|
Showing 1 - 2 of
2 matches in All Departments
The new urbanisation necessitates the upgrading of urban governance
and spatial planning and design. Landscape Architecture Frontiers
accentuates the intelligence on urban growth and physical
construction for years. In this issue, LA Frontiers focuses on the
topics about urban governance and spatial quality improvement under
the promotion of inventory planning and governance refinement,
including: 1) Urban village (micro-) renewals, waterfront
revitalisation, and industrial, cultural, and historical heritage
regeneration; 2) Public participation, community engagement, and
other polycentric urban governance modes and inclusive design
approaches; 3) The resilience of urban planning and design against
sudden disasters and public health emergencies and crises; 4)
Diagnoses on the working systems/mechanisms that support the
upgrades of urban governance and public space construction, through
lenses of Economic Sociology. By gathering cutting edge research
with international outlooks and presenting latest practice examples
among China and abroad, LA Frontiers might offer a new prospective
that helps professionals interpret associated governance and
planning policies, inform practitioners the goals and roadmaps of
public empowerment, navigate planners and designers with flexible
implementation and management guidelines, to eventually improve the
spatial quality of public places, as well as the overall benefits
in society, ecology, and economy.
This issue focuses on: 1) Exploring the significance of territorial
spatial planning by stressing its necessity and main ideas under
the contemporary background of ecological civilisation construction
in China, while re-examining the role of landscape architects in
this reform. 2) Strengthening research on related methodologies and
techniques of urban ecological planning, ecological security
pattern, ecological infrastructure, and ecological restoration to
improve cities liveability and resilience and rebuild harmonious
human-nature relationship under a mandatory planning framework
combined with resilient measures, avoiding inflexible ecological
conservation practices. 3) Analysing and learning from diversified
efforts made by different countries and regions to promote urban
development while protecting ecosystems, particularly their
experience on territorial, regional, and urban planning that is
significantly valuable to the Chinese counterpart, to leverage the
value of territorial natural resources. 4) Exploring feasible
approaches that help restore urban ecosystem structure and
ecological elements, and improve planning and design methods on
specific sites, so as to enhance spatial construction and
ecological quality, to eventually improve a national eco-security
pattern with scientific and user-friendly planning and design. 5)
Encouraging applications of research frontiers in geology,
macro-ecology, regional economics, public management, and
sustainability science.
|
You may like...
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R398
R369
Discovery Miles 3 690
|