Canadian Institue Of Planners

Shaping our Communities
Sustaining Canada's Future.

Old Montréal, Québec


Plan Canada publication

 

Été 2023, Volume 63, No. 2

Alimentation

PLANNING FOR SUSTAINABLE FOOD SYSTEMS IN CANADA: FINDINGS FROM A SURVEY OF CANADIAN PLANNERS AND PRACTITIONERS 
  • Emily Hansen, Kristi Tatebe, Naomi Robert, Kaelan Watson, and Kent Mullinix 
NEWCOMERS' UNIQUE EXPERIENCE WITH FOOD INSECURITY: WHAT NEEDS TO BE DONE? 
  • Wallapak Polasub, Beth Clark, Emily Burkholder, and Anastasia Gaisenok
PLANNING FOR COMMUNITY-BASED FOOD SECURITY 
  • Chrstine Callihoo, Theresa Healy, and Annie L. Booth 
CULTURAL FOOD ASSETS: EVOLUTIONS IN FOOD SYSTEM PLANNING 
  • Janine de la Salle 
FOOD FOR RECONCILIATION: LESSONS ON INDIGENOUS FOOD SOVEREIGNTY FROM NORTHERN ONTARIO 
  • Natasha Gaudio Harrison and Shanley Weston 
PROTECTING AGRICULTURAL LAND IS IMPORTANT, BUT FARMERS ALSO NEED ACCESS TO MARKETS 
  • Glenn Miller 
THE ROLE OF PLANNERS IN PLANNING FOR FOOD SYSTEMS RESILIENCE: SCHOOL FOOD MEETS LOCAL FOOD IN BRITISH COLUMBIA 
  • Tammara Soma, Elina Blomley, Hafsa Salihue, and Dina Sadeghi 
CELISELEM: TSAWWASSEN FIRST NATION 'S ENDEAVOR TO ACHIEVE FOOD SECURITY AND SOVEREIGNTY 
  • Rasika Acharya 
WASTE PLANNING, ENVIRONMENTAL RACISM AND DISPARITIES IN CANCER INCIDENCE AND OUTCOMES IN AN AFRICAN NOVA SCOTIAN COMMUNITY 
  • Charles Hostovsky and Ella Gindi 

Aussi dans ce numéro:

  • Mot de la redaction
  • Du côté des fellows
  • L’étagère du planificateur
  • Condensé des recherches en urbanisme 
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Été 2023, Volume 63, No. 2

Alimentation

PLANNING FOR SUSTAINABLE FOOD SYSTEMS IN CANADA: FINDINGS FROM A SURVEY OF CANADIAN PLANNERS AND PRACTITIONERS 
  • Emily Hansen, Kristi Tatebe, Naomi Robert, Kaelan Watson, and Kent Mullinix 
NEWCOMERS' UNIQUE EXPERIENCE WITH FOOD INSECURITY: WHAT NEEDS TO BE DONE? 
  • Wallapak Polasub, Beth Clark, Emily Burkholder, and Anastasia Gaisenok
PLANNING FOR COMMUNITY-BASED FOOD SECURITY 
  • Chrstine Callihoo, Theresa Healy, and Annie L. Booth 
CULTURAL FOOD ASSETS: EVOLUTIONS IN FOOD SYSTEM PLANNING 
  • Janine de la Salle 
FOOD FOR RECONCILIATION: LESSONS ON INDIGENOUS FOOD SOVEREIGNTY FROM NORTHERN ONTARIO 
  • Natasha Gaudio Harrison and Shanley Weston 
PROTECTING AGRICULTURAL LAND IS IMPORTANT, BUT FARMERS ALSO NEED ACCESS TO MARKETS 
  • Glenn Miller 
THE ROLE OF PLANNERS IN PLANNING FOR FOOD SYSTEMS RESILIENCE: SCHOOL FOOD MEETS LOCAL FOOD IN BRITISH COLUMBIA 
  • Tammara Soma, Elina Blomley, Hafsa Salihue, and Dina Sadeghi 
CELISELEM: TSAWWASSEN FIRST NATION 'S ENDEAVOR TO ACHIEVE FOOD SECURITY AND SOVEREIGNTY 
  • Rasika Acharya 
WASTE PLANNING, ENVIRONMENTAL RACISM AND DISPARITIES IN CANCER INCIDENCE AND OUTCOMES IN AN AFRICAN NOVA SCOTIAN COMMUNITY 
  • Charles Hostovsky and Ella Gindi 

Aussi dans ce numéro:

  • Mot de la redaction
  • Du côté des fellows
  • L’étagère du planificateur
  • Condensé des recherches en urbanisme 

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Printemps 2023, Volume 63, No. 1

Choix et abordabilitè du logement

LESSONS LEARNED FOR ESTABLISHING AN AFFORDABLE HOMEOWNERSHIP PROGRAM IN VANCOUVER 
  • Julia Bahen and Kevin Green 
MODELLING AFFORDABILITY OUTCOMES OF HOUSING TARGETS 
  • Seah Nash and Indro Bhattacharyya 
CAHDCO TOOLBOX: INCREASING NON-PROFIT AFFORDABLE HOUSING DEVELOPMENT CAPACITY 
  • Stephanie Cantlay and Graeme Hussey 
PLANNERS' ROLE IN BENDING THE CURVE OF THE EMERGING ASOCIAL SOCIETY 
  • Meg Holden, Robyn Lee, and Sara Emami 
IMPROVING THE EVALUATION OF LOCAL GOVERNMENT HOUSING POLICY 
  • Marina Jozipovic 
UNLOCKING THE POWER OF LAND: HOW COMMUNITY LAND TRUSTS CAN MEET HOUSING NEEDS 
  • Gavin Williamson 
PLANNING FOR ENERGY: THE ROLE OF PROFESSIONAL PLANNERS IN ACHIEVING NET-ZERO 
  • Michael Kvern 
PRIVATE FIRMS AND INDIGENOUS PLANNING 
  • Alex Hallbom and Joelle McNeil 
INDIGENOUS PLANNING AND ONLINE COMMUNITY ENGAGEMENT: INSIGHTS FROM MICHIPICOTEN FIRST NATION'S LAND USE PLANNING PROCESS 
  • Skylar Niehaus 
ELECTRIFYING TRANSPORTATION ON TWO-WHEELS: WHY ELECTRIC BIKES ARE CRITICAL FOR HELPING MEET CLIMATE TARGETS 
  • Tim Shah, Jimin Park, and Filippos Gkekas 

Aussi dans ce numéro:

  • Mot de la redaction
  • Du côté des fellows
  • L’étagère du planificateur
  • Condensé des recherches en urbanisme 

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Winter 2022, Volume 62, No. 4

Bilans et Perspectives

MOVING MINDS: TURNING IDEAS INTO ACTION
  • Par Paul Bedford

REFINING THE PRESCRIPTION FOR HEALTH IN PLANNING
  • Par Inge Roosendaal

CITIES GROW AND PROSPER DESPITE URBAN PLANNERS
  • Par Felipe Canavera and Melanie Hare

TOWARDS MORE AFFORDABLE HOUSING
 
Looking Back, Looking Forward at Housing Affordability
  • Par Ann McAfee
 
Creating Affordable Rental Housing: The Lessons of St. Lawrence
  • By Frank Lewinberg

A TALE OF TWO (REGIONAL) CITIES: TORONTO AND VANCOUVER
  • Par Ken Cameron

REFLECTING ON LESSONS FROM NORTHERN REGIONAL PLANNING
  • Par Gillian McKee

ENGAGING YOUNGER GENERATIONS IN PLANNING AND DECISION-MAKING
  • Par Shirley Wu and Kyle Whitfield

LEADERSHIP AND THE PLANNING PROFESSION
  • Par Natalie Persaud

OUR PROFESSION MUST CHANGE
  • Par Sarah Manteuffel

MUNICIPAL EQUITY POLICIES
  • Par Victoria Barr and Tessa Williams


Aussi dans ce numéro:

  • Mot de la redaction
  • Du côté des fellows
  • L’étagère du planificateur
  • Condensé des recherches en urbanisme 

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Automne 2022, Volume 62, No. 3

Perspectives sur l’environnement et le changement climatique

HEALTHADAPT PROJECT INSPIRED PUBLIC HEALTH ORGANIZATIONS ACROSS CANADA

Trial by fire
  • Par Laura Chow, Craig Brown, Emily Peterson,and Michael Schwandt
Addressing the health impacts of climate change through planning
  • Par Tracey Wade

NET ZERO PLANS OFFER COLD COMFORT TO CANADIANS
  • Par Richard Laszlo and Tonja Leach

TRAFFIC EVAPORATION
  • Par Eric Doherty

PLANNING A SUSTAINABLE AND RESILIENT CITY
  • Par Melissa Jort-Conway and Birgit Isernhagen

WHAT'S STIRRING IN KAMLOOPS?
  • Par Krista Macaulay

PUSHING THE GREEN BUILDING ENVELOPE
  • Par Kate Macmillan and Joseli Macedo

FACING OUR FEARS
  • Par Tara Lynne Clapp, Megan Gereghty, Olimpia Pantelimon, Carla Stewart, and Brenda Wallace

INTEGRATING NATURE-BASED SOLUTIONS IN RURAL COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT
  • Par Odessa Cohen

LEADING WITH LANDSCAPE
  • Par Jane Welsh

HEALTHYDESIGN.CITY TOOLS AIM TO HELP PLANNERS ADVANCE CLIMATE ADAPTATION, PUBLIC HEALTH AND EQUITY
  • Par Jeffrey R. Brook, Dany Doiron, Allan Mckee, and Eleanor Setton

Aussi dans ce numéro :
  • Mot de la redaction
  • L’ICU Honneurs et Prix
  • Du côté des fellows 
  • Condensé des recherches en urbanisme
  • L’étagère du planificateur

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Été 2022, Volume 62, No. 2

Transformation de la banlieue

CANADA IS A SUBURBAN NATION
  • Par David Gordon and Megan Smythe

ALBERTA'S ANNEXING MUNICIPALITIES: BETTING ON SUBURBAN GROWTH
  • Par Cody Gretzinger

COMPLETE COMMUNITIES: IDEAS TO TRANSFORM THE SUBURB
  • Par Jill L Grant

CHANGES IN THE BUILT FORM OF CANADA'S SUBURBS
  • Par Pierre Filion, Ray Tomalty, and Craig Townsend

REFLECTIONS ON SUBURBAN TRANSFORMATION IN NORTH VANCOUVER, BC
  • Par Suzy Lunn

NEW SUBURBANISM 
  • Par David R. Hardy

URBANIZING SUBURBIA IN CANADA: ISSUES, TRENDS, PERSPECTIVES
  • Par Alex Taranu

BEYOND DENSITY
  • Par Katherine Perrott

FORM-BASED CODES: A TOOL FOR SUBURBAN TRANSFORMATION
  • Par Marta Goldsmith and Louis Mazerolle

SO, YOU HAVE DECLARED A CLIMATE CHANGE EMERGENCY: NOW WHAT? THE URGENT NEED FOR SUSTAINABLE SUBURBAN TRANSFORMATION
  • Par Daniel Leeming and Kristy Kilbourne

LEGALIZING SURVIVAL: RECONSIDERING ANTI-HOMELESS PUBLIC SPACES IN HALIFAX
  • Par Madison Kennedy and Lisa Berglund

Aussi dans ce numéro :

  • Mot de la redaction
  • Du côté des fellows 
  • Condensé des recherches en urbanisme
  • L’étagère du planificateur

