1st Edition

Applied Urban Analysis A critique and synthesis

By Ian Cullen Copyright 1984
    226 Pages
    by Routledge

    226 Pages
    by Routledge

    Much of the theoretical literature in planning and human geography at present is materialist in perspective. This offers a powerful critique but locates the dynamics of urban systems too specifically in just one basic social relationship. It fails to provide an intellectual base broad enough for constructive, detailed urban analysis, partly because it fails to do justice to the reflective awareness of the individual. The alternative humanist position redresses the balance in favour of the individual but again cannot serve the practical requirements of urban analysis since it so often ignores social or contextual analysis.

    Ian Cullen synthesizes these tow apparently inconsistent theoretical positions and to render the increasingly obscure debate between them accessible.

    This book was first published in 1984.

     

     

    1. Introduction

    2. The scientific method in planning

    3. The economic and demographic bases

    4. Spatial form

    5. Perceptions, values and lifestyles

    6. Structured locational decisions

    7. Prediction, explanation and interpretation in applied urban analysis

    8. Investigation and action

     

    Biography

    Cullen, Ian