
- 178 pages
- English
- ePUB (mobile friendly)
- Available on iOS & Android
Social Theory for Planning
About this book
Planners necessarily use theories of how society works. More often than not, however, these were left unstated or confused. As the scope of planning increased in the 1970s it became vital that planners adopted a more refined approach to the social life which they tried to influence.
Originally published in 1975, Social Theory for Planning brings to the attention of an important group of sociology-users some of the latest developments and insights of social theory at the time. The emphasis is on the value of theory in defining planning problems in sociologically conscious terms rather than in solving them. The advantages of conflict theory, interpretative sociology, evolutionism and systems theory are assessed, and urban sociology and research methods are evaluated in the light of alternative social theories.
The book also aims to reveal the implicit social theories that are assumed in the defining of particular planning problems and makes a plea for the explicit discussion of the theoretical implications of conventional planning knowledge.
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Information
Table of contents
- Cover
- Half Title
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Original Title Page
- Original Copyright Page
- Table of Contents
- Preface and acknowledgments
- 1 The context of social theory
- 2 The uses of knowledge
- 3 Social change and evolutionary theory
- 4 Systems theory
- 5 Conflict theory
- 6 Interpretative sociology
- 7 Urban sociology at a ‘high’ level
- 8 Urban sociology at a ‘low’ level
- 9 Social theory, social problems and social control
- Bibliography
- Index