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Printemps 2022, Volume 62, No. 1

État de la profession

AUTOMATION, TELEWORK AND THE GIG ECONOMY

  • Par Marc Frenette, René Morissette, Yuri Ostrovsky, et Grant Schellenberg

 
LAND USE PLANNING IN A POST-PANDEMIC WORLD

  • Par Eric Aderneck

 
REBOOTING THE WAY WE PLAN FOR WORK

  • Par Melanie Hare

 
NEIGHBOURHOOD POCKET PARKS AS CATALYSTS FOR SOCIA-ECONOMIC RESILIENCE

  • Par Gloria Venczel

 
THE EVOLUTION OF EMPLOYMENT LAND

  • Par Antony P. Lorius

 
CHALLENGES OF GROWTH AND DEVELOPMENT AMIDST THE HOUSING CRISIS

  • Par Casandra Begin et Hena Kabir

 
WORLD VIEWS ON WORK

  • Par Glenn Miller

Aussi dans ce numéro :

  • Mot de la redaction
  • Du côté des fellows 
  • Condensé des recherches en urbanisme
  • L’étagère du planificateur

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Hiver 2021, Volume 61, No. 4

État de la profession

THE FUTURE OF THE PROFESSION: START WITH ETHICS AND KNOWLEDGE 

  • Par John Farrow

PROFESSIONAL STANDARDS REVIEW 

  • Par Vicki Bryanton

REPAIRING THE PIPELINE TO PROFESSIONAL CERTIFICATION FOR BIPOC AND IEP PLANNERS IN CANADA

  • Par Leela Viswanathan

THE STATE OF PLANNING EDUCATION IN ONTARIO

  • Par Siobhan Kelly, Holly Stemberger, and Regan Zink

FROM CLASSROOMS TO BOARDROOMS 

  • Par Jennifer Dean, Zhixi Cecilia Zhuang, and Sara Edge

ACCESSIBILITY AND DISABILITY

  • Par Salem Eyob, Merve Kolcak, and Samantha Biglieri

PLANNER AS CONVENER

  • Par Marina Jozipovic, Brenda Madrazo, and Matt Thomson

PLANNING FOR RECONCILIATION IN CANADIAN CITIES

  • Par Sarem Nejad

PLANNING FOR CLIMATE CHANGE 

  • Par Kacia Tolsma, Alison Shaw, and Kelly Learned

CAREER PERSPECTIVES IN PLANNING 

  • Par Lisa Salsberg, Elicia Elliott, and Michelle Kearns

MAPPING VANCOUVER'S SLOW STREETS IN THE CONTEXT OF EQUALITY

  • Par Claire Lee and Patricia Collins

Aussi dans ce numéro :

  • Mot de la redaction
  • Du côté des fellows 
  • Condensé des recherches en urbanisme
  • L’étagère du planifi cateur

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Automne 2021, Volume 61, No. 3

Pecha Kucha en Urbanisme

STRENGTHENING CONNECTIONS ACROSS URBAN CANADA

  • Par Jennifer Barrett

MODERNIZING CANADA PARKS PERMITS 

  • Par Tessa Fortier, Daniel Mercer, et Allison Donnelly 

BRINGING BACK THE NIGHT  

  • Par Sheena Jardine-Olade, Nicole Ives-Allison, et Martyna Turczynowicz 

FROM CARROTS TO COMMUNITY GARDENS 

  • Par Karin Kliewer 

LETTING GO 

  • Par Erik Backstrom et Carley Holt 

ÊTRE DE SON TEMPS 

  • Par Julie Ozell 

A VOLUNTEER’S GUIDE TO PLANNING IN CALGARY 

  • Par Edward Spink et Adetoun Osuntogun 

PRACTICING EXCLUSION 

  • Par Cara Chellew 

RECONCILIATION THROUGH PLACEMAKING 

  • Par Perry Stein, Jillian Bracken, et Andrew Malcolm 

LES JEUNES AGISSENT SUR LEUR MILIEU DE VIE 

  • Par Julien Voyer

REINVENTING THE FAMILY FARM 

  • Par Pamela Duesling, Emily C. Sousa, et Wayne Caldwell 

A FRESH TAKE ON ENGAGEMENT 

  • Par Katie Price et Joanna Burris 

MUNICIPAL FUNDING FOR THE NONPROFIT SECTOR 

  • Par Dominique Clément 

Also in this issue:

  • Editors’ Note
  • Fellows' Corner
  • Planning Research Digest
  • Planner's Bookshelf

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Été 2021, Volume 61, No. 2

Notre population vieillissante

Understanding the diversity of Canadian seniors

  • par Doug Norris


Older Indigenous people, health, and planning in Canada: a call for thoughtful engagement

  • par Jonathan Boron, Katherine Levett, et Myfannwy Pope


What can planners do to help seniors age in place?

  • par Arlene Etchen


The case for visitability

  • par Amina Menkad et Joanna Ilunga-Kapinga


COVID-19 and the forgotten densities of long-term care

  • par Julian Iacobelli, Samantha Biglieri, Lorenzo De Vidovich, et Roger Keil


près la zone scolaire, pourquoi pas la « zone santé » pour un vieillissement actif ?

  • par Mikael St-Pierre, Simon Chouinard-Laliberté, et Audrey Lise Mallet


Breaking up with cars is hard to do

  • par Krista Macaulay


Nested aging: Lifecycles in the vertical city

  • par Maxwell Hartt, Brian Webb, et James T. White


Innovative, intergenerational housing empowers women

  • par Carla Guerrera
     

Affordability: A key component of accessibility

  • par Amanda McCulley


Gerald Hodge FCIP/ FICU 1931-2017

  • par Glenn Miller

Also in this issue:

  • Editors’ Note
  • Fellow’s Corner
  • Planning Research Digest
  • Planner’s Bookshelf

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Printemps 2021, Volume 61, No. 1

Équité sociale et raciale

CITY OF LAND REMEMBERING
  • Par Kamala Todd

RACIAL INEQUITIES IN RURAL, REMOTE AND NORTHERN CANADIAN PLANNING PLANNERS CAN HELP MAIN STREETS ADAPT AND RECOVER
  • Par Jonathan Boron, Katherine Levett, et Myfannwy Pope

THE CASE OF NIGERIA'S SUNGBO EREDO 
  • Par Francis Kodjo Kwashie

URBAN PLANNING EDUCATION AFTER BLACK LIVES MATTER 
  • Par Cecille de Laurentis

SPATIAL MARGINALITY AND TORONTO'S PRIORITY NEIGHBOURHOODS 
  • Par Rahma Siad-Togane

SPATIAL INEQUITIES AND INFORMAL SETTLEMENTS IN APARTHEID AND POST-APARTHEID SOUTH AFTICA 
  • Par Sinovuyo Lehlohonolo Mnyanda

APPRECIATING THE NATURAL HERITAGE LANDSCAPES IN LOW INCOME 'HOODS 
  • Par Shannon Holness

EDMONTON'S ZONING MAKEOVER IS AN OPPORTUNITY FOR EQUITY 
  • Par Livia Balone, Felipe Canavera, et Jason Syvixay

"IN HONOUR OF THE VILLAGE WE HAVE TODAY" 
  • Par Darrien Morton, Zoë Mager, Michael Redhead Champagne, Nigaanii Wabiski Mikanak Ogichidaa
FREEDOM OF MOVEMENT 
  • Par Darrien Morton, Zoë Mager, Michael Redhead Champagne, Nigaanii Wabiski Mikanak Ogichidaa
CARE-FULL MOVEMENT 
  • Par Leslie Kern
Disability justice in the city
  • Par Thea Kurdi et Anika Abdullah
WE'VE PAINTED A RAINBOW CROSSWALK. NOW WHAT?
  • Par Tiffany Muller Myrdahl
 CHALLENGING FROM WITHIN
  • Par Jason Syvixay et Lyla Peter
 WE ARE CARRING OUR BUNDLES FORWARD
  • Par Kamala Todd
Also in this issue:
  • Mot de la redaction
  • Du côté des fellows

  • Condensé de recherches

  • Bookshelf

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Hiver 2020, Volume 60, No. 4

La pandémie et au delà

TECHNOLOGICAL CHANGE AND COVID-19
  • Par Matthew Robinson

HOW PLANNERS CAN HELP MAIN STREETS ADAPT AND RECOVER
  • Par Judy Morgan

CONNECTING ACROSS CULTURES
  • Par Aaron Lao et Belle Cheung

PARKS AND THE PANDEMIC
  • Par Sasha Mosky et Mikiko Terashima

PANDEMIC PATIOS AND “FLAT WHITE” URBANISM
  • Par Amina Yasin et Daniella Fergusson

RACIALIZED IMPACTS OF COVID-19
  • Par Robin Basalaev-Binder et Kevin Manaugh

COVID-19 AND UNCERTAINTY
  • Par Pierre Filion, Markus Moos, et Jean Andrey

RUES LUDIQUES ET RUES-ÉCOLES
  • Par Julien Voyer, Audrey Lise Mallet, Katherine Frohlich, et Mikael St-Pierre

HOW COVID-19 AFFECTED OTTAWA’S APPROACH TO PLANNING
  • Par Stephen Willis, Inge Roosendaal, et Alain Miguelez

PUBLIC TRANSPORT DURING THE COVID-19 PANDEMIC
  • Par Ajay Agarwal et Claire Lee

WHAT DOES PUBLIC ENGAGEMENT LOOK LIKE DURING A GLOBAL PANDEMIC?
  • Par Dallas Clowes, Stirling Scory, et Jana Zelenski

L’ICU HONNEURS ET PRIX
 
Aussi dans ce numéro :
  • Mot de la redaction
  • Du côté des fellows
  • Condensé de recherches en urbanisme
  • Planner’s Bookshelf

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Automne 2020, Volume 60, No. 3

Les collectivités intelligentes sont-elles un choix raisonné?

