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PROGRAM HANDBOOK 24 TH AESOP ANNUAL CONFERENCE 2010 YTK • AAlTo UniversiTY • FinlAnd • JUlY 7–10 2010

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program handbook24th aESop annual ConfErEnCE 2010

YTK • AAlTo UniversiTY • FinlAnd • JUlY 7–10 2010

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Where possible thelogo should appearin black/greyscale if only one colour is available

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space is luxury24th AESOP Annual Conference 7–10 July 2010Centre for Urban and Regional Studies (YTK)Aalto University School of Science and Technology

Local Organising Committee

Chair: Professor Peter Ache, YTKDeputy Chair: Mervi Ilmonen, YTKAalto University Congress Consultant: Jan Fagerström, DipoliSecretariat: Timo Heikkinen & Eeva Mynttinen, YTKWebmaster: Mikko Johansson, YTK

Scientific Committee

AESOP President Professor Willem Salet, The NetherlandsProfessor Peter Ache, FinlandYTK Director Professor Raine Mäntysalo, FinlandProfessor Kimmo Lapintie, FinlandProfessor Kristina Nilsson, SwedenProfessor Pantoleon D. Skayannis, Greece

Contact LOC

Centre for Urban and Regional Studies (YTK)PB 12200, FIN 00076 AALTOTelephone (+358 9) 470 24080Fax (+358 9) 470 24071E-mail [email protected] http://ytk.tkk.fi/en/

Congress Office

CONGREX / Blue & White Conferences Oy,P.O.Box 81, FIN-00371 Helsinki, FinlandTel: +358-9-560 7500, Fax: +358-9-560 75020,E-mail: [email protected]: www.congrex.fi

Location

Dipoli Congress Centre, Aalto University, Otaniemi, FinlandInternet http://www.dipoli.tkk.fi/kongressipalvelut/english/index.html

2010 AESOP PhD Workshopo Nordic organising committee

Kristina L. Nilsson, Chair, SwedenUlrika Gunnarsson Östling, SwedenSigmund Asmervik, NorwayMervi Ilmonen, FinlandHarri Anderson, FinlandMendel Giezen, AESOP Young Academics NetworkPeter Ache, Chair of LOC

Design and Layout

Katri-Liisa Pulkkinen, Open Design OyMarina Johansson, YTK

program handbook

TOCWelcome Notes 5Program Overview 7Key Note Speakers 9

Scientific Program 11Track List and Floor Plans Dipoli 12Instructions for Track Co-Chairs and Speakers 14Full Overview of Session Themes 15

Track by Track Daily ProgramTrack 1 Planning Theory and Methods 18Track 2 Planning History 20Track 3 Planning Education 22Track 4 Planning and Complexity 24Track 5 European Territorial Cooperation and Policies 26Track 6 Global Challenges and Local Responses 28Track 7 Planning for Rural Areas 30Track 8 Urban Planning and Physical Form 32Track 9 Culture, Heritage and Planning 36Track 10 Sustainability: Climate Change, Risks and Planning 38Track 11 Housing and Regeneration Policies 40Track 12 Mobility: Transport Planning and Policy 42Track 13 Resource Management, Energy and Planning 44Track 14 Participation and Governance 46Track 15 Planning, Law and Property Rights 48Track 16 Planning ‘in’ or ‘for’ Multicultural Societies 50

Separate special sessions1 Development and Implementation of GIS 52 and Other Computer Applications in Planning2 Planning in Uncertainty for the Planning Theory 53

Roundtables 55Special Sessions 59Aesop Meetings 65Business Meetings 66Mobile Workshops 67Social Events 73General Information 75Thanks 79Alphabetical List of Presenters/Authors 81

YTK • Aalto University 5

Dear Participants!

Tervetuloa – Välkommen – Welcometo space is luxury – the 24th AESOP Annual Conference

In 2010, the world is clearly one that can be called ‘urban’. In relative terms, more than half of the world’s population dwells in urban settings – about one billion under ‘slum conditions’.

Having quality space available equals commanding a ‘luxury’!

Planning and urban design are key factors in shaping and managing space and generate the wished for quality spaces. The concept of space and concomitantly that of spatial quality includes different meanings and dimensions. Space is physical, including architecture and urban form. Space is also socially constructed through various forms of human interventions. Space is contested and a reason for serious conflicts. Space is presented and space represents. For planning, the management of the competing uses for space requires complex interventions. The making of better places that are valued and have identity is an enduring ambition of planning. And, returning to the start of this brief reflection, the major challenge of spatial planning is to find solutions for a more sustainable urban millennium. Space is expensive and exhaustive, a luxury we cannot afford any longer, if it means excessive use of space in terms of energy inefficiency and traffic pollution.

The Centre for Urban and Regional Studies at Aalto University welcomes 700 planning scholars and professionals from all over the world to Finland and to discuss the manifold issues of space is luxury – and to explore the multitude of related planning issues.

Mervi Ilmonen & Peter AcheLocal Organising Committee

Welcome Note by AESOP

Dear Participants,

On behalf of AESOP, it is my honor to welcome all of you to our 24th Annual Conference. We could not wish for a better place than the fascinating southern coast of Finland to discuss the pros and cons of the conference theme space is luxury.

Finland provides a good case in point, having plenty of space but also knowing perfectly well how to use this

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as a scarce source in environmental friendly and highly efficient ways. It reminds us to our central mission as planners to sustain the quality of the environment as a crucial parameter in a time of economic reconstruction.

At the time of writing, the figures of registration have touched already the amount of six hundred participants with a matching large number of papers and presentations, promising a very lively meeting and a lot of scientific exchange.

I would like to thank all of the Local Organising Committee and the Centre for Urban and Regional Studies for the management of this outstanding event. The very attractive venue of Dipoli provides a stimulating space for four intensive working days – but also to experience the spirit of the AESOP community. All signs are set to ‘green’ for a successful meeting.

I wish you a very productive conference!

Willem SaletPresident of AESOP

Welcome Note by Aalto University

Dear delegates of the AESOP 2010 conference,

It is a great honour for me to welcome you to the 24th Annual Conference of the Association of European Schools of Planning to Otaniemi. I am very pleased that this major international and multidisciplinary event with almost 700 delegates from Europe and all over the world takes place in Aalto University.

Aalto University, in the form of Helsinki University of Technology, has been an active member in AESOP almost since its foundation. This relation will undoubtedly continue in the future, as Aalto shares many of the aims that AESOP has. Also Aalto strives at changing the world through interdisciplinary research and discourses across traditional boundaries. One of our focus areas in research is the human centred living environment, which is in the core of planning research as well.

We know AESOP as a highly esteemed and well known forum in planning, promoting the development of planning through mutual dialogue and communication. AESOP’s engagement is about a better spatial future. In my opinion, the theme of the 2010 Conference, space is luxury, challenges and enables particularly well debates and critical reflections concerning future developments of planning.

I thank the local organising committee at YTK and all Aalto personnel who have worked hard already for two years to make this event possible and wish you all an energizing conference and fruitful encounters with Finnish planning practice!

