1st Edition

Community Impact Evaluation Principles And Practice

By Nathaniel Lichfield Copyright 1996
    380 Pages
    by Routledge

    380 Pages
    by Routledge

    This is a work summarizing in one volume the pioneering approach of the author to public-interest decision-taking in the field of urban & regional planning. This book is aimed at students, researchers and professionals in planning. Nathaniel Lichfield first introduced in his "Economics of Planned Development" the concept that, in any use and development of land, the traditional "development balance sheet" of the developers needed to be accompanied by a "planning balance sheet" prepared by the planning officer or planning authority. Over the forty years since this work was published, the author has brought to the operational level the "planning balance sheet", with many case studies, primarily for consultancy purposes. The present title reflects the incorporation during the 1970s of the then emerging field of environmental impact assessment.

    1 The nature of urban and regional planning 2 Choice, decision and action in everyday life 3 Evaluation for choice in land-use planning 4 The cost-benefit family in plan and project evaluation 5 Theory and principles of impact assessment 6 Theory and principles of cost-benefit analysis 7 The generic method of community impact evaluation applied to projects 8 Comprehending the conclusions of a CIE 9 Simplification of the generic method 10 Theory and principles of community impact evaluation 11 CIE in democratic planning 12 The planning process 13 Roads: a case study comparing COBA, framework appraisal and CIE 14 Development control 15 Planning gain/obligation 16 The cultural built heritage 17 Integrating the environment into development planning 18 Green belts 19 Deregulation 20 CIE study management

    Biography

    Nathaniel Lichfield