Participation, Decentralization, and Advocacy PlanningAssociation of American Geographers, Commission on College Geography, 1974 - 62 páginas A little boy tells a newborn puppy all the things they'll do in the meadow and by the sea when the puppy is old enough to come to live with him. |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-3 de 29
Página 3
... decisions made . Their political resources are few , their needs great . Their demand is essentially one of redistribution , of protest against exclusion . The call for participation rumbles out from the periphery and it is the sound of ...
... decisions made . Their political resources are few , their needs great . Their demand is essentially one of redistribution , of protest against exclusion . The call for participation rumbles out from the periphery and it is the sound of ...
Página 42
... decisions were already made anyway and we met once a month to learn what other decisions they'd been making in the agency . Then it dawned on me that we were appointed to fulfill a legal require- ment and that's all . Less powerful and ...
... decisions were already made anyway and we met once a month to learn what other decisions they'd been making in the agency . Then it dawned on me that we were appointed to fulfill a legal require- ment and that's all . Less powerful and ...
Página 45
... decisions will begin to reflect the interests of everyone in society . * See footnote in Table I. Traditional Planners Advocate Planners 1. Most interest groups have only their peculiar interests in mind . Unlike planners , they are not ...
... decisions will begin to reflect the interests of everyone in society . * See footnote in Table I. Traditional Planners Advocate Planners 1. Most interest groups have only their peculiar interests in mind . Unlike planners , they are not ...
Términos y frases comunes
active Administration advocacy planning Advocate Planners agencies American Political analysis approach Arizona State University Arnstein assumptions basic biases bureaucracy centers central citizen participation citizen theorists citizenry client-group clients College Geography Community Action Program Davidoff decen decision deconcentration demand democracy democratic Detroit Geographical Expedition discussion economic effective efforts elections electoral elites expertise federal Fesler Friere Friere's Fromm functions funds goals groups impact increased individual Institute of Planners interests Ivan Illich Kasperson leadership little city halls Marx Marxist maximum feasible means ment Model Cities Program needs neighborhood residents nonelites nonparticipation opportunity organization particular percent periphery planning issues planning process political system poor professional public affairs represent response Roger E role school decentralization social society Sociological Imagination solutions spectator structure Suburban Action technical tion traditional planners tralization urban renewal V. O. Key values War on Poverty Wright Mills York