Tuula Teeri President of Aalto University

YTK • Aalto University 7

24th AESOP Annual Conference, 7–10 July 2010Program Overview *

3–5 July TUE 6 July WED 7 July THU 8 July FRI 9 July Sat 10 July

09:00–18:00AESOP ExCo Meeting

09:00–12:30AESOP CoRep Meeting

09:00–12:30 Sessions

09:00–12:30 Sessions

09:00–12:30 Sessions

Registration

12:30–13:45Lunch

12:30–13:45Lunch

12:30–13:45Lunch

14:00 Opening & Welcome

13:45–15:15 AESOP General Assembly (Auditorium)

14:00–18:00 Mobile Work-shops

14:00 Closing

PhD Work-shopSeili Island

15:00 GPEAN Meeting

14:30 Key NoteSharon ZukinThe Normalization of Luxury: Aesthetics and Authenticity in the Big City

15:30-19:00 Sessions

14:15 Key NoteJüri SoolepSpace – and Time – is Luxury!

16:00 Key NoteKimmo LapintieTaking Space: The Professional and Historical Context of Finnish Planning

17:30–19:00 Thematic Group Meetings

15:15 Key NoteStephen GrahamCities, Space, Security: The New Military Urbanism as ‘Luxury’

16:45 Welcome Perth 2011 & Farewell

19:00–21:00 Welcome Reception Espoo Museum of Modern Art

19:00–03:00 YAN Drinks

20:00–03:00 AESOP 2010 Conference Dinner Korjaamo Cul-ture Factory

* Please observe further announcements during the conference!

8 AESOP 2010

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Key Note Speakers

Sharon Zukin

Sharon Zukin is Professor of Sociology at Brooklyn College and the Graduate Center, City University of New York. She writes about culture and real estate in New York, and has also examined consumer society and culture, the new economic order in the United States and France, and socialism in former Yugoslavia. Her books Loft Living, The Cultures of Cities, and Naked City, trace the recent reshaping of the city through deindustrialization, gentrification, and immigration and the rise of the symbolic economy based on cultural production and consumption. Her book Landscapes of Power won the C. Wright Mills Award, and in 2007 she received the Robert and Helen Lynd Award for career achievement from the community and urban sociology section of the American Sociological Association. Her latest book is Naked City: The Death and Life of Authentic Urban Places (Oxford University Press, 2010).

Kimmo Lapintie

Kimmo Lapintie is Professor of Urban and Regional Planning at the Department of Architecture, Aalto University School of Science and Technology. He graduated in Philosophy from the University of Turku (1985) and in Architecture from Tampere University of Technology (1989), where he also made his PhD (1993). He has worked as research director, municipal planner, consultant and advisor in administrative programmes in Finland. He has also worked in a number of European Union projects and COST Actions. He has published on aesthetics of architecture, ecological urban planning, communication and argumentation in planning, and the professional role of architects and planners in the contemporary situation. Recently he has been working on a theory of space combining key modal notions in philosophy such as knowledge, perception and normativity to traditional conceptualizations of urban space.

Jüri Soolep

Jüri Soolep is Professor of Architecture and Urban Design and Dean of the Faculty of Architecture at the Estonian Academy of Arts. He is also the vice-rector of Nordic Architecture Academy. His current research focuses on space and time modes in architectural phenomena. Recent publications include: Remarks for diagnosis: Imagosphere Come (2009, Estonian Architectural Review). Architecture – Being Given.

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Temporality in Design Process (2004, Journal of Architectural Theory, Datutop 24). Since 2005 he is the member of the Working Party Diplomas Architecture in Brussels for EU Architects Directive. He has been 2004–2005 the member of the architectural council for Tallinn city and in 2003 the member of the Committee for Architectural Policy of Estonian Government. Jüri Soolep has given guest lectures in the universities of Oulu, Porto, Liverpool, Cork and Tokyo.

Stephen Graham

Stephen Graham is Professor of Cities and Society at the Global Urban Research Unit in Newcastle University's School of Architecture, Planning and Landscape. His research addresses two sets of related intersections: those between urban places, mobilities, technology, politics and urban planning on the one hand, and those between cities, militarization, surveillance, security and war on the other. Stephen Graham has authored and co-authored a wide range of academic articles as well as a variety of influential books. These include Telecommunications and the City (1996, Routledge), Splintering Urbanism (2001, Routledge) (both with Simon Marvin), The Cybercities Reader (Routledge) and Cities, War and Terrorism (Blackwell)(both 2004). His most recent book, Disrupted Cities: When Infrastructures Fail (Routledge), was published in December 2009. His next, Cities Under Siege: The New Military Urbanism (Verso), will be published in March, 2010 (US) and April, 2010 (UK/Europe).

Matti Pursula

Matti Pursula Professor, Lic. Sc. (Tech), D. Sc. (Tech) h.c., is the Executive Dean of Aalto University, School of Science and Technology. He was Rector of Helsinki University of Technology (TKK) in 2003–2009 and before that among other things leading consultant at Viatek Oy, Associate Professor and full Professor in Transportation Engineering and Vice Rector at TKK. Pursula is member of the Finnish Academy of Technology and Chair from 2004–2008. He has acted as visiting professor in the U.S.A. (University of Delaware) and Japan (Osaka City University). He has and has had several positions of trust in national and international cooperation between universities as well as in foundations and companies related to technological research and innovation activities. His scientific interests include transportation theory and simulation of traffic flow, intelligent transportation systems, and travel demanding modeling. He has published over sixty articles in international publications.

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Scientific Program

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Number Acronym Full name Track Co-Chairs Room

1 PTM Planning Theory and Methods Heather J Campbell Klondyke Kimmo Lapintie

2 PH Planning History Friedhelm Fischer Room 13 Marjaana Niemi

3 PE Planning Education Andrea I Frank Room 25 Hanna Mattila

4 PC Planning and Complexity Gert de Roo Room23 Anssi Joutsiniemi

5 ETCP European Territorial Cooperation Andreas Faludi Room 21 and Policies Heikki Eskelinen

6 GCLR Global Challenges and Alessandro Balducci Auditorium Local Responses Kaarin Taipale

7 PRA Planning for Rural Areas Roar Amdam Palaver Toivo Muilu

8 UBPF Urban Planning and Physical Form Ali Madanipour Hall 1 Panu Lehtovuori

9 CHP Culture, Heritage and Planning Zeynep Enlil Hall 4A Mervi Ilmonen

10 SCCRP Sustainability: Climate Change, Peter Driessen Room 22 Risks and Planning Lasse Peltonen

11 HRP Housing and Regeneration Policies Nikos Karadimitriou Luolamies Anneli Juntto

12 MTPP Mobility: Transport Planning Luca Bertolini Room 26 and Policy Tapio Luttinen

13 RMEP Resource Management, Energy Thomas Fischer Hall 4B and Planning Jari Niemelä

14 PG Participation and Governance Louis Albrechts Room 24 Aija Staffans

15 PLPR Planning, Law and Property Rights Rachelle Alterman Takka Kauko Viitanen

16 PIFMS Planning 'in' or 'for' Multicultural Francesco Lo Piccolo Poli Societies Huw Thomas Track 8 has two parallel sessions organised in the Cone Lobby.

Track List

YTK • Aalto University 13

Floor Plans Dipoli

All Tracks and Sessions will be held in Dipoli. Registeration desk is located in the Gala Lobby.

