Planning June 2014
Issue Contents
50 and Fighting
Frances Fox Piven surveys the origins and legacy of the 1964 Civil Rights Act.
Suburban — and Poor
Elizabeth Kneebone and Cary Lou assess the changing landscape of race and poverty in the U.S.
Whose Trolley Is It?
In Miami, a transportation facility prompts a civil rights suit. By Susannah Nesmith.
We Built This Technology
No one knows cities better than planners. Jennifer Evans-Cowley and Brittany Kubinski report in Planning Practice. Sidebar by Dominick Ard'is and Lucas Lindsey.
Reconsidering Ian McHarg: The Future of Urban Ecology
In an adaptation from his new APA Planners Press book, Ignacio Bunster-Ossa ponders the legacy of his famous predecessor.
Quake Control
William Atkinson offers a status report on seismic codes. A Sustaining Places story.
Perspectives
A regular column by APA's CEO, Paul Farmer.
News
Big canal, flood insurance.
Legal News
Disparate impact, billboard spacing.
The Commissioner
A bimonthly department aimed at planning commissioners, edited by Carolyn Torma.
By the Numbers
Statistics in the news. This month: suburban poverty.
Research You Can Use
Reid Ewing asks: Does sprawl help or hinder upward mobility?
Letters
Biomimicry, Savannah.
Planners Library
Complete streets, zombie subdivisions.
Media
New reports, blogs, videos, etc.
Viewpoint
Let's make public schools a priority.
Cover: President Johnson surveys riot damage from above in Washington, D.C., after Martin Luther King Jr.'s assassination. Frank Wolfe/White House Photo Office Collection.