<i>'This book deftly mixes acknowledged classics with new and important work to provide a balanced portrayal of the ways in which modelling has both informed and redefined the practices of planning. It is the indispensable guide to this indispensable area.'</i>
- Nigel Thrift, University of Oxford, UK,
While planning involves seeking ways of influencing future behavior, it is important to have at the outset an abstraction of the world upon which to base an assessment of outcomes. The papers in this collection represent some of the major works in the field of planning models, with land use planning as a core theme. The collection is divided into several parts:Part 1 focuses on location models and embraces a series of classic survey papers as well as a number of more specific contributions covering such topics as the distribution of residential activities. This is followed in part 2 by papers concerned with spatial interaction and, in particular the gravity model. Part 3 of the collection contains papers on micro-macro models that look at ways of moving from individual to collective behavior, whilst part 4 is concerned with dynamic models. Part 5 of the volume reflects an increasing interest in the role of various networks in the formulation of plans, and finally part 6 completes the volume with a selection of policy-planning models.
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While planning involves seeking ways of influencing future behavior, it is important to have at the outset an abstraction of the world upon which to base an assessment of outcomes. The papers in this collection represent some of the major works in the field of planning models, with land use planning as a core theme.
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Contents:
Acknowledgements
Series Preface
Kenneth Button and Peter Nijkamp
Introduction Planning Models: Scoping the Scene
Aura Reggiani, Kenneth Button and Peter Nijkamp
PART I LOCATION MODELS
1. John D. Herbert and Benjamin H. Stevens (1960), âA Model of the Distribution of Residential Activity in Urban Areasâ
2. Douglass B. Lee, Jr (1973), âRequiem for Large-scale Modelsâ
3. John Roy, Börje Johansson and Giorgio Leonardi (1985), âSome Spatial Equilibria in Facility Investment under Uncertain Demandâ
4. Britton Harris (1985), âUrban Simulation Models in Regional Scienceâ
5. Michael Wegener (1994), âOperational Urban Models: State of the Artâ
6. M.E. OâKelly (2004), âIsardâs Contribution to Spatial Interaction Modellingâ
PART II SPATIAL INTERACTION MODELS
7. Peter Nijkamp (1975), âReflections on Gravity and Entropy Modelsâ
8. Eric S. Sheppard (1978), âTheoretical Underpinnings of the Gravity Hypothesisâ
9. Ashish Sen and Siim Sööt (1981), âSelected Procedures for Calibrating the Generalized Gravity Modelâ
10. A. Stewart Fotheringham and Tony Dignan (1984), âFuther Contributions to a General Theory of Movementâ
11. John R. Roy and Jean-Claude Thill (2004), âSpatial Interaction Modellingâ
PART III MICRO-MACRO MODELS
12. Daniel McFadden and Fred Reid (1975), âAggregate Travel Demand Forecasting from Disaggregated Behavioral Modelsâ
13. Andre De Palma and Claude Lefevre (1983), âIndividual Decision-Making in Dynamic Collective Systemsâ
14. GĂŒnter Haag and Wolfgang Weidlich (1984), âA Stochastic Theory of Interregional Migrationâ
15. Manfred M. Fischer (1985), âChanging Modes of Reasoning in Spatial Choice Analysisâ
16. Peter Nijkamp and Aura Reggiani (1988), âEntropy, Spatial Interaction Models and Discrete Choice Analysis: Static and Dynamic Analogiesâ
17. Bryan Raney, Nurhan Cetin, Andreas Völlmy, Milenko Vrtic, Kay Axhausen and Kai Nagel (2003), âAn Agent-Based Microsimulation Model of Swiss Travel: First Resultsâ
PART IV DYNAMIC MODELS
18. P.M. Allen and M. Sanglier (1981), âA Dynamic Model of a Central Place System â IIâ
19. Demitrios S. Dendrinos and Michael Sonis (1986), âVariational Principles and Conservation Conditions in Volterraâs Ecology and in Relative Urban Relative Dynamicsâ
20. Michael Batty and Paul A. Longley (1987), âUrban Shapes as Fractalsâ
21. Peter Nijkamp and Aura Reggiani (1995), âNon-linear Evolution of Dynamic Spatial Systems: The Relevance of Chaos and Ecologically-based Modelsâ
22. Jean-Claude Thill and Aaron K. Wheeler (1995), âOn Chaos, Continuous-Time and Discrete-Time Models of Spatial Systems Dynamicsâ
23. Kieran P. Donaghy (2002), âThe âGreen Bookâ Twenty Years On: A New Look at the Research Program of Isard and Liossatos âSpatial Dynamics and Optimal Space-Time Developmentââ
PART V NETWORK MODELS
24. Roberto Camagni, Lidia Diappi and Giorgio Leonardi (1986), âUrban Growth and Decline in a Hierarchical System: A Supply-orientated Dynamic Approachâ
25. Paul Krugman (1994), âComplex Landscapes in Economic Geographyâ
26. John R. Roy (1999), âAreas, Nodes and Networks: Some Analytical Considerationsâ
27. Albert-LĂĄszlĂł BarabĂĄsi and RĂ©ka Albert (1999), âEmergence of Scaling in Random Networksâ
28. Manfred M. Fischer, Martin Reismann and Katerina Hlavackova-Schindler (2003), âNeural Network Modeling of Constrained Spatial Interaction Flows: Design, Estimation and Performance Issuesâ
PART VI POLICY-PLANNING MODELS
29. P. Nijkamp and P. Rietveld (1976), âMultiobjective Programming Models: New Ways in Regional Decision-Makingâ
30. Folke Snickars and Jörgen W. Weibull (1977), âA Minimum Information Principle: Theory and Practiceâ
31. Tschangho John Kim, David E. Boyce and Geoffrey J.D. Hewings (1983), âCombined Input-Output and Commodity Flow Models for Interregional Development Planning: Insights from a Korean Applicationâ
32. Sergio J. Rey (2000), âIntegrated Regional Econometric+Input-Output Modeling: Issues and Opportunitiesâ
Name Index
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Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781845420222
Publisert
2006-10-27
Utgiver
Vendor
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd
HĂžyde
244 mm
Bredde
169 mm
AldersnivÄ
UP, P, 05, 06
SprÄk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
584