PREFACE (by Professor Ian Douglas - Co-Chairman, UNESCO SCOPE Expert Group on Urban Futures) DEDICATION (To the First Nation Peoples / Traditional Custodians of Australia) Table of Contents Table of Figures Tables 1. INTRODUCTION 1. What is environmental planning? – Byrne, Sipe and Dodson 2. Indigenous relationships to ‘country’ & planning with Native Title – Wensing 3. Australian environmental planning origins and theory/ies – Freestone 2. GOVERNING AUSTRALIAN ENVIRONMENTAL PLANNING 4. The legal basis for Australian environmental planning & governance – England 5. Australian environmental governance and environmental planning procedures – Steele and MacCallum 3. THE URBAN ENVIRONMENT AND ITS CHALLENGES 6. Land use and land management – Garrard and Bekessey 7. Water use and water management – Syme 8. Air quality and pollution management – Chan and Byrne 9. Urban vegetation – Wang, Amati and Byrne 10. Urban wildlife – Daniels and Roetman 4. URBAN ENVIRONMENTAL PROCESSES 11. Energy generation, planning and management – Foran 12. Transportation planning – Sipe 13. Industrial ecology – Roberts 5. KEY AGENDAS IN MANAGING ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE 14. Sustainable and affordable housing – Bosman and Dodson 15. Healthy cities – Giles-Corti, Badland, Foster, Mavoa, Whitzman and Turrell 16. Participatory democracy, community building and social inclusion – Cameron and Grant-Smith 17. Environmental equity/justice – Byrne and Houston 6. CONCLUSION: NEW DIRECTIONS AND POTENTIALITIES 18. Green urbanism – Lehmann and John 19. Bioregional planning and growth management – Dedekorkut-Howes 20. Positive development – Birkeland Epilogue – Byrne, Dodson and Sipe Index
Jason Byrne is a Senior Lecturer in Urban and Environmental
Planning in the Griffith School of Environment, Griffith
University, Gold Coast campus, where he has taught since 2006. A
geographer, anthropologist and planner by training, Jason’s
research interests include: urban nature, parks, green-space,
environmental justice and political ecology. Jason previously
worked as a planning officer, environmental officer and policy
writer with the Western Australian government.
Jago Dodson is Director of the Urban Research Program at Griffith
University, Brisbane. Jago has applied his background in
anthropology and urban planning to a raft of urban problems and
questions, often with a social or institutional dimension. These
include housing, transport and metropolitan planning. Jago teaches
a course on Understanding the Australian City in the Urban and
Environmental Planning program at Griffith. He has published widely
in both academic and public venues.
Neil Sipe is the deputy director of the Urban Research Program at
Griffith University. He currently serves on the Transportation
Research Board Ferry Committee and the Social and Economic Effects
of Transportation Committee and is the editor of the peer reviewed
journal Australian Planner.
"[T]he range and great relevance of topics presented make this a very important new resource in urban planning." – Geographical Education, Professor Rob Wallis Federation University Australia
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