Content
January 2022, Volume 88, Issue 1
- 30-43 The Width and Value of Residential Streets
by Adam Millard-Ball - 44-54 Transit-Induced Gentrification or Vice Versa?
by Jyothi Chava & John L. Renne - 55-66 Shifts Toward the Extremes
by Rolf Pendall & Lydia Lo & Jake Wegmann - 67-82 Housing Affordability Crisis and Inequities of Land Use Change
by Ajay Garde & Qi Song - 83-96 How Does an Expansion of Mandatory Inclusionary Housing Affect Housing Supply?
by Fei Li & Zhan Guo - 97-112 Community-Centered Climate Planning
by Katherine Lieberknecht - 113-126 Planning for Emerging Infectious Disease Pandemics
by James Nguyen H. Spencer & David Marasco & Michelle Eichinger - 127-134 Planning for Dissent
by Atul Pokharel & Dan Milz & Curt D. Gervich - 135-135 Notes From the Review Editor
by Adam Millard-Ball - 136-137 For the War Yet to Come: Planning Beirut’s Frontiers
by Ryan Thomas Devlin - 137-138 Dhaka’s Changing Landscape: Prospects for Economic Development, Social Change, and Shared Prosperity
by Saleh Ahmed - 138-139 The Routledge Handbook of Planning Megacities in the Global South
by Enrique Silva - 140-141 Data Action: Using Data for Public Good
by Clio Andris - 141-142 The Misunderstood History of Gentrification: People, Planning, Preservation, and Urban Renewal, 1915–2020
by David P. Varady - 143-144 Zoning: A Guide for 21st-Century Planning
by Thomas Skuzinski - 144-145 The Streets of Europe: The Sights, Sounds & Smells That Shaped Great Cities
by Michael B. Teitz - 145-146 Public Transportation Systems: Principles of System Design, Operations Planning and Real-Time Control
by Thomas C. Cornillie
October 2021, Volume 87, Issue 4
- 451-454 Peer Review in a Generalist Journal
by Ann Forsyth - 455-469 Riders Who Avoided Public Transit During COVID-19
by Matthew Palm & Jeff Allen & Bochu Liu & Yixue Zhang & Michael Widener & Steven Farber - 470-483 Redrawing the Planners’ Circle
by Louis A. Merlin & Denis Teoman & Marco Viola & Hailey Vaughn & Ralph Buehler - 484-496 Jobs–Housing Balance Re-Re-Visited
by Evelyn Blumenberg & Hannah King - 497-511 Tools of the Trade?
by Fariba Siddiq & Brian D. Taylor - 512-526 Estimating Pedestrian Flows on Street Networks
by Andres Sevtsuk - 527-541 Evaluating Geodesign for Community-Based Tribal Planning
by Jonathan Davis & K. David Pijawka & Elizabeth Wentz & Michelle Hale & David A. King - 542-555 “Ambiguous, Confusing, and Not Delivering Enough Housing”
by Katrina Raynor & Matthew Palm & Georgia Warren-Myers - 556-569 Planning as Bargaining
by Adam Millard-Ball - 570-584 Transferring Vacant Lots to Private Ownership Improves Care and Empowers Residents
by Alessandro Rigolon & Debolina Banerjee & Paul Gobster & Sara Hadavi & William Stewart - 585-586 Notes From the Incoming Review Editor
by Adam Millard-Ball - 587-588 The Great American Housing Bubble: What Went Wrong and How We Can Protect Ourselves in the Future
by Dennis E. Gale - 588-590 Understanding Affordability: The Economics of Housing Markets
by Helen X. H. Bao - 590-591 Making Our Neighborhoods, Making Our Selves
by Emily Talen - 592-593 Designing the Global City: Design Excellence, Competitions and the Remaking of Central Sydney
by Tridib Banerjee - 593-594 Uneven Innovation: The Work of Smart Cities
by Joan Fitzgerald - 595-595 Correction
by The Editors
July 2021, Volume 87, Issue 3
- 309-310 What Is a Contribution in Planning Research?