Lower Level

Upper Level

Number Acronym Full name Track Co-Chairs Room

1 PTM Planning Theory and Methods Heather J Campbell Klondyke Kimmo Lapintie

2 PH Planning History Friedhelm Fischer Room 13 Marjaana Niemi

3 PE Planning Education Andrea I Frank Room 25 Hanna Mattila

4 PC Planning and Complexity Gert de Roo Room23 Anssi Joutsiniemi

5 ETCP European Territorial Cooperation Andreas Faludi Room 21 and Policies Heikki Eskelinen

6 GCLR Global Challenges and Alessandro Balducci Auditorium Local Responses Kaarin Taipale

7 PRA Planning for Rural Areas Roar Amdam Palaver Toivo Muilu

8 UBPF Urban Planning and Physical Form Ali Madanipour Hall 1 Panu Lehtovuori

9 CHP Culture, Heritage and Planning Zeynep Enlil Hall 4A Mervi Ilmonen

10 SCCRP Sustainability: Climate Change, Peter Driessen Room 22 Risks and Planning Lasse Peltonen

11 HRP Housing and Regeneration Policies Nikos Karadimitriou Luolamies Anneli Juntto

12 MTPP Mobility: Transport Planning Luca Bertolini Room 26 and Policy Tapio Luttinen

13 RMEP Resource Management, Energy Thomas Fischer Hall 4B and Planning Jari Niemelä

14 PG Participation and Governance Louis Albrechts Room 24 Aija Staffans

15 PLPR Planning, Law and Property Rights Rachelle Alterman Takka Kauko Viitanen

16 PIFMS Planning 'in' or 'for' Multicultural Francesco Lo Piccolo Poli Societies Huw Thomas Track 8 has two parallel sessions organised in the Cone Lobby.

14 AESOP 2010

Instructions for Track Co-Chairs and Speakers

All sessions and rooms are attended by a volunteer who can assist you further.In case of technical problems, you can also contact the Conference Main Desk.

Presentations

Presentations should be up-loaded at latest during the breaks before your session or during the day before your presentation. Volunteers in session rooms will assist you. Each file should be named by the track number, abstract registration number (paper ID), and the family name of the presenter (e.g. T05-XXX-Smith.ppt).

All computers in the rooms are equipped with Microsoft operating systems. Please consider this when choosing your presentation format.

Session Management

Track Co-Chairs agree with you in advance the specific time available for presentation and discussion. Track Co-Chairs and the moderators are in charge of the time keeping. A Yellow Card indicates that you have three minutes to conclude. A Red Card indicates to you that the time is over.

In principle

Anchor Papers – have 20 minutes for presentation and 10 minutes for discussion.Standard Papers – have 15 minutes for presentation and 5 minutes for discussion.Please be a disciplined presenter!

Paper

Please bring 25 copies of your paper to the session. No copying is done by the organisers.

Selected proceedings

Selected proceedings will also be made available to participants in digital format.Please indicate any publication reservation applying to your paper.

YTK • Aalto University 15

Full overview of session themes

Title T1: PTM T2: PH T3: PE T4: PC T5: ETCP T6: GCLR T7: PRA

Thursday 8th

09:00-10.30Theme

Planning, values and gender

Governance and regions

Future of the discipline

Methodo-logy

Setting the scene

Local responses from grassroots up

Rural planning and governance

11:00-12:30Theme

Power and communi-cation

Planning policy – municipal and national level (cohesive versus sectorial planning)

Developing and evaluating planning compe-tencies

Concepts Macro regions

Looking from the margins

Rural planning – case studies

13:45-15:15 AESOP General Assembly

15:30-17:00Theme

Planning in a dynamic world

Urban design in modern and post-modern times

Teaching methods

Phenomena Poly-centricity and develop-ment zones

Regional perspectives

Sustaina-bility and rural areas around the world

17:30-19:00Theme

Planning: between the universal and particular

Separate special session: Planning in un certainty for the planning theory

Thematic group

Thematic group

Urban renewal Urban growth

Friday 9th

09:00-10.30Theme

Space, scale and value

Re-presentation of space

Special session: Gender issues in planning education

Complexities of the human factor Session

Special session: The EU strategy for the Baltic Sea region

Economic pressures shaping cities – session one

Spatial strategies

11:00-12:30Theme

Place and region

Impact of individual planners, diffusion of planning ideas

Environ-mental issues

Analyzing the complex landscape session

Special session: The EU strategy for the Baltic Sea region

Economic pressures shaping cities – session two

Re-structuring rural areas

Saturday 10th

09:00-10:30Theme

Knowledge and expertise

local / global trans-formations

Flexibility, information and strategies

Spatial planning and territorial governance

Global winners and local losers? Regeneration strategies in shrinking cities – The global dimension (I)

Urban rural interplay

11:00-12:30Theme

Making plans Overground and under-ground: creat-ing quality spaces

Global winners and local losers? Regeneration strategies in shrinking cities – The european dimension (II)

Landscape and land use con-flicts

Track 8: Parallel sessions on Thursday 8th: 15:30 Urban regeneration and place quality – 17:30 Transforming cities.

T8: UBPF

Design gui-dance and planning process

Public space and public sphere

Density and compact city

Landscape and green spaces

History of urban devel-opment

Social challenges of place making

Local centres, sustaina-bility and urbanity

Temporary use of place

T9: CHP T10: SCCRP T11: HRP T12: MTPP T13: RMEP T14: PG T15: PLPR T16: PIFMS

Culture as a tool for urban change

Energy issues and spatial planning

Regenerating brownfield sites and industrial areas

Supporting decision making on infrastructure projects

Climate change and urban planning

Networks and collaborative governance

National planning laws: challenges and reforms

Knowledge and power in the socially diverse city

Creative economy and place effects

Climate change related risk management

Cities, policies and projects

Institutional barriers and innovations in transport planning

System perspec-tives

Networks and collaborative governance

Political ideologies and planning Law

Whose city?

Reinvention of cultural heritage

Climate adaptation and urban planning

Housing policies - international experiences

Integrating infrastructure and spatial planning

Settlement and Form

Networks and collaborative governance

Special session: Property rights and land use regulations around the globe

Public life in the multi-cultural city

Revitalization through cultural planning

Thematic group

Housing quality

Emerging mobility prac-tices and con- ceptuali-zations

Thematic group

Strategic planning

Certainty versus flexibility in plan-making

Thematic group

Heritage in a new context

Adaptation and mitigation policies: stakeholder involvemenet

Urban design in regeneration

Measuring accessibility, mapping mobility

Networks perspective

Strategic planning

The changing roles of private developers and property markets

Decentral-zation and empowe-rment

Special session: Public spaces and urban cultures

Climate adaptation and regional and local planning strategies I

Local interests and localised practices

Exploring the relationship between urban form and travel behavior

Marine and coastal areas

Special ses­sion: Digital tools in participatory planning

Housing rights and social exclusion

Inter-ventions

Heritage in conflict

Climate adaptation and regional and local planning strategies II

Housing markets, planning and regeneration

Mobility for all?

Special session: Theoretical dimensions of urban resilience

ICT-enabled planning and participation

Land policies and land values

Culture represented and reinter-preted

Planning and regeneration in the face of conflicting needs

Achieving the transition to sustainable mobility

Special session: Empirical analysis of urban resilience

ICT-enabled planning and participation

Implementa-tion and diver-sions: planning or legal failure?

Title

Thursday 8th

09:00-10.30Theme

11:00-12:30Theme

Thursday 8th

15:30-17:00Theme

17:30-19:00Theme

Friday 9th

09:00-10.30Theme

11:00-12:30Theme

Saturday 10th

09:00-10:30Theme

11:00-12:30Theme

More information, i.p. rooms and times, for Roundtables, Special sessions, and Thematic Groups can be found on separate pages further down in this Program Handbook.

