Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 320
Trim: 7¼ x 10⅜
978-1-4422-2028-7 • Hardback • June 2018 • $162.00 • (£125.00)
978-1-4422-2029-4 • Paperback • June 2018 • $84.00 • (£65.00)
978-1-4422-2030-0 • eBook • June 2018 • $79.50 • (£61.00)
Richard E. Klosterman is Emeritus Professor of Geography, Planning, and Urban Studies at the University of Akron.
Kerry Brooks is Professor of Urban and Regional Planning at Eastern Washington University.
Joshua Drucker is Associate Professor of Urban Planning and Policy at the University of Illinois at Chicago.
Edward Feser is Provost and Executive Vice President, and Professor of Public Policy, at Oregon State University.
Henry Renski is Associate Professor in the Department of Landscape Architecture and Regional Planning at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst.
List of Figures, Maps, and Tables
Preface
1 Foundations
2 Welcome to Decatur
3 Trend Projection Methods
4 Share Projection Methods
5 Cohort-Component Methods
6 Economic Analysis Methods
7 Spatial Analysis Methods
8 Land Suitability
9 Using Planning Support Methods
Appendix A: US Census Geography
Appendix B: American Community Survey
Appendix C: US Data Sources
Glossary
References
Index
Writing a methods textbook is very difficult. In this instance, the authors have achieved a very good outcome. Students with some grounding should find it approachable. . . . [The] book is long overdue and a major contribution to methods teaching in professional planning.— Regional Studies
This book aims to describe the essential quantitative methods for local and regional analysis and projection. It is best suited for planning practitioners (especially community planners) and students targeting a professional planning career. For practical planners, one key merit for this book is that, despite its breadth in quantitative regional economic methods, it requires no prerequisite of advanced statistics, calculus, or microeconomic background and materials in the book can be well understood for someone without this background. I would recommend this book to (perspective) community planners at various levels, who have interests in understanding the basics of regional population and employment projection and forecasting. . . . Overall, this book provides an important introduction to a rapidly evolving subfield.
— Environment and Planning B: Urban Analytics and City Science
Klosterman and his colleagues have done a masterful job of assembling and describing the core methods that planners use to understand the dynamics of urban growth and development. No other text combines demographic, economic and land suitability techniques in such an effective manner. This book provides a clear explanation of fundamental planning support methods.— Stephen P. French, Georgia Institute of Technology
In sum, the book adds to the modern approach to neighborhood-centered analysis with a focus on community, geospatial data analysis, and use case scenarios. The book provides ample illustrations, informative and user-friendly. Undergraduate and graduate students, community scientists, planners in practice, and applied researchers will find Planning Support Methods: Urban and Regional Analysis and Projection to be a comprehensive book that can be used for both bottom-up and top-down urban and regional data analysis.
— Journal of Planning Education and Research
This delightfully hands-on approach will be a breath of fresh air for students and practitioners alike. At long last we have a book that teaches urban planners to be intelligently analytical and ultrapractical.— Ray Wyatt, University of Melbourne
Good books on planning methods are rare. Klosterman and his colleagues have done us a great service by updating Klosterman’s previous book and extending its scope in population forecasting, spatial analysis, and GIS. A key text.— Michael Batty, University College London
I predict—and making accurate predictions is a big part of what this new volume covers—that Planning Support Methods will become an essential ‘go-to’ reference for both beginning students and experienced professionals. New chapters and sections on spatial analysis methods, land suitability analysis methods, and public participation methods help round out this extremely well-written, easy-to-use, and important new work.— John D. Landis, University of Pennsylvania
Klosterman and his colleagues have done a masterful job of assembling and describing the core methods that planners use to understand the dynamics of urban growth and development. No other text combines demographic, economic and land suitability techniques in such an effective manner. This book provides a clear explanation of fundamental planning support methods.— Stephen P. French, Georgia Institute of Technology
The only textbook that uses information from widely available public data sources to analyze and project the population and economy of a city and county. The book identifies free online sources for the data required to apply the methods in the United States.
Unlike other methods texts, Planning Support Methods applies the methods to an American city and county, demonstrating concretely how quantitative methods can be used to support community-based planning.
Additional resources for using this text and the methods it describes are available at PlanningSupport.org.
Clearly explains and applies key demographic and economic analysis and projection methods, spatial analysis concepts, and land suitability analysis methods and their role in public participation efforts.
Integrates the use of GIS Recognizing the increased importance of geographic information systems (GIS), Planning Support Methods reviews spatial analysis concepts and describes and applies land suitability analysis methods.
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Lecture Notes. The Lecture Notes provide the tables and figures from the text.