by Ann Forsyth - 311-325 The Right to (Re)Shape the City
by Samantha Biglieri - 326-340 Feeling Like an “Odd Duck”
by Ivis García & April Jackson & Andrew J. Greenlee & Anaid Yerena & Benjamin Chrisinger & C. Aujean Lee - 341-353 Why Latino Vendor Markets Matter
by Edna Ledesma & Cecilia Giusti - 354-369 Planning for Regional Food Equity
by Yeeli Mui & Maryam Khojasteh & Alexandra Judelsohn & Avery Sirwatka & Sylvia Kelly & Patrick Gooch & Samina Raja - 370-382 Mandated Planning for Climate Change
by William Butler & Tisha Holmes & Zechariah Lange - 383-395 Upzoning and Single-Family Housing Prices
by Daniel Kuhlmann - 396-408 Minus Minimums
by Daniel Baldwin Hess & Jeffrey Rehler - 409-423 Toward Accessibility-Based Planning
by Xiang Yan - 424-432 Right Sizing Flint’s Infrastructure in the Wake of the Flint Water Crisis Would Constitute an Additional Environmental Injustice
by Richard C. Sadler & Debra Furr-Holden & Ella Greene-Moton & Brian Larkin & Moses Timlin & Dayne Walling & Thomas Wyatt - 433-433 Commentaries on Flint, Right Sizing, and Justice
by Ann Forsyth - 433-434 Right Sizing Is Not What You Think It Is
by Victoria Morckel - 434-436 Better Planning Practice Lies in a Community-Based, Analysis-Informed Process
by Margaret Dewar - 436-437 Toward a Transformative Planning Infrastructure
by Andrew J. Greenlee - 437-438 Rational and Advocacy Planning in Flint Will Have to Come to Terms to Forestall Future Crises
by Brent D. Ryan - 438-440 Beyond Crises
by Renia Ehrenfeucht & Marla Nelson - 440-441 Right Sizing for Efficiency and Equity but Achieving Neither
by Ivonne Audirac & Jason Hackworth - 442-443 Notes From the Review Editor
by Gerard Francisco Sandoval - 444-445 Advancing Equity Planning Now
by Jacob Wagner - 445-446 Black Lives and Spatial Matters: Policing Blackness and Practicing Freedom in Suburban St. Louis
by M. Scott Ball - 446-447 The Voucher Promise: “Section 8” and the Fate of an American Neighborhood
by Dan Immergluck - 448-449 Sustainable Approaches to Urban Transport
by Meiqing Li - 449-450 Designing the Megaregion: Meeting Urban Challenges at a New Scale
by Laura Tate
April 2021, Volume 87, Issue 2
- 155-158 Theories and Planning Theories
by Ann Forsyth - 159-166 Social Distancing and Cultural Bias
by Benjamin Davy - 167-180 Exclusionary Zoning
by Andrew H. Whittemore - 181-196 Are We Planning for Equity?
by Carolyn G. Loh & Rose Kim - 197-210 Toward Mobility Justice
by Ariel H. Bierbaum & Alex Karner & Jesus M. Barajas - 211-227 Plans Versus Political Priorities
by Albert Tonghoon Han & Lucie Laurian & Jim Dewald - 228-238 Land Preservation Under the Transfer of Development Rights Program
by Li Fang - 239-253 Committed and “Won Over” Parents in Vancouver’s Dense Family-Oriented Urbanism
by Louis L. Thomas - 254-265 Early Lessons From Detroit’s Community Benefits Ordinance
by Lisa Berglund - 266-281 Including Preservation in Planning
by Eleonora Redaelli - 282-295 The Impact of Residential Densification on Perceptions of Public Space
by Jordi Honey-Rosés & Oscar Zapata - 296-297 Notes From the Review Editor
by Gerard Francisco Sandoval - 298-299 Manufacturing Decline: How Racism and the Conservative Movement Crush the American Rust Belt
by June Manning Thomas - 299-300 Cyclescapes of the Unequal City: Bicycle Infrastructure and Uneven Development
by Aaron Golub - 300-302 Better Buses, Better Cities: How to Plan, Run, and Win the Fight for Effective Transit
by Kaylyn Levine - 302-303 Right of Way: Race, Class, and the Silent Epidemic of Pedestrian Deaths in America
by Marcel E. Moran - 303-305 Planners in Politics: Do They Make a Difference?
