Advance Praise for Planet of Cities

+ Brandon Fuller

The Lincoln Institute of Land Policy will publish Solly Angel’s new book, Planet of Cities, on August 28 (Amazon). Here’s what people are saying about the book:

Robert Bruegmann, Professor Emeritus of Art History, Architecture, and Urban Planning, University of Illinois at Chicago

In Planet of Cities, Shlomo Angel has produced a landmark study, one that combines an ambitious new history of global urban growth with a surprisingly simple and convincing set of policy recommendations. The book suggests that some planning policies that are widely accepted in the United States and Europe are likely to be counterproductive in the developing world. However, the implications of this study are much larger. This is a book that will upset some readers, particularly those with fixed ideas of how cities should look and work, but for others the sweeping scope and sometimes startling new conclusions will be exhilarating.

Edward L. Glaeser, Fred & Eleanor Glimp Professor of Economics; Director, Taubman Center and Rappaport Institute, Harvard University

Shlomo Angel has written a fascinating and timely book about cities. It is full of interesting facts and wisdom. The book gives a sense of the enormous variety of challenges facing the world’s cities and the folly of trying to handle every one of these urban challenges with a one-size-fits-all policy.

         

Geoffrey B. West, Distinguished Professor, Santa Fe Institute; Senior Fellow, Los Alamos National Laboratory

Cities are our engines of creativity, wealth creation, and economic growth, yet they also pose threats to our climate, our natural environment, and our food, energy, and water supplies. To resolve these complex issues there is an urgent need to develop a deeper understanding of their dynamics and organization. Shlomo Angel’s wonderful book, Planet of Cities, has begun to do just that. He has brought his unique perspective as a distinguished urban planner and geographer with a depth of experience in addressing real-world problems to produce a deeply insightful book that can be used equally by researchers, from economists to physicists, and by practitioners, from urban planners and architects to politicians. It contains a wealth of knowledge, information, and insights interspersed with a delightful historical perspective that I will be returning to again and again. This timely and important book will inform critical thinking about what I consider to be our planet’s greatest challenge.

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