FROM SMART TO MORE INTELLIGENT COMMUNITIES
  • Par John G. Jung
ENHANCING SOCIAL RESILIENCE WITH THE RIGHT SMART TECHNOLOGIES
  • Par Ashita Parekh et Stuart Hamre
LESSONS FROM PLANNING QUAYSIDE
  • Par Pino Di Mascio
SIDEWALK LABS PLANS FOR TORONTO SHAKE THE FOUNDATIONS OF PLANNING AS WE KNOW IT
  • Par Guy Baeten
SMART RURAL REGIONS: A ROLE FOR PLANNERS
  • Par Carol Bergum
THE OPEN SMART CITY: AN ETHICAL APPROACH TO SMART CITIES DEVELOPMENT
  • Par Leon de Vreede
PLANNING CONSIDERATIONS FOR MULTI-LEVEL DEVELOPMENT IN VANCOUVER
  • Par Eric Aderneck
NOT IN STOCK
  • Par Marleen Morris, Julie Good, et Greg Halseth
MESSAGE DE LA PRESIDENTE DE L’ICU
  • Par Eleanor Mohammed
Aussi dans ce numéro :
  • Mot de la redaction
  • Du côté des fellows
  • Condensé de recherches en urbanisme
  • Planner’s Bookshelf

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Été 2020, Volume 60, No. 2

Le Canada en 2050

ON A DIFFERENT PATH TOWARDS 2050
  • Par David Miller
PLANNING PLAUSIBLE FUTURES
  • Par Sarah Krapez, Blair Underhill, et Robert Barrs
PLAN UX: DESIGNING PLANS AND PROCESSES FOR A RAPIDLY CHANGING WORLD
  • Par Robert Barrs et Kasia Tota
SOCIAL INFRASTRUCTURE: INCREASING QUALITY OF LIFE AMID AN UNCERTAIN FUTURE
  • Par Dylan Thiessen
TRANSFORMING VANCOUVER INTO A WATER SENSITIVE CITY BY 2050
  • Par Julie McManus et Wendy de Hoog
PLANNING EDUCATION: THE NEXT GENERATION
  • Par Markus Moos
IMMIGRANTS IN SUBURBS ARE RESTRUCTURING THE TORONTO REGION
  • Par Mohammad A. Qadeer
CIP AND COVID-19
  • By Beth McMahon, Chief Executive Officer, CIP
L’ICU ET LA COVID-19
  • Par Beth McMahon, Directrice générale, ICU
Aussi dans ce numéro :
  • Mot de la redaction
  • Du côté des fellows
  • Condensé de recherches en urbanisme
  • Planner’s Bookshelf

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Printemps 2020, Volume 60, No. 1

Aménagement agricole et rural

PROTECTING FARMLAND
  • Par David J. Connell
GREENBELT GETS IT RIGHT
  • Par Emma Drake, Sara Epp et Wayne Caldwell
PLANNING TO EAT
  • Par Emily Hansen, Naomi Robert et Kristi Tatebe
HARVESTING LESSONS ABOUT AGRICULTURAL PLANNING
  • Par John Steil
INDIGENOUS PERSPECTIVES IN RURAL PLANNING
  • Par Adam Wright
NEW FOUNDATIONS
  • Par Katherine Levett, Sean Markey, Ryan Gibson, Kelly Vadden et Bojan Furst
AGING-IN-PLACE IN RURAL AREAS
  • Par Ian Walker et Roza Tchoukaleyska

FORWARD PLANNING

LESSONS FROM GREEN CITIES OF EUROPE

  • Par David Witty

Aussi dans ce numéro :
  • Mot de la redaction
  • Du côté des fellows
  • Planner’s Bookshelf

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Hiver 2019, Volume 59, No. 3

La question du logement


MEET ME IN THE MIDDLE
  • Par Jason Syvixay and Kalen Anderson
CHALLENGES IN FILLING THE MISSING MIDDLE HOUSING APP
  • Par Leslie Shieh
RENTAL HOUSING APPROACHES ACROSS CANADA
  • Par Ren Thomas
SUSTAINABLE, AFFORDABLE HOUSING
  • Par Gordon Harris
SOCIAL HOUSING IN A TIME OF CHANGE
  • Par Sarah Cooper
WINNING COMMUNITY ACCEPTANCE OF SOCIAL HOUSING
  • Par Shad Mayne and Patricia Maloney
ADDRESSING THE HOMELESSNESS CRISIS
  • Par Shayne Ramsay and Karen Hemmingson
EQUITABLE TRANSIT-ORIENTED COMMUNITIES
  • Par Raymond Kan, James Stiver, and Lilian Chau
GEO-STATISTICAL APPROACHES TO REALIZING AFFORDABLE HOUSING AND COCMPLETE COMMUNITIES
  • Par Archana Vyes and Indro Bhattacharyya
URBANSIM
  • Par Keith Stewart and Bert Pereboom
WHAT IS MEASURED DEFINES THE CRISIS
  • Par Shelagh McCartney and Michael McKay
TEACHING HOUSING POLICY TO PLANNERS
  • Par Carolyn Whitzman
Aussi dans ce numéro :
  • Mot de la redaction
  • Du côté des fellows
  • Planner’s Bookshelf

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Automne, Volume 59, No. 2

MOBILITÉ POUR TOUS


MAKING ACCESSIBILITY ACCESSIBLE FOR PLANNERS
  • Par Madalena Harreman-Fernandes and Ahmed El-Geneidy
GOT TRANSIT? POTENTIAL PLANNER RESPONSES TO COMMON QUESTIONS ABOUT PUBLIC TRANSIT
  • Par Tania Wegwitz
HOW KINGSTON DOUBLED ITS TRANSIT RIDERSHIP WITHIN 10 YEARS
  • Par Preston L. Schiller
TRANSIT-ORIENTED DEVELOPMENT: WHAT CAN CANADIAN PLANNERS LEARN FROM OTHERS?
  • Par Ren Thomas
INNISFIL TRANSIT: POWERED BY UBER
  • Par Paul Pentikainan
PLANNERS TAKE THE WHEEL
  • Par Michelle Berquist
GETTING US ALL THERE: INCLUDING EQUITY IN TRANSPORTATION PLANNING
  • Par Orly Linovski and Nadia Galati
PRIORITIZATION AND PIZZA? APPLYING A SOLUTION TO A PIZZA PROBLEM AS A PROXY FOR A TRANSPORTATION PROBLEM
  • Par Stephen Oliver
ELECTRIC BICYCLES: CAN THEY REDUCE DRIVING AND EMISSIONS IN CANADA?
  • Par Alexander Bigazzi and Elmira Berjisian
DELIVERING LAST-MILE SOLUTIONS: A FEASIBILITY ANALYSIS OF MICROHUBS AND CYCLELOGISTICS IN THE GTHA
  • Par Janelle Lee and Carolyn Kim

Aussi dans ce numéro :
  • Message du comité de redaction
  • CIP Awards
  • Du côté des fellows
  • Planner’s Bookshelf

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Printemps 2019, Volume 59, No. 1

Célébrons ces 100 ans : passé, présent et l’avenir

PASSÉ – L’ÉVOLUTION DE L’URBANISME CANADIEN

PRÉSENT – LA PRATIQUE ACTUELLE DE L’URBANISME

L’AVENIR

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Hiver 2018, Volume 58, No. 4

D’une approche international à une approche locale


INCLUSIONARY ZONING: SIX INSIGHTS FROM INTERNATIONAL EXPERIENCE
  • par Martine August et Giuseppe Tolfo
THE CITY AFTER DARK: A EUROPEAN APPROACH TO NIGHTLIFE
  • par Stacey Forrester
REMEMBERING HABITAT ’76: A LANDMARK MOMENT OF INTERNATIONAL PLANNING AND OPTIMISM
  • par Robin Koning, Andrew Martin, et Penny Gurstein
LESSONS FROM AMERICA’S MIDRISE CAPTAL: PLANNING IN DC
  • Par Erkin Ozberk
MARINE SPATIAL PLANNING: A PLANNING TOOL TO IMPROVE CANADA’S OCEAN MANAGEMENT AND GOVERNANCE
  • par Erin Stapleton
PLANNING PERU FORWARD
  • par Rukshan de Silva
SMART GROWTH SUCCESS STORY? COMMERCIAL REDEVELOPMENT AND NEIGHBOURHOOD CHANGE IN HALIFAX’S NORTH END
  • par Anne Totten et Mikimo Terashima
Aussi dans ce numéro :
  • Mot de la rédaction
  • Du côté des fellows
  • Planner’s Bookshelf

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Automne 2018, Volume 58, No. 3

Les limites territoriales des municipalités


A VIEW FROM ALBERTA: MUNICIPAL BOUNDARY ADJUSTMENT
  • par Sandeep Agrawal, PhD, AICP, MCIP
TREATY LAND ENTITLEMENTS: URBAN RESERVES IN THE WINNIPEG METROPOLITAN AREA
  • par Alex Hallbom, Emly Halldorson, et Janice Barry
A WATERSHED FOR COLLABORATION: a MULTI-JURISDICTIONAL APPROACH TO INDIGENOUS WATER STEWARDSHIP
  • par Robert Patrick, Graham Strickert, Tim Jardine, et Warrick Baijiuss
PLANNING FOR THE BALLOT BOX: SETTING ELECORAL BOUNDARIE IN NOVA SCOTIA
  • par John Heseltine, LPP, MCIP
A LADDER OF MUNICIPAL INTEGRATION
  • par John Heseltine, LPP, MCIP
THE POWER OF ENGAGEMENT: PLANNING DURING AN ANNEXATION
  • par Stephen Yu, MPlan et Ryan Eidick, MCP
CIP AWARDS

PUBLIC TOILETS, ACCESSIBILITY, AND HUMAN RIGHTS: A WINNIPEG POP-UP CAMPAIGN
  • par Rae St. Clair Bridgman et Wins Bridgman
LEGAL IMPLICATIONS OF CLIMATE CHANGE
OPPORTUNITIES AND RISKS FOR THE PROFESSIONAL PLANNER
  • par Joanna Kyriazis, BSc et Christine Callihoo, MSc, RPP, MCIP
ANOTHER  PERSPECTIVE ON AIRBNB
  • par Mary Tasi
Aussi dans ce numéro :
  • Mot de la rédaction
  • Du côté des fellows

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Été 2018, Volume 58, No. 2

Planifier en tenant compte des imprévus


KEEPING AN EYE ON THE PRIZE
  • par Reiner Kravis et Joshua Engel-Yan
RISING WATERS: PLANNING FOR CLIMATE CHANGE CHALLENGES
  • par Carla Stewart et Matt Osler
BUILDING COMMUNITY RESILIENCE IN VANCOUVER’S CHINATOWN
  • par Leslie Shieh et Jessica Chen
AIRBNB AND THE STRUGGLE FOR THE CITY
  • par Brian Doucet
RIDING THE WAVE
  • par Victor Ngo
SHIFTING GEARS FOR THE AUTOMATED VEHICLE
  • par Élyse Comeau
ADJUSTING TO TORONTO’S NEW REALITY
  • par Mohammad Qadeer et Sandeep Agrawal
BACK TO THE FUTURE AGAIN
  • par Lance Berelowitz

RPP-ORTABILITY

Aussi dans ce numéro :
  • Mot de la rédaction
  • Du côté des fellows
  • Planner’s Bookshelf

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Printemps 2018, Volume 58, No. 1

Coups d’oeil sur l’urbanisme à travers le Canada


SOMETHING NEW FOR THE PLANNER’S TOOLKIT?
  • par Kent Munro
URBAN MAGNETS
  • par Mark Holland
BUILDING GREAT NEIGHBOURHOODS
  • par Sasha Tsenkova et Chris Elkey
PUBLIC ART
  • par Nabil Malik
BARRIERS TO INTENSIFICATION
  • par Rylan Graham
IDLE, NO MORE
  • par Jason Syvixay
KITCHENER GROWS UP
  • par Dayna Edwards et Adam Clark
A LITMUS TEST FOR NEIGHBOURHOOD CHANGE
  • par Sarah Christensen, Richard Harris, et Kathleen Kinsella
“BACK FROM THE DEAD”
  • par Jill L. Grant, Ben Abbott, A.J. Taylor, et Qianqiau Zhu
Aussi dans ce numéro :
  • Mot de la rédaction
  • Du côté des fellows
  • Planner’s Bookshelf

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Hiver 2017, Volume 57, No. 4

Tirer parti du patrimoine

 
URBAN HERITAGE: A LIVING LEGACY
  • par Victoria Angel
HISTORICAL SITE OR CULTURAL HUB? REIMAGINING HERITAGE VALUES IN OLD STRATHCONA
  • par  Kevin E. Jones et Vanessa Zembal
THE VANCOUVER HERITAGE ACTION PLAN: NEW TOOLS TO PRESERVE AND CELEBRATE OUR PAST
  • par Donald Luxton
CONSERVING THE DYNAMIC CITY: THE ROLE OF HERITAGE CONSERVATION DISTRICTS IN CITY-BUILDING
  • par Jennifer Keesmaat
TINY TOWN: BIG HISTORY
  • par Brian Arnott
INTENSIFICATION MEETS CONSERVATION
  • par Clint Robertson
THE SMITHFIELD HERITAGE RESTORATION PROJECT: OPPORTUNITIES AND CHALLENGES FOR HERITAGE CONSERVATION IN RURAL SASKATCHEWAN
  • par Richard Krehbiel
RE-IMAGINING CIVIC IMPROVEMENTS
  • par Nick Pryce
MAKING A TOWN A COMMUNITY: INSIGHTS INTO PARTICIPATION FROM AN AGING RURAL CANADIAN COMMUNITY
  • par Katherine Laycock, Wayne Caldwell, et Amanda Herbert
GENDER-BASED DISCRIMINATION AND THE CITY / LA DISCRIMINATION FONDÉE SUR LE SEXE ET LA CITÉ
  • par Regula Modlich
Aussi dans ce numéro :
  • Mot de la rédaction
  • Du côté des fellows
  • Planner’s Bookshelf

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Automne, Volume 57, No. 3

Défis démographiques

PLANIFIER DANS LE BUT DE RELEVER LES DÉFIS DÉMOGRAPHIQUES AU SEIN DE NOS COMMUNAUTÉS

MEETING THE DIVERSE NEEDS OF CHANGING COMMUNITIES

  • par Brad McCannell 

AGING ATLANTIC CITIES: CHALLENGES AND POTENTIAL SOLUTIONS FOR PLANNERS

  • par Ren Thomas et Mikiko Terashima 

IS ONTARIO READY FOR THE SILVER TSUNAMI?