by Wes Grooms - 305-306 Design With Nature Now
by Larissa Larsen - 307-308 Basic Quantitative Research Methods for Urban Planners
by Manish Shirgaokar
January 2021, Volume 87, Issue 1
- 1-2 International Content in the Journal of the American Planning Association
by Ann Forsyth - 3-10 Human Rights and the City: A View From Canada
by Sandeep Agrawal - 11-20 Analyzing Action/Plan Consistency
by Brian W. Ohm - 21-33 Planning and Development Challenges in Western Gateway Communities
by Philip Stoker & Danya Rumore & Lindsey Romaniello & Zacharia Levine - 34-44 Planning for Climate Change
by Sungyop Kim & Fengpeng Sun & Clara Irazábal - 45-61 “Can You Imagine What’s Happened in Durham?”
by Meagan M. Ehlenz - 62-72 Affordable Housing Without Public Subsidies
by Nathaniel Decker - 73-84 Does Local Ownership of Vacant Land Reduce Crime?
by Matthew Stern & T. William Lester - 85-100 Housing Single Women
by Julia Gabriele Harten - 101-107 Why Detailing Spatial Equity Matters in Water and Sanitation Evaluations
by Gabriella Y. Carolini & Prassanna Raman - 108-122 “Like a Fish Out of Water”
by Ivis García & April Jackson & Stacy A. Harwood & Andrew J. Greenlee & C. Aujean Lee & Benjamin Chrisinger - 123-137 Off the Grid…and Back Again?
by Geoff Boeing - 138-140 Notes From the Review Editor
by Gerardo Francisco Sandoval - 141-142 Levine, Grengs, and Merlin: From Mobility to Accessibility: Transforming Urban Transportation and Land-Use Planning
by Adam Millard-Ball - 142-143 Plotch: Last Subway: The Long Wait for the Next Train In New York City
by Floyd Lapp - 144-145 Redaelli: Connecting Arts and Place: Cultural Policy and American Cities
by Zachary M. Jones - 145-146 Wilson: The Heart of Community Engagement: Practitioner Stories From Across the Globe
by Kenneth M. Reardon - 146-148 Dandekar (Ed.): The Planner's Use of Information (3rd ed.)
by Barry Nocks - 148-149 Fitzgerald: Greenovation: Urban Leadership on Climate Change
by Peter B. Meyer - 149-150 Condon: Five Rules for Tomorrow’s Cities
by Doug Kelbaugh - 151-153 Correction
by The Editors
October 2020, Volume 86, Issue 4
- 389-392 Measuring Journal Success
by Ann Forsyth - 393-402 Cultural Insights for Planners: Understanding the Terms Hispanic, Latino, and Latinx
by Ivis García - 403-416 Using Exploratory Scenarios in Planning Practice
by Uri Avin & Robert Goodspeed - 417-430 Making Room for the River
by Siyu Yu & A. D. Brand & Philip Berke - 431-442 Do Industrial Preservation Policies Protect and Promote Urban Industrial Activity?
by Jenna Davis & Henry Renski - 443-457 Urban Heat Management and the Legacy of Redlining
by Bev Wilson - 458-469 What Is a Forecast for?
by Carole Turley Voulgaris - 470-480 Tracking Our Footsteps
by Li Fang & Reid Ewing - 481-494 Uncovering the Relationship Between Historic Districts and Same-Sex Households
by Kelly L. Kinahan & Matthew H. Ruther - 495-509 Does Density Aggravate the COVID-19 Pandemic?
