilian experience Geraldo Costa – Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais, Brazil/ANPUR Understanding planning practice: From theories of planning to practice theory Juliana Zanotto – University of California, US Utopia, Scenario & Plan: A Pragmatic Integration Charles Hoch – University of Illinois at Chicago US Articulating ‘public interest’ through Complexity theory Angelique Chettiparamb – University of Reading, UK TBD Tues July 16th 11:45 - 13:15 Room: Th114 Planning theory and practice: Perspectives on the effects of mixing housing types on social interaction in the suburbs Jill Grant – Dalhousie University When does unequal become unfair? Judging claims of environmental injustice Simin Davoudi – Newcastle University, UK, Elizabeth Brooks – Newcastle University, UK Social Justice in Distressed Post-industrial Cities June Thomas – University of Michigan, US Articulating ‘public interest’ through Complexity theory Angelique Chettiparamb – University of Reading, UK How Can We Realize Just Cities? The Revisionist Debate in Contemporary Planning Cuz Potter – Korea University, Korea Urban Self-Determination: Conceptualizing Urban Rights in Contemporary Capitalism Yosef Jabareen – Technion, Israel Institute of Technology, Israel SESSION 1-5 Moderator Tues July 16th 14:15 - 15:45 Room: Th114 Sustainability and the Environment SESSION 1-6 Moderator Tues July 16th 16:15 - 17:45 Room: Th114 Collaboration and Regulation in Planning SESSION 1-7 Moderator Tues July 16th 18:00 - 19:30 Room: Th114 Hegemony of Theory in Planning? TBD Shifting Peripheries: Coastal Overdevelopment from Spain to Bulgaria Max Holleran – New York University, US Towards more environmentally sustainable urban development: How to learn from ecodistricts? Roelef Verhage – Institute d’urbansim de Lyon, France A post structural, radical theory-based critique of food systems planning in the northwestern U.S. Megan Horst – University of Washington, US Facilitating urban multispecies conviviality: towards a more-than-human planning sensibility for the Anthropocene Johnathan Metzger – KTH Royal Institute of Technology, Sweden Developing a Conceptual Framework for the Study of Low Carbon Policy at the City Level Alexander Nurse – University of Liverpool, UK Peter North – University of Liverpool, UK TBD The Use and Misuse of Collaborative Planning in China: from Theory to Practice Kang Cao – Zheijang University, China, Jin Zhu – Tongji University, China, Ling Zheng – Zheijang University The Assemblage Turn in Planning Theory – exploring the role of plans and regulation in planning practice Yvonne Rydin – Exeter University, UK, Simon Guy, P. Devine-Wright, B. Wiersma Replacing Truth with Social Hope and Progress with Re-description: Can the Pragmatist Philosophy of Richard Rorty Help Reinvigorate Planning? Thomas Lester – University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, US Exploring the Theory on the Limits of Collaboration Richard Margerum – University of Oregon, US legal pluralism framework to contribute to the development of collaborative and regional planning theory and its application to transboundary governance Sandra Pinel – University of Idaho, US TBD Planning Practice in Informal Settlements as a (counter) Hegemonic Planning Thomas Elham Bahman Teymouri- University of Auckland, New Zealand, Mohsen Mohammadzadeh – University of Auckland, New Zealand Is neo-liberalism a hegemonic influence on planning? Tore Sager – Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Norway Perpetual Neo Liberal planning in Tel Aviv-Jaffa Talia Margalit – Tel Aviv University, Israel, Nurit Alfasi – Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, Israel Conundrums in Communicative Planning: Toward More Robust Theory and More Effective Practice Judith Innes – California State University Sacramento, US Planning activism vs neoliberal policies: challenges for planning theory and practice Elena Maranghi – Universita degli Studi di Roma La Sapienza, Italy SESSION 1-8 Moderator Wed July 17th 08:00 – 09:30 Room: Th114 Planning for Resilience SESSION 1-9 Moderator Wed July 17th 09:45 – 11:15 Room: Th114 Local Initiatives SESSION 1-10 Moderator Wed July 17th 11:45 – 13:15 Room: Th114 Democracy and the Public Interest in Planning SESSION 1-11 Decision Making and Infrastructure TBD Towards Contemporary Resilient Settlement Planning: Some Reflections on the 'Nature of Plan' from the Perspective of the Post-Colonial African ‘Edge’ Fabio Todeschini – University of Capetown, South Africa The information imperative: exploring information’s role in urban and community resilience Kari Smith – University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, US Resilient Urban Planning: Building Resilient Cities Zhiduan Chen, Hong Chen – Tongji University, China Contributions and Limitations of a Resilience Thinking Perspective in Planning Theory and Practice Melih Gürçay – Middle East Technical University, Turkey Creative Destruction, Globalization and Urban Resilience Failure: A Political Economy of Resilience Pierre Filion – University of Waterloo, Canada TBD An Integrative Spatial Capital-Based Model for Strategic Local Planning Amnon Frenkel – Technion, Israel, Idan Porat – Technion, Israel Translating theory to practice: alternative planning for 'unrecognized' Bedouins villages in Israel/Palestine Oren Yiftachel – Ben Gurion University of the Negev, Israel The Migration-Development Nexus Revisited: Dominican Hometown Associations and Transnational Transformations Deepak Lamba-Nieves – MIT, US Evaluation of the Effect of Strategic Housing Planning Judith Bornhorst – Academy for spatial Research of Planning, Germany Navigating the Path from Planning Paradigm to Plan Implementation: The Case of a New Bedouin Locality in Israel Abra Berkowitz – Ben Gurion University, Israel, Sarab Abu-Rabia-Queder – Ben Gurion University, Israel, Daniel E. Orenstein – Ben Gurion University, Israel TBD Harnessing Public Participation through Community Mapping: Challenges in Using Local Knowledge to Inform Sustainable Development Decision-Making Meghan Gough – Virginia Commonwealth University, US Dis-placing Rights: The politics of rights in an age of urban colonialism Libby Porter – Monash University, Australia In search of radical democracy: On planning’s current crisis and its undecidable terrain Kristina Grange – KTH Royal Institute of Technology, Sweden Changing Interpretations of Public Interest in Finland Sari Puustinen – Aalto University, Finland Challenges of Street Level Democratizing: Dutch Cases John Forester – Cornell University, US Moderator Thurs July 18th 08:00 – 09:30 Room: Th114 TBD Towards a “post-utilitarian” approach to mega transport infrastructure planning Sandro Fabbro – University of Udine, Italy Planning Policy Ideas in Transit Dorina Pojani – Delft University of Technology, The Netherlands, Dominic Stead – Delft University of Technology, The Netherlands Understanding flood management from a cultural perspective: Impacts on policy-making and implementation in urbanised delta regions Suwanna Rongwiriyaphanich – TU Delft, The Netherlands A Framework of Three Parallel Planning Process for Spatial and Infrastructure Plan Tetsuo Yai – Tokyo Institute of Technology, Japan Empowerment, Transformation, and Resilience: Applying Local Knowledge for Disaster Community Planning Yanjun Cai – University of Hawaii at Manoa, US SESSION 1-12 Moderator Thurs July 18th 11:45 – 13:15 Room: Th114 Alternate Viewpoints SESSION 1-13 Moderator Thurs July 18th 16:30 – 18:00 Room: Th114 Planning and Social Change SESSION 1-14 Moderator Fri July 19th 08:00 – 09:30 Room: Th114 Planning: Negotiating Modernism and Postmodernism TBD On the Fundamental Nature of Urban Planning and Design and the Conditions that Shape it into the 21st Century Michael Neuman – University of New South Wales, Australia An integrated planning, learning and innovation system in public sector Roar Amdam – Volda University College, Norway The Production of Landscape of Exception in High Conflict Zones Francesco Lo Piccolo – University of Palermo, Italy, Abdelrahman Halawani – University of Palermo, Italy Planning Theory from the South: Learning from Luanda and African Urbanism Ricardo Cardoso – UC Berkeley, US The False Dichotomy between Urban Planning and Design in Theory and in Practice Davide Ponzini – Politecnico di Milano, Italy TBD Lost, oblivious… and/or just ‘liking’ it? Living with planning and being a planner in a time and space of contestation and challenge: A comparative study of the perceptions and experiences of young planners in Turkey and South Africa Tuna Tasan-Kok – Delft University of Technology, The Netherlands, Mark Oranje – University of Pretoria, South Africa From a planning doctrine towards development strategy approach in the case of Bosnia and Herzegovina Aleksandra Djurasovic – HafenCity University, Hamburg, Germany Forbidden Fruit? The Expert Planner: A post-postmodernist take on planners in spatial planning and development control Ernest Alexander – University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, US Can planning improve social capital? An exercise in evidence-based theory Tamy Stav – Radboud University Nijmegen, Holland, Carlijn Buts – Radboud University Nijmegen, Holland Ordinary citizens and the political cultures of planning: in search of the subject of a new democratic ethos Andy Inch – University of Sheffield, UK TBD What Constitutes the Authority of Planning Expertise? Belief in the Ones Who [we think] Must Know Michael Gunder – University of Auckland, US Bounded Recognition: Urban planning and the textual mediation of Indigenous rights in Canada and Australia Janice Barry – University of Sheffield, UK, Libby Porter – Monash University, Australia What we talk about when we talk about planning Huw Thomas – Cardiff University, UK, Francesca Sartorio – Cardiff University, UK, Neil Harris – Cardiff University, UK Between religious beliefs and modernist drive for development. An exploration of various moral, ethical and normative views of planning Willem Buunk – Windesheim University of Applied Sciences, Netherlands, Marloes van der Weide – Windesheim University of Applied Sciences, Netherlands Convivial places and Intercultural placemaking Vera Zambonelli – University of Hawaii at Manoa, US SESSION 1-15 Moderator Fri July 19th 09:45 – 11:15 Room: Th114 Social Action and Planning SESSION 1-16 Moderator Mon July 15th 16:00 – 17:30 Room: Th116 From Resilience to Temporariness, and Back Again Niraj Verma -- Virginia Commonwealth University, US SESSION 1-17 Moderator Tues July 16th 08:00 – 09:30 Room: Th116 Sustainable Futures TBD Gentrification versus Governance Theory in Residential Relocation Practice Orna Rosenfeld – University of Westminster, UK Budding Rhizomes: Planning, Deleuze & Guattari and the Food Movement Branden Born – University of Washington, US, Mark Purcell – University of Washington, US The Dark Side of the Urban Plan: Learning from Skopje Leonora Grcheva – IUAV Venice School of Architecture, Italy Engendering Publics: Lefebvre’s Right to the City as Critical Assemblage Urbanism Nicole Foster – University of Texas at Arlington, US Temporary urbanism and public space Elissa Rosenberg – Technion, Israel Resilient planning strategies: a dilemma oriented planning approach Stan Majoor – University of Amsterdam, Netherlands Problematizing Resilience: Implications for Planning Theory and Practice Barbara Pizzo – Sapienza Universita di Roma, Italy Temporary interventions and long term trends Ali Madanipour – Newcastle University, UK Improving Urban Resilience through Design-based Collaborative Innovation Anne Tietjen – University of Copenhagen, Denmark, Karina Sehested – University of Copenhagen, Denmark TBD Planning competition as a tool to sustainable communities: case Sibbesborg Tiina Merikoski – Aalto University, Finland , Sirkku Huisko – Uusimaa Regional Council, Finland Cyber-activism in the struggle for more sustainable cities – a resource for urban social resilience? Edinéa Alcântara – Federal University of Pernambuco, Brazil, Fatima Furtado – Federal University of Pernambuco, Brazil , Alice Lancellotti – Federal University of Pernambuco, Brazil Sustainability in a Post-Utopian Era: A Critical Evaluation of Songdo, Masdar and Treasure Island Greg Morrow – UCLA, US Writing the Future Perfect/Planning the Imperfect Future: Visions of Progress, Risk, SelfOrganization and Sustainability Scott Campbell – University of Michigan, US Bridging Community Futures and Individual Interests Amid Diversity and Division Dowell Myers – University of Southern California, US SESSION 1-18 Moderator Tues July 16th 09:45 – 11:15 Room: Th116 Emotions and Nuances in Planning SESSION 1-19 Moderator Tues July 16th 11:45 – 13:15 Room: Th116 Pragmatic Redevelopment SESSION 1-20 Moderator Wed July 17th 08:00 – 09:30 Room: Th116 Transnational Perspectives on Connecting Research and Practice in Planning SESSION 1-21 Moderator Wed July 17th 09:45 – 11:15 Room: Th116 Politics of Planning TBD Thinking through affective atmospheres in planning theory and practice Michael Buser – University of the West of England, UK Traveling planning ideas as myths Laura Lieto – Federico II University, Italy The elephant in the room called "Emotions". Emotions and Reasoning in Design Juergen Utz – University of Stuttgart, Germany Plans, words and their meanings MaartenJan Hoekstra – Delft University of Technology, Netherlands Self-perceptions of the role of the planner Linda Fox-Rogers, Enda Murphy – University College Dublin, Ireland TBD Developing the Pragmatic Sociology of Critique to Understand the Outcomes of Urban Redevelopment Meg Holden - Simon Fraser University, Canada, Andy Scerri – RMIT University, Australia Is a Focus on Resilience Side-stepping the Important Question of Planning within Limits? Insights from Complexity Theory Jennie Moore – British Colombia Institute of Technology, Canada Between productions and profanations: the space among formal/informal city. A view from the South. Margherita Loddoni – Sapienza Universita di Roma, Italy Perceptions of the common good in planning Enda Murphy – UCD, Ireland, Linda Fox-Rogers – UCD, Ireland Local planning practices, boundary objects and trading zones: dealing with real-life politics and antagonisms in Kruununhaka, Finland Vesa Kanninen – Aalto University, Finland , Pia Bäcklund – University of Tampere, Finland TBD Ethnography's Role between Knowledge and Action: Lessons from China Nick Smith – Harvard University, US It Takes More than Knowledge to Make a Difference: Reflections from the UK Heather Campbell – University of Sheffield, UK, Robert Upton – Planning Inspectorate, UK Re-theorizing South Asian Urbanism: Learning from India’s Great Urban Transition…Outside Cities Sai Balakrishnan – Harvard University, US Planning and the creation of collective political actors. Comparing Engaged research in the US and European ‘South’ Laura Saija – University of Catania, Italy TBD Here and Now: Prefigurative Politics and Autonomous Temporalities in Occupation Movements Silvano De la Llata – Cornell University, US The Resilience of Liberal Democratic Institutions in Multicultural Societies Tom Harper – University of Calgary, Canada, S.M. Stein – University of Calgary, Canada Planning Desire: Participatory Planning, Governmentality, and Construction of the Planning Subject Robert Lake – Rutgers University, US Inequality in a classless society? Reflections on the relationship between national identity and policy frames Emma Fergusson – University of Auckland, New Zealand Would a Non-Sexist City Be Enough? Womanism, Feminism and Visions of Urban Development Annalise Fonza – Independent researcher, US SESSION 1-22 Moderator Wed July 17th 11:45 – 13:15 Room: Th116 New Urbanism, Resilience, and Urban Governance SESSION 1-23 Moderator Thurs July 18th 08:00 – 09:30 Room: Th116 Intricacies in Spatial Planning SESSION 1-24 Plans and Coalitions: Challenging the Hegemony of Collaborative, Communicative, and Critical in Planning Theory Moderator Fri July 19th 08:00 – 09:30 Room: Th116 TBD A Social Ontology Adequate to the World We Plan in Kieran Donaghy – Cornell University, US Plan Led Ad Hoc Coalitions over Time with Multiple Decisions Lewis Hopkins – University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, US, Gerrit Knaap – University of Maryland, US Patrick Geddes and neotechnic urban (r)evolution Robert Young – University of Texas at Austin, US Plans and Non-plans: The uses of planning Nikhil Kaza – University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, US, Philip Berke – University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, US PANEL 1-1 Moderator Mon July 15th 17:45 – 19:00 Room: Th114 Where is the Public Interest in Public Participation? Malcolm Tait – University of Sheffield, UK PANEL 1-2 The Role of Planners in Coping with the Number One Global Risk – Severe Income Disparity -- Welcoming a New Book Naomi Carmon – Technion, Israel Moderator Thurs July 18th 18:15-19:00 TBD Resilience of urban systems Francisco Lourido – University of Porto, Portugal Urban Governmentality and Public Governance: Reviewing the practice of planning in Sao Paulo Nilton Torres – University of Sao Paulo, Brazil The Urban Process, The Monetary Circuit, and Land Marshall Feldman – University of Rhode Island, US A Qualitative Case Study of New Urbanism and Normative Values Joan Blanton – Jackson State University, US TBD Governmentality matters in spatial planning practices Marcel Pleijte – Alterra, Wageningen University and Research Centre Netherlands Knowledge into persuasive story telling? Research and knowledge in spatial planning Wim de Haas – Wageningen University and Research Centre, Netherlands Actors and methodologies for implementing spatial qualities in Luchtbal Antwerpen Pieter Van den Broeck – KU Leuven, Belgium, Els Vervloesem – KU Leuven, Belgium Spatial Quality and its Metabolisms Jan E. A. Schreurs – KU Leuven, Belgium, Frank Moulaert – KU Leuven, Belgium, Marleen Goethals – KU Leuven, Belgium Crisis, planning, and regional policies: the territory as a chance Camilla Perrone – University of Florence, Italy, Giancarlo Paba – University of Florence, Italy Lucie Laurian – University of Sheffield, UK, Chris Maidment – University of Sheffield, UK, Hanna Matilla – Aalto University, Finland, Lucy Natarajan – UCL, UK, Mark Purcell – University of Washington, US, Sanjeev Vidharthi – University of Illinois Chicago, US, Charles Hoch – University of Illinois Chicago, US Susan S. Fainstein – Harvard University, US / National University Singapore, Bish Sanyal – MIT, US, Heather Campbell – University of Sheffield, UK Room: Th114 PANEL 1-3 Moderator Mon July 15th 17:45 – 19:00 Room: Th116 PANEL 1-4 Moderator Thurs July 18th 18:15 – 19:30 Room: Th116 PANEL 1-5 Moderator Fri July 19th 09:45 – 11:15 Room: Th116 Reflective Practice: Lessons from Planning the Planning School Heather Campbell Reflective Practice: Lessons from Planning the Planning School Heather Campbell – University of Sheffield, UK, Niraj Verma – Virginia Commonwealth, US Writing the Future II – Making Knowledge that Matters Heather Campbell Heather Campbell – University of Sheffield, UK, Luca Bertolini – University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands What Future for Planning Theory? Niraj Verma -- Virginia Commonwealth, US Heather Campbell – University of Sheffield, UK TRACK 2: GENDER, DIVERSITY AND JUSTICE SESSION 2-1 Moderator Inclusive Planning Processes in Diverse Communities Mervi Ilmonen -- Aalto University, Finland / Stacy Harwood -- University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, US Mon July 15th 16:00 – 17:30 Room: A006 Urban Planning and Immigrant Communities in the United States: A Call to Action Ryan Allen – University of Minnesota, Community Planning, Social Diversity and the New Metropolis Barry Checkoway – University of Michigan Prospects for Community Coalition Strategies: The Case of Cleveland, Ohio Mittie Jones- Cleveland State University Young people and the eternal search for urban social order: the rise of the “gangs” in British cities Danielle Leahy Laughlin, Jean Grugel, Jess McEwen – University of Sheffield, UK Indigenous Plans: Merely Inclusion or Genuine Influence? Michelle Thompson–Fawcett, Jacinta Ruru – University of Otago, New Zealand SESSION 2-2 Moderator Tues July 16th 08:00 – 09:30 Room: A006 Challenges in Environmental Justice TBD SESSION 2-3 Moderator Tues July 16th 09:45 – 11:15 Room: A006 Creating a Just City in Post – Colonial and Neoliberal Era TBD Neighbourhood greenings as double-edged sword: Emerging environmental justice challenges of displacement and resistance in urban environment Isabelle Anguelovski - Universitat Autonoma de Barcelona, Spain Brownfield Remediation and Urban Sustainability: Contrasting Environmental Justice and Local Development Approaches Tarry Hum – Queen’s College, CUNY, US Evaluating Environmental Justice in Planning – Two Approaches and Their Application Donald Miller – University of Washington, US Access to parks in Portland, Oregon, USA: A case of environmental racism? Jeremy Nemeth, Geneva Faulkner – University of Colorado Denver, US Social Justice within the Real World of Urban Redevelopment under a Strong State: Case study of the Cheong – Gye – Cheon Restoration Project, Seoul, South Korea Taehee Lee – University of Sheffield, UK Planning for Justice: A Capability Approach Claudia Basta - Wageningen University, The Netherlands By invitation only: Uses and Users of the “Entrepreneurial City” Ana Mafalda Madureira- Circle-Lund Univeristy, Guy Baeten – Lund University, Sweden Promoting Hiring Diversity in the Construction Industry: A Los Angeles Case Study Jovanna Rosen – University of Southern California Through a Post- Colonial Lens in Vancouver’s Urban Aboriginal Village Silvia Vilches – Simon Fraser University, Canada SESSION 2-4 Moderator Tues July 16th 11:45 – 13:15 Room: A006 Improving Environmental Accessibility TBD SESSION 2-5 Moderator Tues July 16th 14:15 – 15:45 Room: A006 Negotiating Identity and Citizenship in Public Space TBD SESSION 2-6 Planning for Social Interaction and Integration in Diverse Communities: Does it work? TBD Moderator Tues July 16th 16:15 - 17:45 Room: A006 SESSION 2-7 Moderator Exploring Children and Youth’s Accessibility to Urban Green Spaces: A GIS Study Measuring Access Opportunities for Formal and Informal Play Alessandro Rigolon, Travis Flohr – University of Colorado, Denver The Corner Store : Preserving and Reforming the Local Market Brettany Shannon, David Sloane – University of Southern California, US Outdoor Play and Neighbourhood Environments among White versus Hispanic Children Jeongjae Yoon – Texas A&M University Chanam Lee – Texas A&M University Equity and Justice in the Complete Streets Narrative: Analysis of Bicycle Advocacy and Planning in the US Stephen Zavestoski – University of San Francisco, Julian Agyeman – TUFTS University, The United States The Arab Spring and the Absence of Civic Public Space Yamen Badr – University of Nottingham, Yan Zhu – University of Nottingham, Tim Heath – University of Nottingham Urban policies, diversity and public space: A view from Beirut Mona Harb- American University of Beirut Looking back, moving forward: The importance of public parks in the negotiation of immigrant identity Kelly Main – California Polytechnic State University Spaces of contestation: socio-spatial exclusion and the emerging spaces of urban citizenship among street traders in Kisumu, Kenya Emmanuel Midheme – University of Leuven, Belgium “Segregation and Surveillance”: Invisible citizens in social construction of space Zohreh Soltani – Middle East Technical University, Turkey Are neighbourhoods and people more “resilient” than planning policies? Reflections starting from the analysis of a multi – ethnic area in Padua Paolo Briata – Bartlett School of Planning, UCL Relevance and potentials of inter-religious activities for urban inclusion and cohesion Ariana Furst – TU Dortmund University, Tobias Meier - Ruhr-Universität Bochum Linkage between Social – Cultural Interactions of International Student and Public Spaces in Trondheim Savis Gohari – Norwegian University of Science and Technology Measuring shared space: the use of indicators for planning to enhance social sustainability in the city Gavan Rafferty – University of Ulster, Lousie McNeill – Community Places Interculturalism, super – diversity and urban dwelling space Orna Rosenfeld – University of Westminster, Judith Allen – University of Westminster Policy Making in Multicultural Communities TBD Wed July 17th 08:00 – 09:30 Room: A006 Welcoming Communities Initiatives: A test in Toronto’s Thorncliff Park Sandeep Agrawal – Ryerson University, Canada Neighbourhood Ethnicity and Socio-Economic Status on Residential Preferences Formation in Estonia Daniel Hess – University at Buffalo Emergent Immigrant Civil Societies in the US Midwest Sang Lee - University of Illinois Urbana Champaign Mainstreaming the Asian Mall: The Regulation of Minority Space in Silicon Valley Suburbia Willow Lung-Amam – University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Urban Fear and the Institutional Planning Paradigms. Differences and the Rhetoric on Crime in Two Public Housing Neighbourhoods. Simone Tulumello – University of Lisbon, Institute of Social Science SESSION 2-8 Moderator Wed July 17th 09:45 – 11:15 Room: A006 Representation and Conflict in Urban Spaces TBD SESSION 2-9 Moderator Wed July 17th 11:45 – 13:15 Room: A006 Advancing Research and Practice in Gender Planning in Europe and Beyond TBD (organiser) SESSION 2-10 Moderator Fri July 19th 08:00 – 09:30 Room: A006 Home Spaces TBD (organiser) The Right to the City: Discourses on Recognition in Conflictive Spaces: Urban Planning Contexts Tovi Fenster – Tel Aviv University, Israel The Changing Landscape of Latino Consumption in America: New Urbanist and Creative City Downtown Revitalization Erualdo Gonzalez – California State University, Fullerton, Johanna Londono – University of Albany, US The Crisis of Planning for Imagined Communities Raul Lejano – Hong Kong University, Erualdo Gonzalez – California State University, Fullerton, US Cultural Associations/ Intangible heritage: an actor in urban regeneration Maria da Garcia Moreira- Technical