Track 8: Parallel sessions on Thursday 8th: 15:30 Urban regeneration and place quality – 17:30 Transforming cities.

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Room Klondyke

TRACK 1: Planning Theory and Methods

Track Co-Chairs

Heather J. CampbellKimmo Lapintie

Thursday 8th09:00-10:30Theme Planning, values and genderModerator Yosef Jabareen

Papers #270: Gunnarsson-Östling, UlrikaGendered Futures

#178: Tummers, LidewijHow to Develop a Gendered Perspective on Planning Systems?#49: Alfasi, NuritCivil-Military Relations: the Planning Theory Perspective

#26: Buunk, WillemProfessional and Political Value Systems on Spatial Development. A Normative Approach to Planning

11:00-12:30Theme Power and communicationModerator Heather J Campbell

Papers #90: Sager, Tore ØivinHow to Prevent Communicative Planners from Unwittingly Serving Neo-Liberalism?

#351: Gebhardt, Matthew FPlanning, Institutions and Control: How Building New Institutions Does Not Change Anything and May Make Things Worse

#126: Ponzini, DavidePlanning Theory and Urban Policy Tools: Challenges and Possible Advancements

#342: Thibault, Serge & Verdelli, LauraPlanning Process, Between Expert Project and Collective Action

Thursday 8th 13:45-15:15 AESOP General Assembly

15:30-17:00Theme Planning in a dynamic worldModerator Tore Sager

Papers#497: Mäntysalo, Raine & Balducci, Alessandro & Kangasoja, JonnaPlanning as Agonistic Negotiation in a Trading Zone. Re-Examining Lindblom’S Partisan Mutual Adjustment#202: Beauregard, RobertPlanning in a World of Things#33: Gunder, MichaelPlanning as the Ideology of (Neo-Liberal) Space#207: Lieto, LauraPlace Between Home and No-Man’S Land. Notes on Planning as “Enzymatic” Practice

17:30-19:00Theme Planning: between the universal and particularModerator Enrico Gualini

Papers#170: Healey, PatsyThe Universal and the Contingent: some Reflections on the Transnational Flow of Planning Ideas and Practices#7: Dühr, Stefanie AnneCross-National Comparative Research in Planning: Built on Solid Methodological Foundations?

YTK • Aalto University 19

#117: Reimer, Mario & Othengrafen, FrankThe Embeddedness of Planning in Cultural Contexts – Theoretical Foundations for the Analysis of Dynamic Planning Cultures#522: Campbell, HeatherPlanning and Justice: Between Imposition and “Anything Goes”#709: Becker, Elke & Gualini, Enrico & Runkel, CarolinCivil Society and Civic Engagement in Urban Development: Critical Issues and Emergent Policy Discourses

Friday 9th

09:00-10:30Theme Space, scale and value

Moderator Kimmo Lapintie

Papers #577: Pizzo, BarbaraSpace, Time, and Planning#682: Verma, Niraj & Raja, SaminaLand as Luxury in Urban Development#372: Schreurs, Jan & Moulaert, FrankThe Social Construction of Spatial Quality: from Theoretical Parallelism to Transdisciplinary Theory Building#693: Gualini, EnricoCritical Socio-Spatial Research and Planning Theory: Common Grounds, Common Concerns? Towards an Evolutionary Strategy of Inquiry#51: Alexander, ErnestInstitutional Design for Value-Capture

11:00-12:30Theme Place and regionModerator Cathy WilkinsonDiscussant

Papers#244: Allin, SimoneTrapped Between Space and Time: Contemporary and Future Challenges to Land Use Planning in Germany#729: Demaziere, ChristopheCity-Regions and Strategic Spatial Planning: the French Case#110: Jabareen, YosefTheorizing Planning for Climate Change: Critical Reading for New York City’S Recent Plan – Planyc 2030#580: Håkansson, MariaA Story of a Square – Local Identity and Creation of Meaning in Planning Processes

Saturday 10th

09:00-10:30Theme Knowledge and expertiseModerator Stefanie Dühr

Papers #585: Jessen, JohannLearning Practice – Professional Experience and Planning Theory#573: Buurmans-Niemi, Karen AugustePerception and Use of Urban Structure: The Frame – Pattern – Circuit (Fpc) Model

11:00-12:30Theme Making plansModerator Matthew Gebhardt

Papers #453: Brink, Margo Van Den & Roo, Gert DeBridging the Technical and the Communicative Perspectives in Planning#438: Pozoukidou, GeorgiaAdvancing the Role of Knowlwdge in Urban Planning

20 AESOP 2010

Room Room 13

TRACK 2: Planning History

Track Co-Chairs Friedhelm FischerMarjaana Niemi

Thursday 8th

09:00-10:30Theme Governance and regionsModerator Marjaana Niemi

Papers #227: Laitinen, Karitta TellervoBetween Urban and Rural – Changes of Townscape in a Little Town Lohja from 1940-2010#745: Nupponen, TerttuThe Planned Region – the Modernizing Rationality

11:00-12:30Theme Planning policy – municipal and national level (cohesive versus sectorial planning)Moderator Luuk Boelens

Papers#321: Contursi, AndreaThe Kollektivplan for Berlin of 1946 Between Infrastructure Planning, Rationalization and City Design#561: Hirvonen-Kantola, SariCohesive Planning with Arguments for Sustainability in Vantaa During 1973–2:007#614: Renzoni, CristinaFour Images of Territory: Spatial Issues in Italy’S National Planning 1946-73

Thursday 8th 13:45-15:15 AESOP General Assembly 15:30-17:00Theme Urban design in modern and post-modern timesModerator Friedhelm Fischer

Papers #710: Hatz, GerhardTheorizing and Evaluating Vienna’S Concepts and Performances of Quality Spaces.#142: Mollo, LuigiContemporary Concepts and Ideals in Urban Architetture: the Urban Renaissance

17:30-19:00

Theme Separate special session: Planning in uncertainty for the planning theory

Friday 9th

09:00-10:30Theme Representation of spaceModerator Luigi Mollo

Papers #414: Federico, GigliPlanning Theories and Communication Techniques#613: Masuta, Tatsuo & Tani, Akihiko & Nagano, SinichiroThe Analysis of Historical Maps of the Kanazawa Castle Town

11:00-12:30Theme Impact of individual planners, diffusion of planning ideasModerator Dirk Schubert

Papers #555: Martinez-Perez, AlonaTitle: Haussmannien Paris from the Urban Block to the Situationists Critique.#651: Chudoba, Minna Kristiina“Eliel Saarinen as an Urban Planner: Visions and Reality”

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Saturday 10th

09:00-10:30Theme Local-global transformationsModerator Gerhard Hatz

Papers#249: Schubert, DirkNew Waterfronts: Globalisation, Changing Logistics and Local (Re-)Development Projects in

European Seaport Cities#454: Beriatos, Elias & Papageorgiou, MarilenaAspects of Spa-Tourism Places and Spaces in Mediterranean#488: Kostres, Milica & Atanackovic-Jelicic, JelenaHousing Demands Vs. Heritage Protection in Transitional Societies – a Case Study of Novi Sad,

Serbia11:00-12:30Theme Overground and underground: creating quality spacesModerator Terttu Nupponen

Papers #744: Chatzicocoli, Sophia & Syrakoy, Athena-Christina & Syrakos, StephanosQuality Space = Healthy Space. The ‘Luxury’ of Healthy Urban Space Ideas in Classical Greece#235: Hannikainen, Matti OlaviPlanning Green London, 19:30–1990#666: Ćorović, DraganaForming, Mutations and Transformations of the Green Spaces in 19Th Century Belgrade#481: Skayannis, Pantoleon & Skayannis, PantoleonIs Urban Underground Space Luxury? From Infrastructures to Subterranean Structures

22 AESOP 2010

Room Room 25TRACK 3: Planning Education

Track Co-Chairs

Andrea I. FrankHanna Mattila

Thursday 8th

09:00-10:30Theme Future of the disciplineModerator Andrea FrankDiscussant Patsy Healey

Papers#382: Watson, Paul & Brand, PeterGlass Walls: the Voyeuristic Relationship Between Planning Education/Research and Professional Practice in Local Spatial Planning.#72: Davoudi, SiminIs Planning an Academic Discipline?

