13 Facts About Land-use planning

1.

Land use Land-use planning is the process of regulating the use of land by a central authority.

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2.

Governments use land use Land-use planning to manage the development of land within their jurisdictions.

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3.

The Canadian Institute of Planners offers a definition that land use Land-use planning means the scientific, aesthetic, and orderly disposition of land, resources, facilities and services with a view to securing the physical, economic and social efficiency, health and well-being of urban and rural communities.

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4.

The American Planning Association states that the goal of land use Land-use planning is to further the welfare of people and their communities by creating convenient, equitable, healthful, efficient, and attractive environments for present and future generations.

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5.

Land use Land-use planning practices evolved as an attempt to overcome these challenges.

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6.

Land use Land-use planning is defined as: the process by which optimum forms of land use and management are indicated, considering the biophysical, technological, social, economic and political conditions of a particular territory.

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7.

In view of sustainable development, land use Land-use planning is seen as a political and technical-administrative decision-making process agreed with social, economic, political and technical factors, for orderly occupation and sustainable use of the land under development.

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8.

Today, successful Land-use planning involves a balanced mix of analysis of the existing conditions and constraints; extensive public engagement; practical Land-use planning and design; and financially and politically feasible strategies for implementation.

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9.

Transect, as used in Land-use planning, is a hierarchical scale of environmental zones that define a land area by its character, ranging from rural, preserved land to urban centers.

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10.

The court decision in the case Commonwealth v Alger was related to land use planning and dealt with the construction of a wharf on privately owned tidelands around Boston Harbor.

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11.

Land use Land-use planning is an important method for sustainable development for Indigenous communities.

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12.

Many of the assumptions about land use Land-use planning do not hold true elsewhere in the world, especially as developing nations face urbanization at a more rapid scale than most countries in the Global North.

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13.

Also, due to the fact that the world is quickly urbanizing, and this massive population growth is mostly occurring in cities in the Global South, some of the assumptions we have formed about land use Land-use planning must be reimagined, as common theory and practice is no longer always relevant to those cities that are currently practicing land use Land-use planning.

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