University of Lisbon, Portugal Transnational Identity Politics in Heritage Practices – the case of Nablus Feras Hammami – University of Gothenberg, Sweden Planning for Fair-Shared Cities Doris Damyanovic – Institute of landscape Planning, Department of Landscape, Spatial and Infrastructure Science, BOKU Vienna, Angela Weikmann, Institute of Landscape Planning, Vienna, Eva Kail – Chief Executive Office, City of Vienna 15 years after: gender mainstreaming and regional development in Austria Petra Hirschler – Vienna University of Technology Gender Sensitive Planning in the UK: a cause for celebration or depression? Marion Roberts – University of Westminster The Relationship between Sexual Crimes and Urban Spatial Planning – Illustrated by Research on Public Lavatories and Baths in China Sicheng Wang – Tongji University, Yanfeng Xu – Fudan University, China Challenging mixed- income redevelopment and valuing the home spaces of public housing tenants Martine August – University of Toronto “How it slips through your hands”: African- American Portlanders, homeownership and neighbourhood claims Lisa Bates – Portland State University The Geographic Tenure of Memory and Survival in Historic Black New Orleans Anna Livia Brand – University of New Orleans “I live here but it’s not home”: Staking (or not staking) claim in the changing neighbourhood Kelly Owens – Dilliard University, Renia Ehrenfeucht – University of New Orleans Care, Attachment and capability in marginalized spaces; why are we still surprised? Sheryl-Ann Simpson – Cornell University SESSION 2-11 Moderator Fri July 19th 09:45 – 11:15 Room: A006 Intersectionality and Planning TBD (organiser) PANEL 2-1 COST network genderSTE: Advancing Research and Practice in Gender and Planning in Europe and Beyond Inés Sánchez de Madariaga, UPM-MINECO, Spain, genderSTE Chair LGBTQ University Students: Negotiations for Gender Rights in Intellectual Space Surada Chundasutathanakul – Suan Dusit Rajabhat University, Thailand Beyond Queer Spaces: Planning for Diverse LGBT Populations Petra Doan – Florida State University Queer Theory/ Planning theory: Potential partners or irreconcilable differences Renia Ehrenfeucht – University of New Orleans, D’Lane Compton – University of New Orleans Finding Transformative Planning Practice in the Spaces of Intersectionality Michael Frisch – University of Missouri Kansas City Queer Spaces, places and flows in Chicago and their representation in planning documents. Curtis Winkle- University of Illinois at Chicago, US Moderator Mon July 15th 17:45 – 19:00 Room: A006 Marion Roberts - University of Westminster, UK, genderSTE leader SWG on Cities Doris Damyanovic - BOKU, Austria, genderSTE Management Committee Susan Buckingham - Brunell Universtiy, UK, genderSTE leader SWG Climate change Liisa Horelli - Aalto University, Finland, genderSTE Management Committee Brigitte Wotha - University of Kiel, Germany, invited expert PANEL 2-2 Moderator Thurs July 18th 16:30 – 18:00 Room: A006 PANEL 2-3 Moderator Thurs July 18th 18:15 – 19:30 Room: A006 LGBTQIA Research, Intersectianality and the Academy Michael Frisch- University of Missouri – Kansas City, US Petra Doan - Florida State, US, Silvia Vilches - Simon Fraser, CANADA, Curt Winkle University of Illinois-Chicago, US, Renia Ehrenfeucht - University of New Orleans, US Recognising Marginalised Property Rights in Planning: Beyond (neo) Liberal Conceptions of Property Libby Porter - Monash University, Australia Janice Barry – University of Sheffield, UK TRACK 3: Environment, Energy and Climate Change SESSION 3-1 Moderator Mon July 15th 16:00 – 17:30 Room: C004 Valuation of Environmental Preservation and Adaptation Stefan Greiving -- Technical University Dortmund, Germany Understand People's Altitude and Willingness to Pay to Sea Level Rise Adaptation Options Zhong-Ren Peng – University of Florida, US, Suwan Shen – University of Florida, US, Fei Yang – University of Florida, US Exploring Willingness To Pay (WTP) for Land Conservation Easement on River Space Gyoungjun Ha – Pusan National University, South Korea, Yeol Choi – Pusan National University, South Korea, Juchul Jung – Pusan National University, South Korea Planning for Ecosystems: Integrating Inter-generational Equity into Floodplain Planning through Benefit-Cost Analysis Patrick Green – Bellevue College, US, Jan Whittington – University of Washington, US Resiliency and Transaction Cost Economics Jan Whittington – University of Washington, US , Stefanie Young – University of Washington, US SESSION 3-2 Moderator Tues July 16th 08:00 – 09:30 Room: C004 Countries, Economies and Planning in an Era of Uncertainty and Transition TBD SESSION 3-3 Moderator Tues July 16th 09:45 – 11:15 Room: C004 Growing Needs for Sustainable Urban Water Quality and Quantity Management TBD SESSION 3-4 Moderator Tues July 16th 11:45 – 13:15 Room: C004 Land Conservation Capacity and Impacts TBD SESSION 3-5 Moderator Tues July 16th 14:15 – 15:45 Room: C004 Reducing Vulnerability and Improving Risk Assessment Globally TBD Political Ecology in Planning for Island Tourism in Global Climate Change: Exploring Methodologies in the Philippines Virgilio Maguigad – James Cook University, Australia Sectoral Approach to a Greener Economy Asli Tepecik Dis – Nordregio, Sweden Planning at the Peak of the Oil Age: Managing Systemic Risk and the Future in Planning Gavin Daly – NUI Maynooth, Ireland Design Research for Sustainability Transitions: Managing Multiple Forms of Knowledge in a Context of Irreducible Uncertainty Daan De Vree, Michiel Dehaene –Ghent University, Belgium The Political Ecology of Water Resources in Chile: Water Conflicts and Sustainable Water Management Antonio Bellisario – Metropolitan State University of Denver, US Sustainable Urban Water Use and Application of Planning Support Systems: A Case Study of Metro Atlanta Area, Georgia Sangwoo Sung – Georgia Institute of Technology, US, Steven P. French – Georgia Institute of Technology, US Water Quality Perceptions vs. Reality: Lessons for Planners Stacey White – University of Kansas, US Megacity Under Duress: The Challenges of Water Management in Jakarta, Indonesia Christopher Silver – University of Florida, US Planning and Climate Change Adaptation in the Urban Water Supply Sector: A Literature Review and Research Agenda Anna Hurlimann – University of Melbourne, Australia Assessing Capacity for Ecological Land Planning: Lessons from Wisconsin, U.S.A. Asligül Göçmen – University of Wisconsin – Madison, US Neighbourhood Effects of Conservation Easements Caitlin Dyckman – Clemson University, US, Mickey Lauria – Clemson University, US Sustainable Landuse and Planning on Underused and Unused Lands from a Case Study of Wakayama City, Japan Tomoko Miyagawa – Wakayama University, Japan, Chiaki Hayashi – Wakayama University, Japan Research Intersections in Urban Land Use, Conservation Biology and Landscape Ecology: An Annotated Bibliography of Green Infrastructure Planning Charles Hostovsky – Catholic University of America, US Re-imagining the "Values" in Urban Sustainability: Can Cities in the Global South get Serious about Climate Change? Vincent Onyango – University of Dundee, Scotland, Deepak Gopinath – University of Dundee, Scotland The TURAS Project: Integrating Social-ecological Resilience and Urban Planning Philip Crowe – University College Dublin, Ireland, Karen Foley – University College Dublin, Ireland Socio-Economic Vulnerability in a Multi-Disciplinary Approach--The Case of the Gulf Coast in the US Cecilia Giusti – Texas A&M University, US, Michael Martin – Texas A&M University, US, Francisco Olivera – Texas A&M University, US, Chi Hung Hsu – Texas A&M University, US, .Jennifer Irish – Virginia Tech, US Understanding Environmental Impact of Communities with Disparate Quality of Life: An Eco-footprint Study of Kathmandu Valley, Nepal Amit Bhattarai – University of Sydney, Australia SESSION 3-6 Moderator Tues July 16th 16:15 – 17:45 Room: C004 Social Transformation in Response to Extreme Events and Restoration of Vulnerable Areas TBD The Relationship between Place Attachment, Memory, and Resiliency: The Case of PostKatrina New Orleans Toueir Nada – University of Montreal, Canada Should We Stay or Should We Go Now: Post-Hurricane Sandy Anamaria Bukvic – Virginia Tech, US Perceptions of Extreme Weather Events: Evidence from Different Types of Events Around the U.S. Hilary Boudet – Oregon State University, US, Peter Howe – Utah State University, US Systemic Reclamation Design Scenarios for Campania Plain Davide di Martino – Frederico II University of Naples, Italy SESSION 3-7 Moderator Tues July 16th 18:00 – 19:30 Room: C004 Urban Flood Resilience TBD SESSION 3-8 Built Form, Resource Consumption and Greenhouse Gas Emissions in Cities and Suburbs TBD Moderator Wed July 17th 08:00 – 09:30 Room: C004 Towards Smarter Flood Resilience: Integrating Innovation into Planning Practice Iain White – The University of Manchester, UK, Paul O’Hare – Manchester Metropolitan University, UK, Angela Connelly – The University of Manchester, UK, Nigel Lawson – The University of Manchester, UK A Strategy-based Framework for Establishing Flood Resilient Cities Britta Restemeyer, Margo van den Brink, Johan Woltjer – University of Groningen, The Netherlands Neighbourhood Natural Spaces and Floods: Does Size Matter? Paula Lorente – Texas A&M University, US Managing Flooding in Ireland: A Changing Policy Landscape Finbarr Brereton, Craig Bullock, Eoin O’Neill – University College Dublin, Ireland Adaptation to Flooding in Urban Areas: An Economic Analysis Eric J. Heikkila – University of Southern California, US Low Carbon Downtown Community Planning in Spring City –Kunming of China Nankai Xia – Tongji University, China, Zhenyu Su – Tongji University, China Research and application of the Smart City Model in the View of Low Carbon: a case Study in Guangzhou, China Nankai Xia – Tongji University, China, Qian Liu – Tongji University, China The Role of Suburbia in the Attribution of Greenhouse Gas Emissions Jochen Albrecht, Peter Marcotullio - Hunter College, CUNY, US, Andrea Sarzynski University of Delaware, US, Niels Schulz – IIASA, Austria Residential Energy (and Water) Expenditure and the City-Suburb Dichotomy: a Case Study of the Puget Sound Region, WA Jan Whittington, Hossein Estiri – University of Washington, US On accessibility and its dependence on energy Tomáš Peltan - Czech Technical University in Prague, Daniel Franke - Czech University of Life Sciences Prague, Vojtěch Novotný - Czech University of Life Sciences Prague, Karel Maier Czech Technical University in Prague, Czech Republic SESSION 3-9 Moderator Wed July 17th 09:45 – 11:15 Room: C004 Urban Design’s Influence on GHG Emissions and Travel Behaviour TBD Session 3-10 Moderator Wed July 17th 11:45 – 13:15 Room: C004 Public Perception and Collaborative Planning for Clean Energy TBD Session 3-11 Moderator Thurs July 18th 08:00 – 09:30 Room: C004 Reducing Footprints through Building Retrofit and/or Design TBD Role of Mobility and Land Use in Urban Climate Action Plans: Comparison of Cincinnati, Curitiba and Bordeaux Carla Chifos – University of Cincinnati, US The Effects of Compact Development on Travel Behaviour, Energy Consumption and GHG Emissions: Lessons from Neighbourhoods in Phoenix Metropolitan Area Wenwen Zhang, Subhrajit Guhathakurta – Georgia Institute of Technology, US Study on Measures of Urban Planning and Construction for Climate Change, Tianjin Liu Chengcheng, Lu Chengbin, Zheng Xiangyang, Lu Li – Tianjin Urban, Planning & Design Institute, China Usefulness of Urban Design Demonstrators to Adapt to Changes and Prefigure the Postcarbon City Natacha Seigneuret – Université Pierre Mendès France, France Public Attitudes toward ‘Fracking’ in the U.S. Hilary Boudet – Oregon State University, US, Chris Clarke – George Mason University, US, Dylan Bugden – Oregon State University, US NIMBY in the News and in the Literature: Comparing Representations of Green Energy Opposition Virginia Maclaren – University of Toronto, Canada, Jennifer Taylor – University of Toronto, Canada Big Infrastructure and Public Participation: How to Enhance Renewable Energies Despite or Even Because of Participatory Planning? A Comparative Study of Practices in Germany, the Netherlands, and the UK Joerg Knieling – HaFenCity University, Hamburg, Germany Community Energy Planning in the U.S.: Learning from Europe, Lessons for Europe John Randolph – Virginia Tech, US Understanding the Public Uptake of a Municipal Incentive Program for Energy Efficiency: A Case Study of the SolarColwood Program Christopher Ling – Royal Roads University, Canada, Ingrid Kajzer Mitchell – Royal Roads University, Canada, Charles Krusekopf – Royal Roads University, Canada Searching for Thermal and Acoustic Assessment Strategies to Support Sustainable Built Form Control Ana Cardoso, Irving Franco, Elcione Morais, Dorival Pinheiro, Taynara Gomes – Vale Institute of Technology Energy Efficiency Retrofit of Housing Stock: Innovations in Planning Tools Barbara Havel-University of Cambridge, UK, Sara Verones – University of Trento, Italy Buildings' Energy Upgrade in Historic City Centres Christina Kalogirou – Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, Greece, Katerina Tsikaloudaki – Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, Greece, Dimitris Aravantinos – Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, Greece Retrofitting Large Portfolios of Buildings for Improved Energy Efficiency Clinton Andrews – Rutgers University, US Case Studies on Minimizing a Neighbourhood's Carbon Footprint in the Mediterranean Region Andreas Savvides – University of Cyprus, Cyprus Session 3-12 Moderator Thurs July 18th 11:45 – 13:15 Room: C004 Resilient and Alternative Energy Generation TBD Session 3-13 Moderator Thurs July 18th 16:30 – 18:00 Room: C004 Spatial and Ecological Sustainability to Mitigate Climate Change TBD Session 3-14 Moderator Fri July 19th 08:00 – 09:30 Room: C004 Integrated Development Concepts TBD Urban-rural Energy Partnerships and Resilience Christian Strauß – Leibniz Centre for Agricultural Landscape Research, Germany, Thomas Weith – Leibniz Centre for Agricultural Landscape Research, Germany, Annegret Repp – Leibniz Centre for Agricultural Landscape Research, Germany Planning for Renewable Energy: Lessons from the UK’s Devolved Administrations Geraint Ellis - Queen’s University, Belfast, UK, Richard Cowell - Cardiff University, UK Fionnuala Sherry-Brennan - Cardiff University, UK, Peter A Strachan - Robert Gordon University, UK, Dave Toke - Birmingham University, UK The Impact of Self-sufficient Energy Village program on the Community Capacity and Resilience Tubagus Furqan Sofhani – Bandung Institute of Technology, Indonesia, Irfan Wahyudi – Bandung Institute of Technology, Indonesia, Ridwansyah Yusuf Achmad – Bandung Institute of Technology, Indonesia If not Dams Then What? Basilio Verduzco – Universidad de Guadalajara, Mexico, Maria Basilia Valenzuela – Universidad de Guadalajara, Mexico Planning for Fracking on the Barnett Shale Hazardous Air Pollutants Rachael Rawlins - University of Texas, US Managing the Adverse Impacts of Climate Change: A Spatial Framework Forster Ndubisi – Texas A&M, US Multicultural Assessment of Ecosystem Services across an International Border: Lessons for Land Use Policy in Hyper-Arid Regions Daniel Orenstein – Israel Institute of Technology, Israel, Elli Groner – Dead Sea and Arava Science Center, Israel Urban Ecology and Growth Management in China: The Ecological Boundaries Policy in Shenzhen Dan Lin – China Academy of Urban Planning and Design, China, Aidan While – University of Sheffield, UK Ecological View of the Spatial Forms of Traditional Rural Settlements in the Agricultural Society Jie Ling – South East University, China Planning Slow Landscapes: The Experience of Alphen-Chaam, The Netherlands Claudia Basta – Wageningen University, The Netherlands, Adri van den Brink – Wageningen University, The Netherlands, Rudi van Etteger – Wageningen University, The Netherlands Towards the Resilient Energy Landscape: The Spatial-institutional Transformation of the Energy Landscape from a Complex Adaptive System’s Perspective Jessica de Boer – University of Groningen, The Netherlands, Christian Zuidema – University of Groningen, The Netherlands Energy Turnaround: New Challenges for Integrated Spatial and Infrastructure Development in the Case of Switzerland Silke Rendigs – ETH Zurich, Switzerland Clean Energy Innovation in US and UK Local Authorities Damian Pitt – Virginia Commonwealth University, US, Alina Congreve – University of Hertfordshire, UK New Approaches, Strategies and Tools of Urban Transformation for Energy Sustainability Carmela Gargiulo – University of Naples Federico II, Italy, Valentina Pinto – University of Naples Federico II, Italy, Floriana Zucaro – University of Naples Federico II, Italy Session 3-15 Moderator Fri July 19th 09:45 – 11:15 Room: C004 Social and Political Incorporation of Sustainability and Climate Change Caitlin Dyckman -- Clemson University, USA Session 3-16 Moderator Tues July 16th 14:15 – 15:45 Room: C006 Climate Change Integration into Decision-Making and Planning Practice TBD Session 3-17 Moderator Tues July 16th 16:15 – 17:45 Room: C006 Public Roles in Climate Adaptation Strategies TBD Session 3-18 Moderator Tues July 16th 18:00 – 19:30 Spatial Planning and Modelling for Adaptation to Climate Change, Part 1 TBD Becoming a More Sustainable Society: An Approach to Tracking the Culture of Sustainability in Organizations and Cities Robert W. Marans – University of Michigan, US, John Callewaert – University of Michigan, US Environmental Sustainability in Practice: Local Government Features that Support Implementation Lucie Laurian – The University of Iowa, US, Jan Crawford – Planning Consultants Ltd, New Zealand Framing Sustainability - How Are Interpretations of Sustainability Influencing the Development of New Low Carbon Settlements? Joanne Oldfield – University of Sheffield, UK Mainstreaming Climate Adaptation and the Relevance of Political Commitment: Insights from the Cases Amsterdam and Rotterdam Caroline Uittenbroek – Utrecht University, The Netherlands, Leonie Janssen-Jansen – University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands, Willem Salet – University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands, Tejo Spit – Utrecht University, The Netherlands, Hens Runhaar – Utrecht University, The Netherlands Integrating Climate Change into Cities’ Planning Practices – An Institutional Analysis Anja Wejs – Aalborg University, Denmark, Matthew Cashmore – Aalborg University, Denmark Integrating Climate Change into Environmental Impact Assessment Documents: Exploring the Emerging U.S. Practice Carissa Schively Slotterback – University of Minnesota, US Adaptation to Climate Change, Learning From 2 Case Studies in Canada and in France Isabelle Thomas – University of Montreal, Canada, Anne Tricot – CNRS, UMR PACTE, Grenoble, France Development of environmental Considerations in Planning: The Oresund Bridge Case Eric Markus – Blekinge Institute of Technology, Sweden The Importance of Public Climate Change Perceptions for the Successful Implementation of Mitigation and Adaptation Planning Strategies to Improve Resiliency Bjoern Hagen – Arizona State University, US, Ariane Middel – Arizona State University, US, David Pijawka - Arizona State University, US Where Water Should Be: A Green Solution Pattsi Petrie – University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, US Coping with Climate Change Induced Floods in Informal Settlements of Kampala Using Local Knowledge to Enhance Resilience Musa Timbitwire – Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Norway Adapting to Climate Change in Coastal Dar Silvia Macchi, Liana Ricci, Giuseppe Faldi, Luca Congedo – University or Rome, Italy Evidence and Spatial Planning for Sustainable Development: A Model for spatially Allocating Material Flows Room: C006 Robin Curry – Queens University, Belfast, UK, Geraint Ellis – Queens University, Belfast, UK, Manoj Roy – University of Manchester, UK Anticipating Future Challenges for Delta Areas Ed Dammers, Leo Pols, Gert Jan van den Born, Bart Rijken – PBL Netherlands Environmental Assessment Agency, The Netherlands Ways of Adapting to Climate Change: The ‘Adaptation Hierarchy’ as Guiding Spatial Planning Principle Bart Jan Davidse, Meike Albers, Sonja Deppisch – HafenCity University Hamburg, Germany The Complexity of Interrelationships Between Climate Mitigation and Adaptation in Spatial Planning Katja Säwert – HafenCity University Hamburg, Germany Sessions 3-19 Moderator Wed July 17th 08:00 – 09:30 Room: C006 Spatial Planning and Modeling for Adaptation to Climate Change, Part 2 TBD Sessions 3-20 Moderator Wed July 17th 09:45 – 11:15 Room: C006 Climate Resilience and Adaptation at Multiple Scales, Part 1: Neighbourhoods TBD Session 3- 21 Moderator Climate Resilience and Adaptation at Multiple Scales, Part 2: Cities TBA Wed July 17th 11:45 – 13:15 Room: C006 Climate Resilient Cities: A Methodological Framework for Improving Adaptation Strategies Adriana Galderisi – University of Naples Federico II, Italy , Floriana Ferrara – Italian Environmental Engineers Association, Italy Addressing Resilience Notion for Planning Governance in Facing Climate Uncertainty: A Comparative Study of Kaohsiung (Taiwan) and Rotterdam (the Netherlands) Peiwen Lu – Delf University of Technology, The Netherlands Towards Resilient Cities: A Comparison Between Case Studies Angela Colucci – Politecnico di Milano, Italy Planning for Adaptation in an Uncertainty Setting: Local Government Action in Canada Kevin Hanna –The University of British Columbia, Canada, Ann Dale – Royal Roads The Effects of Built-up Valley Areas on Urban Climate Cagdas Kusçu Simsek – Yildiz Technical University, Turkey The Use of Urban Climatology in Local Climate Change Strategies: A Comparative Perspective Brian Webb – University of Manchester, UK Consequences of Urban Land Use Change on Soils – Is There a Need of Urban Soil Protection? Martin Sauerwein – University Hildesheim, Germany The Klimaatlas as a Planning Tool Michael Hebbert – University College London, UK A Neighbourhood-Scale Model for Understanding Heat Island Effects of New Development David Proffitt – University of Utah, US Climate Change Adaptation in Suburban Neighbourhoods: Institutional Perspectives, Inter-dependence and the Importance of Estate Agents Ian Smith, Katie Williams, Diane Hopkins, UK, Jennifer Joynt, Catherine Payne – University of the West of England, UK Local Air Quality Changes and Neighbourhood Demographic Characteristics in the US, 1999 to 2009 Jeongwoo Lee – University of Southern California, US, Lisa Schweitzer – University of Southern California, US Investigating Urban Agriculture as an Urban Heat Island Mitigation Strategy in Atlanta, Georgia Dana Habeeb – Georgia Institute of Technology, US University, Canada, Pierre Filion – University of Waterloo, Canada, Chris Ling – Royal Roads University, Canada, Mark Seasons – University of Waterloo, Canada Session 3-22 Climate Resilience and Adaptation at Multiple Scales, Part 3: Regions Moderator Thurs July 18th 11:45 – 13:15 Room: A007 TBD Session 3-23 Coastal Resilience and Sea Level Rise Moderator TBD th Adapted Land-use Planning in Climate Change: Challenges and Opportunities for the Mega-urban Region Harry Storch – Brandenburg University of Technology Cottbus, Germany, Nigel Downes – Brandenburg University of Technology Cottbus, Germany Resilient Spatial Planning and Climate Change Impacts – Ethical Challenges Sonja Deppisch – HaFenCity University Hamburg, Germany Climate Change and Energy Efficiency Regional Differences under Europe 2020 Francesco Bonsinetto – University Mediterranea of Reggio Calabria, Italy, Barbara Lino – University of Palermo, Palermo, Italy Fri July 19 08:00 – 09:30 Room: A007 Evolutionary Resilience and Adaptation to Climate Change in European Coastal Regions Elizabeth Brooks – Newcastle University, UK, Simin Davoudi –Newcastle University, UK The Evolving Concept of Coastal Resiliency: Comparisons between Ireland and the US Stephen Flood – National University of Ireland, Maynooth, Judd Schechtman – Rutgers Bloustein School of Planning, US Three Feet High and Rising: An Examination of the Likely Effects and Potential Responses to Sea Level Rise in Coastal Georgia Larry Keating – Georgia Institute of Technology, US, Dana Habeeb – Georgia Institute of Technology, US Establishing Resilient Coastal Zones - A Comparative Study on the Use of Ecosystem Services in Coastal Spatial Planning Ruiqian Li – University of Groningen, The Netherlands, Johan Woltjer – University of Groningen, The Netherlands, Margo van den Brink – University of Groningen, The Netherlands Session 3-24 Climate and Environmental Conservation Plans Moderator Fri July 19th 09:45 – 11:15 Room: A007 TBD Climate Plans in European Cities: A Comparative Perspective Francesco Musco – University luav of Venice, Italy, Filippo Magni – University Iuav of Venice, Italy "Climate Zoning Planning" for Resilient Cities--Integration of Climatic Action Plans in the Urban Planning System of Germany Sylvia Bialk – University of Applied Sciences Stuttgart, Germany, Detlef Kurth – University of Applied Sciences Stuttgart, Germany Clean Energy, Climate Change and the Second Generation of Natural Resource Management (NRM) Planning: A Stocktake of National-level Policy Developments in Australia with Commentary on First Generation Experience in Queensland Karen Vella – Griffith University, Australia , Neil Sipe – Griffith University, Australia, Allan Dale – James Cook University, Australia, Ruth Potts – Griffith University, Australia Urban Climate Comfort Zones-- from Urban Planning Guidelines to Local Interventions Bernd Eisenberg – University of Stuttgart, Germany TRACK 4: Housing, Regeneration and Community Development in Time of Crisis SESSION 4-1 Moderator Mon July 15th 16:00 – 17:30 Room: B005 Housing Policies in Time of Austerity Katrin Anacker -- George Mason University, US SESSION 4-2 Housing Market Failures Moderator Nataša Pichler-Milanović -- University of Ljubljana, Slovenia Tues July 16th 08:00 – 09:30 Room: B005 Housing market failure and policy responses: the case of Liverpool, UK Chris Couch – University of Liverpool, UK, Matthew Cocks – University of Liverpool, UK, Alex Lord – University of Liverpool, UK Is the promotion of private sector rental provision in the UK a response to market failure or a new failure in itself? Martin Field – University of Northampton, UK The Impact of Housing Submarkets and Urban Form on the Foreclosure Crisis in U.S. Urban Counties Subhrajit Guhathakurta – Georgia Institute of Technology, US, Indro Ray - Georgia Institute of Technology, US Re-examining the Social Benefits of Homeownership after the Great Recession William Rohe – University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, US "Custom build" neighbourhoods: the feasibility of European models for delivering larger housing schemes in England Iqbal Hamiduddin – University College London, UK, Nick Gallent – University College London, UK SESSION 4-3 Affordable Housing in the US I: From Policy to Practice Moderator Peter Marcuse -- Columbia University, US Tues July 16th 09:45 – 11:15 Room: B005 State of knowledge on affordable housing policy in USA Karen Christensen – University of California Berkeley, US, Jacob Wegmann – University of California Berkeley, US The U.S. Post-federal Affordable Housing Regime Corianne Payton Scally - University at Albany, State University of New York, US Re-thinking affordable housing policies as tool to promote urban development in the USA Orly Gilat - Pratt Area Community Council, US Local affordable housing policy decisions: whose voice is heard the most? Anaid Yerena - University of California, US Housing Affordability and Health: Evidence from New York City Alex Schwartz - The New School, US The Housing crisis: Backing into real solutions Peter Marcuse – Columbia University, US Reurbanization in the United States and Germany – A Comparative Study of Driving Forces and Spatial Patterns of Re-urbanization Processes in Metropolitan Regions Johan Jessen – University of Stuttgart, Stefan Siedentop - University of Stuttgart, Philipp Zakrzewski - University of Stuttgart, Germany Shrinking cities, challenging current planning paradigms and illuminating the potential for insurgent action: the case of Merseyside (UK) and Kitakyushu (Japan) Alan Mace – LSE, UK, Zac Taylor - Architecture for Humanity, US, Miki Yasui - Hosei University, Japan The American housing bubble: lessons for planners Kirk McClure – University of Kansas, US Impact of Irish property crash and the post crisis housing system Richard Waldron – University College Dublin, Ireland SESSION 4-4 Moderator Tues July 16th 11:45 – 13:15 Room: B005 Affordable housing in the US II: Housing Programmes William Rohe -- University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, US SESSION 4-5 Moderator Tues July 16th 14:15 – 15:45 Room: B005 Affordable Housing: International Perspectives Roberto Quercia -- University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, US SESSION 4-6 Moderator Tues July 16th 16:15 – 17:45 Room: B005 Gentrification Johan Jessen -- University of Stuttgart, Germany SESSION 4-7 Moderator Housing Rehabilitation Sasha Tsenkova -- University of Calgary, Canada Who Gets Ahead in the U.S. Housing Choice Voucher Program? Andrew Greenlee - University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, US Developing the HCV suitability model and evaluating location outcomes for voucher households in Orange County, Florida Vince Wang – University of Florida, Abdulnaser Arafat – University of Florida, Paul Zwick – University of Florida, Elizabeth Thompson – University of Florida, Caleb Stewart – University of Florida, US Job accessibility among housing voucher recipients Michael Lens – UCLA, US Affordable Housing Supply and Demand: A Parcel-Level Approach to Evaluating Affordable Housing Programs and Accessibility to Low and Moderate Income Employment Abdulnaser Arafat – University of Florida, Elizabeth Thompson – University of Florida, Yuyang Zou – University of Florida, Ruoniu Wang – University of Florida, Aygun Erdogan Karadeniz Technical University/University of Florida, US Benefit – Cost Analysis of an Innovative Homeownership/Asset-Building Program for Low-Income Households Anna Santiago - Case Western Reserve University, US, George Galster - Wayne State University, US Local Housing Policy for Low-Income Households: Challenges and Approaches of German Cities Heidi Sinning – Institute of Urban Research, Planning and Communication, Germany Social housing practices in Northern Italy: innovations in time of crisis Nadia Caruso – Politecnico di Torino, Italy Bonjour Tristesse -- Types of residential dissatisfaction in Portugal related to territories, policies and instruments Jorge Gonçalves – IST-UTL, Portugal, Sofia Ezequiel – IST-UTL, Portugal, Susana Marreiros – IST-UTL, Portugal, António Costa – IST-UTL, Portugal Resilience of social housing systems in times of crisis: insights from Vienna and Amsterdam Sasha Tsenkova – University of Calgary, Canada Planning for Affordable Home Ownership: New Perspectives from Australia Catherine Gilbert – University of Sydney, Nicole Gurran – University of Sydney, Australia The Extent and Causes of Gentrification in the U.S., 1990-2010 John Landis – University of Pennsylvania, US The role of community benefits agreements in addressing gentrification and displacement Malo Hutson – University of California Berkeley, US A Question of Gentrification: The Redevelopment of Suburbs in the Baltimore Region Bernadette Hanlon – Ohio State University, US Gentrification as neighbourhood succession: revolving doors and planners' responses Sarah Mawhorter – University of Southern California, US Filtering and gentrification in Toronto's lowest income neighbourhoods 1981-2006 Andrejs Skaburskis – Queen’s University, Canada Tues July 16th 18:00 – 19:30 Room: B005 Space in New Homes: Delivering Functionality and Liveability through Regulation or Design Innovation? Manuela Madeddu – London South Bank University, UK, Nick Gallent – University College London, UK, Alan Mace – London School of Economics and Political Science, UK Metropolitan Resilience, Precarious Housing, and Durable Concentrated Poverty in the United States Rolf Pendall – Urban Institute, US, Brett Theodos – Urban Institute, US, Kaitlyn Franks – Urban Institute, US, Rebecca Grace – Urban Institute, US Sustainable housing rehabilitation and neighbourhood regeneration in inner cities and consolidated self-built settlements Peter Ward – University of Texas at Austin, US Building more resilient housing markets: a government community land trust Peter Phibbs – University of Sydney, Australia Incremental urban renewal: living through redevelopment in an age of financial and market uncertainty Simon Pinnegar – University of New South Wales, Australia SESSION 4-8 Moderator Wed July 17th 08:00 – 09:30 Room: B005 Urban Regeneration Policies and Practices SESSION 4-9 Moderator Wed July 17th 09:45 – 11:15 Room: B005 Suburban Resilience Alan Mace -- London School of Economics, UK SESSION 4- 10 Moderator Wed July 17th 11:45 – 13:15 Room: B005 Environmental Risk Assessments Simge Ozdal Oktay -- Gebze Institute of Technology, Turkey Matthew Cocks -- Xi'an Jiaotong-Liverpool University Urban regeneration governance in Lyon, France: Implications at the local and city levels Juliet Carpenter – Université de Lyon 2, France LUS Living Urban Scape. Regenerating Italian Public Neighbourhoods through Open Spaces Milena De Matteis – IUAV Venice School of Architecture, Italy, Claudia Faraone – IUAV Venice School of Architecture, Italy Dynamic neighbourhood change and its implications for planning policy in England Stephen Hincks – University of Manchester, UK 'Everyone can do what they want': researching urban transformation processes and the role of planning authorities in Beirut, Lebanon Marieke Krijnen – Ghent University, Belgium Urban regeneration as a platform for sustainable growth in Asian cities Melissa Anne Reese e, Lai Choo Malone-Lee, Heng Chye Kiang, Rita Padawangi, Abdul Rahim bin Abdul Hamid – National University of Singapore Lessons from housing crisis on the American home front during WW II Sarah Jo Peterson – Independent Researcher, US The persistent illusion of affluence: suburban poverty in US history Christa Lee-Chuvala – Massachusetts Institute of Technology, US Suburbs as liminal spaces of opportunities for next "adapting" city Barbara Lino – University of Palermo, Italy Suburban resilience: the Athenian periphery in time of crisis Alcestis Rodi – University of Patras, Greece Contradictions of community land trust in the US: decommodification and asset building Rosalind Greenstein – Clark University, US Urban Housing in Developing Countries: Integrating Sustainability and Resiliency for Earthquake Prone Areas Santina Contreras – University of California, Irvine, Victoria Basolo – University of California, Irvine, US Remembering and recovering: negotiating the social and ecological imperatives of rebuilding Barbara Brown Wilson – University of Texas at Austin, US Long term housing outcomes of the disabled after hurricane Katrina Karen Danielsen – University of Nevada Las Vegas, Jasmine Waddell – University of Nevada Las Vegas, US Understanding the Relevant City Characteristics in Planning Countrywide Urban Transformation in Turkey Deniz Ay – University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign, US Temporary housing supply and its international background after the 1963 Skopje earthquake Masaru Tanaka – Tokyo University of Science, Japan SESSION 4-11 Moderator Thurs July 18th 08:00 – 09:30 Room: B005 Urban Environmental Resilience Juliet Carpenter -- Université de Lyon 2, France SESSION 4-12 Moderator Thurs July 18th 11:45 – 13:15 Room: B005 Urban Social Resilience in the US John Landis -- University of Pennsylvania, US SESSION 4-13 Moderator Thurs July 18th 16:30 – 18:00 Room: B005 Urban Social Resilience: International Perspectives Jorge Gonçalves -- IST-UTL, Portugal Proposal of a local specific environmental assessment method for Yedikule neighbourhood, Istanbul Simge Ozdal Oktay - Gebze Institute of Technology, Nuket Ipek Cetin - Gebze Institute of Technology, Turkey The French policies of the sustainable rehabilitation of housing: the example of OPATB in Grenoble Paulette Duarte – University Pierre Mendes, France Implementing green infrastructure through residential development in the UK - the housebuilder perspective Sarah Payne - University of Sheffield, UK, Adam Barker - University of Manchester, UK Recycling declining city: resilience, landscape and regeneration for new housing Michelangelo Russo - Università degli Studi di Napoli Federico II, Italy Residential energy efficiency and default risks Roberto Quercia - University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Nikhil Kaza - University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, US The Impacts of Bridging Town & Gown with Neighborhood Revitalization Strategies Meagan Ehlenz – University of Pennsylvania, Anthony P. Sorrentino – University of Pennsylvania, US How to rebuild, renew and revitalize black neighbourhood John Gilderbloom – University of Louisville, Wesley Meares – University of Louisville, Katherine Becker – University of Louisville, Tobin Williamson – University of Louisville, US Public housing redevelopment and poverty: getting nothing from something Rachel Kleit – The Ohio State University, US, Lynne C. Manzo – University of Washington, US Walkable Opportunity Neighborhoods: Does Subsidized Housing Provide Access? Julia Koschinsky – Arizona State University, Emily Talen – Arizona State University, US Does murder impact property value? And are the impacts differently across neighbourhoods? Chenxi Yu, Daniel McMillen – University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign, US Social cohesion and sense of place: an analysis of residential quality of life and neighbourhood satisfaction in the Greater Dublin area Owen Douglas – University College Dublin, Paula Russell – University College Dublin, Ireland How do different types of households respond to inner city urban regeneration projects? Perception of opportunities and risks Deniz Altay Kaya – Çankaya University, Turkey, Ayda Eraydin – Middle East Technical University, Turkey Is the mixed use what would improve qualities of mass housing estates? Olga Melcerova – Slovak University of Technology, Slovakia Young people as city farmers: putting youth participation in German municipalities to the test Anna Juliane Heinrich – Berlin University of Technology, Angela Uttke – Berlin University of Technology, Germany High-rise city living as a particular "housing culture" in South Korea Jinhee Park – University of Sheffield, UK SESSION 4-14 Moderator Fri 19th July 08:00 – 09:30 Room: B005 Urban Economic Resilience Richard Waldron -- University College Dublin, Ireland SESSION 4-15 Moderator Thurs 18th July 16:30 – 18:00 Room: A004 Economic Resilience at the Neighbourhood Level in US Cities Karen Danielsen -- University of Nevada Las Vegas, US SESSION 4-16 Moderator Fri 19th July 09:45 – 11:15 Room: B005 Community Development and Participation Katrin Anacker /Nataša Pichler-Milanović PANEL 4-1 International Developments in Planning for Affordable Housing: Supporting or Exacerbating Market Failure? Factors of Urban Resilience: Economic Stability, Walkability, or the Creative Class? John Robinson – University of Pennsylvania, UK Building Economic Resilience: A Typology to Assess Community Assets Suzanne Moomaw – University of Virginia, US Community Development as a Way-Out from Crisis -- Guidelines for Milano form New York City’s Experience Pietro Lupo Verga – Independent Researcher, Italy Revitalization project of post-industrial heritage – the case of Scheibler’s Lofts in Lodz, Poland Beata Banachowicz – University of Lodz, Poland Using the Economic Potential for the Exploitation of Cultural Heritage: the case of the New Dutch Water Defence Line Koen Raats – University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands Analyzing neighbourhood foreclosure risk in the US in the context of inequality Katrin Anacker – George Mason University, US Analyzing the geography of opportunity: the role of "equity analysis" in housing policy Edward Goetz – University of Minnesota, US The social impact of home rehabilitation in low income neighbourhoods Erin Graves – Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, US In the Wake of Crisis: Understanding the Role of Single-Family Investors in Distressed Neighborhoods Dan Immergluck – Georgia Institute of Technology, US Plan Implementation of New Urbanism and Income Mixing Strategies in Three HOPE VI Developments: West End at Jackson Square, Westhaven Park & Roosevelt Square April Jackson – University of Illinois at Chicago, US Pocket parks as community building blocks: a focus on Stapleton, CO Huston Gibson – Kansas State University, Jessica Canfield – Kansas State University, US Ljubljana: innovative aspects of community regeneration in the time of crisis Nataša Pichler-Milanović – University of Ljubljana, Slovenia, Biba Tominc – Urban Planning Institute of the Republic of Slovenia, Slovenia Cultural initiatives for community development in Indonesian Kampungs Michael Romanos – University of Cincinnati, US Promoting community resilience through participatory urban programmes: a case study of the "Quiero Mi Barrio" programme, Chile Jenny Moreno – University of Nottingham, UK Need for place specific urban redevelopment strategies for informal housing under new economic conditions: two cases from Ankara Yelda Ozdemirli - Middle East Technical University, Turkey Moderator Mon July 15th 17:45 – 19:00 Room: B005 PANEL 4-2 Moderator Thurs July 18th 18:15 – 19:30 Room: B005 Nicole Gurran – University of Sydney, Australia Michelle Noris – University College Dublin, Neil Klug – University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, Patricia Austin – University of Auckland Social Housing in a Comparative Perspective: Current Challenges and Future Directions Rachel Bratts – Tufts University, USA Kath Scanlon -- London School of Economics, UK, Michelle Norris – University College Dublin, Ireland, Alex Schwartz – New School University, New York, US, Emily Silverman – Hebrew University, Jerusalem, Israel TRACK 5: Transport and Infrastructure Planning SESSION 5-1 Transport Planning for Resilience Moderator Mon July 15th 16:00 – 17:30 Room: C007 Kelly Clifton -- Portland State University, US SESSION 5-2 Moderator Integrated Planning of Transport and Land-use TBD Tues July 16th 08:00 – 09:30 Room: C007 Public transport accessibility in European and North American cities – a shared pursuit of best practice? Jan Scheurer - RMIT University, Australia, Carey Curtis – Curtin University, Australia From integrated planning to sectorial projects; densification and transportation planning in the Netherlands Jan Duffhues – University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands Bridging the Gap between the New Urbanist Ideas and Transportation Planning Practice Ming Zhang, University of Texas at Austin, US Assess Data Quality for Land Use and Transportation Modeling with Integrated Indicators Limin Wang – Portland State University, US, Paul Waddell – University of California, US Combined Effects of Compact Development, Transportation Investments, and Road User Pricing on Vehicle Miles Traveled in Urbanized Areas Reid Ewing – University of Utah, US, Shima Hamid – University of Utah, US, Arthur Chris Nelson – University of Utah, US, James B. Grace – Geographical Survey Lafayette, US SESSION 5-3 Moderator Transit Investments: Impact Assessment TBD How to plan a neighborhood resilient to future threats? An approach in understanding the effects of the built environment on modal choice Samira Ramezani – Sapienza University of Rome, Barbara Pizzo – Sapienza University of Rome, Italy Integrating land-use and transport infrastructure planning: Towards resilient and sustainable region Jos Arts – University of Groningen and Rijkswaterstaat, The Netherlands, Tertius Hanekamp – Temah Cconsultancy, The Netherlands, Anne Dijkstra – Rijkswaterstaat, The Netherlands Transport Improvement Policy and Economic Resilience Jae Kwang Lee – University College London, UK The Demand for Reliable Travel: Theory, Evidence, and a Research Agenda Sandip Chakrabarti –- University of Southern California, US Highway congestion during evacuation: Examining the household’s choice of number of vehicles to evacuate Praveen Maghelal – University of North Texas, US, Walter Gillis Peacock – Texas A&M University, US, Xiangyu Li – University of North Texas, US Tues July 16th 09:45 – 11:15 Room: C007 Analyzing Impacts of Urban Light Rail Investments: Study of the LA Metro Expo Line Using Archived Real-time Transportation System Data Genevieve Giuliano – University of Southern California, US, Sandip Chakrabarti – University of Southern California, US Measuring Neighborhood Change from Public Investment in Light Rail: Results from a Longitudinal Study James Murdoch – University of Texas at Dallas, US, Tommy Leonard – University of Texas at Dallas, US, Kurt Beron – University of Texas at Dallas, US, Margaret Caughy – University of Texas School of Public Health, US, Catherine Eckel – Texas A&M University, US Mexico City’s Suburban Land Use and Transit Connection: the effects of the Line B Metro expansion Erik Guerra – University of California Berkeley, US The impacts of Hiawatha light rail transit and built environment on driving distance Xinyu Cao – University of Minnesota, US The co-evolution of London’s transport networks as a key driver of urban growth patterns Kiril Stanilov – University of Cambridge, UK SESSION 5-4 Moderator Transit: Performance Analysis TBD Tues July 16th 11:45 – 13:15 Room: C007 Streetcars in the US: An Examination of Ridership, Performance, and Function Luis Enrique Ramos – Florida State University , US, Jeffrey R. Brown – Florida State University, US Two urban and transport modal scenarios in comparison: American BRT vs European LRT Luis Miguel Valenzuela – University of Granada, Spain, Oscar Figueroa – Institute of Urban and Spatial Studies, Chile, Julio Soria – University of Zaragoza, Spain Understanding Effects of Urban Transit Network Decentralization in a Small-sized U.S. Metropolitan Area: Case Study of Tallahassee, Florida Michael Jaroszynski – Florida State University, US, Jeffrey R. Brown – Florida State University, US Transit system design mismatch: Where transit serves and where people are going- A study of Atlanta Metropolitan Region’s transit systems Torsha Bhattacharya – Florida State University, US How to Increase Rail Ridership in Maryland? Direct Ridership Models (DRM) for Policy Guidance Sevgi Erdogan – University of Maryland, US, Chao Liu - University of Maryland, US SESSION 5-5 Moderator Tues July 16th 14:15 – 15:45 Room: C007 Transit: Agencies, Financing, Operation TBD Mass-Transit Agencies as De Facto Regional Planners: Reflections on the Colombian Case Julio D. Davila – University College London, UK Organizational reforms in public transport service delivery: new institutions and their impact on planning, operation and system performance Ela Babalik-Sutcliffe – Middle Eastern Technical University, Turkey Transaction Cost Evaluation of Public-Private Partnerships Jan Whittington – University of Washington, US, Karen Trapenberg-Frick – University of California, Berkeley, US Financing Local Public Transport by Land Value Capture : The Case of Cardiff Bus Yimin Wang – Cardiff University, UK, Dimitris Potoglou – Cardiff University, UK, Scott Orford – Cardiff University, UK Innovative governance and finance strategies for implementing Dutch transit-oriented development Sander Lenferink –Radbound University Nijegen, The Netherlands, Hetty van der Stoep – Radbound University Nijmegen, The Netherlands SESSION 5-6 Moderator Transit-Oriented Development (TOD) TBD Tues July 16th 16:15 – 17:45 Room: C007 Change is the Only Constant: Evaluating the role of institutional change in the implementation of transit-oriented development strategies Wendy Tan – University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands, Luca Bertolini – University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands, Leonie Jansen – Janssen – University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands Ferry-Oriented Development: A Comparison of Brisbane (Australia), London and New York City Sipe Neil – Griffith University, Australia The Impacts of Station-level Accessibility and Land Use on Transit Ridership in the Seoul Metropolitan Region Hyungun Sung – Korea Transport Institute, Republic of Korea, Keechoo Choi – Ajou University, Republic of Korea, Sugie Lee – Hangyang University, Republic of Korea Transit Commuting and the Built Environment: An Analysis of America's Station Precincts John Renne – University of New Orleans, US, Reid Ewing – University of Utah, US Beyond the case study dilemma in planning research Ren Thomas – University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands SESSION 5-7 Moderator Land-use Features & Their Impact on Travel & Mode Choice TBD Tues July 16th 18:00 – 19:30 Room: C007 A Review of the Debate Regarding the Influence of Urban Spatial Structure on Commuting and Modal Choice John Humphreys – University College Dublin, Ireland The Impact of Spatial Structure of Metropolitan Areas on Commuting Behaviour Amir Hajrasouliha - University of Utah, US Method to Adjust ITE Vehicle-Trip Generation Estimates in Smart-Growth Areas Robert J. Schneider – University of Wisconsin – Milwaukee, US, Kevan Shafizadeh California State University Sacramento, US, Susan L. Handy – University of California Davis, US Bundled Parking and Vehicle Ownership: Evidence from the American Housing Survey Michael Manville – Cornell University, US Complementarity between Land Use Planning and Pricing in VMT Reduction Sungwon Lee – University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign, US, Bumsoo Lee – University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign, US SESSION 5-8 Moderator Pricing & Traffic Management TBD Weds July 17th 08:00 – 09:30 Room: C007 Getting the Prices Right for Parking in San Francisco Gregory Pierce – UCLA, US, Donald Shoup – UCLA, US Parking policies as a tool for reducing green house gas emissions Tor Medalen – Norwegian University of Science, Norway Achieving political acceptability for new transport infrastructure in congested urban regions Jonas Westin – KTH Royal Institute of Technology, Sweden, Pierre Basck – University of Lyon, France, Joel P. Franklin – KTH Royal Institute of Technology, Sweden, Stef Proost – KU Leuven, Belgium, Charles Raux – University of Lyon, France The Longer-Term Impacts of the London Congestion Charge: An Analysis of Firm Location Choices Andrea Broaddus – University of California Berkeley, US Estimating the Potential for Mode Shift Based on Price and Incentives William Riggs – California Polytechnic State University, US, Jessica Kuo – University of California Berkeley, US, Elizabeth Deakin – University of California Berkeley, US SESSION 5-9 Moderator Freight Transport/Logistics TBD Weds July 17th 09:45 – 11:15 Room: C007 Corridors for Customers: analysing bottlenecks in intermodal freight transport Patrick Witte – Utrecht University, The Netherlands, Bart Wiegmans – TU Delft, The Netherlands Current Situation of the Rail Freight Yard and Possibility of Modal Shift in Japan Yasuhiro Mano – Osaka University, Japan, Noriko Otsuka - ETH Zurich, Switzerland, Hirokazu Abe – Osaka University, Japan Relationship between Land Use and Freight Delivery Activities Kazuya Kawamura- University of Illinois at Chicago, US, PS Seiroj – University of Illinois at Chicago, US, Havan Raj Surat – University of Illinois at Chicago, US, Martin Menniger – University of Illinois at Chicago, US The Impact of Origin-Destination Spatial Units on the Accuracy of Freight Flow Assignment on Highway David Jung-Hwi Lee - Georgia Institute of Technology, US, Guoqiang Shen – University of Oklahoma, US Regional Strategies for HUB Airports and Megaregions David Jung-Hwi Lee – Georgia Institute of Technology, US, Catherine Ross – Georgia Institute of Technology, US SESSION 5-10 Moderator Planning for Water Supplies TBD Weds July 17th 11:45 – 13:15 Room: C007 Catching the Rain: Adapting Global South Local