#410: Teräväinen, HelenaPlace Making in Multiple Scales

11:00-12:30Theme Developing and evaluating planning competenciesModerator Bruce Stiftel

Papers #198: Serrano, José & Scholles, Frank & Dühr, StefanieA European Intensive Seminar to Learn About Both Spatial Quality and the Cooperation Process

#61: Frank, Andrea I & Kurth, Detlef & Mironowicz, IzabelaAccreditation and Quality Assurance of Planning Education in Europe – Comparing Approaches in Germany, Poland and Great Britain#591: Frassoldati, Francesca & Wang, ShifuThe Luxury Urbanity of New Housing Projects. Report of an Urban Design & Planning Course in China#407: Gu, Dazhi & Xu, ZhenThe Comparative Analysis of Urban Planning Professional Educationbetween Chinese and European – Set the China and the UK as an Example

Thursday 8th 13:45-15:15 AESOP General Assembly 15:30-17:00Theme Teaching methodsModerator Hanna MattilaDiscussant Deborah Peel

Papers#234: Törnqvist, AndersConceptual Apprenticeship – Heuristics in Training Planning Students in Negotiation Technique and Argumentation Analysis

#:308: Amati, Marco & Mcneill, MargotVirtually Accessible: Teaching About Planning Safe Spaces Using Second Life and Virtual Worlds#206: Higgins, MarilynFormative Assessment: Balancing Educational Effectiveness and Resource Efficiency

#219: Combrink, Aneri & Van Rensburg, LeonCognitive Development in Planning Theory

17:30-19:00 No session

YTK • Aalto University 23

Friday 9th

09:00-10:30Theme Special session: Gender issues in planning educationModerator Marilyn Higgins Papers #434: Huning, Sandra

#434: Droste, Christiane11:00-12:30Theme Environmental issuesModerator Stefanie DuehrDiscussant Paul Maginn

Papers#39: Fischer, Thomas BernwardTwoea-M Enhancing Attractiveness of Environmental Assessment and Management Higher Education#472: Diab, Youssef G.Urban Planning and Environment Education: Transfer of Knowledgeto Developing Countries Towards Sustainability

#317: Petrikova, DagmarJoint Innovation in Spatial Planning Curriculum

#589: Uttke, Angela & Zenia, KotvalCommunication and Education in Brownfield Development

Saturday 10th

No sessions

24 AESOP 2010

Room Room 23

TRACK 4: Planning and Complexity

Track Co-Chairs Gert de RooAnssi Joutsiniemi

Thursday 8th09:00-10:30Theme Methodology

Papers#569: Beeftink, MarcWhat Can Spatial Planning Learn from Ecologic Management? Exploring Potentials of Panarchy for Spatial Management.

#137: Frenkel, Amnon & Orenstein, DanielMeasuring the Spatial Complexity of Urban Sprawl Using Different Methodologies – Implications for the State of the Art

11:00-12:30Theme Concepts

Papers #108: Hemberger, Christoph & Schoenwandt, WalterThe Challenge of Complexity – Mental Models and Cognitive Competences in Planning

#229: Terzi, Fatih & Tezer, AzimeIntegrating Complexity Theory into Urban Planning: Reflections from Istanbul Case

Thursday 8th 13:45-15:15 AESOP General Assembly 15:30-17:00Theme Phenomena

Papers#196: Prosperi, David C. & Diker, NazireComplexity Theory and Spatial Economic Development: a Comparative Study of Shopping Centers in South Florida, USA and Istanbul, Turkey#676: Gemenetzi, GeorgiaRethinking Urban Sprawl: an Unsustainable Urban Pattern or Just New Forms of Metropolisation?

17:30-19:00

ThemeThematic Group:Planning and complexityChair: Gert de Roo

Friday 9th

09:00-10:30

Theme Complexities of the human factor Session

Papers #632: Antoninetti, MaurizioPredicting the Growth of Norcs and Their Needs Within San Diego County, California

#422: Wankiewicz, Heidrun & Damyanovic, Doris & Zibell, BarbaraGender Planning: New Challenges and Chances in Times of Demographic Change?

#174: Israel, Emil & Frenkel, AmnonSocial Justice and Urban Sprawl—Toward an Empirical Measurement of Socio-Spatial Complexity

#512: Toufengopoulou, Anastasia -The Spatial Planning of Tourism in Greece: Assessment, Prospects

#68: De Vries, Jasper & Roodbol-Mekkes, Petra H. & Wiemer, EllenDiscussing the Details, About the Development of Trust in Relation to Long Term Contracts

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11:00-12:30Theme Analyzing the complex landscape session

Papers #257: Lindholm, GunillaThe Inclusive Reductionist or to Use Landscape Perspectives in Urban Planning

#129: Olsson, Krister & Haas, TigranStructural Change and Urban Planning & Design Ideals

#469: Weith, Thomas & Toussaint, Verena & Mueller, KlausManaging Complexity in Sustainable Land Management Research

Saturday 10th

09:00-10:30Theme Flexibility, information and strategies

Papers#727: Raagmaa, Garri & Tali, Taivo & Kase, UrmasEmerging Public Planning Culture in a Post-Soviet Country. A Comparative Study of Pärnu and Tartu Public Planning Disputes Via Media Reflection

#671: Alatalo, ElinaOpen Source Architecture: Johannesburg, South Africa

#442: Dross, Michael & Thierstein, Alain & Haag, Sebastian‘Spatial Strategy’ or How to Unlock the Fix Spatial Planning Is In

11:00-12:30 No session

26 AESOP 2010

Room Room 21

TRACK 5: European Territorial Cooperation and Policies

Track Co-Chairs

Andreas FaludiHeikki Eskelinen

Thursday 8th

09:00-10:30

Theme Setting the scene

Moderator Dominic Stead

Papers #89: Faludi, AndreasTerritorial Cohesion Post-2013 (To Whomsovever It May Concern)

#184: Cotella, Giancarlo & Janin Rivolin, UmbertoInstitutions, Discourse and Practices: Towards a Multidimensional Understanding of EU Territorial Governance

#275: Haselsberger, BeatrixThe Impact of Identity on Territorial Cohesion

11:00-12:30Theme Macro regionsModerator Maros Finka

Papers#742: Knieling, Jörg & Othengrafen, FrankMacro-Regions as a Concept for European Spatial Integration? – Discussing Positioning Strategies in the Baltic and Northern Sea Regions

#465: Fritsch, MattiTheorizing External Territorial Governance: Spatial Development Co-Operation Between the EU and Russia#25: Stead, DominicSpatial Rescaling: the Case of European Macro-Regional Strategies#340: Matern, Antje & Herslund, LiseBig Regions and Big Benefit? Observations About the Benefit of Large-Scale Cooperation for Rural Stakeholders – Results of a Comparative Study

Thursday 8th 13:45-15:15 AESOP General Assembly

15:30-17:00Theme Polycentricity and development zonesModerator Thilo Lang

Papers #528: Eskelinen, HeikkiRepositioning Europe’S Northernmost Regions#731: Thoidou, ElisavetTowards the Territorial Approach in EU Cohesion Policy: Overview and some Evidence from Greece#701: Jauhiainen, Jussi S. & Moilanen, HelkaGrowth and Prosperity for the Non-Metropolitan Areas? Regional Development Zones in Spatial Policies and Planning in Finland.