by Shima Hamidi & Sadegh Sabouri & Reid Ewing - 510-510 JAPA Is More Than a Generalist Journal
by Martin Wachs - 510-511 Geographic Silos: A Cautionary Note
by Subhrajit Guhathakurta - 511-512 JAPA’s Generalist Planning Journal Book Review Section
by Gerardo F. Sandoval - 512-513 Mapping Communities: Responding to Commentaries on “In Defense of the Generalist Journal”
by Ann Forsyth - 514-515 Notes From the Review Editor
by Gerardo Francisco Sandoval - 516-517 Rothstein: The Color of Law: A Forgotten History of How Our Government Segregated America
by Tim Chapin - 517-518 Knapp: Constructing the Dynamo of Dixie: Race, Urban Planning, and Cosmopolitanism in Chattanooga, Tennessee
by Charles Connerly - 518-520 Anacker, Carswell, Kirby, & Tremblay (Eds.): Introduction to Housing (2nd ed.)
by Jane M. Rongerude - 520-522 Tighe & Ryberg-Webster: Legacy Cities: Continuity and Change Amid Decline and Revival
by Eric Seymour - 522-523 Sies, Gournay, & Freestone (Eds.): Iconic Planned Communities and the Challenge of Change
by Sonia Hirt - 523-524 Haselberger (Ed.): Encounters in Planning Thought: 16 Autobiographical Essays From Key Thinkers in Spatial Planning
by Lisa Ann Schweitzer - 525-526 Borden: Skateboarding and the City: A Complete History
by Jeremy Németh
July 2020, Volume 86, Issue 3
- 281-283 Speaking to the Future
by Ann Forsyth - 284-296 Immigrant Legal Status and Commute Mode Choice for Hispanics in the United States
by Ryan Allen & Jueyu Wang - 297-303 Racial Equity in Planning Organizations
by Miriam Solis - 304-310 Flint (MI) Missed an Opportunity to “Right Size” With Its Water Crisis
by Victoria Morckel - 311-323 Meeting Climate, Mobility, and Equity Goals in Transportation Planning Under Wide-Ranging Scenarios
by Robert Lempert & James Syme & George Mazur & Debra Knopman & Garett Ballard-Rosa & Kacey Lizon & Ifeanyi Edochie - 324-338 Evaluating Hong Kong’s Spatial Planning in New Towns From the Perspectives of Job Accessibility, Travel Mobility, and Work–Life Balance
by Sylvia Y. He & Sui Tao & Mee Kam Ng & Hendrik Tieben - 339-348 Greenspace After a Disaster: The Need to Close the Gap With Recovery for Greater Resilience
by Shaleen Miller - 349-363 Compact Development and BMI for Young Adults
by Shima Hamidi & Reid Ewing - 364-376 Using Big and Open Data to Analyze Transit-Oriented Development
by Jiangping Zhou & Yuling Yang & Chris Webster - 377-378 Notes From the Review Editor
by Gerardo Francisco Sandoval - 379-380 Talen: Neighborhood
by Sanjeev Vidyarthi - 380-381 Manturuk, Lindblad, and Quercia: A Place Called Home: The Social Dimensions of Homeownership
by Deirdre Pfeiffer - 382-383 Kelbaugh: The Urban Fix: Resilient Cities in the War Against Climate Change, Heat Islands and Overpopulation
by Patrick M. Condon - 383-384 Albro: Vacant to Vibrant: Creating Successful Green Infrastructure Networks
by Steven M. Richter - 384-385 Prytherch: Law, Engineering, and the American Right-of-Way: Imagining a More Just Street
by Dave Amos - 386-387 Mallach: The Divided City: Poverty and Prosperity in Urban America
by John Parcell - 387-388 Florida: The New Urban Crisis: How Our Cities Are Increasing Inequality, Deepening Segregation, and Failing the Middle Class and What We Can Do About It
by Dennis E. Gale
April 2020, Volume 86, Issue 2
- 139-141 In Defense of the Generalist Journal
by Ann Forsyth - 142-156 Whiteness and Urban Planning
by Edward G. Goetz & Rashad A. Williams & Anthony Damiano - 157-170 Gender Dynamics in the Planning Workplace
by Marisa Turesky & Mildred E. Warner - 171-187 Do Neighborhood Walkability, Transit, and Parks Relate to Residents’ Life Satisfaction?