Water Reuse and Catchment Strategies to Texas Katherine Lieberknecht – University of Texas at Austin, US Governance Models for Community Water Systems--The Case of Agua Clara Gonzales Rivas – University of Pittsburgh, US, Mildred Warner – Cornell University, US, Karim Bears – Cornell Cooperative, US, Monroe Weber – Cornell University, US Household Water Preferences and Sense of Community among Women in Urban Areas of Uganda and Nigeria Charisma Acey – Ohio State University, US Interoperability of Urban Water Supply in the Global South: Vietnam, Cambodia, Indonesia James Spencer – University of Hawaii at Manoa, US Institutional determinants of successful Public-Community Partnerships Emmanuele Lobina - University of Greenwich, UK, Leo Heller – Federal University of Minos Gerais, Brasil Uncharted waters: navigating new forms of governance for urban services Ariyon Das – University of Hawaii at Manoa, US SESSION 5-11 Moderator Transport, Equity, Fairness TBD Thurs July 18th 08:00 – 09:30 Room: C007 Assessing benefit distribution of transportation investment programs: A proposal and its application Aaron Golub – Arizona State University, US, Karel Martens – Radboud University Nijmegen, The Netherlands An Assessment of Social Mobility among Key Disadvantaged Communities in North East Dublin David O'Connor – Dublin Institute of Technology, Ireland, Odran Reid – Northside Partnership On fair financing in the transportation domain Karel Martens – Radboud University Nijmegen, The Netherlands Exploring the emergency facility location problem for measuring the relative spatial equity Hsueh-Sheng Chang – National Cheng Kung University, Taiwan, Chin-Hsien Liao – National Cheng Kung University, Taiwan Multifamily housing and walkable neighborhoods: Assessing economic and social equity impacts Kenneth Joh – Texas A&M University, US, Wei Li – Texas A&M University, US, Chanam Lee – Texas A&M University, US, Jun Hyun Kim – Texas A&M University, US SESSION 5-12 Moderator Thurs July 18th 11:45 – 13:15 Room: C007 Transport Models TBD SESSION 5-13 Moderator Residential Relocation TBD Thurs July 18th 16:30 – 18:00 Room: C007 Are movers irrational? A pilot study of the happiness, commuting, housing, and social lives of undergraduates before and after a move Daniel G. Chatman – University of California Berkeley, US, Andrea Broaddus – University of California Berkeley, US, Cheryl Young – University of California Berkeley, US Modeling Residential Location Choice and Travel Behavior in the Portland Metropolitan Region Roger B. Chen – Portland State University, US, Steven R. Gehrke – Portland State University, US, Kristina M. Currans – Portland State University, US, Jenny H. Liu – Portland State University, US, Kelly J. Clifton – Portland State University, US Joint Effects of Residential Relocation and Rail Transit Development on Mode Choice and Greenhouse Gas Emissions Qing Shen – University of Washington, US, Peng Chen – University of Washington, US, Haixiao Pan – Tongji University, Shanghai Understanding Recent Mover Non-work Travel Mode Adoption Arlie Adkins – Portland State University, US A Life-Course and Inter-Generational Approach to Residential Relocations Janna Albrecht, Christian Holz-Rau, Joachim Scheiner – Dortmund University, Germany SESSION 5-14 Moderator Mobility & Accessibility TBD A Framework For Multi-Resolution Transport Modeling to Assess Local and Regional Development Impacts Timothy Welch – University of Maryland, US, Sevgi Erdogan – University of Maryland, US The (in)accuracy of travel demand forecasts in the case of no-build alternatives Morten Skou Nicolaisen – Aalborg University, Denmark, Petter Næss – Norwegian University of Life Sciences, Norway Transport Modeling in the Context of the ‘Predict and Provide’ Paradigm Petter Næss – Norwegian University of Life Sciences, Norway, Morten Skou Nicolaisen – Aalborg University, Denmark, Arvid Strand – Institute of Transport Economics, Norway, Jeppe Andersen – Aalborg University, Denmark Computer Says “Not Sure”: Path Dependencies and Increasing Returns in Large Transport Projects Patrick Driscoll – Aalborg University-Copenhagen, Denmark Equilibrium or Non-equilibrium? Modeling Real Estate Price in Integrated Land Use Models Liming Wang – Portland State University, US, Paul Waddell – University of California Berkeley, US Fri July 19th 08:00 – 09:30 Room: C007 Activity location and mobility costs Erica Papa – University of Rome, Italy, Agostino Nuzzulo – University of Rome, Italy, Pierluigi Caoppola – University of Rome, Italy Accessibility in the Greater Dublin Area David Quinn – National University of Ireland, Maynooth, Ireland, Alexai Pozdnoukhov – National University of Ireland, Maynooth, Ireland An Analysis of Household Car-Ownership and Transportation Expenditures during the US Economic Recession Yaye Keita – University of Illinois Chicago, US, Piyushimita Thakuriah – University of Glasgow, UK Adapting to Automobility: Immigrants, Suburbs, and Household Transport Strategies in the Greater Toronto Area Paul Hess – University of Toronto, Canada Mobility and Accessibility of Hispanics in Small Town and Rural Areas in the U.S. Miwa Matsuo – University of Iowa, US SESSION 5-15 Moderator The Planning "Cycles" TBD Fri July 19th 09:45 – 11:15 Room: C007 Planning for cycling – Institutional and Organisational Analysis Isabelle Anguelovski – Autonomous University Barcelona, Spain, Vladimir Mrkajic – University of Novi Sad, Serbia / Autonomous University Barcelona, Spain Why has Norway not succeeded in Planning for Cycling? Helge Fiskaa – Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Norway Sustainable bike cities and unsustainable car cities in Europe Anders Langeland – University of Stavanger, Norway Cycling in the African American Community Talia McCray – University of Texas at Austin, US E-Bike Use in the Portland Metro Region John MacArthur, Mark Person, Jennifer Dill – Portland State University, US SESSION 5-16 Moderator Thurs July 18th 08:00 – 09:30 Room: C006 Bicycle Transportation TBD SESSION 5-17 Moderator Thurs July 18th 11:45 – 13:15 Planning for Pedestrians TBD Modeling and Finding Bicycle-Friendly Neighborhoods in America's Most Bicycle Friendly City Earl G. Bossard – San Jose State University, US Variation in Bicycle and Pedestrian Traffic Patterns: Implications for Estimating Average Daily Traffic Greg Lindsey – University of Minnesota, US, Steve Hankey – University of Minnesota, US Encouraging Bicycling among University Students Lessons from Queen’s University, Kingston, Ontario Ajay Agarwal – Practitioner, Canada A participative bike route planner to improve adaptive cycling strategies in cycling starter cities - typology of cyclists and cycling preferences in Lisbon Jorge B Silva, Rosa Félix, Alexandre Gonçalves, Fernando N da Silva – Universidade Técnica de Lisboa, Portugal Geographic Access to Transit for Bicyclists: Attitudes, Issues, and Options for Improvement Bradley J Flamm – Temple University, US, Charles R. Rivasplata – San Jose State University, US Pedestrian mobility environments: Definition, evaluation and prospects Julio A. Soria – University of Zaragoza, Rubén Talavera – University of Granada, Luis M. Room: C006 Valenzuela – University of Granada What is a Walkable Community? A Review and Conceptual Framework Ann Forsyth – Harvard University, US Examining Recent Trends in Walking and Cycling Travel in Southern California: Insights from the 2001-2009 National Household Travel Surveys Kenneth Joh – Texas A&M University, Marlon Boarnet – University of Southern California, Sandip Chakrabarti – University of Southern California Development of a Sidewalk Quality Index to Support Accessible Urban Environments Randall Guensler – Georgia Institute of Technology, Alexandra Frackelton – Georgia Institute of Technology, Alice Grossman – Georgia Institute of Technology Variations in Correlates of Walking to School by Community Setting: Urban, Suburban and Rural schools Chanam Lee – Texas A&M University, Young-Jae Kim – Texas A&M University, Hyung Jin Kim – Kansas State University, Diane Dowdy – Texas A&M Health Science Center, Deanna Hoelscher – University of Texas School of Public Health, and Marcia Ory – Texas A&M Health Science Center SESSION 5-18 Moderator Thurs July 18th 16:30 – 18:00 Room: C006 Active Travel and Health TBD SESSION 5-19 Moderator Fri July 19th 08:00 – 09:30 Room: C006 Active Travel: Mobility of Children and Youth TBD SESSION 5-20 Moderator Fri July 19th Impacts and Determinants of Travel Behaviour Ela Babalik-Sutcliffe -- Middle Eastern Technical University, Turkey Built Environment Influences on Healthy Eating and Active Living: a “NEWPATH” to Energy Balance Lawrence Frank – University of British Columbia, Canada, Josh van Loon – University of British Columbia, Canada, Pat Fisher – Region of Waterloo, Canada, Mary Thompson – Region of Waterloo, Canada, Leia Minaker – University of Alberta, Canada, Kim Raine – University of Alberta, Canada Exploring Barriers to Collaboration Between Transportation and Public Health Organizations Jianling Li – University of Texas at Arlington, US, Colleen Casey – University of Texas at Arlington, Lou Brewer – Tarrant County Public Health, US Mood and Mode: Does how we travel affect how we feel? Eric Morris – Clemson University, US, Erick Guerra – University of California at Berkeley, US Transit Accessibility and Active Travel: The Role of Transit Service Quality and Psychological Factors Jeongwoo Lee – University of Southern California, US Are Bicycling and Walking “Cool?”: Adolescent Attitudes about Active Travel Tara Goddard, Nathan McNeil, Jennifer Dill – Portland State University, US Active School Commuting – What Motivates Children to Walk or Bike to School? Findings from a quasi-experiment research project Yizhao Yang – University of Oregon, US, Noreen McDonald – University of North Carolina Chapel Hill, US, Bill Harbaugh – University of Oregon, US Safe Route to School Program’s Impact on Walking and Biking: Eugene, Oregon Study Noreen C. McDonald – University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, US, Yizhao Yang – University of Oregon, US, Steve M. Abbott – University of Oregon, US, Allison N. Bullock – University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, US Is online activity leading to falling physical mobility amongst young adults? Scott Le Vine – Imperial College, UK, Charilaos Latinopoulos – Imperial College, John Polak – Imperial College, UK, Peter Jones – University College London, UK Impacts of a regional carbon tax on transportation: a case study of Oregon 09:45 – 11:15 Room: C006 Jenny Liu, Jeff Renfro – Portland State University, US Pro-environmental behaviour and private car ownership in fast developing countries: the case of Bangkok in Thailand Catalina Turcu – UCL Bartlett School of Planning, UK, Alizara Juangbhanich – TEAM Group of Companies Co. Ltd., Thailand Small Is Beautiful?: University Students’ Mode Choice and Its Determinants in College Town Jiangping Zhou – Iowa State University, US The influence of street environments on fuel efficiency: insights from a naturalistic driving dataset Xiaoguang Wang – Central Michigan University, US, Chao Liu – University of Maryland, US, Lidia Kostyniuk – University of Michigan, US, Qing Shen – University of Washington, US, Shan Bao – University of Michigan Transportation Research Institute, US Assessing benefits of walkability to single family property values: a hedonic study of Austin, Texas Wei Li, Kenneth Joh, Chanam Lee, Jun-Hyun Kim – Texas A&M University, US PANEL 5-1 Moderator Residential Self-Selection in Land Use and Transportation Research Xinyu Cao, University of Minnesota, US Mon July 15th 17:45 – 19: Room: C007 Marlon Boarnet - University of Southern California Dan Chatman - University of California Berkeley Petter Næss, Norwegian University of Life Sciences TRACK 6: Governance, Institutions and Civic Initiatives SESSION 6-1 Moderator Mon July 15th 16:00 – 17:30 Room: B004 SESSION 6-2 Moderator Tues July 16th 08:00 – 09:30 Room: B004 Urban Governance and Service Delivery Under Austerity : Moving from Privatisation to Social Enterprise Mildred Warner – Cornell University, US “Cannibalizing” the State and Citizenship: Marketization and the City Judith Clifton – University of Cantabria, Spain, Mildred Warner – Cornell University, US Less planning, more development? Housing industry discourse and urban reform in Australia Nicole Gurran – University of Sydney, Australia, Kristian Ruming – Macquarie University, Australia Neoliberal Governance and the Discourse of Urban Marketization: Policy Discourses Surrounding Business Improvements in the US and Germany Susanna Francesca Schaller – The City College of New York, CUNY, US Beyond the Public-Private Divide: Social Entrepreneurship and the Privatization of Public Services Lisa Hanley – Zeppelin University, Germany Business Improvement Districts in England and the (private?) governance of urban spaces. Claudio de Magalhaes – University College London, UK Resilience Frames Shaping Resilience Moira Zellner – University of Illinois, US Narratives of resilience Raul Lejano – University of Hong-Kong, China A planning practice perspective on the relationship between resilience, risk and sustainability My Sellberg – Stockholm Resilience Centre, Sweden, Cathy Wilkinson – Stockholm Resilience Centre, Sweden Emergence of Resilient Watershed Governance in an Urbanizing River Valley Wendy Kellogg – Cleveland State University, US Flood risk governance – a framework for coping with climate change related uncertainties? Walter Seher – University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences, Austria, Lukas Loschner – University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences, Austria Small is Beautiful: How Simple Modeling Supports Participatory Environmental Planning Moira Zellner, Charles Hoch, Daniel Milz, Leilah Lyons, Joshua Radinsky – University of Illinois, US SESSION 6-3 Moderator Tues July 16th 09:45 – 11:15 Room: B004 Governance and Scale Elizabeth Hamin – University of Massachusetts, US SESSION 6-4 Moderator Tues July 16th 11:45 – 13:15 Room: B004 Challenges and Pitfalls in/for Strategic Planning Louis Albrechts – KU Leuven, Belgium SESSION 6-5 Moderator Tues July 16th 14:15 – 15:45 Room: B004 Contextualized Cases on Strategic Planning Valeria Fedeli – Politecnico di Milano, Italy Collaborative planning for resilience – what scale works? Sanda Kaufman – Cleveland State University, US, Kathryn Hexter – Cleveland State University, US Resilience and institutional responses to a zanjera irrigation system in the Philippines (1979, 1985-2010) Ruth Yabes – Arizona State University, Bruce Goldstein – University of Colorado Shrinking Rural Areas in Japan: Community ownership of assets as a development potential? Thomas Feldhoff – Goethe Institute, Germany Planning with self-empowered and resilient communities: a case-study of Cardwell, Australia S. Serrao-Neumann – Griffith University, Australia, Choy D. Low – Griffith University, Australia By Stealth or by Spotlight: Matching Adaptation Approaches to Implementation Barriers Elizabeth Hamin – University of Massachusetts, US Strategic Spatial Planning’s role in legitimizing investments in transport infrastructure Kristian Olesen – Aalborg University, Denmark Building adaptive strategies as transgressions of knowledge boundaries Valeria Monno – Politecnico di Bari, Italy Strategic planning as the intentional production of a “trading zone” Alessandro Balducci – Politecnico di Milano, Italy Does strategic spatial planning deal with issues that really matter and does it asks the right questions? Louis Albrechts – KU Leuven, Belgium Between innovation and resistance: how does strategic spatial planning balance ecological viability and economic development? Christophe Demazière – University of Tours, France, Jose Serrano – University of Tours, France, Sylvie Serrain-Courant – ENSNP, France, Fabien Nadou – University of Tours, France What’s so strategic about Australian Metropolitan Plans? The case of Melbourne, Perth and Sydney Paul Maginn – University of Western Australia, Robin Goodman – RMIT Australia, Nicole Gurrnan – University of Sydney, Kristian Ruming – Macquarie University Strategy and strategic planning at work: meaning, goals and processes from (Embodied) practice in Wales Francesca Sartorio – Cardiff School of Planning and Geography, UK Strategic planning and land use planning conflicts : The role of statutory authority Glen Searle – University of Queensland, Australia 15 years of Strategic planning in Italian cities: which influences on ordinary spatial planning and planning styles? Valeria Fedeli – Politecnico di Milano SESSION 6-6 Moderator Tues July 16th 16:15 – 17:45 Room: B004 Tensions Between Strategic Planning and Statutory Planning Louis Albrechts – KU Leuven, Belgium SESSION 6-7 Moderator Tues July 16th 18:00 – 19:30 Room: B004 Planning at the Neighbourhood Scale Sanda Kaufman -- Cleveland State University, US SESSION 6-8 Moderator Wed July 17th 08:00 – 09:30 Room: B004 Governance on the Margins TBD SESSION 6-9 Moderator Wed July 17th 09:45 – 11:15 Room: B004 Community Action, Capacity and Assessment TBD Legitimacy of the new strategic land use planning instruments – Case Finland Raine Mäntysalo – Aalto University, Finland, Karoliina Jarenko – Aalto University, Finland Strategic spatial planning in uncertainty : respecting the unexpected Jean Hillier – RMIT University, Australia Strategic spatial planning and institutional resilience : Theoretical thoughts and some Empirical Devices Servillo Loris – KU Leuven, Belgium, Mario Reimer – ILS Research Institute for Regional and Urban Development, Germany Plan in progress: A critique of the selective coproduction of the Spatial Policy Plan for Flanders (Belgium) Kobe Boussauw – Ghent University, Belgium, Luuk Boelens – Ghent University, Belgium Strategic planning and implementation Jef Van den Broeck – KU Leuven, Belgium Universities in Networks of Innovation in Poor Neighborhoods: Challenges and Contradictions Ramon Borges-Mendez – Clark University, US Is small really beautiful? The legitimacy of neighbourhood planning Paul Cowie – Newcastle University, UK, Simin Davoudi – Newcastle University, UK Community Support Groups in Neighbourhood Planning in England Nick Gallent – University College London, UK Facilitating civic infrastructure: a corollary to civic leadership Deborah Peel – University of Ulster, UK, Greg Lloyd, University of Ulster, UK Democracy and Shadowy Places: Citizen Deliberation and Institutional Responses in Expert-Managed Systems Deiric Ó Broin – Dublin Institute of Technology, Ireland The paradox of governance: the constraining project architecture of the Westflank Haarlemmermeer, The Netherlands Jochem De Vries – University of Amsterdam, Netherlands, Sebastian Dembski – University of Amsterdam, Netherlands Territorial pact as tool of effective governance in the poor regions Irina Saghin – University of Bucharest, Romania, Iona Ianos – University of Bucharest, Romania, Daniel Peptenatu – University of Bucharest, Romania The Changing Rural Governance in Peri-urban China: A Tale of Three Villages in Chengdu Bo Qin – Renmin University of China, China th Dublin 5 Province - Citizen Interaction in an E-deliberation Environment: Governance, Institutions and Civic Initiatives Panel Andrew Moore, Dublin City University, Deiric Ó Broin – Dublin Institute of Technology, Ireland Community engagement assessment: What is the return on investments? Pat Crawford – Michigan State University, US Examining the Ineffectiveness of Comprehensive Community Initiatives: Developing A Framework for Community Engagement and Capacity Building Malo Hutson – University of California Berkeley, US, Jovanna Rosen – University of Southern California, US Collaboration, Institutional Capacity and Transformation of Planning Culture: The Experience of Collaborative Community Building Practices in Korea Sangmin Kim – University of Southern California, US Giving Voice to Community Aspirations for Public Transport: The role of community engagement and research advocacy in Perth, Western Australia. Jake Schapper – Curtin University, Australia, Shahed Khan – Curtin University, Australia New York’s High Line: Definitely Not Lost in Translation Laura Tate – Community Action Initiative, Canada SESSION 6-10 Moderator Wed July 17th 11:45 – 13:15 Room: B004 Community Action Evaluation, Measurement and Indicators TBD SESSION 6-11 Moderator Thurs July 18th 08:00 – 09:30 Room: B004 Strategies for Planning, Development and Participation TBD SESSION 6-12 Moderator Thurs July 18th 11:45 – 13:15 Room: B004 Institutional Change and Analysis TBD Community Resiliency Measurement: From theory to practice- The evolution and application of the CCRAM Mooli Lahad, Limor Aharonson-Daniel, Dima Leykin, Bruria Adini, Odeya Cohen – Tel-Hai College, Israel, Avishay Goldberg –, Ben-Gurion – Tel-Hai College, Israel Creating the Sustainable Communities Indicators Catalog Eugenie Birch – University of Pennsylvania, US, Stuart Andreason – University of Pennsylvania, US, Amy Lynch – University of Pennsylvania, US A just assessment of the everyday landscape as a basis for planning of infrastructure Ulla Berglund – Department of Urban and Rural planning, Sweden, Andrew Butler – Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Sweden A little less conversation, a little more action: A structural-functional approach to evaluating the health of governance systems Ruth Potts – Griffith University, Australia, Karen Vella – Griffith University, Australia, Neil Snipe – Griffith University, Australia, Allan Dalé – James Cook University, Australia Collaborative assessment of planning methods and tools for coastal areas Márilisa Coelho – University of Lisbon, Portugal The performance of trust Jasper R. de Vries, Petra Roodbol-Mekkes, Raoul Beunen – Wageningen University and RC, The Netherlands Governance and strategic planning in Sardinia (Italy) Chiara Garau – University of Cagliari, Italy Assessing Shrinking City Models: Focus on Strategies for Citizen Participation Joongsub Kim – Lawrence Technological University, US Evaluation in strategic spatial planning: what is there and when to evaluate? Carlos Rodrigues – University of Aveiro, Portugal, Fernando Nogueira – University of Aveiro, Portugal Organic development strategies, self-organization in Dutch urban development? Ward Rauws – University of Groningen, Netherlands, Anke van der Wiel – Bilthoven University, Netherlands, Terry van Dijk – University of Groningen, Netherlands The functional gap: a reflection on the limits to institutional capital João Mourato – University of Lisbon, Portugal, João Ferrão – University of Lisbon, Portugal Institutional Transition and Social Polarization: Exploring the Impacts of Public Participation on Issuing Planning Permits in Beijing Lei Owi – Renmin University of China, China A neo-institutional analysis of local governance responses to spatial fragmentation Sam Smit – Artesis Hogeschool Antwerpen, Belgium, Tom Coppens – University of Antwerp, Belgium, Lise Loots – University of Antwerp, Belgium New Cities’ space Development Led by China’s Entrepreneurial Local Governments: the Example of Wujin Jing Mai – Nanjing University, China The evolution of environmental governance approaches in Australia: A stocktake of National-level policy developments in Australia with commentary on progress in Queensland Karen Vella – Griffith University, Australia Neil Snipe – Griffith University, Australia, Ruth Potts – Griffith University, Australia, Allan Dalé – James Cook University, Australia SESSION 6-13 Moderator Thurs July 18th 16:30 – 18:00 Room: B004 Innovative and Alternative Governance 1 TBD SESSION 6-14 Moderator Fri July 19th 09:45 – 11:15 Room: B004 Innovative and Alternative Governance 2 Lia Vasconcelos -- IMAR, FCT/ New U of Lisbon, Portugal SESSION 6-15 Moderator Mon July 15th 16:00 – 17:30 Room: C006 Participation and Non-Participation Paula Russell – University College Dublin, Ireland Bedouin Communities in the Negev: Models for Planning the Unplanned – Part II Implementation Deborah Shmueli – University of Haifa, Israel, Rassem Khamaisi – University of Haifa, Israel Occupy Planning: Public Participation and Money Politics in Santa Ana, California Victoria Beard – Cornell University, US, Carolina S. Sarimento – University of California, US Exploring New Actor Coalition in Chinese Urbanization: Creating Shanghai Hongqiao Transit Led Central Business District Guowen Dai – University of Amsterdam, Netherlands Coastal Governance on the island of Ireland: a comparative study in social-ecological resilience Linda McElduff – University of Ulster, UK, Deborah Peel – University of Ulster, UK, Greg Lloyd – University of Ulster, UK Contested Visions for a New Generation of Great Stations – Towards a Sustainable Redevelopment of Rail Terminals in Major U.S. Cities? Deike Peters – University of Southern California, US Rational Ignorance in Civic Engagement: Study Case in Hamburg Alenka Poplin – HafenCity University Hamburg, Germany, Tony Haertling – HafenCity University Hamburg, Germany Place marketing and citizen participation: applying branding to address the emotional dimension of planning processes? Jasper Eshuis – Erasmus University Rotterdam, Netherlands Sustainable Mega-Event Governance: Public Participation in London 2012 Ozlem Edizel – Brunel University, UK Participatory marine spatial planning: a comparison of two North American case-studies Wesley Flannery – Queen's University Belfast, UK Co-constructing Collaborative Governance Lia Vasconcelos – IMAR, FCT/ New U of Lisbon, Portugal, Márilisa Coelho – University of Lisbon, Portugal, Mana João Ramos Pereira – University of Aveiro, Portugal, Rita Sa – University of the Algarve, Portugal, Flavia Silva – New University of Lisbon, Portugal, Ursula Caser – MEDIATEDOMAIN, Portugal A Research about Public Participation via Questionnaire Survey in the Process of Master Planning Fan Yang – Tongji University Accounting for the ‘Non’participant in the City of Cincinnati Ohio’s Comprehensive Planning Marisa Zapata – University of Cincinnati Participatory Planning in Chinese Inner City Regeneration – where are we? Lei Sun – University of Liverpool, Xiaonan Zhang – Xi’an Jiaotong