#71: Fabbro, Sandro“Euroregional Spatial Planning” as a Possible Variant of “Regional Planning”?

17:30-19:00

ThemeThematic Group:Transport planning and policy: european experiencesChair: Angela Hull

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Friday 9th

09:00-10:30Theme Special session: The EU strategy for the Baltic Sea region Moderator Ole Damsgard, Peter Schmitt

Papers Sweet,David (EU Commision DG Regio):The Commission’s view on the BSR strategy

#188: Lindblad, SverkerSweden and the EU BSR Strategy – Abstract to Aesop-Session on the EU Baltic Sea Strategy

#116: Schmitt, PeterThe EU BSR Strategy and the Vasab Long-Term Perspective – Complementary or Controversial Approaches Towards Territorial Cohesion?#144: Görmar, WilfriedMeeting Development Challenges for the Baltic Sea Region – Contributions of Transnational Projects

11:00-12:30Theme Special session: The EU strategy for the Baltic Sea region Moderator Ole Damsgard, Peter SchmittDiscussant

Papers#641: Saarinen, SakariSpecial Session on the EU Baltic SEA Strategy – the EU BSR Strategy and the Vasab Long-Term Perspective – Challenges and Opportunities for the Cities in BSR#263: Humer, AloisPerspectives and Challenges for a Danube Macro Regional Strategy

Saturday 10th

09:00-10:30Theme Spatial planning and territorial governanceModerator Beatrix HaselsbergerDiscussant

Papers #318: Finka, Maros & Jamecny, LubomirThe Territorial Agenda as an Opportunity in Enlarged EU?

#344: Adams, Neil & Cotella, Giancarlo & Nunes, Richard JosephTerritorial Knowledge Channels: Mapping Territorial Governance Arrangements in the Enlarged European Union#131: Lingua, Valeria & De Luca, GiuseppeThe Italian Perspective for Cooperative Regional Planning#94: Metzger, JonathanNo Stakeholders, No Region: Exploring Translational Stratagems in Contemporary Processes Towards Regionalization

11:00-12:30 No session

28 AESOP 2010

Room Auditorium

TRACK 6: Global Challenges and Local Responses

Track Co-Chairs Alessandro BalducciKaarin Taipale

Thursday 8th09:00-10:30Theme Local responses from grassroots upModerator Alessandro BalducciDiscussant Cristiana Rossignolo

Papers #431: Hall, Stephen George & Lambert, ChristineConstructing Local Narratives of Sustainable Development: the Case of Bristol ‘Green Capital’#588: Meyer, Christine Julia: Governing Local Development for an Ageing Population

#550: Aber, Jasmin: Creative, Collaborative & Innovative Approaches for Shrinking Cities:

#429: Mady, Christine: Void Matters: Temporary Open Urban Spaces in Beirut

#653: Thompson, MatthewCities and Regions Shaping Energy Systems: from Hydrogen Economies to Low Carbon Transitions

11:00-12:30Theme Looking from the marginsModerator Alessandro BalducciDiscussant Raine Mäntysalo

Papers #501: Muller, Larissa & Este, DavidStrengthening Community Services for Recent Immigrants: Case of Calgary#456: Tulumello, Simone & Giacopelli, Anna Licia & Giampino, AnnalisaSustainable Informal Settlements: Western Concepts Vs On-Field Issues#298: De Leo, Daniela: Planning Practices in Conditions of ‘Disorder’#562: Krakover, Shaul: Local Development Across Formerly Hostile Borders:The Case of Eilat and Aqaba

Thursday 8th 13:45-15:15 AESOP General Assembly 15:30-17:00Theme Regional perspectivesModerator Karina PallagstDiscussant Sylvie Fol

Papers #560: Waterhout, Bas: Borderless Planning in Europe

#529: Othengrafen, Frank & Knieling, JoergSoft Spatial Development in Cross-Border Metropolitan Areas: The Example of Basel#702: Cabral, Joao & Gonçalves, FernandoChallenges and Opportunities in the Integration of the Territorial Agenda and Place-Based Development Policies in Spatial Planning Systems and Practices

#182: Zonneveld, Wil: Randstad: a Soft Space for Planning?

#544: De Vries, JochemSpatial Planning as Spatial Governance: the Case of the Amsterdam Region#478: V. Löwis, Sabine & Matern, AntjeHamburg – a Metropolitan Region Responding to Global and Regional Challenges Using Emergent Strategies

17:30-19:00Theme Urban renewalModerator Thorsten WiechmannDiscussant Paulo Pinho

Papers #482: Trillo, Claudia & Bengs, Christer & Bevilacqua, CarmelinaClud: a New Sustainable Approach to the Public-Private Partnerships for Urban Regeneration#406: Rossignolo, Cristiana & Benach, Nuria & Atkinson, RobThe Europeanization of an Urban Regeneration Myth: the Barcelona Case#495: Mulligan, Helen: Environmental Sustainability Issues Under Conditions of Retrenchment: Case Studies in Europe and the US

YTK • Aalto University 29

#630: Shin, Dong-Chun: Transforming the Axis of the Two Main Central Stations in Seoul into an Innovative Industry and Culture Town, as Part of Seoul Renaissance Project

Friday 9th09:00-10:30Theme Economic pressures shaping cities – session oneModerator Kaarin TaipaleDiscussant Matthew Thompson Papers #644: Chen, Yi-Ling: Identity Politics and Culture-Led Urban Regeneration in Hualien City, Taiwan

#506: Kangasoja, Jonna K. & Mäntysalo, Raine: NPM, Local Government Reform and the Transforming Status of Architects Working in the Municipal Sector in Finland#572: Alves, Teresa: Global Challenges and Local Responses: Innovation in the Territory at the Night, Lessons from the Old Industrial Buildings New Functions#118: Huang, Wei-Ju: Typology of ICT Policies and Their Corresponding High-Tech Spaces: European and Asian Perspectives

11:00-12:30Theme Economic pressures shaping cities – session twoModerator Kaarin TaipaleDiscussant Emilia Rebelo

Papers #:30: Rocco, Roberto: New Spaces for the New Economy: New Patters for the Location of Advanced Services in Post-Fordism#91: Mironowicz, Izabela & Prosperi, David C.: Urban Change: Can We Plan New Urban Form?#537: Vermeulen, Rick: The Innovative Potential of Cities : How the Development of Amsterdam Is Reflected in Its Exhibition Center#420: Rebelo, Emília Malcata & Pinho, Paulo: Regional Impacts of Infrastructural Programmes:#490: Brand, Peter Charles & Watson, Paul RichardThe Domestic Intromission: Personal Environmental Responsibility and the Formation of Home-Based Subjectivities

