Growth management in Florida : planning for paradise

著者

    • Connerly, Charles E.
    • Chapin, Timothy Stewart
    • Higgins, Harrison T.

書誌事項

Growth management in Florida : planning for paradise

edited by Timothy S. Chapin, Charles E. Connerly and Harrison T. Higgins

(Urban planning and environment)

Ashgate, c2007

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注記

Includes bibliographical references and index

内容説明・目次

内容説明

This volume offers the first detailed assessment of the Florida growth management experience, a system that has received only piecemeal attention from researchers despite its historical significance and its state-mandated comprehensive planning approach. Because Florida's approach is the most detailed system for managing growth in the US, one that embraces planners and planning in the day-to-day governance of all areas of the state, this book will be of great value to the planning profession as it offers an assessment of one of the most planning-affirmative policy approaches in the United States. With contributions from national experts on land use planning and growth management, this volume offers an assessment of the outcomes of the Florida's approach to managing growth. Over the course of the book, the strengths and weaknesses of the state's approach are identified, providing insights into how and when to manage land use change in a state continuously inundated by growth. In evaluating the successes and failures of the Florida approach, planners and policy makers throughout the United States will learn lessons about how and how not to implement growth management policies at both the state and local level. Overall, while the authors concur that growth management has had a positive impact on restricting growth in Florida, the economic, demographic, and political pressures for continued growth in Florida make it difficult to restrict growth in a way that has had a major impact on the state's natural and built environment-Florida continues to be a sprawling state that is rapidly expanding its urbanized areas even though growth management appears to have had an impact on limiting the spread of growth still further.

目次

  • Introduction, Timothy S. Chapin, Charles E. Connerly and Harrison T. Higgins. Section 1 The Foundations of Growth Management in Florida: A historical perspective for evaluating Florida's evolving growth management process, Thomas G. Pelham
  • Consistency, concurrency and compact development: 3 faces of growth management implementation in Florida, Efraim Ben-Zadok
  • The fiscal theory and reality of growth management in Florida, James C. Nicholas and Timothy S. Chapin
  • Attitudes towards growth management in Florida: comparing resident support in 1985 and 2001, Timothy S. Chapin and Charles E. Connerly. Section 2 Evaluating Growth Management's Outcomes: Growth and change Florida style: 1970 to 2000, Thomas W. Sanchez and Robert H. Mandle
  • Growth management and the spatial outcome of regional development in Florida, 1982-1997, John I. Carruthers, Marlon G. Boarnet and Ralph B. McLaughlin
  • Growth management or growth unabated?: economic development in Florida since 1990, Timothy S. Chapin
  • Compact urban form or business as usual?: and examination of urban form in Orange County, Florida, Gerrit-Jan Knaap and Yan Song
  • The spillover effects of growth management: constraints on new housing construction, Yan Song
  • Are we any safer?: an evaluation of Florida's hurricane hazard mitigation planning mandates, Robert E. Deyle, Timothy S. Chapin and Earl J. Baker
  • Urban containment and neighborhood quality in Florida, Arthur C. Nelson, Casey J. Dawkins, Thomas W. Sanchez and Karen A. Danielsen. Section 3 Innovations and Limitations of the Florida Growth Management Experience: Transportation concurrency: and idea before its time?, Ruth L. Steiner
  • Why do Florida counties adopt urban growth boundaries?, Randall G. Holcombe
  • Paying for the 'priceless': Florida forever, managing growth, and public land acquisition, Harrison T. Higgins and Neil B. Paradise
  • Affordable housing in Florida: why haven't Florida's growth management laws met the challenge of adequately housing all its citizens?, Charles E. Connerly
  • Documenting the rise of impact fees in Florida, Gregory S. Burge and Keith R. Ihlanfeldt. Section 4 Conclusion: The 1985 Florida GMA: Satan or Savior?, Timothy S. Chapin, Charles E. Connerly, Harrison T. Higgins
  • Index.

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