SES # | TOPICS | GUEST SPEAKERS |
---|---|---|
Week 0: Introductions | ||
1 | What is the scope of planning | |
Week 1: Olmstead Jr. vs. Marsh | ||
2 | American exceptionalism in planning | |
3 | Marsh’s position | |
4 | Group meeting | |
Week 2: Regionalism and regional planning | ||
5 | Regions: The economics and politics of territory | Amy Glasmeier, Department Head, Department of Urban Studies and Planning, MIT |
6 | Against regionalism | Karen Polenske, Professor of Regional Political Economy and Planning, MIT |
7 | Facilitated session | Ceasar McDowell, Director, Center for Reflective Community Practice, MIT |
Week 3: Possibilities and limits of planning (post Depression era) | ||
8 |
The necessity of planning/response to the Depression City, state, national relationships |
Alan Altshuler, Professor, Department of Urban Planning and Design, Harvard Graduate School of Design. Fred Salvucci, Senior Lecturer and Senior Research Association, MIT |
9 | The dangers of planning | |
10 | Alumni panel: Planners of color in the profession | |
Week 4: Development planning | ||
11 | For development planning | |
12 | Against development planning | |
13 | Group meeting | |
Week 5: Technology | ||
14 | Technology: Modeling transportation and land use | Joe Ferreira, Professor of Urban Planning and Operations Research, MIT |
15 | Immigration | Kent Wong, Director, Center for Labor Research and Education, UCLA |
Week 6: Rational comprehensive vs. strategic incrementalist | ||
16 | For comprehensive planning | |
17 | Against comprehensive planning | |
18 | Postindustrial Cities | Emma Rothschild, Director, Center for History and Economics, Harvard University |
Week 7: Planning and dissent | ||
19 | Advocacy and radical planning | Phil Thompson, Associate Professor of Urban Politics, MIT |
20 | The role of dissent in planning | Mel King, Senior Lecturer Emeritus, MIT |
21 | Group meeting | |
Week 8: Top down vs. Moses vs. Jacobs | ||
22 | Bottom up planning | Ceasar McDowell, Director, Center for Reflective Community Practice, MIT |
23 | Top down planning | |
24 | Group meeting | |
Week 9: Is planning the “Handmaiden” of capitalism? | ||
25 | Capitalism | Peter Marcuse, Professor Emeritus of Urban Planning, Columbia University |
26 | Globalization and planning | |
27 | Addressing income inequality | Robert Solow, Professor Emeritus, Department of Economics, MIT |
Week 10: Just processes vs. just outcomes | ||
28 | Process: Consensus building | Larry Susskind, Professor of Urban and Environmental Planning, MIT |
29 | Just processes vs. just outcomes | Daphne Spain, Professor, School of Architecture, University of Virginia |
30 | Outcomes | Susan Fainstein, Professor, Department of Urban Planning and Design, Harvard University Graduate School of Design |
Week 11: Design | ||
31 | New urbanism | Brent Ryan, Assistant Professor of Urban Design and Public Policy, MIT |
Week 12: Methodology | ||
32 | Measurement/expert knowledge/professionalism | Amy Glasmeier, Department Head, Department of Urban Studies and Planning, MIT |
33 | Storytelling/local knowledge | James Throgmorton, Professor of Urban and Regional Planning, The University of Iowa |
34 | Alumni panel: How should you be thinking about the next three semesters? | |
Week 13: Final week | ||
35 | e-Governance | Joe Ferreira, Professor of Urban Planning and Operations Research, MIT |
36 | Education of city planners: Reflective practitioner, specialist, generalist |
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2010
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