Mismatch Between Planning Education and Practice Contemporary Educational Challenges and Conflicts Confronting Young Planners

Authors
Publication date 2018
Host editors
  • T. Taşan-Kok
  • M. Oranje
Book title From Student to Urban Planner
Book subtitle Young Practitioners’ Reflections on Contemporary Ethical Challenges
ISBN
  • 9781138847347
  • 9781138847354
ISBN (electronic)
  • 9781317538172
  • 9781315726854
Series The RTPI Library Series
Pages (from-to) 15-32
Publisher New York: Routledge
Organisations
  • Faculty of Social and Behavioural Sciences (FMG) - Amsterdam Institute for Social Science Research (AISSR)
Abstract
The long-neglected task of defining the discipline of planning, describing the multiplicity of influences impinging upon it and unravelling the complementary (and even contradictory) discourses constituting it probably means probing the core of planning practice and revisiting planning education itself (Davoudi & Pendlebury, 2010; Goldstein & Carmin, 2006). According to Davoudi and Pendlebury, “Although planning has evolved into a distinct discipline in institutional terms, its intellectual underpinning has remained ill-defined”. Moreover, “periodic changes to planning education have neglected the epistemic aspects of the discipline” (Davoudi & Pendlebury, 2010: 613).
Document type Chapter
Language English
Related publication From Student to Urban Planner
Published at https://doi.org/10.4324/9781315726854-2
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