PLANNING HISTORY AND ENVIRONMENT SERIES
Published by Routledge, an imprint of the Taylor & Francis Group. This series offers a unique window on the creation of the modern environment. Designed for an international readership, the emphasis is on:
~ urban and regional planning
~ recent as well as longer-term history
~ what the past can tell us about the present
~ local as well as global and comparative topics
The books address three themes:
~ regional, continental and comparitive studies
~ planning histories of key cities
~ changing planning ideologies and policies

EDITOR
Professor Dennis Hardy, Emeritus Professor of Urban Planning. He has authored three books in the series: From Garden Cities to New Towns, From New Towns to Green Politics, and Utopian England: Community Experiments, 1900–1945. His latest books are Poundbury: The Town that Charles Built (2006) and Cities that Don’t Cost the Earth (2008) both published by the Town and Country Planning Association.
EDITORIAL BOARD
Professor Gregory Andrusz, London, UK
Professor Arturo Almandoz, Universidad Simón Bolivar, Caracas, Venezuela
Professor Nezar AlSayyad, University of California, Berkeley, USA
Professor Robert Bruegmann, University of Illinois at Chicago, USA
Professor Meredith Clausen, University of Washington, Seattle, USA
Professor Jeffrey W. Cody, Getty Conservation Institute, Los Angeles, USA
and Chinese
University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong
Professor Robert Freestone, University of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia
Professor Sir Peter Hall, University College London, UK
Professor Peter Larkham, University of Central England, Birmingham, UK
Professor Anthony Sutcliffe, Nottingham, UK
TECHNICAL EDITOR
Ann Rudkin, Alexandrine Press, Marcham, Oxon, UK
Further information may be obtained from the Taylor & Francis website
Members of the International Planning History Society may purchase the books at a discount. Further information is available at the Society website.
Banner Photo Credit: Parliament Building, Canberra (Collection: National Capital Authority Library and Information Service; photo: John Baker)