  • par Maxwell D. Hartt et Samantha Biglieri 

THE ECONOMICS OF SUSTAINABLE NEIGHBOURHOODS: WHY OUR SUBURBS NEED URGENT ATTENTION

  • par Glenn Miller 

HOW CAN WE BETTER PLAN AGE-FRIENDLY COMMUNITIES?

  • par Evan Peterson 

DEMENTIA + PLANNING: EXPANDING ACCESSIBILITY THROUGH DESIGN AND THE PLANNING PROCESS

  • par Samantha Biglieri 

STROLLERS AND SCOOTERS: PERSPECTIVES OF A MILLENNIAL PLANNER LIVING IN A RETIREMENT COMMUNITY 

  • par Kristin Agnello 

CHALLENGING THE IDEOLOGY OF HOMEOWNERSHIP: CREATING EQUITABLE  HOUSING OPTIONS FOR MILLENNIALS

  • par Nick Revington 

LET THEM EAT TOAST: PLANNING FOR YOUNG ADULTS LIVING WITH THEIR PARENT(S)

  • par Markus Moos 

COACH HOUSES: THE MULTI-GENERATIONAL HOUSING SOLUTION 

  • par Emily Davies 

CAN COMMUNITY HUBS FILL THE VOIDS LEFT BY CLOSED PUBLIC SCHOOLS? FOUR RECOMMENDATIONS FOR ONTARIO

  • par Sarah Cranston 

EVALUATING SCHOOL CLOSURES THROUGH A RURAL LENS

  • par Rob Rappolt, Mark Seasons, et Bill Irwin 

WHO SAYS, "VANCOUVER HAS RUN OUT OF DEVELOPABLE LAND?" 

  • par Gordon Harris

Aussi dans ce numéro :

  • Mot de la rédaction
  • Du côté des fellows

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Été, Volume 57, No. 2

Les droits de la personne et la ville


HUMAN RIGHTS 101 FOR PLANNERS 
  • par Sandeep Agrawal 
LEGALLY SPEAKING: HUMAN RIGHTS LAW AND THE CITY
  • par Dominique Clement 
BETWEEN A ROCK AND A HARD PLACE: THE PROBLEMS WITH VAGUENESS AND COMPLEXITY IN OUR (BY)LAWS
  • par Ola Malik et Stacy McFarlane 
INTEGRATING HUMAN RIGHTS WITH LAND USE PLANNING: NOW A CORNERSTONE OF ONTARIO POLICY STATEMENT, 2014
  • par Antonella Ceddia 
PLANNING AND HUMAN RIGHTS - WE HAVE SOMETHING IN COMMON
  • par Jacquelin Pegg et Rosemary Bennet 
BETTER TOGETHER: EMBRACING HUMAN RIGHTS AND DIVERSITY
  • par Robert A. Philp
INDIGENOUS PEOPLES, HUMAN RIGHTS AND THE CITY 
  • par Renee Vaugeois 
CAN WE PLAN FOR AFFORDABLE HOUSING? 
  • par Signe Leisk et Sophie Moher 
A CENTURY OF ZONING 
  • par Raphael Fischler 
SHIPPING CONTAINER-HOUSING 
  • par Becky Loi, Vivan Accioly-Games, Jeff Henry, et Ashley Rudkevitch 
Aussi dans ce numéro :
  • Mot de la rédaction
  • Du côté des fellows
  • Planner’s Bookshelf

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Été 2017, Volume 57, No. 1

Les villes digitales

 
PLANNING IN THE ERA OF DATA SCIENCE AND DASHBOARDS
  • par Aaron Baxter BA, MEnv
COULD YOUR CITY HACK IT AT A TRAFFICJAM?
  • par Michelle Berquist MScPl et Scott Fraser PEng, MEng
DATA AND ANALYSIS IN THE NEW EMPLOYMENT LANDSCAPE
  • par Indro Bhattacharyya MSc, MCIP, RPP et Derek Brunelle MES
PLANLOCAL: DATA-DRIVEN PARTICIPATORY PLANNING
  • par Paul Shaker MCIP, RPP et Graeme Douglas MA
PLANNING AND DESIGN THROUGH THE LOOKING GLASS
  • par Morgan Boyco BA, MScPl et Bruce Cory BA, MA
THE GROWTH OF SUBURBAN POVERTY
  • par Eleni Taye MUP et Raphaël Fischler MCIP, OUQ
REACTIONS TO THE ONTARIO GROWTH PLAN
  • par Pierre Filion MA, PhD, Neluka Leanage MUDS PhD, Michelle Lee BES, MSc, et Kent Hakull BA, MA
WELCOMING IMMIGRATION IN A CHANGING URBAN ENVIRONMENT
  • par Grant E. Moore BA, MPl
Aussi dans ce numéro :
  • Message du comité de rédaction
  • Du côté des fellows
  • Planner’s Bookshelf

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Hiver 2016, Volume 56, No. 4

Urbanisme autochtone


PRIVILEGING INDIGENOUS KNOWLEDGE
  • par Patrick Stewart, Luugigyoo (Nisga`a), PhD, Architect AIBC, MRAIC, LEED®AP et Eladia Smoke, KaaSheGaaBaaWeak (Anishinaabe), OAA, MRAIC, LEED®AP
(RE)IMAGINING OUR COMMUNITY: CHANGING THE PLANNER AND PLANNING WITH FIRST NATIONS YOUTH
  • par Shelagh McCartney D.Des. OAA, MRAIC, Elizabeth Atlookan, Louie Sugarhead, Jeffrey Herskovits, et Kathryn Trnavsky
TREATY PRINCIPLES ARE PLANNING PRINCIPLES: LEARNING FROM THE EXPERIENCES OF MANITOBAN PLANNING PRACTITIONERS
  • par Madeleine Koch MCP, MCIP Candidate et Janice Barry PhD, MCIP Candidate
PLANNING IN PARTNERSHIP: THE WAGMATCOOK FIRST NATION  HOUSING PILOT PROJECT
  • par Alexis Miller MCP, Nathan Roth MPlan, et Frank Palermo FCIP LPP, FRAI
BEYOND CONSULTATION: LESSONS FROM JOINT STEWARDSHIP
  • par Sheri Longboat PhD
NEW CENTURY, NEW APPROACH  TO MARINE PLANNING IN B.C.
  • par Marine Plan Partnership for the North Pacific Coast (MaPP): John Bones BA, MSc, Charles Short BSc, MSc, et Steve Diggon BES, MSc
FROM REACTIVE TO PROACTIVE IN FIRST NATIONS PLANNING: A CASE STUDY OF THE METLAKATLA EXPERIENCE IN BRITISH COLUMBIA
  • par Katerina Kwon MCIP, Thomas Gunton MCIP, RPP, Murray Rutherford MCIP, RPP, et Taylor Zeeg MCIP, RPP
A ROADMAP TO INDEPENDENCE: THE K’ÓMOKS FIRST NATION’S PROACTIVE APPROACH TO SUSTAINABLE LAND MANAGEMENT
  • par Alanna Mitchell, Pamela Shaw PhD, MCIP, RPP, FRCGS, et Devon Miller, MSc, LEED AP ND
WAYS OF KNOWING: ENGAGING IN PARTNERSHIP FOR INDIGENOUS PLANNING EDUCATION
  • par Leonie Sandercock PhD, Leona M. Sparrow BA, MA, LLB et Jeff Cook MCIP, RPP
QUEBEC INDIGENOUS  COMMUNITIES AND URBAN PLANNING: A WORLD APART?
  • par Denise Piché MPs, MUrb, PhD
COLLABORATING TO PRESERVE INDIGENOUS HERITAGE IN LETHBRIDGE, ALBERTA
  • par Perry Stein MA, BA, Scotty Many Guns, Andrew Malcolm RPP MCIP, BA, Neil Mirau, et Chelsea King
BRINGING DECISION-MAKING CLOSER TO HOME: A HEALTH AND WELLNESS PLANNING ECOSYSTEM  
  • par Leanne Martinson, Connie Jasper et Trish Osterber
Aussi dans ce numéro :
  • Message de la présidente
  • L’actualité des urbanistes
  • Message du comité de rédaction
  • Du côté des fellows
  • Planner’s Bookshelf

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Automne 2016, Volume 56, No. 3

Excellence en urbanisme


AWARDS | PRIX

CAMPUS PLANNING REFLECTS CONTEMPORARY PLANNING TRENDS

  • par Rhiannon Gilbart et Jill L. Grant FCIP, LPP

THE UNSEXY INFRASTRUCTURE DEFICIT: PLANNERS WORK ON DRESSING UP ASSET MANAGEMENT

  • par Emilie K. Adin MCIP, RPP

THE DEATH AND LIFE OF REGIONAL PLANNING IN CANADA

  • par Heather M. Hall PhD et Gerald Hodge PhD

CIVICACTION’S BETTER CITY BOOTCAMP WHIPPED CIVIC LEADERS INTO SHAPE. NOW WHAT?

