Scottish planning
Series: House Builder ; 63(11) December 2004, 33-35(2)Publication details: 2004Subject(s): Online resources: Summary: Covers in two articles aspects of Scottish planning and land use planning. In "Scots free" Bruce Walker suggests that the Scottish house building market has its own set of planning and land use challenges (some different to those in England, some similar) and argues for devising a Scottish form of planning reform. In "Lie of the land" Jim Ross reviews the findings of the Policy Institute paper "The planning famine - reforming land use planning in Scotland", which argues that major changes in the Scottish land use planning must be made to help meet current consumer needs. The paper can be viewed at www.policyinstitute.info/.| Item type | Current library | Call number | Copy number | Status | Barcode | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Journal article | London Journal article | ABS68663 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 1 | Available | 128520-1001 |
Covers in two articles aspects of Scottish planning and land use planning. In "Scots free" Bruce Walker suggests that the Scottish house building market has its own set of planning and land use challenges (some different to those in England, some similar) and argues for devising a Scottish form of planning reform. In "Lie of the land" Jim Ross reviews the findings of the Policy Institute paper "The planning famine - reforming land use planning in Scotland", which argues that major changes in the Scottish land use planning must be made to help meet current consumer needs. The paper can be viewed at www.policyinstitute.info/.