by Deirdre Pfeiffer & Meagan M. Ehlenz & Riley Andrade & Scott Cloutier & Kelli L. Larson - 188-195 Planning the Green New Deal: Climate Justice and the Politics of Sites and Scales
by Kian Goh - 196-207 Where Should We Have the Meeting?
by Mattijs Van Maasakkers & Jeeson Oh - 208-221 Negotiation or Schedule-Based?
by Minjee Kim - 222-235 Trade Uber for the Bus?
by Xiaoxia Dong - 236-249 Guidelines for a Polycentric Region to Reduce Vehicle Use and Increase Walking and Transit Use
by Keunhyun Park & Reid Ewing & Sadegh Sabouri & Dong-ah Choi & Shima Hamidi & Guang Tian - 250-263 Modeling Sustainability Scenarios in the Baltimore–Washington (DC) Region
by Gerrit-Jan Knaap & Daniel Engelberg & Uri Avin & Sevgi Erdogan & Fred Ducca & Timothy F. Welch & Nicholas Finio & Rolf Moeckel & Harutyun Shahumyan - 264-265 Knowing What Land Use Regulations Localities Have “On the Books” Can Reveal Regulatory Stringency—And Much More
by Rolf Pendall - 265-266 What Planners Do Know: Their Community’s Culture
by Linda C. Dalton - 267-268 What’s Wrong With Objective Questions?
by Ned Levine - 268-269 Planning Knowledge and the Regulatory Hydra
by Paavo Monkkonen & Michael Manville - 269-270 Lewis and Marantz’s “What Planners Know”: A Springboard for Further Analysis
by Dave Guyadeen - 270-271 A Response to Comments on “What Planners Know: Using Surveys About Local Land Use Regulation to Understand Housing Development”
by Paul G. Lewis & Nicholas J. Marantz - 272-273 Notes From the Review Editor
by Gerardo Francisco Sandoval - 274-275 Fishman: Bike Share
by Bert van Wee - 275-276 Shoup: Parking and the City
by David A. King - 276-277 Garvin: The Heart of the City: Creating Vibrant Downtowns for a New Century
by Peter Hendee Brown - 277-278 Wolfe: Urbanism Without Effort: Reconnecting With First Principles of the City
by Floyd Lapp - 278-280 Sagalyn: Power at Ground Zero: Politics, Money, and the Remaking of Lower Manhattan
by Michael B. Teitz
January 2020, Volume 86, Issue 1
- 1-2 A Point of View in Planning
by Ann Forsyth - 3-10 Historic Infrastructure Left Behind: Should Urban Planners Protect Streets and Blocks?
by Brenda Case Scheer - 11-24 Understanding the Legacy of Pedestrian Malls
by Dave Amos - 25-38 How Do Homeowners Associations Regulate Residential Landscapes?
by V. Kelly Turner & Matthew Stiller - 39-46 Seven Principles of Strong Climate Change Planning
by Sara Meerow & Sierra C. Woodruff - 47-59 “Urban Farming Is Going High Tech”
by Michael Carolan - 60-74 When Do Plans Matter?