  • par Christina Sgro MCIP, RPP

SOME UNCOMFORTABLE TRUTHS ABOUT THE WAY WE PLAN

  • par Jill L. Grant FCIP, LPP

PLANNING FOR SOCIAL AND SPATIAL JUSTICE IN CANADA

  • par Barbara Rahder FCIP

Aussi dans ce numéro :

  • Message de la présidente
  • L’actualité des urbanistes
  • Message du comité de rédaction
  • Q&R … avec des nouveaux Fellows
  • Du côté des fellows

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Été 2016, Volume 56, No. 2

Financer les villes


FINANCING CANADIAN CITIES IN THE 21ST CENTURY
  • par Enid Slack, PhD
FINANCING MUNICIPAL INFRASTRUCTURE: THE BASICS
  • par Brian Conger MPP, RPP, MCIP et Almos Tassonyi PhD
CANADIAN CITIES: PRESENT STRUCTURE AND POSSIBLE ALTERNATIVES
  • par Melville McMillan PhD
USING LAND VALUE CAPTURE TOOLS IN CANADIAN MUNICIPALITIES
  • par David Amborski MSc, MA, MCIP, RPP
MISSED OPPORTUNITY: MUNICIPAL LEVEL FUEL TAX FOR ALBERTA
  • par Amrita Singh PhD
PPPS AND THE FINANCING OF CITIES
  • par Matti Siemiatycki PhD
FUNDING MECHANISMS FOR BUILDING TRANSIT IN ONTARIO
  • par Craig Binning MPhil et Jaclyn Hall, BURPI
HOW A FINANCING TOOL ACCELERATED EDMONTON’S DOWNTOWN DEVELOPMENT
  • par Heather Chisholm MSc, RPP, MCIP et Tom Beck MScPl, RPP, MCIP
INTEGRATING LAND USE PLANNING AND DEVELOPMENT FINANCE TO IMPROVE LOCAL GOVERNMENT SUSTAINABILITY
  • By Kim Fowler MCIP, RPP
Aussi dans ce numéro :
  • Message de la présidente
  • L’actualité des urbanistes
  • Message du comité de rédaction
  • Q&A with … Jay Wollenberg
  • L’acquisition du savoir
  • Du côté des fellows

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Printemps 2016, Volume 56, No. 1

Aux limites de la durabilité


CLIMATE CHANGE  À LA MODE
  • par Janis Fedorowick MCIP, RPP, OALA, BES
SUSTAINABILITY AT THE URBAN-RURAL FRINGE
  • par Cian O'Neil BASc, MPL et Dr. Patricia Collins BSc, MSc, PhD
CONDO FARMS
  • par Dilys Huang, BES, MPL, LEED Green Associate, et Dr. Leela Viswanathan, PhD, MCIP, RPP
CRYSTAL TO IQALUIT
  • par Kenneth Johnson, RPP, MCIP
THE LEARNING CURVE / L’ACQUISITION DU SAVOIR
  • Jordan Jackson
Aussi dans ce numéro :
  • Message de la présidente
  • Échoes de l’ICU
  • Le mot de la présidente du comité de rédaction
  • Du côté des fellows
  • Des nouvelles dignes d’intérêt
  • Planner’s Bookshelf

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Hiver 2015 Vol. 55, No. 4

Les communautés salient les succèss en urbanisme


GREAT PLACES IN CANADA
 
THE CITY AS A NATION BUILDER
  • By A.J. Diamond MCIP, RPP
WHAT DO WE TALK ABOUT WHEN WE TALK ABOUT EARTHQUAKES?
  • By Shana Johnstone EAC, BCSLA, candidate member PIBC
INCORPORATING SOCIAL MEDIA DURING DISASTERS
  • par Katherine Laycock BA, MSc
THE CART BEFORE THE HORSE:  POLICY PERSPECTIVES ON FARM PARCEL CREATION ON MENNONITE FARMS
  • par Bryce Sharpe et Wayne Caldwell MCIP, RPP
BEES IN THE CITY:  ADMINISTRATION OF URBAN HONEY BEES
  • par Jenna Mouck MCIP, RPP
Aussi dans ce numéro :
  • Le mot de la présidente
  • Échos de l’ICU
  • Le mot de la présidente du comité de rédaction
  • Du côté des fellows
  • Nouvelles des comités
  • Des nouvelles dignes d’intérêt
  • Planners' Bookshelf

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Automne 2015 Vol. 55, No. 3

Prix d'excellence en urbanisme


FLEURIR 2015 SASKATOON – CELÉBRÉR L’URBANISME CANADIEN ET LE FEE SACRÉ DE LA RÉGÉNÉRATION
 
INTRONISATION AU COLLÈGE DES FELLOWS 2015
 
PRIX D’EXCELLENCE EN URGANISME
 
Aussi dans ce numéro :
  • Le mot de la présidente
  • Échos de l’ICU
  • Le mot de la présidente du comité de rédaction
  • Du côté des fellows
  • Des nouvelles dignes d’intérêt

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Été 2015, Vol. 55 No. 2

Planifier le Canada et le monde

   
INNOVATIVE APPROACHES TO PLANNING AND DESIGN
  • par Stephen Yu BA, Courtney Laurence BA, MA, etSandra Shanoada BSc
CANADA STRENGTHENS WATERSHED MANAGEMENT IN THE PHILIPPINES
  • par Andrew Farncome MCIP, RPP et Gary Wilkins, MCIP, RPP
IF WE BUILT IT, THEY WILL STAY
  • parJohn van Nostrand  Arch, OAA, FRAIC, FCIP
  • carte par Chris Brackley
COORDINATING MULTIPLE PLANS
  • par Amanda Taylor and Jill L. Grant, FCIP, LPP
Aussi dans ce numéro :
  • Le mot du président
  • Échos de l’ICU
  • Le mot de la présidente du comité de rédaction
  • Du côté des fellows
  • Nouvelles des comités

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Printemps 2015 Vol. 55 No. 1

Repenser le logement et les collectivités à vocations multiples


PLANNING FOR HOUSING IN A TIME OF GROWING EMPLOYMENT PRECARITY (refereed article)
  • par Markus Moos PhD, MCIP, RPP, Tristan Wilkin, Geoff Chase, et Michael Seasons
MIXED-USE BUILDINGS, DESIGN AND DEVELOPMENT IN PRACTICE (Part 1 of 2)
  • par Michael Gordon MSc, MCIP, RPP et William Dunn MSc
COMMUNITIES AND THE STREETS RESIDENTS LIVE ON, LINKING NEIGHBOURHOOD CHARACTER TO ZONING
  • par Elizabeth Desmarais MCIP, RPP et Alain Miguelez MCIP, RPP
EXPLORING SOLUTIONS FOR SUSTAINABLE RURAL DRINKING WATER SYSTEMS
  • par Joshua Barrett, Sarah Minnes, et Kelly Vodden
A STREETCAR AND DESIRE
  • par Chelsey Jersak MCIP, RPP
Aussi dans ce numéro :
  • Le mot du président
  • Échos de l’ICU
  • Le mot de la présidente du comité de rédaction
  • L’acquisition du savoir
  • L’urbanisme chez nous et à l’étranger
  • Du côté des fellows

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Hiver Vol 54. No 4

Les quartiers, rues et lieux publics divers et inspirants de 2014


A CONCEPTUAL MODEL FOR BALANCING MANAGEMENT TRADE-OFFS BETWEEN URBAN FOREST BENEFITS AND WILDFIRE RISK
  • par Ellen Whitman, Eric Rapaport MCIP, RPP,et Kate Sherren
SPRUCE THE BRUCE
  • par Kara Van Myall MCIP, RPP
A PLANNING TOOL FOR THE PROTECTION OF DRINKING WATER SOURCES IN CANADA
  • par Robert Patrick PhD, MCIP, RPP et David Espeseth
CYCLING THROUGH WINTER
  • par Cara Fisher
Aussi dans ce numéro :
  • Le mot du président
  • Échos de l’ICU
  • Le mot de la présidente du comité de rédaction
  • L’acquisition du savoir
  • L’urbanisme chez nous et à l’étranger
  • Du côté des fellows
  • Nouvelles des comités
  • Planners' Bookshelf

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Automne 2014 Vol. 54, No. 3

Le défi du transport en commun

 
LEVERAGING TRANSIT INVESTMENT TO SHAPE THE COMMUNITY: WATERLOO REGION’S CENTRAL TRANSIT CORRIDOR COMMUNITY BUILDING STRATEGY
  • par Kevin Curtis MCIP, RPP et Melanie Hare MCIP, RPP
TOO MANY PLANS? TRENDS IN PRODUCING PLANS
  • par Andrew Burns et Jill L. Grant FCIP, LPP
PLUMBING PUBLIC VALUES: GREATER VANCOUVER’S 40 YEARS’ EXPERIENCE WITH REGIONAL PUBLIC ATTITUDE SURVEYS
  • par Ken Cameron FCIP, RPP et Jacint Simon
CREATING THE NEXT GENERATION OF INFORMED AND ENGAGED URBAN CITIZENS
  • par Evan Perlman MPl, Ryan Guetter BES, MCIP, RPP, et Christopher De Sousa MScPl, PhD, MCIP, RPP
Au dans ce numéro :
  • Le mot du président
  • Échos de l’ICU
  • Le mot de la présidente du comité de rédaction
  • L’acquisition du savoir
  • L’urbanisme chez nous et à l’étranger
  • Du côté des fellows
  • Nouvelles des comités

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Été 2014 - vol. 54 no.2

Le climat des villes, en été comme en hiver


DEFENSIBLE DECISIONS AND SUCCESSFUL OUTCOMES: A CASE STUDY OF THE NORTH OKANAGAN REGIONAL GROWTH STRATEGY
  • par William Trousdale, MCIP, RPP, Rob Smailes MCIP, RPP, Anthony Kittel MCIP, RPP, Lorien Nesbitt, et Michael J. Meitner
START WITH PEOPLE: DESIGNING VISUALLY ACCESSIBLE CITIES AND COMMUNITIES
  • par Devin Causley MCIP, RPP
PLANNING FOR CLIMATE CHANGE: THE STATE OF CURRENT PRACTICE IN CANADIAN COMMUNITIES 
  • par Kevin Hanna PhD, Mark Seasons PhD, FCIP, RPP, Ann Dale PhD, Pierre Filion PhD, MCIP, RPP, et Chris Ling PhD*
*Correction : le titre de cet article a originalement paru sous le nom "Long-Term Climatic Planning No Longer Works". Ce titre demeure le même dans l'édition imprimée du journal d'été 2014 de Plan Canada.  
 
DON’T PUT YOUR BIKE AWAY TOO SOON: PLANNING FOR WINTER CLIMATES
  • par Cara Fisher
ABORIGINAL RIGHTS BROUGHT TO THE PROVINCIAL TABLE: ONTARIO’S NEW PROVINCIAL POLICY STATEMENT
  • par Heather Dorries
Au dans ce numéro :
  • Le mot du président
  • Échos de l’ICU
  • Le mot de la présidente du comité de rédaction
  • L’acquisition du savoir
  • L’urbanisme chez nous et à l’étranger
  • Du côté des fellows
  • Planners' Bookshelf

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Printemps 2014 - vol. 54, no. 1

De l'agriculture urbaine aux Chemins de fer Canadiens


URBAN FARMS IN CANADA
  • par Emilie K. Adin MCIP, RPP et Alexander F. Kurnicki MBCSLA, MUP
CONTEMPORARY PRACTICES IN SOCIAL PLANNING REFEREED ARTICLE LESSONS FROM COMPREHENSIVE SOCIAL PLAN DEVELOPMENT
  • par Leonora C. Angeles, Olga Shcherbyna, et John Foster MCIP, RPP
PLANNING IN PROXIMITY TO RAILWAYS
  • par Raymond Beshro MICU, OUQ
HOW MANY PLANETS? MEASURING ENVIRONMENTAL SUSTAINABILITY IN PLANS
  • par Les Kuzyk et Matt Rockley
PLANNING FOR SOCIAL DIVERSITY IN THE CANADIAN SUBURBS
  • par Leah Perrin BA, MPLAN et Jill Grant FCIP
Au dans ce numéro :
  • Le mot du président
  • Échos de l’ICU
  • Le mot de la présidente du comité de rédaction
  • L’acquisition du savoir
  • L’urbanisme chez nous et à l’étranger
  • Du côté des fellows
  • Aménagement et politique au Canada : la recherché qui mérité d’être utilisée
  • Planners' Bookshelf

