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  1. Land Market Monitoring for Smart Urban Growth

    Libros
    Diciembre 2001
    Edited by Gerrit J. Knaap

    The fundamental debate about urban growth—no growth, slow growth, go growth—will never be resolved, but there is general agreement that urban growth will occur, that it needs some type of...

  2. Regionalism on Purpose

    Enfoques en políticas de suelo
    Agosto 2001
    Kathryn A. Foster

    In the past decade, interest in and experience with U.S. metropolitan regionalism have mushroomed as public officials, civic leaders, and metropolitan residents seek to address complicated regional...

  3. Land Lines, November 2001

    Revista Land Lines
    Noviembre 2001
    Edited by Ann LeRoyer

    This issue looks at the impact of land markets and land policies on spatially-oriented segregation in urban areas of Latin America and elsewhere; and the Lincoln Institute’s distance-based...

  4. Land Lines, September 2001

    Revista Land Lines
    Septiembre 2001
    Edited by Ann LeRoyer

    This issue explores “Greater Phoenix 2100,” a smart growth vision for the rapidly-expanding Sun Belt city; development and land use patterns that the Dutch are experimenting with in the...

  5. Distance Learning for New England's Forests

    Revista Land Lines
    Noviembre 2001
    Charles H.W. Foster

    The Forest Setting Forests presently cover approximately 25 percent of the world's land surface, excluding Greenland and Antarctica. Two-thirds of this important renewable natural resource lies in...

  6. Política del suelo, mercados inmobiliarios y segregación espacial urbana

    Revista Land Lines
    Noviembre 2001
    Allegra Calder and Rosalind Greenstein

    Una versión más actualizada de este artículo está disponible como parte del capítulo 5 del libro Perspectivas urbanas: Temas críticos en políticas de suelo de América Latina. ¿Es la segregación...

  7. Land Policy, Land Markets and Urban Spatial Segregation

    Revista Land Lines
    Noviembre 2001
    Allegra Calder and Rosalind Greenstein

    Is urban spatial segregation a consequence of the normal functioning of urban land markets, reflecting cumulative individual choices? Or, is it a result of the malfunctioning of urban land markets...

  8. Greater Phoenix 2100

    Knowledge Capital, Social Capital, Natural Capital
    Revista Land Lines
    Septiembre 2001
    Frederick Steiner

    The Sun Belt grew at spectacular rates in the late twentieth century, and among western U.S. cities Phoenix and its metropolitan region led the pack. The Census Bureau reports that between 1990 and...

  9. Crosscurrents in Planning

    Changes in Land Use Policy in the Netherlands
    Revista Land Lines
    Septiembre 2001

    At the train station for Bijlmermeer, in the fringe development area of Amsterdam known as Southeast, a landscape comes into view that seems very un-Dutch-a huge enclosed mall, a gleaming new sports...

  10. Revisiting the Sitcom Suburbs

    Revista Land Lines
    Marzo 2001
    Dolores Hayden

    The largest of the post-World War II suburbs were the size of cities, with populations between 50,000 and 80,000, but they looked like overgrown subdivisions. In Levittown, Lakewood and Park Forest,...

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