Saturday 10th

09:00-10:30

Theme Global winners and local losers? Regeneration strategies in shrinking cities – The global dimension (I)

Moderator Helen Mulligan Discussant Sergio Moraes

Papers #319: Wiechmann, Thorsten & Fernandez-Martinez, Cristina & Weyman, TamaraPolicy Responses to Shrinking Cities in Asia-Pacific, Europe and America#:309: Pallagst, Karina M.: Shrinking Cities in the USA in Times of Economic Recession

#375: Buhnik, Sophie: A Shrinking City in a Country Losing Population: Osaka in Japan

#381: Uemura, Tetsuji: A Comprehensive Conceptual Framework for Anticipated Infrastructure Development in the Context of Long-Term Depopulation#187: Özatağan, Güldem: Urban Shrinkage in a Growing City Region –The Case of Izmir, Turkey

11:00-12:30

Theme Global winners and local losers? Regeneration strategies in shrinking cities – The European dimension (II)

Moderator Jasmin Aber Discussant Dong Chun Shin

Papers #203: Platt, Stephen: Governance and Community Involvement in Regenerating UK Cities

#205: Sousa, Sílvia Ávila De & Pinho, Paulo: Typology of Shrinking Cities in Portugal#124: Prada, José: From the “Industrial City” to an Unsuccessful Reconversion Process and the Unfinished Urban Change. The Case of Langreo (Spain).#322: Miot, Yoan: Housing Renewal Strategies and Their Urban Effects in Ancient Inner City Areas of Shrinking Cities. The Case of Mulhouse, Roubaix and Saint-Etienne#157: Albecker, Marie-Fleur & Fol, Sylvie: The Restructuring of Declining Suburbs in the ParisRegion (Pre-Organized Session: Global Winners and Local Losers? Regeneration Strategies in Shrinking Cities)

30 AESOP 2010

Room Palaver

TRACK 7: Planning for Rural Areas

Track Co-Chairs

Roar AmdamToivo Muilu

Thursday 8th

09:00-10:30Theme Rural planning and governance Moderator Roar Amdam

Papers#38: Shaw, David & Pemberton, SimonNew Forms of Sub-Regional Governance and Implications for Rural Areas: Evidence from North West England.#96: Nes, Akkelies Van: The Relationship EU and Local Drivers for Development in Rural Areas

#240: Hayangah, Rosemary Awuorh & Ofosu-Kwakye, YvonneChallenges to Rural Planning in Africa: the Case of Three Post-Democratic Sub-Saharan African Countries#526: Hartman, Stefan & De Roo, GertTowards Planning Strategies for Dealing with Spatial-Economical Lock-In; the Case of the Wadden Sea Region#661: Hirschler, PetraParticipation in Regional Development Processes Through a Gender Lens

11:00-12:30Theme Rural planning – case studiesModerator Roar Amdam

Papers #665: Linzer, Helena: Village Renewal from a Process Perspective

#22: Hattori, KeiroAging and Shrinking Villages in Japan, Its Reality and Relevance to Planning – a Case Study of Nanmoku Mura Village in Japan

#673: Vestby, Guri MetteSocial and Cultural Sustainability in Rural Tourist Destinations – Young Peoples Participation Reveals Conflicts and Future Challenges

Thursday 8th 13:45-15:15 AESOP General Assembly 15:30-17:00Theme Sustainability and rural areas around the worldModerator Deokho Cho

Papers #487: Basco, LauraThe Metropolitan Park of Eastern Hills of Naples. Between Landscape, Practices and Conflict

#736: Kim, Geunyoung & Kim, SangwonDoes Climate Change Affect Korea?: Regional Economic Impacts of Typhoons and Recovery Construction Projects to Residential Stability

#34: Beunen, Raoul: The Governance of Nature

17:30-19:00Theme Urban growthModerator Deokho Cho

Papers #279: Coucill, Laura Suzanne & Morton, RichardNu_Clear Urban Reform#457: Mitrea, AndreiIs the Romanian Metropolization Process a Special Case?

YTK • Aalto University 31

Friday 9th

09:00-10:30Theme Spatial strategiesModerator Akkelies van Nes

Papers#631: Agata, Spaziante & Murano, ChiaraStrategic Environmental Assessment of Rural Development Programmes: New Challenges for Improving Rural Space Quality Towards Luxury?#167: Stein, Axel: Spatial Strategies for the Development of Rural Knowledge Regions#190: Roodbol-Mekkes, Petra & Van Den Brink, AdriDivergence of Rural Spatial Planning Policy and Systems in the Netherlands#705: Napoleone, Claude & Jean-Sauveur, AyIntegrating the Relative Scarcity of Land Resources into an Efficient Local Planning: some Insights from Zonings in Provence (France)

11:00-12:30Theme Restructuring rural areas Moderator Guri Mette Vestby

Papers #66: Amdam, Roar: Local and Regional Restructuring in Norway and the Effects on Industrial Development and Attractiveness#242: Vojvodik, Martin & Vojvodikova, BarbaraIntraregional Assessment of Rural Municipalities in Czech Republic#265: Pleijte, Drs. Marcel & Kamphorst, Dr. DanaGovernment, New Public Management, Public Private Partnerships and Self-Organization in Area Development. A Comparative Evaluation of Dutch Rural Policy Initiatives.#273: Park, Wonseok & Cho, Deokho & Kim, ByungkyuPolicy Issues About the Restructuring of Rural Area After Introduction of Farmland Reverse Mortgage System#405: Sireni, Maarit KastehelmiSparsity as Luxury? An Analysis of Rural Policy-Makers’ Views on Construction in Low Density Areas in Finland.

Saturday 10th

09:00-10:30Theme Urban rural interplayModerator Toivo Muilu

Papers#269: Scott, Mark & Gkartzios, MenelaosGentrification in Rural Ireland: Middle-Class Colonisation of Rural Space, Social Conflicts and Implications for Planning Policy

#158: Ioannou, Byron & Ierides, Vassilis & Xenophontos, MariaSustainable Community Development, Challenges and Gaps

#677: Vestergaard, Maja Sig & Krogh, Birgit & Løbner, KristianA Sociological View on the Aspects of a Motorway to a Peripheral Area

#285: Farthing, Stuart MillerUnderstanding the Meaning and Significance of Spatial Practices in City Region Governance

11:00-12:30Theme Landscape and land use conflictsModerator Toivo Muilu

Papers #32: Roth, Michael & Kruse, Alexandra: Foundations for the Planning of Europe’S Rural Areas: Agricultural Landscapes as Cultural Heritage – a European View#75: Verbeek, Thomas & Leinfelder, Hans & Pisman, AnnPublic and Private Use of Open Space in a Densely Urbanized Context#125: Hanegreefs, Griet & Petit, Steven & Leinfelder, HansPlanning Greenhouse Development Through Research by Design at the Landscape Scale#663: Scarwell, Helga-Jane & Leducq, DivyaWind Farms Planning Between Latent Confliction and Singular Complementarity?