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Hiver 2013 - vol. 53, no. 4

Les endroits exceptionnels du Canada : de la création à la célébration


DESIGNING NEW NEIGHBOURHOODS
A learning journey that started with a bus

  • par Beth Sanders MCIP, RPP et Kalen Anderson MCIP, RPP

LET THEM EAT CAKE!
A foray into new forms of citizen engagement

  • par Molly Johnson et Jason Prince

REVITALIZATION IN DOWNTOWN WINNIPEG

  • par Jino Distasio, PhD et Scott McCullough, MCP
Special insert article:
10 Ways CIP Works to Serve Your Needs and Interests


Au dans ce numéro :
  • Le mot du président
  • Correspondances
  •  Échos de l’ICU
  • Christine Helm célrébre ses 25 ans au sein de l’ICU
  • L’urbanisme chez nous et à l’étranger
  • Du côté des fellows
  • Planners' Bookshelf
  • L’acquisition du savoir

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Automne 2013 - vol. 53, no.3

Habitat et chez-soi


ARE WE THERE YET? MAKING INROADS TO DECOLONIZE PLANNING KNOWLEDGE AND PRACTICES IN SOUTHERN ONTARIO
  • par Leela Viswanathan PhD, MCIP, RPP, Fraser McLeod, Carolyn King, Jared Macbeth, et Erin Alexiuk
THE TORONTO WATERFRONT AQUATIC HABITAT RESTORATION STRATEGY A UNIQUE, COLLABORATIVE APPROACH TO STREAMLINING APPROVALS AND RESTORING AQUATIC HABITAT
  • par  Lisa Prime MCIP, RPP, Colin Lake, Laud Matos, Bruce Morrison, Emily Morton, Rick Portiss, William J. Snodgrass, et Brent G. Valere
INVESTING IN NEW YORK'S FUTURE AFFORDABLE RENTAL HOUSING IN MIXED INCOME PROJECTS
  • par  Sasha Tsenkova PhD, MCIP, RPP
ETHICS IN PROFESSIONAL PLANNING PRACTICE PART 2: NAVIGATING OUR ETHICAL OBLIGATIONS: JANE JACOBS’ SYSTEMS OF SURVIVAL
  • par  Ian Wight PhD, MCIP
Au dans ce numéro :
  • Le mot du président
  • Échos de l’ICU
  • Le mot de la présidente du comité de rédaction
  • L’acquisition du savoir
  • L’urbanisme chez nous et à l’étranger
  • Du côté des fellows
  • Recherche
  • Planners' Bookshelf

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Été 2013 - vol. 53, no.2

L'autochtone de la planification / Planifier l'autochtonisation

Featured Articles
  • Re-situating Indigenous Planning in the City by Ryan Walker, MCIP, RPP and Hirini Matunga
  • Indigenizing and Decolonizing An Alliance Story by Aftab Erfan and Jessie Hemphill
  • Who Makes the Decisions? First Nations Land Use Planning Issues and Governance Trends by Ken Cossey, MCIP, RPP
  • Planning for PipelinesThe Carrier Sekani Experience by Jaime Sanchez, MCIP, RPP and Angel Ransom, MCIP, RPP
  • By the North, For the North Stakeholder-Driven Planning in the Thompson Region, Manitoba by Michelle Drylie, MCIP, RPP, Charlene Lafreniere, Freda Lepine, Hilda Fitzner and Jim Beardy
  • Giving Voice to All Traditional Syilx wisdom and practice shape contemporary community planning in the Penticton Indian Band’s CCP by Marena Brinkhurst, Elaine Alec and Anona Kampe
  • Six Nations of the Grand River Territory and the Grand River Notification Agreement Towards Consensus in Land Use and Environmental Planning by Charles Hostovsky, PHD, MCIP and Paul General
  • Indigenizing Planning Education, Decolonizing Planning Practice First Steps by Leonie Sandercock, Jeffrey Cook, MCIP, RPP, Leona Sparrow and Larissa Grant

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Printemps 2013 - vol. 53, no.1

Thinking Forward

Featured Articles
  • The Stakeholder Tier System A tool to assist management of public engagement processes for large
    infrastructure projects
    by Donovan Toews, MCIP
  • Ethics in Professional Planning Practice Four Sources of Ethical Obligations by Ian Wight, PHD, MCIP
  • Planning Sustainable Communities Europe’s New Model for Green Living in Stockholm by Sasha Tsenkova, PHD, MCIP and Tigran Haas, PHD, CNU, APA
  • Shifting Gears: The Emergence of Cycle Tracks in the Canadian Urban Landscape by Brian Patterson, MCIP, RPP and Hailey Steiger
  • Innovation by Collaboration on Toronto's Waterfront by Lisa A. Prime, RPP, MCIP and Anna Palamarchuk, RPP, MCIP

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Hiver 2012 - vol. 52, no.4

Connecting Smart Communities

Featured Articles
  • The Online Public Engagement "Ecosystem" What's Out There and What to Use by Robyn Spencer
  • Placespeak 21st Century Innovation in Public Participation by Maureen Mendoza
  • From Climate Change Plans to By-Laws, It's Time to Act The sea level rise (SLR) zone adaptation by-law - New coastal development regulation: SLR by-law by Sebastien Doiron, MCIP, RPP
  • Thund Bay's Spirit Garden Incorporating Cultural Values into Project Design by Katherine Dugmore, MCIP, RPP
  • Planning Healthy Suburbs by Jill L. Grant, FCIP, LPP, Heidi Craswell, BSC, MPLAN, and Leah Perrin, BA, MPLAN
  • How the War of 1812 Defined Ontario by Janis Fedorowick, MCIP, CSLA, RPP

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Automne 2012 - vol. 52, no.3

Planning with Uncertainty

Featured Articles
  • What Ontario's Greenbelt and Places to Grow Legislation Mens for Commuting in the GGH by Bruce Newbold and Darren Scott
  • Green Sprawl by Laura Taylor and Kirsten Valentine Cadieux
  • Revisiting Food Desets in the Canadian Prairie: A case study from Saskatoon, Saskatchewan by Robert J. Patrick PDF, MCIP and Deborah Cheesebrough
  • Infill in Mature Naighbourhoods: New Directions in Ottawa by Alain Miguelez
  • A Tale of Two Suburbs: The physicial plan and its implications for active transportation by Jeffrey Ward, MCIP, RPP
  • Walkability and Economic Development: How Pedestrian and Transit-Oriented Environments Attract Creative jobs in Hamilton by Paul Shaker, MCIP, RPP

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Été 2012 - vol. 52, no. 2

Regulating for Place-making

Featured Articles
  • Maufacturing Genius Loci? Design Codes and the Challege of Place-Making by Justin Webber, BA, MA, Dip Urb Des
  • Planning vs. Human Rights? The Case of Minimum Separation Distances by Lilith Finkler, PHD
  • Say Goodbye to Small Retail: Should We Care? by Don Alexander and Pamela Shaw
  • Airport Integrated Land Use Planning: Lessons from Leduc Alberta by Ken Woitt and Sam Sugita, BSc, MCRP
  • Parklets - Planningwith Place-Making in Mind Rationale and Strategy for Municipal Planners by Chris Larson, BSc, MCP (candidate) and John Guenther, MA, PhD, MCIP

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Printemps 2012 – vol. 52, no. 1

Regional Planning Today / Tools for Change

Featured Articles
  • Canada Green Building Council Sustainable Community Toolkit A Best Practice Guide to Applying Sustainable Principles in Your Municipality by Gregry Bender, MCIP, RPP
  • Creatng a Regional Growth Strategy A Recipe for Successful Collaborative Planning by Anthony Kittel
  • Calgary's Wetland Conservation Plan Lessons Learned and Unintended Consequences by Steven Snell and Chris Manderson
  • Public Participation and Climate Change Adaptation A personal Perspective of my Experiences in the Hamlet of Arviat, Nunavut by Michael Sullivan, MCIP, RPP
  • Contemplating the Future of Toronto's Transit City by Christina Sgro, MES (Pl) and Jaclyn Brillinger, MES(Pl)
  • A Definition of 'Affordable Housing' for Edmonton by Trent Portigal, MCIP, RPP

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Hiver 2011 — vol. 51, no. 4

Ethics and Equity in Uncertain Times

Featured Articles
  • Urban Amnesia:The Fate of Habitat ’76 by Don Alexander, BA, MA, PHD, MCIP
  • Planning in the Absence of Traditional Growth: The Story of Saint John, New Brunswick by Liora Freedman, MCIP, RPP and Cyndi Rottenberg-Walker, MScPI, MCIP, RPP
  • Planning for the Long Term: Regulating for Resilience by Jill L. Grant, FCIP, RPP
  • From the High Water Mark to the Back of the Fish Flakes: The Purposeful Evolution of Cities by Beth Sanders, MCIP, RPP
  • From Codified Ethics to Co-Created Ethos: Staking Common Ground in Uncertain Timesby Ian Wight
  • Reducing Ecological Footprint through Public Artby Ugo Lachapelle
  • What Do We Know About the Provision of Parks in Our Cities? A Methodology for the Classification of Urban Parks Using GIS and Remotely Sensed Data by Philippe Apparicio, Anne-MarieSéguin, Jonathan Denis-Jacob and Thi-Thanh-Hiên Pham

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Automne 2011 – vol. 51, no. 3

Planning for Resilient Communities

Featured Articles
  • Planning For Equity in Disaster Recovery: Lessons from the Christchurch Earthquakes by John Lindsay
  • Rural Ontario: The Stories Behind the Statistics by Wayne J. Caldwell, PhD, MCIP, RPP, Jennifer Ball, PhD, MCIP, RPP, and Katie Temple, MSC (Plan)
  • The North Saanich Whole Community Agricultural Strategy by Rob Buchan, MA, FCIP
  • Local Food Hubs: A New Strategy in the Field of Food System Planning by Janine de la Salle
  • Sustainability and the Greenbelt by Robert B. Gibson, BA, MA, PhD
  • Development of a Joint Glossary of Terms for Land Use Planners and Public Health Professionals by Kim Bergeron, PhD Candidate and Lucie Lévesque, PhD
  • Creative, Communicative, and Progressive: Developing the Collingwood Urban Design Manual by Robert Voigt, RPP, MCIP

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Été 2011 – vol. 51, no. 2

From “No Place” to Great Places: Reinventing Planning

Featured Articles
  • Urban Sprawl—The Price is Wrong by Pamela Blais, PHD, MCIP, RPP
  • How the Creative Economy is Transforming Downtown Brantford by Mark Gladysz, MCIP
  • City Planning as Ideology and Practice by Dr. Earl A. Levin
  • Planning by Design in Community—Making Great Places? By Ian Wight, PHD, MCIP
  • The Perfect Storm—Lessons from the Vancouver Olympic Village by Alex Taylor, MCIP and Christine Callihoo, MCIP
  • Bolstering the Role and Influence of Watershed Report Cards in Planning by Barbara Veale, PHD, MCIP, RPP
  • Research Note: A History of Canada’s Utopian Communities—A Legacy of Jeanne Wolfe, CM, FCIP by Beth Moore Milroy, PHD, FCIP and Brian Osborne

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Printemps 2011 – vol. 51, no. 1

