1st Edition

Social Theory for Planning

By Joe Bailey Copyright 1975
178 Pages
by Routledge

178 Pages
by Routledge

178 Pages
by Routledge

Planners necessarily use theories of how society works. More often than not, however, these were left unstated or confused. As the scope of planning increased in the 1970s it became vital that planners adopted a more refined approach to the social life which they tried to influence. Originally published in 1975, Social Theory for Planning brings to the attention of an important group of... Read more

Preface and Acknowledgments.  1. The Context of Social Theory  2. The Uses of Knowledge  3. Social Change and Evolutionary Theory  4. Systems Theory  5. Conflict Theory  6. Interpretative Sociology  7. Urban Sociology at a ‘High’ Level  8. Urban Sociology at a ‘Low’ Level  9. Social Theory, Social Problems and Social Control.  Bibliography.  Index.

Biography

Joe Bailey is an Emeritus Professor of Sociology and previous Head of the School of Social Science at Kingston University UK. He is the author of Ideas and Intervention (1980), Pessimism (1988) and Social Europe (ed 1992: 1998). He was educated at the University of Kent and The London School of Economics. Social Theory for Planning was an outcome of a course taught in the Planning Department of the Architectural Association in London in the early 1970s.