/ Thursday Nov 04,2021
11:00 am - 12:30 pm

Upcoming Webinar: Session 3 Containment of Urban Expansion

RSVP

This webinar will briefly review the state of the art in urban containment in cities worldwide and focus on three case studies: the green belt of Seoul; urban-growth boundaries in South Africa; and the green belt of London. Discussion following the case studies will focus on successes, failures, and consequences—both intended and unintended—of efforts to contain urban expansion. William A. Fischel (Dartmouth College) will moderate a panel that includes Director of Urban Expansion, Solly Angel, Myung-Jin Jun (Chung-Ang University), Anele Horn (Stellenbosch University), and Alan Mace (London School of Economics).

The webinar will be co-hosted by the Urban Expansion program and the journal Buildings and Cities on November 4 from 11:00 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. EDT.

Speakers

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Shlomo (Solly) Angel
Program Director / Urban Expansion
Professor of City Planning / NYU Marron Institute

Shlomo (Solly) Angel is a Professor of City Planning at the Marron Institute where he leads the NYU Urban Expansion Program. He is an international expert on housing and urban development policy, having written extensively on the subject, advised the United Nations, the World Bank, and the Inter-American Development Bank (IDB), and implemented projects on the ground. He currently focuses on documenting urban expansion and densification in a global sample of cities, as well as on advising rapidly growing cities on how to prepare adequate room for their inevitable expansion while making adequate room for the densification of their existing footprints as well.  

In 1973, Angel started a program in Human Settlements Planning and Development at the Asian Institute of Technology in Bangkok. He taught at the Institute from 1973 to 1983, while researching housing and urban development in the cities of East, South, and Southeast Asia. He co-edited Land for Housing the Poor in 1982. From the mid-80s to mid-90s, he worked as a housing and urban development consultant to UN-Habitat, the Asian Development Bank, and the Government of Thailand. In 2000, he published Housing Policy Matters, a comparative study of housing conditions and policies in more than fifty countries around the world. From 2000 to 2010 he prepared housing sector assessments of 11 Latin America and Caribbean countries for the IDB and the World Bank. Since 2005, he has been documenting global urban expansion, resulting in the publication of The Dynamics of Global Urban Expansion in 2005, the Atlas of Urban Expansion in 2012 and 2016, and Planet of Citiesin 2012.  

Angel earned a bachelor’s degree in architecture and a doctorate in city and regional planning at the University of California, Berkeley.

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William A. Fischel
Professor of Economics / Dartmouth College

Bill Fischel is the author of Zoning Rules! The Economics of Land Use Regulation, published in 2015 by the Lincoln Institute of Land Policy in Cambridge, Mass. The book combines Fischel’s scholarship, his students’ insights, and his service on the Hanover Zoning Board to explain how zoning works and affects the American economy. Bill has taught economics at Dartmouth College since 1973. He received his PhD from Princeton and his BA from Amherst College. Fischel's scholarship focuses on local government. He is the author of The Economics of  Zoning Laws (Johns Hopkins, 1985), Regulatory Takings (Harvard, 1995), The Homevoter Hypothesis (Harvard, 2001), and Making the Grade: The Economic Evolution of American School Districts (Chicago, 2009).