UBC's Parking Evolution / New Urbanism vs. Traditional / Retail Planning

Featured Articles
  • A Virtuous Circle: How Transportation Demand Management Transformed UBC, Vancouver by Andrew E. Jackson
  • Comparing Canadian New Urbanist and Conventional Suburban Neighbourhoods by Ray Tomalty, Murtaza Haider, PhD and Susan Fisher
  • Pathways to Climate Change Resilience—Guiding the Adaptation of Forest-Based Communities in Canada by Cindy Pearce and Christine Callihoo, MCIP
  • Commercial/Retail Planning Framework for Canadian Municipalitiesby Carol Mak, MCIP
  • Valuing Planning—An Ethic/Ethos in the Making? by Ian Wight, PhD, MCIP
  • Are We Graduating Too Many Planners? by Grant Moore
  • Book Review: The Geography of Aging: Preparing Communities for the Surge in Seniors by Gerald Hodge/Reviewed by Pamela Shaw, PhD, MCIP

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Hiver 2010 - Vol. 50, No. 4

Climate Change + Communities: A Call to Action

Featured Articles
  • Getting To Minus 80: Urban Form Strategies for Measurably Achieving Greenhouse Gas Emission Reduction Targets by Elisa Campbell and Jackie Teed
  • Planning the Energy Resilient Community by Brent Gilmour, Jessica Webster and Taylor Zeeg
  • Lessons Learned from Canadian Municipal Climate Change Adaptation Case Studies by Gregory R. A. Richardson and Donald S. Lemmen
  • Toronto’s Climate Change Initiatives: Overview, the Toronto Green Standard and The Green Roof Bylaw by Joe D’Abramo and Lawson Oates
  • Scenario Planning As a Tool to Ensure Robust Adaptation: Experiences from Whitehorse, Yukon by Ryan Hennessey
  • Low Carbon Community Development in the Caribbean by Darwin Horning, Michel Frojmovic and Marcelle Linton
  • Climate Change and a Small Mountain Town: Visualizing a Rural Community’s Climate Impacts, Adaptations and Mitigation: City Of Kimberley, KCAP and CALP by Ellen Pond, Olaf Schroth, Sara Muir-Owen, Troy Pollock and Ingrid Liepa
  • Book Review - Agricultural Urbanism: Handbook for Building Sustainable Food & Agriculture Systems in 21st Century Cities by Meredith Seeton

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Automne 2010 - Vol. 50, No. 3

Nifty at Fifty: A new look for Plan Canada

Featured Articles
  • Reviving a Professional Journal: The First Issue of Plan Canada by David Gordon
  • Six Years in the Life of Plan Canada by Gerald Hodge
  • Fads, Fancies... and Form-Based Codes by Jill Grant
  • Retrospective: CIP National Planning Awards by David Gordon
  • Retrospective: Plan Canada Feature Article Awards by Ian Skelton
  • Part of the Way it Was; Canadian Planning and Planners in 1967 by Gerald Hodge
  • CIP and Affiliates by the Numbers: The Growth of Professional Planning Institutions in Canada Since 1967 by Ian Skelton
  • Planning in the Public Eye by Matti Siemiatycki
  • Integrated, Equitable, and Transformative: A Hopeful Future for Planning by Leela Viswanathan
  • La Position Ambrigue des Urbanistes : Entre Ouverture et Prise de Position by Sophie LeBlanc Van Neste
  • Renaissance Thinkers for a Fragmented World by Pierre Filion
  • Three Books on Planning by Joe Berridge

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Été 2010 - Vol. 50, No. 2

Planners' Perspectives on Art and Culture

Featured Articles
  • How Cities Renew by Richard Florida
  • Rediscovering the Wealth of Places: Cultural Mapping and Cultural Planning in Canadian Municipalities by Greg Baeker
  • Cultural Industries and Urban Regeneration in Hoxton/Shoreditch, London by Jonathan Denis-Jacob
  • The Emergence of a Creative Enterprise District – Toronto’s Liberty Village by Reid Henry
  • Can We Have a “Creative City” Without Forgetting Social Cohesion? Some Avenues of Reflection by Juan-Luis Klein and Diane-Gabrielle Tremblay
  • Artist Live/Work Space: Best Practices and Potential Models by Michelle Geneau, Karin Kronstal, Gill McGinnis and Brendan Sutton
  • Planning for the Creative Economy: The Live Music Scene in Halifax by Jill L Grant, Jeffry Haggett, and Jesse Morton
  • Culture, the Arts and Newfoundland Place-Making by Dennis Knight
  • Planners Work in Mysterious Ways...Literary Tourism and the Imagination by Rae Bridgman
  • Book Review – A Reader in Canadian Planning: Linking Theory and Practice, Edited by Jill Grant Reviewed by Pamela Shaw
  • The Learning Curve: Can You Plan for Creativity? by Daniella Fergusson

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Printemps 2010 - Vol. 50, No. 1

Planning for the Homeless

Featured Articles
  • A Word from the President by Marni Cappe
  • From the Senior Editor by Richard Milgrom
  • CIP News
  • Improving Canada’s Record on Housing and Homelessness by Michael Shapcott
  • Where the Other Half Lives: A Call for Emergency Homeless Shelter Standards by Suzanne Gessler
  • Hidden Homeless in Brandon, Manitoba: Seeking Solutions through Community Partnerships by Vince Barletta
  • Human Dignity on Main Street: Public Toilets in Canada by Rae Bridgman
  • American Pathways to Curbing Homelessness in Canada by Jino Distasio
  • Canada’s Immigration Policy: A More Focused Approach Needed by Grant E. Moore
  • Urban Change on the Horizon? Smart Growth in a Recessionary Context by Pierre Filion
  • The Developer as a Partner in Change: Defying Popular Myths by Larry Diamond
  • The Learning Curve: Housing Affordability and Homelessness in Vancouver by Daniella Fergusson

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Hiver 2009 - Vol. 49, No. 4

Building A Better World: Making a Difference

Featured Articles
  • “Rural” Planning in an Urbanizing Region by Kyra McCardle
  • Tomorrow’s Transportation Demographics: Youth and Young Adults by Ren Thomas
  • Transforming Industrial and Commercial Landscapes by Greening the Business Bottom Line Partners in Project Green: A Pearson Eco-Business Zone by Chandra Sharma
  • Transportation Reframed: Creating the case for Complete Streets Policies by Stephen Hill and Steve Disher
  • New Strategies for Consultation: The Jasper Experience by Pamela Sweet and Andrew Sacret
  • Healthy Cities/Communities:An enduring approach to linking urban planning and citizen health by Victoria Barr and Jodi Much
  • The Evolving Nature of Agricultural Production: Implications for Planners by Wayne Caldwell
  • “The Ideal Urban Form” by Chris Turner
  • L'acquisition du savoir: Aller de l'avant par Daniella Fergusson

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Automne 2009 - Vol. 49, No. 3

Planning without a net: The International Experience

Featured Articles
  • Young Professional Planners: Making a Difference, One Person at a Time, by Michel Frojmovic
  • CIP in China, by David Palubeski
  • A Question of Perspectives, by Hok-Lin Leung
  • Changing Perceptions: A Second Look at Costa Rican Squatters, by Enrique Peris
  • Reflections on Planning: Niagara County, NewYork & Niagara Region, Ontario, by Jenn Burnett,Wayne Caldwell, John Farley,Amy Fisk, Eric Gilbert, Kate Hall, Jen Kirchner, Jess Klug,Mitch Morawetz, Jamal Nasir, and Ying Zhang
  • Call Centres as a Strategy for Downtown Revitalization in Sudbury, Ontario, by Laura Schatz and Laura C. Johnson
  • From “Experiment” to Community Engagement: The Institute of Urban Studies Celebrates 40 Years of Research and Action, by Dr. Jino Distasio, Michael Dudley and Brodie Lister

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Été 2009 - Vol. 49, No. 2

Food Security

Featured Articles
  • Food System Planning: Moving Up the Planner’s Ladders, by Jerome L. Kaufman
  • Canadian Approaches to the Preservation of Farmland, by Wayne J. Caldwell and Claire Dodds-Weir
  • Planning for Sustainable Livestock and Agricultural Development in Manitoba, by Sheri Grift
  • Farmland Protection and Sustainable Urban Communities in Ontario, by John Turvey and Barbara Konyi
  • Securing British Columbia’s Agricultural Land through Effective Growth Management: The Fourth Decade of
  • Agricultural Land Reserve, by Gary Hall
  • Farm Subdivisions: Preserving Farmland and/or Exurban Amenity Space? by Eric Gallant and Gerda R. Werkele
  • Planning for Urban Agriculture, by Janet Oswald
  • Toronto’s Green Roof Policy and Rooftop Food Production, by Penny Kaill-Vinish
  • Food Security on Campus, by Christine LoScerbo and Pamela Shaw
  • “Alternative” Food Outlets and Their Relevance to Policy and Planning Decisions, by Jessica Wegener
  • A Greener Revolution: An Argument for Vertical Farming, by Gordon Graff
  • Monitoring Food Security in Nuntsiavut, Labrador, by David C. Natcher, Larry Felt, Andrea Procter, and the Nunatsiavut Government
  • Urban Planning for Food Security: Reinventing City and Countryside with Jane Jacobs, by Tom Agnotti
  • Book Review – The Long Emergency: Surviving the Converging Catastrophes of the Twenty-First Century by James Howard Kunstler, Reviewed by Ken O’Brien
  • The Learning Curve: Food For Thought, by Adam Cooper

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Printemps 2009 - Vol. 49, No. 1

Green Infrastructure

Featured Articles
  • From Grey to Green: The Transformation of Canada’s Infrastructure, by Karen Wilkie and Cathy Ascroft
  • Green Parking Lots: Paving the Way to a Greener Future, by Myron Belej
  • Trash Talk of a Different Kind – What Canada Can Learn From the Swedes, by Glenn Miller
  • Landscape Synergy: An Exchange of Culture, Ideas and Opportunities – CSLA Cuba 2007 Congress, by Serge Poitras, in collaboration with Claude Potvin
  • Brentwood Station Area Redevelopment Plan – City of Calgary: A Step Towards Sustainability, by Ryan Hall
  • Green with Incentives: Supporting Sustainable Infrastructure and Development, by Carla Stewart
  • Saving the Night: Efforts to Reduce Nighttime Light Pollution, by Spencer Croil
  • Refereed Article: Green Infrastructure Networks as Urban Connective Tissue, by Chris Baker, Richard Mahé, Kaeley Wiseman, and David van Vliet
  • Raising Awareness of Climate Change Adaptation in Planning, by Ian Picketts, John Curry, and Eric Rapaport
  • Condo-minimizing connectivity: The Effect of Townhouse Developments on Suburban Travel, by Blake Laven and Jill L. Grant
  • The Learning Curve – Green Infrastructure: Opportunities to Act, by Adam Cooper

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Hiver 2008 - Vol. 48. No 4

The Importance of Planning

Featured Articles
  • Discussing the Northern Ontario Growth Plan, by Heather M. Hall
  • Planning for Source Water Protection by Robert Patrick
  • New Urban Planning Means Being “Proactive”: Learning Points from the Field of Strategic Environmental
  • Assessment by Bram Noble and Jill A.E. Harriman
  • Urban and Regional Planning in Atlantic Canada’s Amalgamated Municipalities by John Heseltine
  • The Print Media and Planning by R. Christopher Edey
  • Social Capital – A Planner’s Primer by Kevin Hanna and Ann Dale
  • Ending the Homelessness Phenomenon in Toronto: Thoughts for Planning by Olusola Olufemi
  • Historic Villages: Saving in Action by Sheng Ying
  • The Legacy of Colonel Jack Allston, FCIP by Ken O’Brien
  • The Learning Curve CIP’s National Annual Conference:AKA the Handover by Adam Cooper

