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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 15 page expansion of a paper by the same name, which discusses the benefits, problems and responsibility for including the public in urban planning. The paper uses the decline and decay of Detroit and the development of urban sprawl in neighboring areas as an example of an area in which residents have tried to have input but were thwarted for several years as the sprawl problem worsened. Examples from cities such as Seattle and Portland illustrate that planning absolutely can be sustainable over time. Bibliography lists 17 sources.
Page Count:
15 pages (~225 words per page)
File: CC6_KSpubPlanUrb2.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
books unavailable to me. You faxed pages from only one. * The original order reads: "Three or four section headings should be used to separate primary parts of
the paper, with sub-sections as needed." Excluding the givens of Introduction and Conclusion, there are four section headings. * The revision request reads: "The writer was supposed to
break the paper up into sub topics such as history, democratic views and economic views of participation." These section headings would have been fine and would have resulted in
a different paper, to be sure. If these are the section headings desired at the outset, they should have been specified then, too. * The revision request also states,
"The writer was also suppposed [sic] to use teh [sic] professors [sic] corrected abstract in which she did not." Youll note that the entire two paragraphs are used in
the introduction as an overview to the paper. The four section headings used in the original paper were taken directly from the overview text provided. * Added text is
in bold. Introduction According to Gregrson (1990), Winston Churchill once said that "We shape our buildings, and afterwards our buildings shape us" (p.
PG). Those buildings collectively comprise cities, in which increasing numbers of people live. By 2015, the United Nations (UN) projects that there will be 21 "megacities" of at
least 10 million people each, 17 of which will be in developing nations (Population Reports, 2002). Already, urban areas gain approximately one million additional residents each week (Meeting the
urban challenge, 2002). "The concept of public participation has been widely discussed in the literature of planning. Research shows that it also plays
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