University/Liverpool University, China From Dialogue to Trialogue? – A new Perspective on Collaboration, Conflict and Power within Participatory Governance Tobias Schmidt – Leibniz-Institute Planning for their Future: Children, Participation and the Planning Process Paula Russell – University College Dublin, Ireland SESSION 6-16 Moderator Tues July 16th 08:00 – 09:30 Room: C006 Caught in Between Local and Global: Entrepreneurial Government TBD SESSION 6-17 The New Frontiers of Planning: Knowledge Building, Artistic Practice and Leadership TBD Moderator Tues July 16th 09:45 – 11:15 Room: C006 New Cities’ space Development Led by China’s Entrepreneurial Local Governments: the Example of Wujin Jing Mai – Nanjing University, China Agenda 21 and Sustainable Development Opposition in the United States Karen Frick – UC Berkeley, US, Paul Waddell – UC Berkeley, US, David Weinzimmer – UC Berkeley, US Agenda 21 and its Discontents: Is Sustainable Development a Global Imperative or Globalizing Conspiracy? Richard Norton – University of Michigan, US Regional Water Management: The Architecture of Regional Governance and Planning of Water Management in Sao Paulo Roberto Rocco – TU Delft, Netherlands, Taneha Bacchin – TU Delft, Netherlands, Ryan Schweitzer – University of South Florida, US New Spaces of Territorial Governance between Territoriality and Relationality Implications of Soft Spaces in North-Western Europe Frank Othengrafen, Marta Jacuniak-Suda, Jörg Knieling, Cormac Walsh – HafenCity University Hamburg, Germany Planners as knowledge promoters: dealing with complexity through knowledge building Helena Farrall – CESNova FCSH/UNL, Portugal, Lia Vasconcelos – DCEA-FCT/New University of Lisbon, Portugal Art as participatory planning? On the border of artistic practice and planning Maria Håkansson – Urban and regional studies, KTH, Sweden Social Capital and Urban Regeneration in Chinese Historic Quarters: A Case Study of the Muslim District in Xi’an Binqing Zhai – Xi'an Jiaotong University, China Place-based Leadership – new possibilities for planning? Robin Hambleton – University of the West of England, UK SESSION 6-18 Moderator Tues July 16th 11:45 – 13:15 Room: C006 Governance for Sustainable Development TBD PANEL 6-1 Strategic Planning and the Quest for Certainty Cultural Heritage Governance: Adaptation to a more sustainable urban planning Ragnhild Skogheim – Norwegian Institute for Urban and Regional Research, Norway, Kari Larsen – Norvegian Institute for Cultural Heritage, Norway, Kjell Harvold - Norwegian Institute for Urban and Regional Research, Norway Space that we share. Commons solutions for spatial planning and management? Veronika Poklembova – Slovak Academy of Sciences, Slovakia ‘Localism’ and the removal of the English Government Offices: Implications for strategic policy integration and sustainable development Abbas Ziafati Bafarasat, Mark Baker – University of Manchester, UK A window on sustainability. Integration of environmental interests in urban planning through ‘decision windows Rien van Stigt – Utrecht University of Applied Sciences, The Netherlands Comprehensive Federal Urban Policy in the United States: A History and a Retrospective Rebecca Retzlaff - Auburn University, US, Stuart Meck - Rutgers University, US Moderator Mon July 15th 17:45 – 19:00 Room: B004 PANEL 6-2 Moderator Thurs July 18th 18:15 – 19:30 Room: B004 PANEL 6-3 Moderator Fri July 19th 08:00 – 09:30 Room: B004 Alessandro Balducci -- Politecnico di Milano, Italy PANEL 6-4a Networks, Plans and Governance: Processes to Transform the Urban Food Systems, Part I Session dedicated to the memory of Professor Jerry Kaufman Joe Nasr - Ryerson University, Canada Moderator Mon July 15th 17:45 – 19:00 Room: C006 PANEL 6-4b Moderator Thurs July 18th 18:15 – 19:30 Room: C006 Jean Hillier – RMIT, Australia, Raine Mantysalo – Aalto University, Finland, Michael Neuman – NSW Sydney, Australia, William Salet – AME Amsterdam, The Netherlands, Louis Albrechts – KU Leuven, Belgium Trading Zones in Urban Planning Raine Mãntysalo – Aalto University, Finland Alessandro Balducci – Politecnico di Milano, Italy, Ric Richardson – MIT, US,, John Forester – Cornell University, US, Willem Salet – University of Amsterdam, Netherlands, Tore Sager – NTNU, Norway University-Community Partnerships in Planning and Regeneration Sabina Deitrick -- University of Pittsburgh, US Brian Cassidy – Cork City Council, Ireland, Niall McGurk – Ilex, The Urban Regeneration Company, Derry-Londonderry, UK, Laxmi Ramasubramanian – Hunter College, US, Robin Boyle – Wayne State University, US, Frank Gaffikin – Queens University, Belfast, David Perry – University of Illinois Chicago, US, Len Gibbs – Empowering People Insipirng Communities (EPIC), Stoke on Trent, UK Everyday food planning Nevin Cohen – The New School, US Rustbelt Radicalism: A Decade of Food Systems Planning in Buffalo, New York Samina Raja – State University of New York, US, Diane Picard, Massachusetts Avenue Project, US, Cristina Delgado – State University of New York, US The Politics of Urban Food Planning Kevin Morgan – Cardiff University, UK Networks, Plans and Governance: Processes to Transform the Urban Food Systems, Part 2 Session dedicated to the memory of Professor Jerry Kaufman Nevin Cohen – The New School, US Planning for Urban Agriculture: Challenging through Experimentation Michael Hardman – Birmingham City University, UK, Silvio Caputo – Coventry University, UK An action plan without planners? GrowTO and the partnering to scale up urban agriculture in Toronto Joe Nasr – Ryerson University, Canada, James Kuhns – Ryerson University, Canada Planning New Systems of Food Relief: From Corporate to Grassroots Urban Agriculture Domenic Vitiello – University of Pennsylvania, US TRACK 7: Land Use Policy and Planning SESSION 7-1 Moderator Mon July 15th 16:00 – 17:30 Room: C005 Evaluation and Measurement in Land Use Regulation and Research Carolyn Loh -- Wayne State University, US Using Indicator- Based Evaluation Systems to Assess Performance of Eco-City Projects in China: A case study of two large-scale eco-city development projects Dehui Wei – Caofeidian International Ecocity Research and Technology, China, Yizahao Yang – University of Oregon, Peng Lin – China Investment Corporation, Dongquan He – Energy Foundation China Program Adaptive management and planning: the emergence of a new role for policy Evaluation Els Terryn – Ghent University, Belgium, Luuk Boelens – Ghent University, Bergium Land Transactions as the Fundaments of Spatial Planning Sanne Holtslag–Broekhof – Wageningen University, The Netherlands, R. Van Marwijk- Kadaster, R. Beunen – Wageningen University,The Netherlands, JSC Wiserke – Wageningen University, The Netherlands What to do when all seems lost? Exploring alternative options using a multi – criteria decision- aiding approach Jose Antunes Ferreira - Technical University of Lisbon, Isabel Loupa Ramos – Technical University of Lisbon, Jorge Batista e Silva – Technical University of Lisbon Measuring Justice: tensions between scenario- driven planning and equity Elizabeth Mueller – University of Texas at Austin, Michael Oden – University of Texas at Austin SESSION 7-2 Moderator Tues July 16th 08:00 – 09:30 Room: C005 Growth Management TBD SESSION 7-3 Moderator Tues July 16th 09:45 – 11:15 Room: C005 Effects of Land Use Arrangements on Prices and Consumption TBD SESSION 7-4 Moderator Tues July 16th 11:45 – 13:15 Room: C005 Regulation, Implementation and Land Use TBD Impacts of Growth Management on Urban Growth Myungje Woo – University of Seoul, Korea, Jean – Michel Guldmann – The Ohio State University, US The Planning History, Theory, and Politics of the Portland Metropolitan Area’s Original Urban Growth Boundary Sy Adler – Portland State University, US Clouds over the Sunshine States? The Demise of Growth Management in Florida and Queensland Aysin Dedekorut – Howes – Griffith College, Australia, Severine Mayere – Queensland University of Technology, Australia Agriculture and urban sprawl in the Lisbon region. What visions for agriculture in spatial planning? Patricia Abrantes, Eduarda Marques da Costa, Miguel Padeiro, Margarida Queiros – University of Lisbon, Portugal From sprawl to smog an d the roles of spatial planning: aspects of the “Greek Crisis” Athena Yiannakou – Aristotle university of Thessaloniki, Greece Linking low density zoning, housing price changes, mortgage characteristics and foreclosures Arnab Chakraborty, Dustin Allerd – University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign, US Gas Prices, the Suburbs and Housing Price Volatility Zachary Patterson- Concordia University, Canada The Impact of Beijing’s Land Use Planning on Moderate-priced Housing Ruohan Hu – Tsinghua University, China Land Use Planning and the Supply of Dwellings and Neighbourhoods: a Critical Review Leonard Machler, Mark Stevens – University of British Columbia, Canada Nature preserves, Industrial Sites, and the value of Residential Properties Youngre Noh, George Rogers – Texas A&M University, US Land Use Planning for Flood Hazard Mitigation: Municipal Flood Bylaws in British Columbia, Canada Mark Stevens – University of British Columbia, Steve Hanschka – Clackamas County Planning and Zoning Division Form Follows Function? How America Zones Sonia Hirt – Virginia Tech Controlling of the Implementation of Swiss Cantonal Comprehensive Plans Georg Phillipe Mueller – Swiss Federal Research Institute, Felix Kienast – Swiss Federal Research Institute, Anna M. Hersperger – Swiss Federal Research Institute Green Infrastructure in the City of Vancouver, BC: Analysing Regulatory Policy and Outcomes Elizabeth Brabec – University of Massachusetts Amherst The Role of Land Use Policies in Local Food Clusters: international or organic? Anna Haines – University of Wisconsin - Stevens Point SESSION 7-5 Moderator Tues July 16th 14:15 – 15:45 Room: C005 Urban Form and Behaviour TBD SESSION 7-6 Moderator Tues July 16th 16:15 – 17:45 Room: C005 Planning Process 1 TBD SESSION 7-7 Moderator Tues July 16th 18:00 – 19:30 Room: C005 Planning Process 2 TBD SESSION 7-8 Moderator Wed July 17th 08:00 – 09:30 Room: C005 Mixed Uses in Time and Space TBD Energy-Oriented Development (EOD) Duology of Land Use as Economic Functional Unit and as Energy Consumption Unit Zizheng Wang – ENN, China From Minimum to Maximum parking standards: A matched- pair approach to evaluating the residential parking reform in London Fei Li – New York University, Zhan Gou – New York University Land Use Sprawl and traffic injuries and fatalities at the local level: A case study in south east Michigan Rayman Mohammed – Wayne State University, United States, Rainer Vom Hofe – University of Cincinnati, Sangida Mazumder – Wayne State University Relationship of School Siting and Neighbourhood Design in Tennesse Susan Roakes – University of Memphis Evolution of Future Land Use Planning in Central Florida: Stagnation or Innovation? Rebecca Lewis – Florida State University, Jamie Schindewolf – Florida State University The performance of South African spatial development frameworks Gerhard Kienast – University of Kassel, Germany Urban Transformation in Istanbul: Cause and Consequence of a Long-term Legalization Policy Basak Demires Ozkul – University College London “Planning and ‘Viability’”: is English decision-making now taking place in a vacuum..?” Bob Colenutt – University of Northampton, Martin Field – University of Northampton, Allan Cochrane – Open University Flexibility and Public Accountability in Housing Development Projects Vitnarae King – OTB Research Institute for the Built Environment, The Netherlands The Land use of strategic of local authorities in the aftermath of new public management Jean-David Gerber – Institute of Geography, University of Bern, Switzerland A relational Approach to Implementation of the European Landscape Convention in Sweden Sylvia Dovlen – Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Sweden Interlocal Cooperation and Residential land use Policies Thomas Skuzinski – University of Michigan , US Spatial planning conflicts in Portugal: The case of the tourism vs. territory conflict on the Alentejo Coast Joana Almeida – Universidade Technica de Lisboa, Fernando Nunes de Silva – Univeridade Technica de Lisboa, Carlos Costa – Universidade de Aveiro, Portugal Local Empowerment and Strategic Co – ordination Marco Bianconi, Nick Gallent, Iqbal Hamiduddin - University College London Mixing Uses in the Same Building: Planning Processes and Project Outcomes Matti Siemiatycki – University of Toronto, David Pijawka – University of Toronto Empirical Analyses on Relationships between Mixed land Use and Residential Land Value Hee Jin Yang – Harvard University Graduate School, Jihoon Song – Harvard University Graduate School New Urbanist Development Pattern of Suburban Neighbourhoods: A Case Study in the Greater Toronto Area JieLan Xu, Andre Sorensen, Paul Hess – University of Toronto, Canada Planning and Temporary Uses: Regulating Food Trucks in Portland, San Francisco and Chicago Matthew Gebhardt – Portland State University, US Managing Temporary Land Use for Better Environment in Taipei Chien-yuan Lin – National Taiwan University SESSION 7-9 Moderator Wed July 17th 09:45 – 11:15 Room: C005 Plans and Outcomes TBD SESSION 7-10 Moderator Wed July 17th 11:45 – 13:15 Room: C005 Land Use and Population Change SESSION 7-11 Moderator Thurs July 18th 08:00 – 09:30 Room: C005 Targeted Development Major overview of the Portuguese Land Readjustment Practice in Detail Plans Beatriz Condessa – CESUR, IST, Universidade Technica de Lisboa, Portugal Settlement Policy, Land Use Zoning and Regulating Development: A Review of the Reform Agenda in Ireland and England Jonathan Hall, Will Brady, Clara O’Neill – University College Cork Centre for Planning Education and Research, Ireland Searching for certainty: Revisiting the Relationship between plans and Decisions Neil Harris, Francesca Sartorio, Huw Thomas – Cardiff University, UK Literature Review: Central and Local Government’s Impacts on Land Development in China Qi Wang – Tongji University, China Impact of planning Legislation on Settlement form: Comparisons from Tanzania nad South Africa Wolfgang Scholz – TU Dortmund University, Germany Peter Robinson – Univeristy of KwaZulu-Natal, Tanya Dayaram – Consultant, Durban, Sabine Baumgart – TU Dortmund University, Susanna Godehart – Durban TBD Population Growth in Large US Metropolitan Areas from 1990 – 2010: New Measures and Pervasive Trends Jamie Schindewolf – Florida State University, Rebecca Lewis – Florida State University, Gerrit Knapp – University of Maryland. William Fulton – Smarth Growth America, John I Carruthers – George Washington University, US Identification of Urban Development Dynamics using GIS Peter – Baus –Slovak Academy of Science Hydro Urban Units – a meso scale approach for integrated planning Bernd Eisenberg – University of Stattgart,Germany, Eva Nemcova – University of Stuttgart, Rossana Poblet – University of Stuttgart, Antje Stokman- University of Stuttgart Flexible Industrial Land Policies on Exit Strategies in the Rapid Transition Period Hao Chen, Jun Wang – Shanghai Tongji Urban Planning and Design Institute, China Dismantling Density, Diversity and Connectivity for Walking Activity Sugie Lee – Hanyang University, Korea, Tae-Hyun Kim – Seoul Research Institute, Korea Hyungun Sung – Korea Transport Institute TBD Capitalization of Transit Access Beyond the Half – Mile Circle Susan J. Petheram, Arthur C. Nelson, Matt Miller, University of Utah, Reid Ewing - University of Utah, US Transit Orienteed Development : Land Policy for Transit Funding Gualteiro Mattiuzzi – Bartlett School of Planning, UCL, United States Priority Development Areas: How Equitable is the Implementation of California’s Climate Law? Elizabth Mattiuzzi – University of California, Berkeley Lesson (UN) Learning in Spatial Fiscal Incentives: Enterprise Zones and Empowerment Zones Graham Squires, Stephen Hall – University of the West of England, Bristol, UK Tourism and spatial planning public policies in Portugese coastal areas: experience(s) and challenges Jose Simoes, Carlos Cardoso Ferreira – University of Lisbon, Portugal SESSION 7-12 Moderator Thurs July 18th 11:45 – 13:15 Room: C005 Structural Issues in Land Use SESSION 7- 13 Moderator Thurs July 18th 16:30 – 18:00 Room: C005 Commercial and Industrial Land Use SESSION 7-14 Moderator Fri July 19th 08:00 – 09:30 Room: C005 Land Use and the Environment TBD SESSION 7-15 Planning Policy Case Studies from Around the World TBD Municipalities, land policy and changing contexts: land acquisition in the Netherlands Ramona van Marwilk, Michiel Pellenbarg – Dutch Land Registry, The Netherlands Istanbul’s Resilience in Question Betul Sengezer, Aysenur Okten – Yildiz Technical University, Turkey An Urban structure type approach to understand future risks and support spatial planning in a highly dense Asian Setting Nigel Downes, Harry Storch – Brandenburg University of Technology Cottbus, Germany Planning for the Pursuit of Economic and Environmental Resilience Peter Meyer – University of Louisville, US Towards a new common agriculture Policy (CAP) 2014-2020 Agata Spaziante – Politecnico di Torino_ DIST, Italy TBD Is Brownfield Cleanup Worth the Effort? A spatial Hedonic Study on Property Tax Discounts form Proximity to Brownfield Sites Oana Mihaescu – HUI Research AB and Dalarna University, Sweden, Rainer Vom Hofe – Univeristy of Cincinnati The Impact of Planning Policies on Investment in Industrial Buildings Huub Ploegmakers, Pascal Beckers, Erwin van der Krabben – Radbound University Nijmegen, The Netherlands Employment Land Use Protection in the City of Toronto Steven Webber – Ryerson University, Canada Manufacturing and the City Minjee Kim, Eran Ben – Joseph – Massachusetts Institute of Technology, US The Change in Retail Agglomeration in California Cities: 1990 – 2010 Yizhen Gu – University of California, Berkeley, US Sustainable land Management in Europe: Pathways for Institutional Innovations Nadin Gaasch, Thomas Weith, Christian Strauss – Leibiniz Centre for Agriculture Landscape Research, Germany Social Exclusion and the elimination of urban green spaces. Land use planning and policy framework in Greece Fotini Zigouri – University of Thessaly, Greece, Costas Portokalidis – University of Greece, Anastasia Nikoli – University of Thessaly, Greece A case of clash between mational ownership of agricultural land and the environment in Israel Micha Dori – Israel Institute of Technology Planning for urban watersheds: A case study in Guadalajara, Mexico Juan Demerutis – Arenas – Universidad de Guadalajara, Mexico Energy Production and Environment Degradation in Black Mesa James Gardner – Arizona State University, David Pijawka – Arizona State University Moderator Fri July 19th 09:45 – 11:15 Room: C005 Kostantinos Lalenis -- University of Thessaly, Greece Quality Objectives on the Portugese Land Use Plans: case study municipality of Obidos Carla Goncalves – University of Aveiro, Portugal, Maria José Curado – University of Porto, Paulo Silva – University of Aveiro Spatial Planning and housing policies in the Global South: Evidence from Lima, Peru Ana Maria Fernandez – Maldonado – Delft University, the Netherlands st Embracing tall buildings in a historic city: Remodelling Jerusalem’s skyline in the 21 century Igbal Charney – University of Haifa, Israel, Giliad Rosen – Hebrew University of Jerusalem Regulating, Governing and Implementing Planning Gain: Practices of Section 106 in Southwark Sophie Elsmore – King’s College London Urban/Environmental? Rethinking the distinction between development and conservation in the peri-urban landscape Alex Lord, Andreas Schulze-Bäing, Thomas Fischer – University of Liverpool, UK PANEL 7-1 Moderator Mon July 15th 17:45 – 19:00 Room: C005 Creating and Maintaining Livable Communities: Perspectives from Academia Elise Bright – Texas A&M, US David Perry – University of Illinois at Chicago, US, David Amborski – Ryerson University, Canada, David Shaw – University of Liverpool, UK TRACK 8: GENDER, DIVERSITY AND JUSTICE SESSION 8-1 Moderator Mon July 15th 16:00 – 17:30 Room: A005 Problem Focused Learning Anna Geppert -- Sorbonne, France SESSION 8-2 Moderator Tues July 16th 16:15 – 17:45 Room: A005 Active Critical Learning TBD SESSION 8-3 Moderator Tues July 16th 18:00 – 19:30 Room: A005 Studio Focused Learning TBD Environmental Education Multigerational Empowerment Lia Vasconcelos – University of Lisbon, Flávia Silva – New University of Lisbon, Portugal, Maria João Ramos Pereira – University of Aveiro, Portugal, Rita Sá – University of the Algarve, Portugal, Marilisa Coelho – University of Lisbon, Portugal, Úrsula Caser – MEDIATEDOMAIN Portugal Knowledge Acquisition in Strategic Planning Processes in Education and Practice Christoph Hemberger – University of Stuttgart, Germany, Walter L. Schönwandt – University of Stuttgart, Germany Adaptability of Lynch’s survey to the interpretation of contemporary territories Maria Federica Palestino – Federico II University of Naples, Italy Planner’s practical suggestions in cases of ‘Chronic Violence’. Daniela DeLeo – Sapienza Università di Roma, Italy BROWNTRANS Project as an Innovative Approach to Education Zuzana Ladzianska – STU in Bratislava, Slovak Republic, Martin Balonga – STU in Bratislava, Slovak Republic Insights into planning for non-planners: the university and local area studies Helen Hay – De Montfort University, UK Innovation and problem solving as a method of educating architects and planners Slawomir Ledwon – Gdansk University of Technology, Poland Immersed in Ethics: Experiences and Strategies for Planning Education Hazel Edwards – The Catholic University of America, US The challenge of teaching a studio course to eighty plus first year planning students Tooran Alizadeh – Griffith University, Australia Teaching Plan-Making at the Core of Professional Graduate Degree Sanjeev Vidyarthi – University of Illinois in Chicago, US, Curtis Winkle – University of Illinois in Chicago, US, Janet Smith – University of Illinois in Chicago, Tingwei Zhang University of Illinois in Chicago, US, Kazuya Kawamura University of Illinois in Chicago & Charles Hoch – University of Illinois in Chicago, US An Integrated Approach to Urban Design Teaching Angela Colucci – Politecnico di Milano, Italy, Amr Alaaeldin Elesawy – Politecnico di Milano, Italy, and Rachele Radaelli – Politecnico di Milano, Italy Research-by-design and the renaissance of the scenario-method Oswald Devisch – Hasselt University, Belgium SESSION 8-4 Moderator Wed July 17th 08:00 – 09:30 Room: A005 Integrating Emerging Ideas and Practices into Planning Education TBD SESSION 8-5 Moderator Wed July 17th 09:45 – 11:15 Room: A005 Innovative Tools for Planning Education TBD SESSION 8-6 Moderator Wed July 17th 11:45 – 13:15 Room: A005 Internationalization of Planning Education TBD Rocks and hard places: the challenges facing planning professionals in rapidly-changing environments. Clare M Mouat – University of Western Australia, Australia and Diana MacCallum – Curtin University, Australia Teaching planners to deal: the pedagogical value of a (simulated) economic development negotiation Laura Wolf-Powers – University of Pennsylvania, US Gender Issues in Planning Education – an empirical survey in German schools of planning Sandra Huning – Dortmund University of Technology, Germany How has The breakthrough of New Public Management changed planning practice and education in Finland Hanna Mattila – Aalto University, Finland Metabolizing Design: How is the process conceptualized across the urban disciplines? Barbara Brown Wilson, Kristine Stiphany – University of Texas at Austin, US Communicative turns in Planning Education? Reflections on communication tools and methods in Urban Design and Urban Planning Angela Uttke – TU Berlin, Germany, Manuela Kölke – TU Berlin, Germany Expectations of student participation in curriculum redesign: the experience of the Urban and Regional Planning School, Queensland University of Technology Severine Mayere, Paul Donehue, Mellini Sloan – Queensland University of Technology, Australia Planning and Spatial Citizenship: Educating the Next Generation of Planners. Laxmi Ramasubramanian – City University of New York, US Developing Planning Students’ Creativity by Teaching Multi-Agent Simulation. Wei Zhu – Tongji University, China Impact Assessment of Practicum Communities Andrew LeMarbe, Zeenat Kotval-Karamchandani, Patricia L. Machemer, Zenia Kotval -Michigan State University, East Lansing, US The Unplanned Path of Chinese Planning Schools: Historic retrospect and its future prospects Li Hou – Tongji University, China The challenges of internationalisation and the planning curriculum Olivier Sykes – University of Liverpool, UK European networking in planning education: Coming Closer in a Changing World Elena Dimitrova – University of Architecture, Bulgaria Project AGIRE: An International Collaborative Studio Mathilde Gralepois – University of Tours, France, David C. Prosperi – Florida Atlantic University, US Educating Planners for the New Challenge of Sustainability, Knowledge and Governance: Report from a EU/US Exploratory Collaborative Project in Planning Education Laurence Carmichael - University of the West of England, Bristol, UK, Sanda Kaufman Cleveland State University, US, Connie Ozawa - Portland State University, US, Frank Scholles - Leibniz Universität, Hannover, Germany, Michela Zonta - Virginia Commonwealth University, US SESSION 8-7 Moderator Fri July 19th 09:45 – 11:45 Room: A005 Planning Education & Research Charlie Hoch --University of Illinois Chicago, US PANEL 8-1 Breaking with the Past: Radically Rethinking Planning Education for the 21st Century Christopher Silver – University of Florida, US Moderator Mon July 15th 17:45 – 19:00 Room: A005 PANEL 8-2 Moderator Thurs July 18th 18:15 – 19:30 Room: A005 PANEL 8-3 Moderator Thurs July 18th 18:15 – 19:30 Room: C007 Network(s) of Planning Research: Mapping and Analyzing Planning Scholarship. Thomas Sanchez – Virginia Tech, US Research in spatial planning and urban development. The recent Italian experience Bruno Zanon – University of Trento, Italy Towards Mutual Recognition: Planning Practice and Education in Europe Dónall N. Ó Ceallaigh – Independent Research Consultant, Ireland and Hendrik van der Kamp, DIT, Ireland The Research-led Pedagogy in Contemporary Planning Education. Bing Chen – Xi-an Jiaotong – Liverpool University, China Andrea Frank – University of Cardiff, Wales, UK, David Amborski – Ryerson Polytechnic, Toronto, Canada, Furqon Sofhani – Institute of Technology, Bandung, Indonesia Discussion of Higher Ed Spatial Planning Using Integrated Place Focused Learning Bernd Scholl – ETH Zurich, Switzerland Andreas Voigt – Vienna University of Technology Massive Open Online Courses: The Future of Planning Education? Jennifer Evans-Cowley – Ohio State University, US Tom Sanchez - Virginia Tech University, US, Abel Silva - Lizcano Politecnico di Milano, Italy, Jan Whittington – University of Washington, Seattle, US TRACK 9 : Design and History of the Urban Environment SESSION 9-1 Moderator Mon July 15th 16:00 – 17:30 Room: A007 Sustainability Zeynep Enlil -- Yildiz Technical University, Turkey American vs European Green Urbanism: Towards a Unified Prescriptive Theory of Sustainable Urbanism Rafael E Pizarro – Texas Southern University, US The growth of high-rise buildings in the U.S. suburbs: Will suburban tall promote sustainable development? Kheir Al-Kodmany – University of Illinois at Chicago Resilient Dubai: Planning for the Next Resurrection Amer A. Moustafa – American University of Sharjah Sustainable Urban Design with Chinese Characteristics: Inspiration from the Shan-Shui City Idea Jie Hu - Tsinghua Urban Planning and Design Institute, Yizhao Yang - University of Oregon, Jesse Rodenbiker - University of Oregon Technospace ecologies Stephen Read – TU Delft, Netherlands SESSION 9-2 Moderator Mon July 15th 17:45 – 19:00 Room: A007 Placemaking TBD SESSION 9-3 Moderator Tues July 16th 08:00 – 09:30 Room: A007 HERITAGE 1: Preservation, Destruction, Loss TBD SESSION 9-4 Moderator Tues July 16th 09:45 – 11:15 Room: A007 HERITAGE 2: Politics and Practices TBD SESSION 9-5 Moderator Tues July 16th 11:45 – 13:15 Room: A007 HERITAGE 3: Spatial Aspects, Planning, Governance and Tools TBD The Kind of Art Urban Design Is: From Form-making to Place-making Stephen Marshall – University College London Battle of the brands: Place-making under conditions of economic precarity Ramzi Farhat – California State Polytechnic University-Pomona, US Serendipity between the Press, the Planner and the Public Miriam Fitzpatrick – University College Dublin Towards a Functional Typology for Successful Public Spaces in Chinese Residential Neighbourhoods Andrew Armbruster - Tongji University, China De-heritagization in urban planning: a case study of Kiruna’s urban transformation Jennie Sjöholm – Luleå University of Technology, Sweden The Conflict Between Material and Moral: A Vanishing Industrial Heritage in Ankara Duygu Cihanger – Middle East Technical University, Turkey The destruction of architectural heritage – towards an explanatory framework Andrew McClelland – University of Ulster, UK No Escape? The co-ordination problem in heritage conservation Nancy Holman – London School of Economics and Political Science, Gabriel Ahlfeldt – London School of Economics and Political Science Beyond Le Corbusier and the Modernist City: Reframing Chandigarh's ‘World Heritage’ Legacy Manish Chalana – University of Washington Representing Colonial Landscape: A Comparative Analysis of the Politics of Historic Preservation in Taipei and Hong Kong Liang-Yi Yen – Fu-Jen Catholic University, Taiwan Integrated Urban Environment of Heritage and New Buildings Kristina L Nilsson – Luleå University of Technology, Sweden Planning for public realm conservation in Portugal: from institutional frameworks to resilient practice in World Heritage cities. Elisabete Cidre – UCL Bartlett School of Planning, London Urban Heritage Conservation: The role of public-private partnerships Caroline Cheong – University of Pennsylvania, US Conservation Of The Postmodern Heritage – Radical Conservation At Work? Alexandra Berezina – Bath and North East Somerset Council, UK, Michael Short – University of the West England Measuring the Public Perception of Post-war Housing Heritage – The Case of Caoyang New Village, Shanghai Yiwen Wang – Xi'an Jiaotong-Liverpool University, China, Xiaonan Zhang – Xi'an JiaotongLiverpool University, China, Lei Sun – Xi'an Jiaotong-Liverpool University, China Spatial aspects of built heritage in Greece: the case of traditional settlements Marilena Papageorgiou – University of Thessaly, Georgia Pozoukidou – Aristotle University of Thessaloniki Conservation and Consensus: Defining Expert Built Heritage Discourse in Ireland Arthur Parkinson – University College Dublin, Mark Scott – University College Dublin, Declan Redmond – University College Dublin The future of the past: architectural heritage guides as handbooks for city decoding and as blueprints for urban design. Arie de Fijter – University of Liege, Céline Bodart – University of Liege, Axel Fisher – University of Liege, under the supervision of Marc Goossens – University of Liege and Rita Occhiuto – University of Liege SESSION 9-6 Moderator Tues July 16th 14:15 – 15:45 Room: A007 History TBD SESSION 9-7 Moderator Nature, Open Space, Health and Livability TBD Tues July 16th 16:15 – 17:45 Room: A007 Equitable Distribution of Open Space: Using Spatial Analysis to Evaluate Urban Parks in Curitiba, Brazil Joseli Macedo – University of Florida, Mônica Haddad – Iowa State University Nature in the City and Human Connection to Nature: experience and meaning with urban nature Sarah P. Church – University of British Columbia, US Evaluating the Design Characteristics of LIHTC-Funded Senior Housing for Community Liveability Daniel Serda – University of Kansas Urban planning and public health: revaluing a legacy from the past Thomas Verbeek – Ghent University, Belgium, Luuk Boelens – Ghent University, Belgium SESSION 9-8 Moderator Public Space TBD Tues July 16th 18:00 – 19:30 Room: A007 Public Space in Cities and Cyberspace. A comparative analysis guiding urban design and planning. Aspa Gospodini – University of Thessaly, Dimitris Zahos – University of Thessaly Analyzing the Publicness of Konak Square in Izmir Işın Can - IYTE, Faculty of Architecture, Turkey, Ela Çil – IYTE, Faculty of Architecture, Turkey, Koray Velibeyoğlu – IYTE, Faculty of Architecture, Turkey, Berna Yaylalı Yıldız – IYTE, Faculty of Architecture, Turkey The Accidental Playground: Balancing governance and anarchy in ‘undesigned’ public spaces Daniel Campo – Morgan State University, US Urban design, public space and creative milieus: an international comparative approach to informal dynamics in cultural districts Pedro Costa – University Institute of Lisbon, Portugal, Ricardo Lopes – DINAMIA’CET-IUL, Portugal Contest Urbanism: Meaning and Manifestation in Community Garden Design Writings on Urban Design: Emerging Cross-Atlantic and Cross-Pacific Differences Tridib Banerjee – University of Southern California, US Propagating planning knowledge in the 1940s through exhibitions: The roles of the British Council and the US Office of War Information Marco Amati – La Trobe University, Australia, Robert Freestone – University of New South Wales, UK Leading Design Memes: 100 years of the Neighborhood Unit Concept Jason Brody – Kansas State University Canberra 2013 – Planning and the Centennial Karl F. Fischer – University of New South Wales, Australia, James Weirick – University of New South Wales, Australia Visualizing the Core of an Ideal Democratic Community: Jaqueline Tyrwhitt and Post-war Planning Exhibitions Ellen Shoshkes – Portland State University Cristina Delgado – University at Buffalo, US SESSION 9-9 Moderator Wed July 17th 08:00 – 09:30 Room: A007 Methods of Urban Development TBD SESSION 9-10 Moderator Wed July 17th 09:45 – 11:15 Room: A007 Infrastructure / Pathways TBD SESSION 9-11 Moderator Wed July 17th 11:45 – 13:15 Room: A007 Urban Uses and the City Jason Brody -- Kansas State University, US SESSION 9-12 Moderators Soundscape 1 Gary W. Siebein -- University of Florida, US, Östen Axelsson --University of Sheffield, UK Thurs July 18th Assessment of water sounds in urban soundscapes: the case of Orlando The Geopolitical Economy of Public Space Disintegration – The Post-Socialist Urban Transformation of the New City Centre in Sarajevo Mejrema Zatric – University of Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina Challenging the Rule of Experts: A Case Study of Toronto’s Central Waterfront Innovative Design Competition James T. White – University of Glasgow Dutch Strategies For The Historic Urban Core Wout van der Toorn Vrijthoff – Delft University of Technology, Vincent Nadin – Delft University of Technology The Partnership Between Urban Design and Urban Planning Danilo Palazzo – University of Cincinnati, Frederick Steiner - University of Texas at Austin The Role of Design Guidelines in Shaping Waterfronts in Cosmopolitan Cities: A Comparative Study of Chicago River Corridor Design Guidelines and Standards and the “Waterfront Development” Chapter in Urban Design Guidelines for Hong Kong Jane Zheng – Chinese University of Hong Kong Perception of Ownership and Management of Privately Owned Sidewalks: The Construction and Use of QiLou in Taiwan Hsiutzu Betty Chang – National Cheng Kung University Assessing the Quality of Traditional Streets: Case of Malioboro Street, Yogyakarta, Indonesia Arif B Sholihah – University of Nottingham, Tim Heath – University of Nottingham, Amy Yue Tang – University of Nottingham Railway stations as high-speed places Ileana Apostol – ETH Zurich, Switzerland Spatial Facts, Fabrics and Fissures Alan Mee – University College Dublin, Ireland From a public spine of a city to a high-speed inner-city artery: Discussing socio-spatial changes of Ataturk Boulevard in Ankara Oya Memlük – Gazi University, Turkey, Müge Akkar Ercan – Middle East Technical University Urban design, history, and stadia Benjamin Flowers – Georgia Institute of Technology, US Urban Design and City’s Identity in an Island Seaport Valeria Lingua – University of Florence, Italy Commemoration on urban pavements Quentin Stevens – University College London, Mira Ristic – University of Melbourne Local Shops as Creators of Urban Identity and Community: A Case Study in Helsinki Mervi Ilmonen – Aalto University, Finland The Amphibious Public: geographies of municipal bathing infrastructure New York City, 1870 - 2013 Naomi Adiv – CUNY Graduate Center, US José A. Garrido – University of Granada, Gary W. Siebein – University of Florida, Diego P. Ruiz-Padillo – University of Granada Identifying and protecting tranquil areas with reference to the UK National Planning Policy Framework Greg Watts – University of Bradford, UK Surveys of soundscapes in historic district in Rome Laura Tedeschini-Lalli – University Roma Tre Acoustic satisfaction in historical areas in Tianjin, China 16:30 – 18:00 Room: A007 Zhou Zhiyu – Tianjin Urban Planning & Design Institute, China, Zhe Zou – Harbin Institute of Technology, China, Jian Kang – University of Sheffield, UK Walk the sonic niche! Footnotes on open source urban soundscapes Antonella Radicchi – Tempo Reale, Italy SESSION / PANEL 9-1 Moderators Thurs July 18th 18:15 – 19:30 Room: A007 Soundscape 2 Gary W. Siebein -- University of Florida, US, Östen Axelsson --University of Sheffield, UK An exploration of the urban design possibilities offered by soundscape theory Gary W. Siebein – University of Florida School of Architecture, US Sound Cities Östen Axelsson – University of Sheffield, UK Place-temporality, an aesthetics akin to music: the sense of time, soundscape and rhythmicity in urban space Filipa Matos Wunderlich – University College London, UK TRACK 10: Cross Border and International Planning SESSION 10-1 Moderator Unpacking Geography, Scale and Borders Andreas Faludi -- TU Delft, The Netherlands / Neema Kudva -- Cornell University, US Mon July 15th 16:00 – 17:30 Room: A004 Regional Development in the Pearl River Delta Region Roger Chan – the University of Hong Kong A typology of Europe’s Maritime Region Sue Kidd – University of Liverpool, Dave Shaw – University of Liverpool, Lynne McGowan – University of Liverpool, Holger Janssen – Leibniz Institute of Baltic Sea Research, Warnemuende, Stephen Jay – University of Liverpool EUropeanisation or Europeanisation of Spatial Planning? Andreas Faludi – TU Delft, The Netherlands The Reality of Borders: Unpacking the Complex Border Phenomena Beatrix Haselsberger – Vienna University of Technology, Austria SESSION 10-2 Moderator Tues July 16th 08:00 – 09:30 Room: A004 Understanding Urban Growth and Shrinkage Patterns TBD Differing Models of Exurbia and Peri-Urban Development in London and Curitiba: Similar or Dissimilar (Un)Sustainable Development Results. Caralampo Focas – University of Oxford, Julianna Zanotto – University of California, Irvine, Luis Vasconcelos – University of Oxford Growth Poles Revisited? Exploring Planned and Unplanned Urban Growth and Extractove Economies in Tete, Mozambique Joshua Kirshner – Rhodes University, South Africa Edgeless and Eccentric Cities or New Peripheries? Ester Limonad – Universidade Federal Fluminense, Brazil/ANPUR, Heloisa Costa – Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais, Brazil/ANPUR The Paradox of Shrinking Cities in India Sukumar Ganapati – Florida International University Development or Displacement in India? A Preliminary Appraisal of JnNURM Abhinav Alakshendra – University of Florida, Joseli Macedo – University of Florida SESSION 10-3 Moderator Tues July 16th 09:45 – 11:15 Room: A004 Infrastructure and Basic Services TBD Sao Paolo’s Green trash: the Social, Technological and Biophysical Impacts of the Bandeirantes Landfill Development Kristine Stiphany – University of Texas at Austin, Jason Sowell – University of Texas at Austin Participatory Slum Upgrading under Decentralization: How the Context Matters Ashok Das – University of Hawaii at Manoa Weaving the Built Environment: Social Infrastructure Networks enhancing Equity, Inclusion, and Community resilience Santiago Sanchez Guzman – TU Vienna Strategies for Building a Developmental Public Service for Effective Service Delivery in Sub-Saharan Africa Francis Owusu – Iowa State University, Frank Kwaku Ohemeng – University of Ottawa Electric Urbanism, Challenges of Pre-paid Urban Service Delivery in Mozambique Idalina Baptista – University of Oxford, UK SESSION 10-4 Moderator Tues July 16th 11:45 – 13:15 Room: A004 The Challenges and Impacts of Building Transportation Infrastructure TBD SESSION 10-5 Moderator Tues July 16th 14:15 – 15:45 Room: A004 Learning Environments and Policy Flows in Urban Planning and Growth TBD SESSION 10-6 Moderator Tues July 16th 16:15 – 17:45 Room: A004 Knowledge and Policy Transfers TBD It’s All in the Framing: Bus Rapid Transit travelling from Bogota, Colombia to China Alainna Thomas – UC Berkeley, US Strangers in a Box: the Bus as Contested Space in Abu-Dhabi Surajit Chakravarty – ALHOSN University Abu Dhabi, Abdellatif Qamhaieh – ALHOSN University, Abu Dhabi Developing Trans-European Railway Corridors, Lessons from the CODE24 project Noriko Otsuka, Felix Christian Gunther, Ilaria Tosoni, Cecilia Braun – ETH Zurich, Switzerland Environmental Impact Assessments in Transboundary European Contexts Karsten Stechow, Dietwald Gruehn, Marlit Haber – Dortmund University of Technology Making Connections and Building Bridges: Improving the Bi-National Planning Process Susan Bradbury – Iowa State University, US Mainstreaming integrated policies versus local responses Laura Colini – IRS Erkner Berlin, Germany A Policy on the Move? Spatial Planning in the Post-Devolutionary UK and Ireland Ben Cilfford, Janice Morphet – University College London, UK South-South Imaginings, Tanzanian Urban Transformations and the Influence of China Kathryn Owens – University of Michigan International Experts and Urban Sustainability: Reflections on an Emerging Industry Elizabeth Rapoport – University College London, UK Creating a Learning Environment: Exploring the value of “Proximate –Peer Learning” for Urban Development in Mozambique Gabriella Carolini – Massachusetts Institute of Technology, US Policy Transfer in Territorial Governance: The European Case Giancarlo Cotella, Umberto Janin Rivolin – DIST, Italy Addis Ababa: How Protocols of Development Cooperation Impede Urban Resilience Sascha Delz – Swiss Federal Institute of Technology Zurich, Switzerland Planning Approaches to Improving Energy Resilience: The Case of the North Sea Region David Shaw, Sue Kidd, Stephen Jay, Lynne McGowan – University of Liverpool, UK Sustainable Growth Management in Both Sides of the Atlantic: Can Planners in Finland Learn Something from Maryland’s Smart Growth, or is the Context Just Too Different? Helka Kalliomaki – University of Turku, Finland The Transferability (or Otherwise) of “Western” Planning Principles to China Rebecca Kiddle, Steven Davey – Xi’an Jiaotong/Liverpool University, China SESSION 10-7 Moderator Tues July 16th 18:00 – 19:30 Room: A004 Cross-Border Transnational Cooperation and Integration TBD SESSION 10-8 Moderator Wed July 17th 08:00 – 09:30 Room: A004 Soft Spaces and Borders, Cooperation and Marginality TBD SESSION 10-9 Moderator Wed July 17th 09:45 – 11:15 Room: A004 Planning in Latin America Francisco Fernandez – University of California, Irvine, US Cross-Border Cooperation: Metropolitan positioning of Vienna and Bratislava Rudolf Giffinger – Vienna University of Technology, Italy, Christophe Sohn – CEPS-Public Research Centre, Katharina Stoger – Vienna University of Technology, Italy Knowledge, Vision and Cooperation: Resilience in a Cross-Border Setting Annette Kuhk, Jan Schreurs – KU Leuven, Belgium The Idea of cross-Border European Cities on the Polish Borderlands Piotr Michalski – Wroclaw University of Technology, Poland Applicability of European groupings of Territorial Cooperation (EGTCs) in the Transnational and Interregional Cooperation – the Example of Network EGTCs. Beate Caesar – University of Kaiserslautern, Germany Transnational Cooperation: Maritime Spatial Planning for Shared Maritime Space Heather Ritchie – University of Ulster, Ireland, Wesley Flannery – Queen’s University, Ireland, Anne Marie O’Hagan – University College Cork, Cathal O’Mahony – University College Cork, and Sarah Twomey – University College Cork Europeanizing Territoriality – Towards Soft Spaces? Phil Allmendinger – University of Cambridge, UK, Tobias Chilla – Friedrich-AlexanderUniversität Erlangen-Nürnberg, Germany, Franziska Sielker – Friedrich-AlexanderUniversität Erlangen-Nürnberg, Germany Borders, Marginalities and Urban-Centric Cross-Border Network Relations: the Case of the International Oresund Region and its Rebordering Effect on Region Skane in Southern Sweden Tassilo Herrschel – University of Westminster, UK EU Macro-Regions and Spatial Rescaling – Experiences in the Baltic Sea and Danube Regions Franziska Sielker – Friedrich Alexander University Erlangen-Nürnberg, Germany, Dominic Stead – Delft University of Technology, The Netherlands Creating a Space for Cooperation: Soft Spaces, Spatial Planning, and territorial Cooperation on the Island of Ireland Cormac Walsh – HafenCity University Hamburg, Germany, Jörg Knieling – HafenCity University Hamburg, Germany We shape the Institutions that Shape Us Francisco Fernandez – University of California, Irvine, US Neoliberalizing Sao Paolo Felipe Francisco de Souza – The University of Tokyo, Japan, Marta Ferreira Santos Farah – The Getulio Vargas Foundation, Brazil Power, Politics and Planning Practice Abigail Friendly – University of Toronto, Canada Spatial Politics of Large Scale Projects Catalina Ortiz – National University of Colombia, Colombia Changing Medellin: Planning and urban conflict in the era of social urbanism Luisa Sotomayor – University of Toronto, Canada SESSION 10-10 Moderator Wed July 17th 11:45 – 13:15 Room: A004 Territorial Governance, Planning Regimes and the Concept of Property TBD PANEL 10-1 Moderator Mon July 15th 17:45 – 19:00 Room: A004 PANEL 10-2 Moderator Thurs 18th July 18:15 – 19:30 Room: A004 PANEL 10-3 Planning for States and Nation-States: A Transatlantic Exploration Gerrit Knaap – University of Maryland, US Moderator Fri 19th July 08:00 – 09:30 Room: A004 Transformations and Counter-Hegemonic Planning Regimes Scott Bollens – University of California, Irvine, US Property in Planning: Towards a Critical Framework of Analysis Mona Fawaz – American University of Beirut, US Territorial Governance Across Europe Peter Schmitt – Nordregio, Sweden Lisa Van Well – Nordregio, Sweden Types of Territorial Governance Dominic Stead – Delft University of Technology, The Netherlands Features of Good Territorial Governance in the Flood Management Along the DutchGerman Border Alexander Wandl – TU Delft, The Netherlands, Wil Zonneveld – TU Delft, The Netherlands Andreas Faludi – Delft University of Technology, The Netherlands, Rebecca Lewis – Florida State University, US, Berna Grist – University College Dublin, Ireland, Armando Carbonell – Lincoln Institute of Land Policy, US The Future of International Development Planning Joseli Macedo – University of Florida, US Gabriella Carolini – Massachusetts Institute of Technology, US, Bishwapriya Sanyal Massachusetts Institute of Technology, US, Gavin Shatkin - Northeastern University, Heather Campbell – University of Sheffiled, UK, Neema Kudva – Cornell University, US New North-South Relationships, The Changing Role of Universities in Knowledge Creation Bishwapriya Sanyal - Massachusetts Institute of Technology, US Julio Davila - University College London, UK, Antje Stokman - University of Stuttgart, Germany, Nina Gribat - University of Stuttgart, Germany TRACK 11: Spatial and Planning Analysis Methods in a Digital World SESSION 11-1 Moderator Tues July 16th 08:00 – 09:30 Room: A005 Planning Support System 1 Michele Campagna – University of Cagliari, Italy The Online What If? Planning Support System Richard Klosterman – What if? Inc, The United States, Christopher J Pettit – University of Melbourne, Marcos Nino-Ruiz - Melbourne eResearch Group, Ivo Widjaja - University of Melbourne , Patrizia Russo- University of Melbourne , Martin Tomko - The Australian Urban Research Infrastructure Network , Richard Sinnott - University of Melbourne, Robert Stimson- The Australian Urban Research Infrastructure Network . Local Urban planning and Regional effects – a new GIS- tool to support sustainable strategic planning Alexander Mayr - Research Institute for Regional and Urban Development ,Germany, Anja Brauckmann – Research Institute for Regional and Urban Development, Developing the Next Generation of Scenario Planning Software Robert Paterson- University of Texas at Austin Planning Support System enabled multiscale energy facility sitting Scott Lieske - University of the Sunshine Coast, Australia, Jeffrey D. Hamerlinck – University of Wyoming, The United States Risk and Benefit Assessment Technique of Urban Development based on the Regulatory in Planning in China – A case study of Shangai Caohejing Hi-Tech Park Chenchen Ren – Shanghai Tongji Urban Planning and Design Institute, Nankai Xia – Shanghai Tongji Urban Planning and Design Institute SESSION 11-2 Moderator Tues July 16th 09:45 – 11:15 Room: A005 Planning Support System 2 Richard Klosterman- What if? Inc SESSION 11-3 Moderator Tues July 16th 11:45 – 13:15 Room: A005 Geodesign – Analysis Michael Roth – Dortmund University of Technology, Germany SESSION 11-4 Moderator Tues July 16th 14:15 – 15:45 Room: A005 Geodesign – Visualization and Modelling Steven French – Georgia Institute of Technology, US SESSION 11-5 Moderator Thurs July 18th 08:00 – 09:30 Room: A005 Big Data Vivek Shandas - Portland State University, US Born to perform: Planning Support System and the Professional roles in Planning Actors Peter Pelzer – Utreucht University, The Netherlands, Stan Geertman – Utreucht University Pursuing Resilience through G-ICT Aoife Corcoran - University College of Dublin, Zorica Nedovic – Budic – University College of Dublin CT Tools to enhance the utility of a Spatial Decision Support System- Methodological Essays Eduarda Marques da Costa, Nuno Marques da Costa, Patrícia Abrantes, Ana Louro – University of Lisbon, Portugal Constructing Ontology for Planning Knowledge Management System Feng-Tyan Lin, Yi-Pei Liao, Che-An Lin – National Cheng Kung University NetHood: A social learning approach for hybrid space designs Panayotis Antoniadis, Ileana Apostol – ETH Zurich, Switzerland An Evidence-based Planning Support Methodology Integrating Consumers’ Valuations Into Sustainable PIannings Hong Hu, Stan Geertman, Pieter Hooimeijer – Utreucht University, The Netherlands Site selection of urban green spaces: a capacitated location modelling approach and its visualization Xiaoling Li – Cornell University, US Integrating Ecological Servgices Analysis into Scenario Planning: Coupling the i-Tree analytics to scenario planning Thomas Hilde, Robert Paterson – University of Texas at Austin, US Mapping Opportunity: concepts and techniques Eli Knaap, Chao Liu, Gerrit Knaap – University of Maryland, US A toolkit for understanding for understanding the impacts of planned activity centres on local employment Jennifer Day, Sophie Sturup, Yiqun Chen – University of Melbourne, Australia 3D Visualization of Skyscrapers: A study of Citizen’s Responses in Hamburg Tony Haertling, Alenka Poplin – HafenCity University Hamburg Virtual platforms for urban living labs and energy conscious spatial planning Andreas Voigt, Claudia Czerkauer-Yamu – Vienna University of Technology The trends of geotechnology to support urban planning: New paradigms and challenges Sheyla Santana, Ana Clara Moura - Department of Urbanism, UMFG, Brazil Exploring the credibility of virtual reality within landscape and visual impacts assessment Neil A. Powe, Kyungjin An - University of Newcastle upon Tyne, UK Using GIS and Digital Participatory Planning Approaches for Wind Turbine Localization in Land Use Planning Michael Roth, Dietwald Gruehn – Dortmund University of Technology, Germany Big Data: an Exploration of new data sources for theorizing tourist destination development in the United States Li Yin, Sam Cole – State University of New York, US ICT services for Urban Engagement : An analysis of Emerging Digital