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Automne 2008 - Vol. 48. No 3

Planning for Changing Demographics

Featured Articles
  • The Chill Factor: Land Use Conflicts and Resistance to Growth in the Toronto Region, by Gerda R. Wekerle
  • Making Small Towns Age-friendly: What Seniors Say Needs Attention in the Built Environment, by Bonnie Hallman, Verena Menec, Janice Keefe and Elaine Gallagher
  • Demographics and Planning Perspectives on Aging in Canada, by Gerald Hodge
  • "1 in 10" Means On the Ground: The City of Langford Affordable Housing Strategy, by Emilie K. Adin and Rob Buchan
  • Planning for the Seniors Surge - One municipality's response. City of Richmond's Older Adults Service
  • Plan: Acitve and Healthy Living in Richmond 2008-2012, by Lucy Tompkins
  • The Empty Space Machine: How Slow Growth Exacerbates the Ills of Sprawl, by Christopher Leo
  • Conserving a Sense of the Past: Built Heritage and Adaptive Reuse, by Jason Kovacs and Laura Schatz
  • Debunking Myths about Demand of Typical Suburban Development, by Josh van Loon
  • Refereed Article: Cost of Community Services Study as a Planning Tool: A Canadian Pilot Study in Red Deer County, Alberta, by Michael Quinn and Stephanie Sanders
  • The Learning Curve: The Wheels of Change, by Adam Cooper

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Été 2008 - Vol. 48. No 2

Celebrating Best Practices of Indigenous Planning

Featured Articles
  • Building on Traditions of the Past: The Rise and Resurgence of First Nations CCP, by Jeffrey Cook
  • Comprehensive Community Planning in the Atlantic Region: Where We Go From Here, by Tracey L. Wade
  • The Need to Do More: Advancing Planning with First Nation Communities, by Laura Mannell and Heather Ternoway
  • "Hith Alis Lax Gwa-yas-dums" : Moving from Crisis to Hope at Gwa-yas-dums Village, Gilford Island, BC, by William Trousdale, Jeffrey Cook and Chief Bob Chamberlin
  • First Nations Comprehensive Community Planning - A Good Investment for Canada, by Colin Harivel and Colette Anderson
  • Why Hire a Planner? by Wes Shennan
  • Intergovernmental Community Planning: The Sliammon First Nation and City of Pwell River Experience, by Stephen Gallagher
  • First Nations Urban Reserves in Saskatoon: Partnerships for Positive Development, by Lorne Sully, Livia Kellett, Joseph Garcea and Ryan Walker
  • The Path Forward: First Nations Land Use Planning as a Unifying Community Process, by Rahul Ray and David Harper
  • Ts'enwecw Te TmiCW - Our Sacred Land, by Catherine Berris, Charlene Higgins and Chief Mike Retasket
    Evolution of Corporate Models in First Nation Communities,
    by John Curry and Han Donker
  • The Learning Curve: Recognizing Urban Aboriginal Populations in Canadian Cities, by Amie Baker

Celebrating Best Practices of Indigenous Planning - additional online articles

  • The Changing Legal Landscape for Aboriginal Land Use Planning in Canada, by Richard Krehbiel
  • Accelerating to Action: An Implementation Toolkit for Community Plans, by Dan Yarymowich
  • Young Aboriginal Voices in Planning - A First Nations Planner Speaks About Building Capacity in Comprehensive Community Planning, by Meagan Wilson
  • Governance and Treaty Making - The Tticho Land Use Plan, by Eddie Erasmus, Andrea Nokleby and Margaret Kralt
  • The United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples - As a Global Strategic Plan, by Patrick Kelly
  • The First Nations Comprehensive Community Plan Process: Potential Impediments to Success, by Christine Callihoo
  • Defining Aboriginal Populations: The Forecasting and Planning Challenge, by Colette Isaac and David J. Stinson
  • Nunavut Land Claims Agreement Section 11.4.1(a): A New Focus for Planning in the Territory, by Vicki Mark

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Printemps 2008 - Vol. 48. No 1

Planning for Climate Change

Featured Articles
  • The Basics of Climate Change, by Gerri King
  • Adapting to Climate Change in Coastal Areas: Six Steps Local Land Use Planners Can Take, by Amber Nicol
  • Climate Change: Canadian Cities are doing their share, by the Intergovernmental Committee on Urban and Regional Research (ICURR)
  • CIP Forays into Climate Change, by Beate Bowron and Gary Davidson
  • Preparing for Climate Change Impacts in local, regional and state governments, by Elizabeth Willmott
  • Urban Heat Islands: A Climate Change Adaptation Strategy for Montreal, by Chee F. Chan, Julia Lebedeva, José Otero and Gregory Richardson
  • Renewable Energy:  Exploring Options for Farmers, Rural Landowners, and Rural Communities, by Sarah-Patricia Breen
  • Local Climate Change Visioning: A New Process for Community Planning and Outreach Using Visualization Tools, by Stephen RJ Sheppard
  • Assessing Vulnerability to Climate Change and Flooding in the City of London, Upper Thames River Basin, Ontario, by Linda Mortsch and Andrea J. Hebb
  • Planning, Politics and Climate Change: Research Results, by Devin Causley
  • COMMUNITY ENERGY PLANNING: Critical Actions for Success, by Ron Macdonald and Siobhan Murphy
  • Planned Creativity - My First Planning Assignment, by Rob Roycroft
  • The Learning Curve - Food for thought…, by Amie Baker
  • Book Review: The Amenity Migrants: Seeking and Sustaining Mountains and their Cultures, Reviewed by Dan Wallace

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Hiver 2007 - Vol. 47. No 4

Planning for Major Change

Featured Articles
  • Obituary - R. Norman Giffen, FCIP
  • All eyes are on Ontario as it implements the Growth Plan for the greater Golden Horseshoe
  • Bracing for the Demographic Tsunami: How will Seniors Fare in an Aging Society?
  • Calgary: Maintaining Design Integrity in Rapid Growth
  • Vancouver's Evolving Visions: The Next Era of Achievement
  • Québec 2008: Taking back the shores of the St. Lawrence River
  • Putting design back into city planning: a three-step recovery program
  • The Learning Curve: Moving the Profession into a Greener or More Environmentally Responsible Existence / L'acquisition du savoir : Amener la profession vers une existence plus verte et plus respectueuse de l'environnement
  • Book review: Multiple Victories

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Automne 2007 - Vol. 47. No 3

The challenge of the 21st century - planning the super-region

Featured Articles
  • Regional Sustainability Strategies: A Comparison of Eight Canadian Approaches
  • From Suburbanization to Super-regions: The Political Challenge Facing Canadian Metropolitan Areas and Their Central Cities
  • Will the Toronto city-region ever be self-governing?
  • Implementing a New Vision for Growth in Canada's Largest City region
  • Suburbia in the City-Region
  • Adapting to a New Planning Landscape in Waterloo Region
  • Canada in the Urban World
  • Planning on Fast-Forward: Opportunities from Unprecedented growth in Wood Buffalo
  • Super Regions - the Regional Planning Challenge of the 21st Century
  • The Learning Curve - Flexibility in Planning / L'acquisition du savoir - Flexibilité et urbanisme

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Été 2007 - Vol. 47. No 2

Planning for Uneven Growth

Featured Articles
  • Allston Obituary
  • Living with population growth and decline
  • Planning in a Declining Region
  • Planning Challenges in Thunder Bay: optimism amongst demographic and economic shifts
  • Multi-Tasking Planners
  • Development in Peripheral Canada: Oxymoron or Reasonable Policy?
  • Refereed Paper - Planning Practice and the Shrinking City: Reversing the Land Use Allocation Model
  • The Smart Growth Gap
  • Immigrants' Needs and Public Service Provisions in Peel Region
  • The Learning Curve: Changing it Up / L'Acquisitions du Savoir : Le changement à valeur ajoutée
  • Planned Creativity / Créativité planifiée

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Printemps 2007 - Vol. 47. No 1

Directions Forward: Ideas for uncertain times

Featured Articles
  • Obituary: Theresa Baxter, MCIP, ACP
  • Cycling in Canada and the United States: Why Canadians are so far ahead
  • Canada after the Peak: Evaluating Canadian cities' readiness for the new energy crisis
  • Prime Impacts: Putting Urban Design to Work for Changing Heritage Environments
  • Refereed Paper: Lost in Translation: A brief comparison of Canadian land use planning terminology
  • Refereed Paper: Design Review: Lessons for Toronto
  • Successful downtowns: some experiences from Vancouver Island
  • The 2006 Halifax Regional Plan: Process and Overview
  • Privatizing Community: The Growth of Private REsident Associations
  • Refereed Paper: Using Circles to Build Communication in Planning
  • Building Community-Based Planning Capacity in Trinidad and Tobago
  • Planning in Unplanned Communities in Mexico City
  • The Learning Curve - L'acquisition du savoir

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Été Vol. 45 no. 2

Plan Canada Été 2005 Vol. 45 no. 2

  • Olympic Balance: What Vancouver-Whistler Can Learn from Beijing by David Luchuk, Xu Qing and Wu Xiaojing
  • Taking the Measure of the Games: Lessons from the Field by Charles Heying, Matthew J. Burbank and Greg Andranovich
  • EXPO’98: From Idea to Legacy by Carlos Balsas
  • The 2010 Winter Olympics: The Role of Planners in the Economic Realm by Eric Vance
  • Legacy of Grandeur: the 1976 Olympic Games by Jeanne M.Wolfe
  • A Framework for Measuring Olympic Sustainability by Julia MacKenzie
  • 2005 World Expo in Aichi, Japan: An Environmental Challenge by Sylvie Grenier
  • Urbanité Exchange Choosing the Site for Expo 67 by Guy Legault
  • Urban Planning and Ethnic Diversity: Toronto and Tel Aviv by Oren Yiftachel and Itzhak (Kiki) Aharonovitz
  • Formation of an Ethnic Enclave: Process and Motivations, by Sandeep Kumar and Bonica Leung
  • Great Canadian Transit Abroad:A Personal Perspective, by Richard von Fuchs
  • Rethinking the Public Interest as a Planning Concept, by Jill Grant

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Spring 2005 Vol. 45 No.1

Spring 2005 Vol. 45 No.1

  • Refereed Paper - Planning for Rural Amenity Migration by Raymond Chipeniuk
  • Canada’s Hidden National Crisis by Norman Pearson
  • Stratford Leads the Way to a New Model for Suburban Development by Fanis Grammenos
  • A Simple Model of Urban Density by Martin Laplante
  • Competing for Public Space: How Maritime Cities Have Accommodated the Sidewalk Café by Kim Livingston
  • What Planners Need to Prepare for Climate Change: Responses to a Questionnaire by Norval Collins
  • The National Planning Framework for Scotland:
  • Lessons for Canada in Strategic Planning by Tremayne Stanton-Kennedy
  • New Visions for Scotland’s Cities by Deborah Peel and Greg Lloyd
  • Land Use Planning in China: The Emergence of a Western Model by Howard M. Epstein
  • Calgary’s Midtown: Actively Shaping a 100-Year Vision by Michael von Hausen, Larry Pollock and Thom Mahler
  • Book Review: American Planning Association (APA) Policy Guide on Homelessness

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