by Lu Liao & Mildred E. Warner & George C. Homsy - 75-88 Affordable Housing, Disasters, and Social Equity
by Aditi Mehta & Mark Brennan & Justin Steil - 89-105 Energy Cost Burdens for Low-Income and Minority Households
by Constantine E. Kontokosta & Vincent J. Reina & Bartosz Bonczak - 106-112 It’s Time to End Single-Family Zoning
by Michael Manville & Paavo Monkkonen & Michael Lens - 113-119 Death to Single-Family Zoning…and New Life to the Missing Middle
by Jake Wegmann - 120-120 The View From Minneapolis: Comments on “Death to Single-Family Zoning” and “It’s Time to End Single-Family Zoning”
by Paul Mogush & Heather Worthington - 121-122 Ending Single-Family Zoning: Is There a Plan B?
by Glen Searle & Peter Phibbs - 122-122 Not a Matter of Choice: Eliminating Single-Family Zoning
by Anaid Yerena - 123-124 Calls to End All Single-Family Zoning Need More Scrutiny
by Arnab Chakraborty - 124-125 Eliminating Existing Single-Family Zoning Is a Mistake
by Lane Kendig - 125-126 Though Rumors of Its Demise Might Be Exaggerated…
by Gerritt Knaap & Nicholas Finio - 126-127 The Detached Single-Family Home Genie and Its Bottle
by Harley F. Etienne - 127-128 Last Thoughts From Manville, Monkkonen, and Lens
by Michael Manville & Paavo Monkkonen & Michael Lens - 128-128 Last Thoughts From Wegmann
by Jacob Wegmann - 129-130 Notes From the Review Editor
by Gerardo Francisco Sandoval - 131-132 Pemberton: Rural Regeneration in the UK
by Michael Hibbard - 132-133 Chapple and Loukaitou-Sideris: Transit-Oriented Displacement or Community Dividends? Understanding the Effects of Smarter Growth on Communities
by Adam Millard-Ball - 133-134 Ash: Chicago Union Station
by Thomas C. Cornillie - 134-135 Spiers: Smarter Growth: Activism and Environmental Policy in Metropolitan Washington
by Rebecca Lewis - 136-137 Speck: Walkable City Rules: 101 Steps to Making Better Places
by Whit Blanton
October 2019, Volume 85, Issue 4
- 389-392 Scholarly Publication in an Information Age
by Ann Forsyth - 393-404 Ethical Dilemmas in Professional Planning Practice in the United States
by Mickey Lauria & Mellone F. Long - 405-423 Using Simple, Decision-Centered, Scenario-Based Planning to Improve Local Coastal Management
by Richard K. Norton & Stephen Buckman & Guy A. Meadows & Zachary Rable - 424-444 Plan Implementation Challenges in a Shrinking City
by Brent D. Ryan & Shuqi Gao - 445-462 What Planners Know
by Paul G. Lewis & Nicholas J. Marantz - 463-481 Measuring the Local Economic Impacts of Replacing On-Street Parking With Bike Lanes
by Daniel Arancibia & Steven Farber & Beth Savan & Yvonne Verlinden & Nancy Smith Lea & Jeff Allen & Lee Vernich - 482-500 Toward a Richer Picture of the Mobility Needs of Older Americans
by Anastasia Loukaitou-Sideris & Martin Wachs & Miriam Pinski - 501-510 Transportation Sustainability Follows From More People in Fewer Vehicles, Not Necessarily Automation
by Louis A. Merlin - 511-524 Building Water-Efficient Cities
by Philip Stoker & Heejun Chang & Elizabeth Wentz & Britt Crow-Miller & Gabrielle Jehle & Matthew Bonnette - 525-543 Planning Matters
by Quan Yuan - 544-563 Neighborhood Affordability and Housing Market Resilience
by Kyungsoon Wang & Dan Immergluck - 564-584 Immigrant Entrepreneurship and Economic Development
by Xi Huang & Cathy Yang Liu - 585-586 Notes From the Review Editor
by Tim Chapin - 587-588 Hertz: The Battle of Lincoln Park: Urban Renewal and Gentrification in Chicago
by Dennis Gale