IB ysh
Dalam rangka 50 tahun Pendidikan Perencanaan di Indonesia. PWK ITB akan
menyelenggrakan seminar internasional. Seminar ini didukung oleh pakar dari:
Tokyo University, University of British Columbia, University of Florida,
University of Toronto, University of Groningen, University Gollege London,
Universitas Gadjah Mada, Universitas Indonesia.
Call for paper bisa dilihat di http://ppgc.or.id/index.php?action=call-paper
detail seminar bisa di clik di http://ppgc.or.id
Bapak-ibu yang tertarik pada topik tertentu dapat membuat track sendiri,
silakan menghubungi OC secepatnya.
salam
Haryo
Call for Papers
One of the most pressing issues affecting world population is the changing
climate which has brought about detrimental impacts in water availability,
agricultural production, pests and diseases as well as has created natural
disasters in many parts of the world. Ironically, the changing climate is a
product of modern civilization supported by capitalism. Although many nations
have realized urgency of the situations, significant global actions to avoid
environmental catastrophes with complex economic and social consequences have
not been materialized yet.
When many nations are still navigating themselves in the alarming environmental
situation, capitalist world has been shaken by unexpected economic crisis
originated from the US. Given the interconnected world economy, the crisis has
bitten many parts of the capitalist world. Despite financial and economic
stimulation implemented in many countries, recovery will unlikely to occur
soon. Shrinking growth will reduce living standards. For developing countries,
it might deepen poverty.
These crises have called for a greater attention of policy makers, scholars and
concerned communities. Furthermore, they require immediate and effective
collaborative actions internationally and locally. Long term perspectives and
short term solutions should be tailored and then implemented effectively.
Although alternative solutions seem to be understood, effective collaborative
global actions remain uncertain given significant conflicting interest among
nations. This situation has endangered sustainable development, diming the
prospect of poverty alleviation. It will affect development at the national,
regional and local levels. Consequently, it has given rise to questions need to
be addressed:
What is the prospect of our global environment? Do we need to redefine
sustainable development? Do we have alternatives for better environment? How
can planning contribute to realization of the alternatives?
How can planning contribute to recovery from and adjustment to the current
economic crisis as well as avoid unintended consequences of capitalist
development in the future?
What are strategic planning agendas at the national, regional and local level
for adjusting to the current global crises? How can the agendas be
institutionalized to assure their realization? what lesson can be distilled
from the current crises for planning education and research in developed and
less developed countries?
This International Conference on Urban, Regional Planning is seek to know the
answer of the question by providing forum for the presentation of new advances
and research results in the fields of theoritical, experimental, and applied
Urban and Regional Planning. The conference will bring together leading
researchers, and scientists in the domain of interest forum around the domain
of interest from around the world.
Topics of interest for submission include, but are not limited to:
Track 1 : Global Crisis and Urban Development
Chair: Assoc. Prof. Julio Davila (University College London)
Track 2: Global Crisis and Metropolitan Areas
Chair: Assoc. Prof. Andre Sorensen (University of Toronto)
Track 3: Climate Change and Urban Design
Chair: Prof. Yukio Nishimura (University of Tokyo)
Track 4: Urban Land and Housing Development
Chair: Assoc. Prof. Sudaryono (Gadjah Mada University)
Track 5: Urban and Regional Governance
Chair: Dr. Teti Armiati Argo (Institut Teknologi Bandung)
When a situation of impoverishment created, marginality and inequality deepened
as a result of a crisis, urban and regional governance as a system may not be
free from being questioned either as creator or perpetuator of such situation.
A self evaluation may lead to rearranging of the governance, in which thriving
economic growth has no longer driven how communal goals are defined, developed
and focused. The roles and positions of community groups, including business
and financial may redefine regional and urban tendency towards common goals.
This track invites scholars, scientists, practitioners, educators to explore,
identify and discuss how regional and urban governance evolve around inevitable
change brought by crisis, how actors become involved in the process of change,
nature and direction of interactions that lead to a new forms of governance.
Track 6: Climate Change and Coastal Urban Areas
Chair: Prof. Michael Leaf (University of British Columbia)
Track 7: Global Crisis and the Regional Development and Planning
Chair: Prof. Tommy Firman (Institut Teknologi Bandung)
Track 8: Infrastructure Planning in the Era of Crisis
Chair: Assoc. Prof. Johan Woltjer (University of Groningen)
Track 9: Urban and Regional Planning Tools
Chair: Dr. Ibnu Syabri (Institut Teknologi Bandung)
Track 10: Planning Finance in the Era of Crisis
Chair: Prof. Bambang Brodjonegoro (University of Indonesia)
Track 11: Global Crisis and Planning Theory
Chair: Prof. Gert de Roo (University of Groningen)
Track 12: Global Crisis and Planning Education
Chair: Prof. Christopher Silver (University of Florida)