Infomediaries in an Era of Big Data Piyushimita (Vonu) Thakuriah - University of Glasgow, UK, Lise Dirks - University of Illinois at Chicago, Yaye Keita-Mallon - University of Illinois at Chicago, US Urban Activity Landscape: Real Time Monitoring of Individual Daily Activities in a Metropolitarian Area Mi Dia - National University of Singapore, Yi Zhu - Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Giusy Di Lorenzo - Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Francesco CalabreseMassachusetts Institute of Technology, Carlo Ratti - Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Joseph Ferreira, Jr - Massachusetts Institute of Technology Participative spatial planning and design: challenges and opportunities through edemocracy Angioletta Voghera, Carlo Rega, Emanuela Saporito - DIST, Politecnico di Torino, Italy How can Social Media Affect Neighbourhoods’ Resiliency? Nader Afzalan - University of Colorado, US, Jennifer Evans-Cowley - Ohio State University, US SESSION 11-6 Moderator Thurs July 18th 11:45 – 13:15 Room: A005 Smart Cities Jennifer Evans- Cowley – Ohio State University, US Using digital technologies to study domestic energy demand strategies through occupants’ time- space paths Stephen Lorimer - University College London Making Smart Cities work in the face of conflicts: Lessons from practitioners of South Korea’s U-City projects Joon Sik Kim - Xi'an Jiaotong-Liverpool University Urban Planning in the Wave of Smart Cities: Exploration of New Planning Solutions in China Zhaohui Liu, Zhiqiang Wu- Tongji University, China A Clean Slate: Tablet Computing as a Means to Personal Mapping and Geographic Awareness Lohren Deeg, Kyle Parker – Ball State University, US Downscaling Spatial Information: Participatory GIS, local knowledge, and urban quality of life Vivek Shandas – Portland State University, US SESSION 11-7 Moderator Thurs July 18th 16:30 – 18:00 Room: A005 Volunteered Geographic Information Alenka Poplin – HafenCity University Hamburg, Germany SESSION 11-8 Moderator Spatial Analysis in Urban and Regional Planning 1 Andreas Voigt – Vienna University of Technology, Austria Promoting Social Networking in local disaster management Elena Pede - Politecnico di Torino, Italy, Ake Sivertum - Swedish National Defence Collage Stockholm, Sweden Community- Driven, Folksonomy- Based Authoring of Interactive Multimedia for Public Space Taylor Fitz-Gibbon, Jeff Burke, Fabian Wagmister - University of California, US Place, I care! Crowdsourcing planning information Michelle Campagna – University of Cagliari, Italy, Anton Kudinov - Tomsk Polytechnic University, Russia, Anastacia Girsheva - University of Cagliari, Konstantin Ivanov - Tomsk Polytechnic University, Maxim Kornov - Tomsk Polytechnic University, Roberta Falqui University of Cagliari Identifying Dynamic Place Themes from Human Activities and POIs Shan Jiang, Joseph Ferreira, Jr – Massachusetts Institute of Technology, US Volunteered Geographic Information and Legalization Process of Informal Housing in Croatia – Empower Ivana Katurić - University of Milan, Mario Lipovac - Imago Matrix Ltd. ,Marko Lipovac Urbanex Ltd., Aleksandar Lukic - University of Zagreb, Croatia Fri July 19th 08:00 – 09:30 Room: A005 Constructing the Model of Evaluating the Efficiency of Space Allocating Public Facilities in Towns Hong Geng, Dan Shi - Huazhong University of Science and Technology, China The Geo-Spatial Analysis and policy-making in urban planning Wudi Xu, Zaihui Zhou, Zuobin Wu - Xi’an University of Architecture and Technology, China Structural Leaning of Bayesian Networks for Long-Term Household Choices Yi Zhu - Massachusetts Institute of Technology, US, Mi Diao - National University of Singapore Reclassification of Sustainable Neighbourhoods: An Opportunity Indicator Analysis in Baltimore Chao Liu, Eli Knaap, Gerrit Knaap - University of Maryland A spatial diagnosis tool for analysing classifying and identifying improvement strategies on deprived neighbourhoods in the Netherlands Akkelies van Nes – DELFT University of Technology, The Netherlands, Manuel Lopez – RCM Advies SESSION 11-9 Moderator Fri July 19th 09:45 – 11:15 Room: A004 Spatial Analysis in the Urban and Regional Planning 2 Akkelies Van Nes – DELFT University of Technology, The Netherlands Assessing the Economic Impact of Natural Diaster on Vulnerable Populations Yuri Mansury – Cornell University, Dong Keun Yoon – North Dakota State University, US A Spatial Statistical Model of Roof-top Solar Energy Supply and Urban Morphology Interactions: Implications for Urban Design Bumseok Chun - Georgia Institute of Technology, Jean-Michel Guldmann - The Ohio State University, US Planning for Resilience in a changing climate: Integrating spatial analysis and on-line pollution inventories to Manage Chemical releases during floods Michael Howes – Griffith School of Environment, Jago Dodson - Griffith College, Deanna Tomerini - Griffith School of Environment The Role of Modelling and Simulation in Creating Resilient Cities Steven French, Wenwen Zhang – Georgia Institute of Technology, US Spatial Assessing a Class Size Policy for the Brazilian Northeast Monica Haddad - Iowa State University, Pedro Amaral – Arizona State University, Luciana Luz – Arizona State University, US TRACK 12: Planning for Urban Regions in Transition, Growth and Shrinkage SESSION 12-1 Moderator Mon July 15th 16:00 – 17:30 Room: A003 Modelling City Development 1 Maros Finka -- Bratislava University, Slovakia SESSION 12-2 Moderator Modelling City Development 2 TBD Mapping Urban area decline of Residential areas and urban sites in the Netherlands Jasper Beekmans – Radboud University, Pascal Beckers – PBL Netherlands, Jan Schuur – PBL Netherlands Evaluation Model and Method of Urban System Planning, the Case of Bengbu Shiqi Tao – Georgia Institute of Technology, Xigang Lu – Tongji University Is Compact Growth the Only Path to Sustainable Development? Results from a Structural Equation Model James Murdoch – University of Texas, Arlington Urban shrinkage. Theoretical reflections and empirical evidence from a Southern European perspective Carlo Salone, Angelo Besana – DIST, Politecnico e Universita di Torino, Italy Planning to Revitalize shrinking secondary cities: the case of South Korea Yu Min Joo – Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy Singapore Tues July 16th 08:00 – 09:30 Room: A003 Exclusion on the Urban Periphery: Colonias in Texas’ Lower Rio Grande Valley Noah Durst – University of Texas at Austin Framework and indicators of urban Resilience: Assay in the urban systems of Caldas de Rainha and Evora Carlos Goncalves, Eduarda Marques da Costa – University of Lisbon, Portugal Spatial Systems Approaching Bifurcation points: Greece as a Case Study Christos Kousidonis – University of Thessaly, Greece Spatial Transformation Between the Illusion of Prosperity and Political Uncertainties Lubna Shaheen – Birzeit University Strategic Planning Approach for Creating Resilient City – A Case Study in Hangzhou City (China) Dan Liu – Zhejiang University, Georges Alleart - Ghent University, Chen Hua - Zhejiang University, China SESSION 12-3 Moderator Tues July 16th 09:45 – 11:15 Room: A003 Uneven Development of Neighbourhoods in Shrinking Cities Katrin Grossman -- Helmholtz-Centre for Environmental Research, Germany SESSION 12-4 Moderator Tues July 16th 11:45 – 13:15 Room: A003 Opportunities for Regeneration Shrinking Margaret Cowell -- Virginia Tech, US SESSION 12-5 Vacancies and abandonment in shrinking cities in an interdisciplinary perspective: impacts and responses Annegret Haase -- Helmholtz-Centre for Environmental Research, Germany Moderator The Urban Disassembly Line: Speculative Construction and the Shrinking of Detroit since 1950 George Galster – Wayne State University, US Tracing the parallels between urban renewal policies, foreclosure and vacancy to inform planning for shrinking cities Thige Rossi - Appalachian State University, US Joanna Ganning – Saint Louis University, US Circling the Wagons: Spatial reconfiguration and the challenges of uneven development for shrinking cities in the United States Alan Mallach – The Brooking Institute, US Growth and shrinkage in three French traditional industrial areas: Lille, Mulhouse and Saint- Etienne Yoan Miot – University of Lille, France Picking Neighbourhood Winners and Losers in the Incredible Shrinking City: Municipal Acquisition and Neglect of Abandoned Property in Buffalo NY Robert Silverman, Kelly L Paterson, Li Yin – University at Buffalo, US Making Anchor- Driven Neighbourhood Redevelopment Effective in a Shrinking City Avis Vidal – Wayne State University, US Sustainability – The challenges and opportunities for regeneration shrinking cities Katrin Grossman, Sigrun Kabisch, Dieter Rink, Annegret Haase - Helmholtz-Centre for Environmental Research, Germany The Shrinking Cities Phenomenon and its Influence on Planning Cultures – evidence from a German – American comparison Karina Pallagst, Seba Asaaied, René Fleschurz – University of Kaiserlautern, Germany Infusing Regeneratino Principles into Sustainability Plans – Comparative Policy and Planning Translations from Philadelphia and Liverpool Covel Margaret, Joseph Schilling – Virginia Polytechnic and State University, US The Evolution of City-wide Master Plans in the Context of Urban Shrinkage Robin Boyle – Wayne State University, US Redeveloping Cities in the US and Canada in to more Sustainable and Resilient Places – Why generation policy and programs are only part of the equation Christophe De Sousa – Reyerson University, Canada Urban Transition Effects on Socio- Ecosystems Resilience Dilek Unalan – Bogazici University Tues July 16th 14:15 – 15:45 Room: A003 The Impact of the Foreclosure and Abandonment Crisis and Responses to It in Cleveland, Ohio William Keating – Cleveland State University, US Upgrading and Demolition: Theory and Practice of a Dual Approach for Urban Restructuring in East Germany Anja Nelle – Leibniz – Institute for Regional Development and Planning, Germany An assessment of Housing Market Renewal in East Lanchashire Stephen Platt – Cambridge Architectural Research, UK Shrinkage and the Governance of Brownfields. Examples and Lessons from Eastern Europe Cities Dieter Rink – Helmholtz – Centre for Environmental Research, Robert Krzysztofik - Silesian University Katowice, Bogdan Nadolu - West University of Timisoara, Romania, Ondrej Slach - Ostrava University, Miroslava Soldak - Industrial Economics Institute Donetsk, Poland The Urban Development of the Former Athens Airport Spiro Pollalis – Harvard University, Angela Kouveli – Hellinikon SA, Vassilis Kyriakopoulos – Hellinikon, SA, Alexandra Papagianni – Hellinikon SA, Natalia Papapetrou – Hellinikon SA, Vasiliki Sagia – Hellinikon SA, Naya Tritaki - Hellinikon SA, Greece From Crisis to Choice: Reimagining the future in shrinking cities William Neill – University of Aberdeen, Hans Schlappa – University of Aberdeen SESSION 12-6 Moderator Tues July 16th 16:15 – 17:45 Room: A003 The Urban Waterfront: Theory and Pratice TBD SESSION 12-7 Moderator Tues July 16th 18:00 – 19:30 Room: A003 City Development TBD SESSION 12-8 Moderator Wed July 17th 08:00 – 09:30 Room: A003 Regional Development 1 TBD Just add Water: Assembling Urban Waterfronts Sue Brownhill – Oxfords Brookes University Waterfront regeneration in Dublin: Local practice and/or global imperative? Niamh Moore-Cherry – University College Dublin, Ireland The “Competitive Waterfront” in the neoliberal city: Who benefits? Jenny Muir, Philip Boland – Queen’s University Belfast, UK Waterfront regeneration in Australia: local responses to global trends in re-imagining disused city docklands Susan Oakley – University of Adelaide, Australia Water- City Interfaces and Implications for Adaptive Urbanism – A Case Study of Kaohsiung City, Taiwan Yang Yi-Sheng – University of Leuven, Belgium Reinventing the city – the making of urban futures in Strategic Planning Exercises Mark Tewdwr-Jones – Newcastle University, UK, Peter Ache – Radbound University The limits of City as a matter of scale: East London (UK) as a case study Anna Attademo – University of Naples, Italy Spatial metrics for growth and shrinkage: the case of Portuguese medium-sized cities Jose Pedro Reis – University of Cambridge, Elisabeth A. Silva – University of Cambridge, Paulo Pinho – University of Porto The Transformation of Roles and Small Towns in Regional Development in China: The case of the Yangtze Delta after 1949 Jun Ying – DELFT University of Technologym, The Netherlands Assessing creative and cultural policies for urban regeneration: A Case Study Antonio Nicoletti, Piergiuseppe Pontrandolfi – University of Basilicata, Italy The Image of Study of Ruhr – Region Keiro Hatorri – Meijigakuin University Alternative Futures for Australia’s Peri- Urban Regions Michael Buxton – RMIT University, Lucy Groenhart – Swinburne University MPOs and Regional Sustainability Planning: How sustainable? Karen Chapple, Karen Frick, Elizabeth Mattiuzzi, Myriam Zuk – University of California, Berkeley, US The Urban Spatial Evolution based on the Geomorphic Features of the Loess Plateau in Northern Shaanxi Qinghua Zhou, Huixia Lei, Darui Tian – Xi’an University of Architecture and Technology, China Planning for Rural Transformation in Rapidly Urbanised Chinese Regions: the Case of Jiangsu Province Cecilia Wong – University of Manchester, UK, Hui Qian – Nanjing University, China SESSION 12-9 Moderator Wed July 17th 09:45 – 11:15 Room: A003 Regional Development 2 TBD SESSION 12- 10 Moderator Wed July 17th 11:45 – 13:15 Room: A003 Keys to Growth TBD SESSION 12-11 Moderator Thurs July 18th 08:00 – 09:30 Room: A003 Metropolitan Development 1 TBD New processes of deindustrialization. Scenarios of degrowth, regeneration and maintenance in the dispersed territories of Northern Italy. Cristiana Mattioli – Politecnico di Milano, Italy Towards future proofing leisure- oriented regions: on resilience, adaptive capacity and planning implications also European Tourism futures Institute Stefan Hartman – University of Groningen, The Netherlands The New Town Developmental Space Protection and Optimization Based on the Urban and Rural Area Dekai Tao – Huazhong University, Luo Ji - Huazhong University, Xia Ji - Nanjing Institute of Landscape, Architecture, Planning & Design, China Steering Growth North of Vienna - Lessons learned drafting a new "regional master plan" Thomas Dillinger – Vienna University of Technology, Austria Planning Resilient Regions in Romania – some lessons for 2014 – 2020 Gabriel Pascariu – University of Architecture, Romania, Simone Pascariu – Urbaplan SRL Creative Shenzhen? A critical view on Shenzhen’s transformation from a low-cost manufacturing hub to a creativity megacity Marco Bontje – University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands Cities, Innovation, Growth, Globalization Metro Agglomeration, Innovation and Globalization Sam Cole – University of Buffalo, US Places of Internationalisation – pillars of Urban Development in Berlin Paul Hebes - Senate Department for Urban Development and the Environment, Berlin, Dietrich Henckel - Technical University of Berlin, Ricarda Pätzold – Senate Department, Elke Plate - Senate Department Do Plans Contain Urban Growth? An Explanation and Case Study in Taipei Mu-Hseuh Wu, Liguo Wang, Shih-Kung Lai, Yuh-Chyurn Ding – National Taipei University, Taiwan Planning the Recovery: Dubai’s Search for a New Model Adnan Husnein – ALHOSN University, Surafat Charkravarty – ALHOSN University Metropolitan Urban Growth in Latin America: A planning integration experience for local sustainable development Cristian Gabriel Terreno - Universidad Nacional de Cordoba, Spain Reflection on Sustainable Development of Population, Resources and Environment in Old City of Beijing Metropolis Jiayan Liu - Tsinghua University, China Producer Service Linkages and Mega City Region Development in the Pearl River Delta, China Anthony G. Yeh, Fiona F. Yang – The University of Hong Kong From self-built periphery to Metropolitan Business District. Spatial Transformations and Emerging urban Identities in the Cono Norte, Lima/Peru Kathrin Golda-Pongratz - Universitat Ramón Llull Barcelona, Spain Sources of Political Power in the Urban Periphery Urban Development in Amsterdam, Milan and Paris Federico Savini – University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands SESSION 12-12 Moderator Thurs July 18th 11:45 – 13:15 Room: A003 Metropolitan Development 2 TBD SESSION 12-13 Moderator Thurs July 18th 16:30 – 18:00 Room: A003 Green and Sustainable Cities TBD SESSION 12-14 Moderator Thurs July 18th 08:00 – 09:30 Room: A004 Social Development TBD Athens in Crisis: The Planning Challenges Pantoleon Skayannis – University of Thessaly, Greece Declining inner suburbs? A longitudinal-spatial analysis of prosperity indicators in the urban zones of the 15 largest Canadian census metropolitan areas Zhu Qian – University of Waterloo, Dejan Pavlic - University of Ottawa, Canada Remaking Paris as the “City of Flows” Lara Belkind – Harvard University, US Social Vulnerability, Adaptive Capacity and Vancouver’s Changing Metropolitan Region Jacopo Miro – University of British Columbia, Canada Re-Scaling Equity Planning: What’s an equity planner to do? Jacob Wagner – University of Missouri- Kansas City, US Landscape and urban planning transformation of space – planning structure as a vector for sustainable development of the linear city Elina Krasilnikova - Volgograd State Architectural and Civil Engineering University Development of sustainable urban forms for under-developed mountainous county areas: the case of Hubei Xiaoru Lin, Yaping Huang, Dekai Tao – Huazhong University of Science and Technology, China The importance of urban green for city regions in transformation Jost Wilker, Karsten Rusche - ILS - Research Institute for Regional and Urban Development The pattern of change: Infrastructures, filaments and the open space system Sofia Morgado, João Rafael Santos, Inês Moreira – University of Lisbon, Portugal Rural- Urban Migration and Resilience: Vietnamese Migrants after Relocation Luong Duy – University College of Dublin, Ireland Populations and Mobility for a new urban system Bruna Vendemmia – Politecnico di Milano, Italy The Rise of the Hispanic Demographic in Houston Lester King – Rice University, US The Location preference of the knowledge workers in China and its implication for the fringe areas of the city. Giulio Verdini, Lei Sun – Xi’an Jiaontong- Liverpool University, Yu Guo – Xi’an JiaotongLiverpool University We Got More Educated, we are better off.. right? Stuart Andreason – University of Pennsylvania, US Study on the Reconstruction of Population Spatial Structure in City Fringe of Urbanization Process in China. Tianjin as an example. Chang Chen – Tiajin Urban Planning, Wei Zhou – Tiajin Urban Planning, China Social Resilience and Development Opportunities of Danish Small Towns Christian Fertner, Lise Herslund, Trine Agervig Carstensen, Niels Boje Groth – University of Copenhagen, Denmark SESSION 12-15 Moderator Thurs July 18th 11:45 – 13:15 Room: A004 Supraregional Development TBD Urban Shrinkage in a Spatial Perspective – Operationalization of Shrinking Cities in Europe 1990 – 2010 Thorsten Wiechmann – TU Dortmund, Manuel Wolff – TU Dresden, Germany Urban Sprawl in Bulgaria – Specific Issues in South-Eastern Europe Aleksander Slaev, Ivan Nikiforov – Varna Free University, Bulgaria The Reshaping of China’s Urban System: What’s Next? Weiping Wu – TUFTS University, US Exploiting the City Network of Yangtze River Delta, China through the firm linkages. Ziye Na – Politecnico di Milano, Italy SESSION 12-16 Moderator Fri July 19th 08:00 – 09:30 Room: A003 Post-Industrial and Brownfield (re)Development TBD SESSION 12-17 Moderator Fri July 19th 09:45 – 11:15 Room: A003 Technical and Social Infrastructure TBD PANEL 12-1 MODERATOR Shrinking cities: international perspectives and policy implications Karina Pallagst - University of Kaiserslautern, Germany / Helen Mulligan Cambridge Architectural Research, UK Mon July 15th 17:45 – 19:00 Room: A003 Ivonne Audirac - University of Texas Arlington, US, Sergio Moraes - University of Santa Catarina, Florianopolis, Brazil, Thorsten Wiechmann - TU Dortmund, Germany, Tong Wu University of Western Sydney, Australia The mobilization of heritage as a component of Resilience in old Industrial Regions in transition. The case of French Ardennes Marcel Bazin – University of Reims Working Regions: Regeneration by Design in Older Industrial Regions Jennifer Clark – Georgia Institute of Technology Detroit Future City: A new planning Paradigm for American Legacy Cities Toni Griffin – The City College of New York, US Resilient Urban Regeneration: Situating the Manchester Case Margaret Cowell, Joseph Schilling – Virginia Tech, US Military Urbanism: A Transatlantic Comparison of Planning Approaches Zenia Kotval – Michigan State University, Angela Uttke – Berlin University of Technology, Germany Post-war Transition and Resilience in Beirut, Lebanon: Does Planning Contribute to maintaining a conflict trap? Bruno Marot – McGill University, Canada After infrastructural networking: transition and expectation in Lisbon metropolis Joao Rafael Santos – Technical University of Lisbon Impacts of High-Speed Train Stations on Chinese urban development: and empirical study of 38 cities along two high-speed lines Lan Wang, Chen Chen, Can Wang – Tongji University, China Regional Variation in Telework Adoption and Provision Mohja Rhoads – University of Southern California, US Retail Change and Urban Resilience. From retailer’s Strategies to multilevel integrate policy Teresa Barata- Salgueiro – University of Lisbon TRACK 13: Urban and Regional Economic Planning under Prosperity and Austerity SESSION 13-1 Moderator Firm Location, Clusters, Innovations, Entrepreneurs 1 Micheal Getzner -- TU Vienna, Austria Tues 16th July 08:00 – 09:30 Room: B107/108 Creating Cities and Regions of Knowledge: Identifying Barriers to the Generation of University Spinoffs Harvey Goldstein - MODUL University, Italy – Vienna, Verena Peer – University of Life Science and Agriculture, US, Sabine Sedlacek - MODUL University, Vienna, Austria Spatio- Temporal Patterns of Entrepreneurial Activity: A Case Study of Phoenix, Az Elizabeth Mack – Arizona State University, US Exploring the role of non-profit organizations and organized civil society in sustainging regional economic growth and resilience: Four regional initiatives in the knowledge and services economy Criseida Navarro–Diaz – University of Peurto Rico The Geographic Location and Mobility of Immigrant Entrepreneurs in US cities Cathy Liu - Georgia State University, US Agglomeration Effects in the Birth, Survival and Death of Establishments: Evidence from the State of Maryland Yi Niu –Capital University of Economics and Business, China, Chengri Ding - University of Maryland, US, Yu Qiao – University of Maryland, US SESSION 13-2 Moderator Tues 16th July 09:45 – 11:15 Room: B107/108 Firm Locations, Clusters, Innovations, Entrepreneurs 2 TBD SESSION 13-3 Moderator Tues 16th July 11:45 – 13:15 Room: B107/108 Urban Economic Resilience TBD SESSION 13-4 Moderator Tues 16th July Urban and Regional Labour Markets TBD The role of size (of events, cities and stadia) and soccer in urban regeneration Alex Deffner – University of Thessaly, Greece Towards financial sustainability of creative incubators in times of austerity Jan Jacob Trip, Arie Romein – Delft University of Technology, The Netherlands Industrial Competitiveness in Central and Eastern Europe – China’s Rise, the Return of Manufacturing, and Strategic Economic Plannig Leohard Plank - Vienna University of Technology, Armon Rezai – Vienna University of Economics and Business, Cornelia Staritz – Austrian Research Foundation for International Development Road Congestion, Accessibility and Intra- Urban Firm location Choices Yuting Hou – University of Southern California, US An Empirical Look at Industry Cluster Initiatives by US Regional Economic Development Organisations Timothy Green - Clemson University, US New approaches in urban transformation management – challenges for future research resulting from CIRCUSE project Maros Finka – Slovak University of Technology in Bratislava, Tatiana Kluvankova-Oravska – Slovak University of Technology in Bratislava, Peter Gezik – Slovak University of Technology in Bratislava, Slovakia What Makes Regions Resilient? Main Attributes and Determinants Ayda Eraydin – Middle East Technical University, Turkey The Role of the Creative Industries within Maastricht’s bid for European Capital of Culture Philip Lawton – Maastricht University, The Netherlands Effect of austerity on environmental planning: comparing evidence from Scottish and Canadian cities Vincent Onyango - University of Dundee Economic Resilience of Metropolitan areas: Post-Crisis implications for regional Economic Planning Markus Neufeld - Friedrich – Alexander – Universitat Erlangen- Nurnberg, Germany Precarious Jobs, Precarious Politics: Flexible Work Schedules and the Limit to Labour 14:15 – 15:45 Room: B107/108 Market Reform Marc Doussard – University of Illinois at Urbana- Champaign, US The workload and jobs for low and moderate income parents in an era of privatization and austerity Carrie Makarewicz – University of California, Berkeley, US Residential Segregation and Self-Employment of Rural Migrant Workers in China Pengyu Zhu – Zhejiang University, Hui Wang – Zhejiang University, China Resilience and Metropolitan “High-Tech” and “I-Tech” Activity Dillon Mahmoudi, Greg Schrock – Portland State University, US SESSION 13-5 Moderator Wed 17th July 09:45 – 11:15 Room: B107/108 Economic Development and Policies 1 TBD SESSION 13-6 Moderator Wed 17th July 11:45 – 13:15 Room: B107/108 Economic Development and Policies 2 TBD SESSION 13-7 Moderator Creative Industries, Culture, Institutions Elizabeth Currid-Halkett -- University of Southern California, US Fri 18th July 08:00 – 09:30 Room: B107/108 Cultural Amenities: Large and Small, Mainstream and Niche. A Conceptual Framework for Cultural Planning in an Age of Austerity Robert Kloosterman – University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands Stakeholder Partnerships and the Cultural City: Creative economic