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Plan or Be Planned – that is the neighborhood question
Housing development now planned for the bay area will be an invasion of gentrification unless communities and neighborhods have a place at the planning tables, both for the general plan and for site-by-site projects. This article is an argument for why this is not only essential to democracy, and to the health of cities (the article focuses on Berkeley), but also for cities to stay within the law. It offers a critique of the representationist system of governance.
Housing development now planned for the bay area will be an invasion of gentrification unless communities and neighborhods have a place at the planning tables, both for the general plan and for site-by-site projects. This article is an argument for why this is not only essential to democracy, and to the health of cities (the article focuses on Berkeley), but also for cities to stay within the law. It offers a critique of the representationist system of governance.
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