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Journal ArticleDOI

Green Cities, Growing Cities, Just Cities?: Urban Planning and the Contradictions of Sustainable Development

Scott W. Campbell
- 30 Sep 1996 - 
- Vol. 62, Iss: 3, pp 308-326
TLDR
In this article, the authors propose a "planner's triangle" with sustainable development located at its center, and argue that planners would benefit both from integrating social theory with environmental thinking and from combining their substantive skills with techniques for community conflict resolution, to confront economic and environmental injustice.
Abstract
Nothing inherent in the discipline steers planners either toward environmental protection or toward economic development—or toward a third goal of planning: social equity. Instead, planners work within the tension generated among these three fundamental aims, which, collectively, I call the “planner's triangle,” with sustainable development located at its center. This center cannot be reached directly, but only approximately and indirectly, through a sustained period of confronting and resolving the triangle's conflicts. To do so, planners have to redefine sustainability, since its current formulation romanticizes our sustainable past and is too vaguely holistic. Planners would benefit both from integrating social theory with environmental thinking and from combining their substantive skills with techniques for community conflict resolution, to confront economic and environmental injustice.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Three pillars of sustainability: in search of conceptual origins

TL;DR: The three-pillar conception of sustainability, commonly represented by three intersecting circles with overall sustainability at the centre, has become ubiquitous as discussed by the authors, however, there is no single point of origin of this threepillar conception, but rather a gradual emergence from various critiques in the early academic literature of the economic status quo from both social and ecological perspectives on the one hand, and the quest to reconcile economic growth as a solution to social problems on the part of the United Nations on the other.
Journal ArticleDOI

Smart sustainable cities of the future: An extensive interdisciplinary literature review

TL;DR: The applied theoretical inquiry into smart sustainable cities of the future is deemed of high pertinence and importance—given that the research in the field is still in its early stages, and that the subject matter draws upon contemporary and influential theories with practical applications.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Compact City Fallacy

TL;DR: This article reviewed empirical data of whether compact cities are sustainable and concluded that conceiving the city in terms of form is neither necessary nor sufficient to achieve the goals ascribed to the compact city.
Journal ArticleDOI

Are we planning for sustainable development? An evaluation of 30 comprehensive plans

TL;DR: In this article, the authors set forth a set of six principles that define and operationalize the concept of sustainable development and evaluated 30 comprehensive plans to determine how well their policies support sustainable development.
Journal ArticleDOI

What is social sustainability? A clarification of concepts

TL;DR: A review of the literature suggests that sustainable development is a concept in chaos as mentioned in this paper, and argues that this severely compromises its importance and utility, and proposes a tripartite of social sustainabilities to explore ways in which contradictions and complements between them impede or promote sustainable development, and draw upon housing in urban areas as a means of explicating these ideas.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The Science of "Muddling Through"

TL;DR: Lindblom, C.E. as mentioned in this paper discussed the science of "muddling through" in the context of monetary policy. But he did not consider monetary policy with respect to inflation.
Book ChapterDOI

The science of muddling through

TL;DR: Lindblom, C.E. as mentioned in this paper discussed the science of "muddling through" in the context of monetary policy. But he did not consider monetary policy with respect to inflation.
Book

Uneven Development: Nature, Capital, and the Production of Space

Neil Smith
TL;DR: The ideology of nature is the production of nature, the creation of space toward a theory of uneven development as mentioned in this paper, the dialectic of geographical differentiation and equalization, spatial scale and the see-saw of capital.