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2011-2012 Landscape Architecture and Regional Planning Programs, Faculty, and Courses Program Overview Master of Regional Planning Degree Program
Master of Regional Planning Degree Program
The M.R.P. degree program provides the theoretical and applied knowledge necessary to enter a career in urban and regional planning. A focus of the program is preparing professionals to recognize and promote sustainable development as the balance of ecology, economy, and equity achieved through a participatory planning process. The curriculum integrates studies of the physical, environmental, social, cultural, economic, and political facets of planning at all scales and densities: urban, suburban, small town, and rural. A studio requirement in which students undertake projects for clients is a central part of the program. Assistantships, internships, and practica represent other opportunities for professional development. There are no prerequisites for the program. Students come from a wide variety of educational and professional backgrounds, including the arts, natural sciences, social sciences, engineering design, and the humanities. The program is designed to balance core requirements and faculty research specialties with individual student interests. The Curriculum Core Requirements 1. Planning concepts, theories, philosophies and histories. 2. Techniques associated with planning; quantitative, qualitative, GIS, and other visualization methods. 3. The built environment: recognition of opportunities and challenges, and understanding the environmental consequences of land and resource use activities. 4. The political, legal, institutional, and administrative setting of planning. 5. The economic and fiscal implications of planning. 6. The social, cultural, and psychological implications of planning. 7. “Plan-making” through studio reports, theses, and terminal projects. 8. Sustainable development and participatory planning. Concentrations 1. Urban and Regional Land Use Planning. The focus of this concentration is understanding the forces affecting the built environment, the interrelationships between land use and social conditions, and ways to support and regulate development to best achieve community goals. Important skills for this concentration include comprehensive planning, urban and regional design, community participation methods, and applications of planning theory. 2. Social Policy and Community Planning. This concentration, focusing on social, political, and cultural analyses of the built environment, explores different social and cultural responses to the built environment, analyzing policy, planning, and design criteria for building more responsible urban forms, and intervening in discriminatory practices. Topics of study include domestic and international analyses of housing policy, urban development, land use, urban form, urban design, spatial relations, and social change. 3. Landscape and Environmental Planning. This concentration focuses on environmental policy and planning as it relates to preserving and protecting environmental quality and habitat in the face of new development. Important skills for this concentration include landscape assessment, plan formulation, and evaluation of landscape units ranging from the local to watershed scale, using Geographic Information Systems as a planning tool. 4. Economic Development Planning. This concentration focuses on understanding the economic and social pressures facing communities, and strategies for building local and regional economies. It explores such issues as how towns, cities, and regions will survive in a globalizing economy, and how towns and cities build communities in periods of boom and decline. Topics of study include industrial planning, regional analysis, social planning and social impact assessment, public and private finance, land-use planning, and spatial analysis. 5. Environmental Management. This concentration is related to but distinct from the other concentrations described above, especially the Landscape and Environmental Planning concentration. It focuses on the environment as broadly conceived in terms of the relationships between land and resource use, ecological systems and services, and infrastructure and built form. This concentration also has a greater emphasis on comparative international development and sustainable management practices. |
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