Planners' Attitude Toward GrowthA Comparative Case Study
- 31 December 1994
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Journal of the American Planning Association
- Vol. 60 (4) , 483-500
- https://doi.org/10.1080/01944369408975606
Abstract
Planners' attitudes toward growth have received little attention despite the essential roles that growth and development play in planning. To contribute to an understanding of planners' attitudes and values, this paper compares planners' attitudes toward growth with those of the general public. Responses to eleven questions relating to quality of life, initiatives and referenda, growth limitation approaches, civic boosterism, and the costs and benefits of growth indicate that planners, at least in San Diego, hold more favorable attitudes toward growth than does the general population. Private sector planners favor growth more than public planners do. These findings are consistent with a historical and theoretical understanding of the relationship between the planning profession and those who benefit from growth.Keywords
This publication has 26 references indexed in Scilit:
- Growth Ideology in a Period of Decline: Deindustrialization and Restructuring, Flint StyleSocial Problems, 1992
- The Establishment of the San Diego Housing Trust Fund: Lessons for Theory and PracticeJournal of Planning Education and Research, 1992
- Growth Machines and Ballot Box Planning: The San Diego CaseJournal of Urban Affairs, 1992
- Who Plans America? Planners or Developers?Journal of the American Planning Association, 1990
- Legislative WatchJournal of the American Planning Association, 1990
- Growth Management Good for the Town, Bad for the Nation?Journal of the American Planning Association, 1990
- The Turbulent Eighth Decade: Challenges to American City PlanningJournal of the American Planning Association, 1989
- Planning History: What Story? What Meaning? What Future?Journal of the American Planning Association, 1989
- The Houston Growth Coalition in “Boom” and “Bust”Journal of Urban Affairs, 1989
- Challenging Chicago's growth machine: A preliminary report on the Washington administrationInternational Journal of Urban and Regional Research, 1987