development policy in Toronto and New York Shoshanah Goldberg–Miller – The New School, New York, US Artistic Clusters and Neighbourhood Change: Location Patterns and Implications after the Financial Crisis Carl Groddach – University of Texas Arlington, Elizabeth Currid-Halkett – University of The m (median) score: An alternative to the z-score in statistics and index creation Edward Hill, Kelly Kinahan – Cleveland State University, US Time and Spatial Transformation of New Economic Globalization in the Yangtze River Delta Region Tao Li – Tongji University, China Advanced Service Urbanism: The Evolution of Firm Clustering in US City Regions, 1998 2010 James Connolly – Northeastern University, US, Elizabeth Currid-Halkett – University of Southern California, US Urban Economic Development – Who survived? Case of the High Line and Special West Chelsea District Heeyeun Yoon – Harvard University Graduate School of Design, US What will the next building boom look like? Forecasting the spatial preferences of finance Rachel Webster – University of Illinois at Chicago, US Dimensions of “smart” fiscal policies of cities Michael Getzner, Johann Bröthaler – Vienna University of Technology, Austria The determinants of planning and development decisions under fiscal stress Elena Besussi – The Bartlett School of Planning (UCL), London, UK Spatial Disequilibrium Development of Henan Province in Central China: From Spatialtemporal Pattern to Planning Strategy Jing Wang – HuaZhong University of Science and Technology, Peng Chong – HuaZhong University of Science and Technology st Manufacturing’s Contribution to U.S. Metropolitan Economics in the 21 Century Nancey Green Leigh, Taelim Choi – Georgia Institute of Technology, US The effects on the real estate market by an economic policy supporting urban renaissance in Japan: Osaka City Kunihiko Hattori, Hirokazu Abe – Osaka University, Japan Southern California, Nicole Foster – University of Texas, Arlington, James Murdoch – University of Texas, Arlington, US Achieving Successful City Centres: Organized Approaches to their Management Gary Sands – Wayne State University, US, Pierre Filion – University of Waterloo, Canada, Laura Reese – Michigan State University, US Creativity- led regeneration: towards an evaluation framework Arie Romein – Delft University of Technology The Netherlands, Jeannette Nijkamp – Rotterdam University of Applied Science, Jan Jacob Trip – Delft University of Technology The Role of Creative Industry in the Development of industrial and Economic transition – Case on China’s creative Industry Juan Wu – Tianjin Urban Planning & Design Institute, China TRACK 14: Planning for Risks - Health, Safety and Security SESSION 14-1 Moderator Mon July 15th 16:00 – 17:30 Room: A008 Health & Social Equity TBD SESSION 14-2 Moderator Tues July 16th 14:15 – 15:45 Room: A008 Water, Planning and Human Health 1 TBD SESSION 14-3 Moderator Tues July 16th 16:15 – 17:45 Room: A008 Water, Planning and Human Health 2 TBD Departmental plan “Health” - a new instrument for environmental justice? Sabine Baumgart – TU Dortmund University, Germany Should Quality of Life include Mental Health? Noemi Leon-Baerecke – Instituto Politecnico Nacional-SEPI ESIA, Mexico Redeveloping Old Havana: The Challenge of Maintaining Social Equity in the Face of Change Jacklyn Kohon, Scott Ellis, Melissa Iglesias – Portland State University, US A spatial dimension of environmental justice in Istanbul, Turkey Asli Ögüt Erbil – Istanbul Technical University An approach for bringing public health into local authority spatial and transport planning Marcus Grant – University of the West of England, Adrian Davis – NHS Bristol, Stephen Hewitt – Bristol City Council, UK Planning and Health: Forging New Alliances in Building Healthy and Resilient Cities Susan Thompson, Jennifer Kent – University of New South Wales, Australia The waterfront justice project: addressing climate change impacts and public health risks in industrial waterfront communities while protecting local industrial jobs. Eddie Bautista e, Juan Camilo Osorio, Eva Hanhardt, Natasha Dwyer – Pratt Institute, US Water access: social, institutional and spatial issues Rita Biconne – University of Florence, Italy Planning for a Resilient Coast: Evaluating Louisiana’s Coastal Master Plan for Balanced Sustainability and Effective Participation Melanie Sand – Cornell University, US Urban Morphology and Ecological Design in Mediterranean areas. The case of East Naples Gilda Berruti, Emanuela Coppola, Francesco Domenico Moccia – Federico II University of Naples, Italy Scalability of a Community-Based Approach to Improve Water Point Access, Functionality, and Public Health in the Leogane and Gressier Districts of Haiti Jocelyn Widmer – Virginia Tech, US Future Flooding Risk Assessment under Growth Scenarios and Climate Change Impacts for the Charles River Watershed in the Boston Metropolitan Area Chingwen Cheng, Elizabeth Brabec, Robert Ryan, Yi-Chen E. Yang, Craig Nicolson, Paige Warren – University of Massachusetts Amherst, US Post-tsunami Reconstruction: Complexity and planning challenges Andre Sorensen – University of Toronto, Canada Searching for flood risk management strategies in Kampala Richard Sliuzas – University of Twente, Netherlands, Shuaib Lwasa – University of Makerere, Uganda, Victor Jetten – University of Twente, Netherlands, Georg Petersen – Hydroc Consult, Germany, Johannes Flacke – University of Twente, Netherlands, John Wasige – University of Makerere, Uganda Demand Analysis of Water to Improve Quality of International Development: The Case of Cambodia Chan Mi Kim, Jina Kim – Seoul National University, South Korea Urban patterns in near-shore ecosystems: the role of wastewater infrastructures in mediating the impacts of urban development on coastal ecosystems Daniele Spirandelli – University of Hawaii, US SESSION 14-4 Moderator Tues July 16th 18:00 – 19:30 Room: A008 Risks, Disasters & Planning 1 TBD SESSION 14-5 Moderator Wed July 17th 08:00 – 09:30 Room: A008 Risks, Disasters & Planning 2 TBD SESSION 14-6 Moderator Wed July 17th 09:45 – 11:15 Room: A008 Risks, Disasters & Planning 3 TBD How to Create Resilience to Natural Disasters through Urban Regeneration within context of Spatial Development Policies in Turkey? Arzu Taylan - Selçuk University, Turkey Application of the integrated risk governance construct as a risk reduction method. Exploring integrative risk governance as a resilience construct William Siembieda – California Polytechnic State University, US Seismic risk in urban systems. The urbanization of disasters Mónica Ferreira, Carlos Sousa Oliveira, Francisco Mota de Sá – Technical University of Lisbon, Portugal Disasters and Social Capital: Exploring the Impact of Hurricane Katrina on Gulf Coast Counties Lili Wang – Arizona State University, US, N. Emel Ganapati – Florida International University, US Urban Transformation in Istanbul - Disaster Mitigation or Gentrification? Ayse Yonder – Pratt Institute, US Risk management of disasters in Brazil and urban resilience: progress and challenges Cynthia Suassuna, Fátima Furtado, Edinéa Alcântara – Federal University of Pernambuco, Brazil Earthquake Vulnerability Assessment: A Case Study of Tehran City Zhila Pooyan, Iran, Mohammad Reza Ghayamghamian – International Institute of Earthquake engineering and Seismology, Iran Building community resilience: Lessons from business preparedness in case of Adapazari Ezgi Orhan - Middle East Technical University, Turkey Towards regional resilience: cross-scale planning in Metro Vancouver Lilia Yumagulova – The University of British Columbia, Canada Resilience in Planning: A Review of Comprehensive Plans in Mississippi after Hurricane Katrina Ann Carpenter – Georgia Tech, US Multicriteria method for the evaluation of urban resilience to seismic event: the case of L’Aquila. Claudia Ceppi - Technical University of Bari, Italy, Lucia Tilio - Independent researcher Priority Setting Amid the Rubble: A Study of Organizational Responses to Post-Disaster Reconstruction in Haiti Michael Hooper – Harvard University, US What actions are city governments taking to build resilience to natural hazards? Cassidy Johnson – University College London, Sophie Blackburn – King’s College London, UK Cyberenvironments help decision-making processes at the local level for pre-disaster planning of natural disasters Claudio Vicentelo – University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign, US SESSION 14-7 Moderator Wed July 17th 11:45 – 13:15 Room: A008 Informal Settlements and Health TBD SESSION 14-8 Moderator Thurs July 18th 08:00 – 09:30 Room: A008 Planning for Food Access TBD SESSION 14-9 Moderator Thurs July 18th 08:00 – 09:30 Room: A007 Walkability, Physical Activity and Well-being TBD SESSION 14-10 Moderator Fri July 19th 09:45 – 11:15 Security, Risk & Resilience TBD Sustainable urban neighbourhood development and the complexity of crime prevention in Cape Town’s urban periphery Lauren Ugur – Technische Universität Darmstadt Surviving cities: Addressing disaster risk to informal settlements in social network and governance framework Rolee Aranya – Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Renu Khosla – Centre for Urban and Regional Excellence, Pranita Shrestha – Norwegian University of Science and Technology Mismatches on Brazilian Government’s Interventions in Hillsides Risk Areas’ Settlements Sergio Moraes, Sonia Soares – Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina, Brazil Social Vulnerability and Environmental Risks in Favelas of Rio de Janeiro Rachel Coutinho-Silva – Federal University of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil Urban Resilience in Situations of Chronic Violence: Combining Spatial Planning with Socio-political Network Building in the Search for Security Diane Davis – Harvard University, US Supermarket Development to Mitigate Risks of Disparate Food Access and Diet-Related Disease Benjamin Chrisinger – University of Pennsylvania, US Food Risks, Community Capacity, and Planning in the Third Sector Mahbubur Meenar – Temple University, US The relationship between parental perception of the neighbourhood environment and children’s outdoor play activities Raktim Mitra – Ryerson University, Canada, Guy E. J. Faulkner – University of Toronto, Canada An analysis of green space and premature mortality in Florida, 2000-2012 Christopher Coutts – Florida State University, US Environmental Correlates of Traffic Collisions around School Chia-Yuan Yu, Xuemei Zhu – Texas A&M University, US Accessibility and Health: Towards walkability tools for planning practice Mark Tully, Geraint Ellis, Michael Donnelly, Frank Kee, Luke Kelleher, Ruth Hunter – Queen's University Belfast, UK Residential Environments of the Elderly in an Intermediate-Size U.S. City Andrew Aurand, Rebecca Miles – Florida State University, UK The walkability of Bristol: how this relates to physical activity, health and well-being Sarah Burgess, Danielle Sinnett – University of the West of England, UK The Prevalence of Obesity among Residents of Low‐income Neighborhoods: Assessing the Factors of Lifestyle, Socioeconomic Status and Built Environment Deden Rukmana – Savannah State University, Sujin Kim Fear of Crime in Urban spaces: Influence of environmental features, Presence of people and Social variables Room: A008 Rangajeewa Ratnayake – Bendigo campus, Australia Using the concept of adaptive capacity to explore the “urban security” approach in Kigamboni New City project Liana Ricci – SAPIENZA University of Rome Assembling Gare du Nord: mobile displacement and the new politics of urban security Ulpia Botezatu – Newcastle University, UK Undemocratic and Irrational Planning for the 2010 Vancouver Winter Olympic Jason Burke – University of Toronto, Canada Planning for Human Security: Addressing Human Trafficking at the City and Regional Level Lyndsey Christoffersen – University of California, Irvine TRACK 15: Planning Law, Regulation and Dispute Resolution SESSION 15-1 Moderator Mon July 15th 16:00 – 17:30 Room: B107/108 Effects of Planning Law on Housing and Real Estate Rachelle Alterman -- Technion, Israel SESSION 15-2 Moderator Tues July 16th 16:15 – 17:45 Room: B107/108 History and Theory of Planning Law TBD SESSION 15-3 Moderator Tues July 16th 18:00 – 19:30 Room: B107/108 Law of Citizen and Community Involvement TBD On the Regulatory Nexus between Land and Capital: A Comparative Perspective David Bierie – University of Michigan, US Can Centralization, Decentralization, and Welfare Go Together? The Case of Massachusetts’s Affordable Housing Policy (Ch. 40B) Ravit Hananel – Tel-Aviv University, Israel Revitalising abandoned properties in Johannesburg inner city: what ‘expropriation’ and ‘community land trusts’ can offer to initiate inclusion? Neil Klug – University of the Witwatersrand, South Africa, Heinz Klug – University of Wisconsin, US De-commodification in the face of land policy and housing Michael Kolocek - TU Dortmund University – Germany The Potential for Urban Land Reform in Scotland David Adams -- University of Glasgow, UK Planning in a Context of Discontinuous Change Leonie Janssen-Jansen – University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands, Greg Lloyd – University of Ulster, UK, Deborah Peel -- University of Ulster, UK, Erwin van der Krabben -- Radboud University Nijmegen, The Netherlands Crowd-sensing in city apartment precincts: legal, ethical and citizen concerns Rebecca Leshinsky – Australian Catholic University, Marta Poblert – Autonomous University of Barcelona, Spain, Emily Paradis – University of Toronto, Canada Land matters: resilience, regulation and resolve Greg Lloyd, Deborah Peel – University of Ulster, UK Planning Law in Germany: Sedimations of Power Nikolai Roskamm – TU Berlin, Germany Bringing central regulation and local governance interaction together: the case of the Markermeer-IJmeer Natura 2000 area Bas Waterhout – Delft University of Technology, The Netherlands How relevant and appropriate is the regulatory regime for the planning and development of water resources in Taiwan? Janet Askew – University of the West of England, Bristol, UK, Ally Lu – National Cheng Kung University, Taiwan Do we need to agonize over condominium disputes? What agonism can offer conflicts in condominium living. Clare Mouat - The University of Western Australia, Rebecca Leshinsky – Australian Catholic University A new planning system in New South Wales, Australia. Can we legislate for effective community engagement? Neil Selmon – NSW Department of Planning and Infrastructure, Australia Marginalising Indigenous peoples: A comparative view of the response of land use planning in Australia and New Zealand John Sheehan – University of Technology Sydney, Australia Environmental Review and Participation in Climate Action Planning: A Comparative Study Robert Smith – University of California, Davis, US SESSION 15-4 Moderator Wed July 17th 08:00 – 09:30 Room: B107/108 Negotiated Regulation, Planning Law, and Takings TBD SESSION 15-5 Moderator Thurs July 18th 08:00 – 09:30 Room: B107/108 Planning, Law, and Water TBD SESSION 15-6 Moderator Thurs July 18th 11:45 – 13:15 Room: B107/108 Reform of Planning Law Administration and Process 1 TBD Agreements between Developers and Local Governments: A strained relationship between planning law and practice Rachelle Alterman – Technion-Israel Institute of Technology, Israel A Comparison of Density Bonus Policies in Two Canadian Cities: Toronto and Vancouver David Amborski – Ryerson University, Canada Involving citizens in development projects: conditions for implementation of Community Benefits Agreements in the Netherlands Menno van der Veen – University of Amsterdam, Leonie Janssen-Jansen – University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands Use of conservation covenants and agreements in land use management: An Australian perspective Peter Williams, Angelique Williams – University of New South Wales, Australia Is Regulatory Takings Coming to the Netherlands? Erwin Van der Krabben – Radboud University Nijmegen, The Netherlands, Harvey M. Jacobs – University of Wisconsin-Madison, US Comparative Analysis of State Level Water Supply Planning and Demand Management Legislation Caitlin Dyckman – Clemson University, US SPATIAL WATER PLANNING: How water management enters the realm of spatial planning Thomas Hartmann – Netherlands, Tejo Spit – Utrecht University, The Netherlands Using GIS Models & Mental Models to Understand the Building Code-Resiliency Gap. Robert Thompson – University of Rhode Island, US, Shannon Hulst – Wetlands Watch, US Optimizing the Organization Models of Control Lines in Chinese Waterfronts Chunxia Yang – Tongji University, China, Huizhi Geng – Tongji University, Ming Qin – Tongji University, China Planning of the Coastal Areas in Turkey Emine Yetiskul – Middle East Technical University, Turkey, Tanyel Ozelci Eceral – Gazi University, Turkey, Nihan Ozdemir Sonmez – Gazi University, Turkey Legislation and the challenge of planning organic transformation: the case of Buiksloterham in Amsterdam, Netherlands Sebastian Dembski – University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands The need for the reform of the Greek planning system, through the new economic conditions. Despina Dimelli – Technical University of Crete, Dimitrios Vakalopoulos – National Technical University of Athens, Maria Dimelli – National Technical University of Athens Uncertainties, oligopolies and the unexpected ways in which the UK planning system is holding residential development back: Tales from Cyprus and Hong Kong. Nikos Karadimitriou – UCL Bartlett School of Planning, UK Basic Characteristics of Local Urban and Rural Planning Law and Regulatory System in China Huizhi Geng, Wang Qi, Chunxia Yang – Tongji University, China Revision of the Portuguese Land Use Law: Impacts on Planning Policies Emilia Rebelo– University of Porto, Portugal SESSION 15-7 Moderator Thurs July 18th 16:30 – 18:00 Room: B107/108 Reform of Planning Law Administration and Process 2 TBD SESSION 15-8 Moderator Fri July 19th 09:45 – 11:15 Room: B107/108 Planning Law and Spatial Analysis Richard (Dick) Norton -- University of Michigan, US PANEL 15-1 Moderator Mon July 15th 17:45 – 19:00 Room: B107/108 Planning and Human Rights Benjamin Davy – Technical University Dortmund, Germany PANEL 15-2 Moderator Thurs July 18th 18:15 – 19:30 Room: B107/108 International and Comparative Perspective on Land-use Planning and Regulation Sonia Hirt -- Virginia Tech, US Legal and Administrative Framework for Development Regulation Sweta Byahut – Auburn University, US Evidence-Based Sign Regulation: Regulating Signage on the Basis of Empirical Wisdom Dawn Jourdan, Kathryn Hurd, Gene Hawkins, Kimberly Winson-Geideman – University of Oklahoma, US From ‘Urbanism’ to Urban Ecology: An Examination of the Impacts of the General Building Code and its Amendments on the Urban Environment in Greece Lalenis Konstantinos – University of Thessaly, Greece Planning policies and regulations that can reduce the practice of private sector property abandonment in the U.S Rex LaMore, Michelle LeBlanc – Michigan State University, US Planning appeals: independence, impartiality and the state Adam Sheppard – University of Ulster,UK, Tom Warth – Planning Inspectorate, UK Climate change: Understanding the phenomenon and finding answers from a spatial planning perspective Bahar Gedikli – Middle East Technical University, Turkey OSS and LDF: spatial planning answer to the resilient city Lucia Nucci – Università Roma Tre, Italy Growth dependencies in the Dutch spatial development system; the challenge for a more robust institutional framework Alexander Woestenburg – Netherlands Council for the Environment and Infrastructure Multiple dwelling and environmental sustainability Ingrid Persson – Blekinge Institute of Technology, Sweden Property instruments instead of traditional planning tools - The Swiss secondary residence regulation and its significance for spatial planning Andreas Hengstermann – Universität Bern, Switzerland Nurit Alfasi -- Ben Gurion University of the Negev, Israel), Rachelle Alterman -- Technion, Haifa, Israel, Tovi Fenster -- Tel Aviv University, Israel, Mark Oranje -- University of Pretoria, South Africa, Libby Porter -- Monash University, Melbourne, Australia, Jeannie van Wyk -University of South Africa, Pretoria, South Africa Marta Lora-Tamayo – UNED, Madrid, Richard Norton – University of Michigan, David Bieri – University of Michigan, Jerold Kayden – Harvard TRACK 16: Rural and Landscape Planning SESSION 16-1 Moderator The Peri-urban Karen Foley – University College Dublin, Ireland Tues July 16th 08:00 – 09:30 Room: A008 Green Sprawl : Nature Ideology in Exurban Landscapes Laura Taylor – York University, Canada, Kirsten Valentine Cadieux - University of Minnesota, US Landscape Urbanisation and Heritage Protection in Greece. The Specific Function of Spatial planning Elias Beriatos – University of Thessaly, Greece Peri-urban landscapes in metropolitan areas: using transdisciplinary research to move towards an improved conceptual and geographical understanding Isabel Ramos – Technical University of Lisbon, Portugal, Maria de Fátima Ferreiro Dinâmia-CET/ISCTE-IUL, Portugal, Conceição Colaço - Technical University of Lisbon, Portugal, Sebastião Santos - Dinâmia-CET/ISCTE-IUL, Portugal A Comparative study of Urban Environmental Management Strategies and Implementation in six Localities within a Growing Metropolitan Region Connie Ozawa, Alan Yeakley – Portland State University, US SESSION 16-2 Moderator Tues July 16th 09:45 – 11:15 Room: A008 Rural Planning, Development & Resilience in the 21st century TBD SESSION 16-3 Moderator Tues July 16th 11:45 – 13:15 Room: A008 Planning for Green Infrastructure and Open Space Values TBD SESSION 16-4 Moderator Thurs July 18th 11:45 – 13:15 Room: A008 Rural Development Policy TBD st Shifts in 21 Century Rural Planning in the USA and India Hemalata Dandekar – California Polytechnic State University, US Transitioning rural regions into the new energy and climate future: the role of regional planning Michael Hibbard – University of Oregon, US, Tiffany H. Morrison – University of Queensland, Australia, Marcus B. Lane – Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation, Australia China’s urban-rural coordination planning Tingwei Zhang – University of Illinois at Chicago, US Challenges and complexity regarding rural planning and development in Norway Joergen Amdam – Volda University College, Norway Stronger, more resilient communities? The potential social value of second homes in rural areas Nick Gallent – University College London, UK Preserving Open Irrigation Canals and Drains as Systems of Resilience and Cultural Heritage Sherry McKibben – University of Idaho, US Imagined futures in Murray-Darling Basin: Resilient and Transforming Communities Leonie Pearson – University of Canberra, Australia From modelling to visual representation: use of visualisation for communication of perspectives of nature development in Nature Outlook Alexandra Tisma – Netherlands Environmental Assessment Agency, The Netherlands, Bart de Knegt - Netherlands Environmental Assessment Agency, The Netherlands, Rjik van Oostenbrugge - Netherlands Environmental Assessment Agency, The Netherlands Urban Open Space and Their Impact on Real Estate Values Anne Budinger – TU Dortmund, Germany Community-based Water Systems : Preserving Livelihood and Community David Henkel – University of New Mexico, US Exploring the concept of Territori Lenti for designing Rural Development Policies Artur Rosa Pires – University of Aveiro, Portugal, Martina Pertoldi - University of Aveiro, Portugal, Gioacchino Garofoli – Universita degli Studi di Pavia, Italy, Carlos Rodrigues University of Aveiro, Portugal Villages Under Rapid Urbanization in Central China: From Present Problems to Planning Strategy Yun Liu – Wuhan University, China Interface Issues for landscape, open space and planning policy at the rural urban fringe Brendan O’Sullivan, Ireland, Karen Ray, Evelyn Sikora - University College Cork, Ireland Subsidizing the sublime: rural resistance to planning the amenity landscape Susan J. Gilbertz - Montana State University-Billings, US Assessment of settlement pressure on environmental system: forms and processes taking place in Sicily Annalisa Giampino – University of Palermo, Italy, Filippo Schilleci – University of Palermo, Italy, Vincenzo Todaro – University of Palermo, Italy SESSION 16-5 Moderator Thurs July 18th 16:30 – 18:00 Room: A008 Emerging Landscapes TBD SESSION 16-6 Moderator Fri July 19th 08:00 – 09:30 Room: A008 Rural-urban Linkages and Food Policy Karen Foley – UCD, Ireland Learning from the past, planning for the future; the hidden potential for toponyms for landscape typology, planning and management Nadja Penko Seidl – University of Ljubljana, Slovenia Revitalisation of abandoned villages: design processes in the memory of places Luca di Figlia – University of Florence, Italy A Study of the Reconstruction Planning of Rural Settlement System in Western China: a case study of outer suburb of Xi’an Shaanxi Province Jing Zhu – Northwest University, Canada, Kewei Liu – Northwest University, Canada, Lin Liu – Northwest University, Canada Representation of rural second homes on the spatial settlement modelling in Extremadura, Spain Jin Su – University of Extremadura, Spain The rising Chinese middle class and the “construction” of new countrysides John Sturzaker – University of Liverpool, UK Rural Urban Linkages, Local Food Systems and Rural Resilience Becca Jablonski – Cornell University,US Integrating Agri-environmental schemes design and landscape planning Carlo Rega – PolytechnichUniversity of Turin,Italy Revisiting urban planning to integrate multifunctional agriculture policies by the means of landscape Esther Sanz Sanz – INRA and EHESS, France, Claude Napoléone – INRA, France, Bernard Hubert – INRA and EHESS, France Planning in the urban-rural fringe and urban food policy – an international comparison Andreas Schulz Bäing Olivier Sykes – University of Liverpool, UK Assessing the impact of urban form on peri-urban farmland function Catherine Brinkley – University of Pennsylvania, US Poster Presentations by Track – provided in a separate file