32 AESOP 2010

Room Hall 1

TRACK 8: Urban Planning and Physical Form

Track Co-Chairs

Ali MadanipourPanu Lehtovuori

Thursday 8th

09:00-10:30Theme Design guidance and planning processModerator Ali Madanipour

Papers #67: Carmona, MatthewDecoding Design Guidance#299: Mueller-Herbers, Sabine: New Guidelines for Inner Urban Development – Approaching Private Property Owners Is Worth Doing It

#15 Paterson, Elaine MargaretDesign Review – What Place in Urban Design Guidance for Planning Decision Making?#281: Tiesdell, Steven & Adams, David & Weeks, GeorgeWhat Matters Most: Delivering Better Places in Scotland

11:00-12:30Theme Public space and public sphereModerator Panu Lehtovuori

Papers #239: De Magalhaes, ClaudioPublic Space and the Governance of Publicness: a Framework for Analysis

#556: Madanipour, Ali: Political Theory and Public Space

#485: Varna, George & Tiesdell, SteveConceptualising and Measuring the Publicness of Public Space: Towards a New Model

#480: Vasconcelos, Ricardo BorgesParque Das Nações, Lisbon: the Design of Urban Space on the City Edge

#122: Duarte, Paulette & Seigneuret, NatachaThe French Public Places of the Modern Movement. From a “Free” Place of the Postwar’S Years to a Requalified Contemporary Place Became Rare and Precious.

Thursday 8th 13:45-15:15 AESOP General Assembly 15:30-17:00Theme Density and compact cityModerator Stephen Marshall

Papers #70: Boyko, Christopher: The Softer Side of Density

#54: Portokalidis, Costas & Lalenis, Costas & Zygouri, FoteiniCompact City. How Does the Greek Planning Institutional Framework Deal with This Urban Pattern? A Theoretical Analysis

#689: Vettorato, Daniele: Urban Morphology and “Energy Behaviors of Settlements”

#587: Bricocoli, Massimo & Savoldi, PaolaPlace, People and the Organization of Urban Space. Milan and Turin Under Observation#151: Marshall, Stephen & Green, Nick & Gong, YiUrban Compactness: New Geometric Interpretations and Indicators Applied to English Settlements

15:30-17:00 Parallel Session – Cone LobbyTheme Urban regeneration and place qualityModerator Ali MadanipourPapers #604: Apostol, Ileana: Rhythm-Analyses: Santa Monica, California and Oberhausen, Ruhrgebiet

#374: Jefferies, Thomas Edward: 3 X Beetham – Banal Luxury and ‘Quality Places: #463: Sapounakis, Aris: Urban Regeneration of the Heraklion Western Waterfront: 5 Years After#615: Wu, Ming: The People’S Square in Central Shanghai: a Spatial and Socio-Historical Analysis

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17:30-19:00 Parallel Session – Cone Lobby

Theme Transforming cities

Moderator Panu Lehtovuori

Papers #277: Cocks, Matthew & Couch, Chris & Bernt, Matthias Shrinking Cities: a Comparison Between Liverpool and Leipzig Within a European Context

#267: Nielsen, Thomas Sick & Groth, Niels Boje & Grunfelder, Julien Emergence of the Polycentric Urban Region: the Case of Detroit

#646: Sasek Divjak, Mojca Cities Regrowing Smaller - Regeneration Strategies for Ljubljana Urban Region

#667: Kooij, Henk-Jan: Space for Innovation

17:30-19:00Theme Landscape and green spacesModerator Rafael Pizarro

Papers #479: Cassatella, Claudia“Landscape Is Luxury”: Searching for Images of Sustainability#250: Mäkinen, KirsiTracing Nature for Walking – Planning Needles, Stones and Roots Under Suburban Pedestrian Feet#549: Zavraka, Despoina & Tellios, AnastasiosThe Luxury of Silence, Cemeteries as Places of ‘Aposiopesis’ in the City

#440: Nucci, LuciaOpen Space Vs “Luxury” Neighbourhoods

Friday 9th09:00-10:30Theme History of urban developmentModerator Zorica Nedovic-Budic

Papers #367: Santos, João RafaelBuilding a Metropolis from Infrastructure: Lisbon from 1940 to 1966#64: Schilleci, Filippo & Picone, Marco: A Mosaic of Suburbs

#31: Stanilov, Kiril: Planning the Growth of a Metropolis: Factors Influencing Development Patterns in Western London, 1875-2:005#10: Nedovic-Budic, Zorica & Djordjevic, Dejan & Dabovic, TijanaShifting Planning Doctrines and Urban Transformation of Belgrade: from 19Th to 21St Century

11:00-12:30Theme Social challenges of place makingModerator Marion Roberts

Papers #681: Darchen, Sebastien: The Redevelopment Process of Entertainment Zones and the ‘Creativity’ Discourse in Vancouver and Toronto: a Necessary Path Towards ‘Place Making’?

#264: Forino, GiuseppeConsequences for Social Network Development of Rebuilding and Planning of Cities Damaged by Natural Disasters: L’Aquila (Italy).#539: Harinasuta, Supapim GajaseniNew Forms of Public Spaces in Bangkok: from Houses and Pavements to Condos and the Third Place#:458: Roberts, Marion ElizabethYouth, Place and Alcohol: a Framework to Investigate Regional Variations

Track 8 continues next page...

#53: Pizarro, Rafael E & Bürgow, Grit: Merging New Green Infrastructure with Traditional Urban Form: New Urban Structures for the 21St Century?”

Room Hall 1

TRACK 8: Urban Planning and Physical Form

Track Co-Chairs

Ali MadanipourPanu Lehtovuori

Thursday 8th

09:00-10:30Theme Design guidance and planning processModerator Ali Madanipour

Papers #67: Carmona, MatthewDecoding Design Guidance#299: Mueller-Herbers, Sabine: New Guidelines for Inner Urban Development – Approaching Private Property Owners Is Worth Doing It

#15 Paterson, Elaine MargaretDesign Review – What Place in Urban Design Guidance for Planning Decision Making?#281: Tiesdell, Steven & Adams, David & Weeks, GeorgeWhat Matters Most: Delivering Better Places in Scotland

11:00-12:30Theme Public space and public sphereModerator Panu Lehtovuori

Papers #239: De Magalhaes, ClaudioPublic Space and the Governance of Publicness: a Framework for Analysis

#556: Madanipour, Ali: Political Theory and Public Space

#485: Varna, George & Tiesdell, SteveConceptualising and Measuring the Publicness of Public Space: Towards a New Model

#480: Vasconcelos, Ricardo BorgesParque Das Nações, Lisbon: the Design of Urban Space on the City Edge

#122: Duarte, Paulette & Seigneuret, NatachaThe French Public Places of the Modern Movement. From a “Free” Place of the Postwar’S Years to a Requalified Contemporary Place Became Rare and Precious.

Thursday 8th 13:45-15:15 AESOP General Assembly 15:30-17:00Theme Density and compact cityModerator Stephen Marshall

Papers #70: Boyko, Christopher: The Softer Side of Density

#54: Portokalidis, Costas & Lalenis, Costas & Zygouri, FoteiniCompact City. How Does the Greek Planning Institutional Framework Deal with This Urban Pattern? A Theoretical Analysis

#689: Vettorato, Daniele: Urban Morphology and “Energy Behaviors of Settlements”

#587: Bricocoli, Massimo & Savoldi, PaolaPlace, People and the Organization of Urban Space. Milan and Turin Under Observation#151: Marshall, Stephen & Green, Nick & Gong, YiUrban Compactness: New Geometric Interpretations and Indicators Applied to English Settlements

34 AESOP 2010

Saturday 10th

09:00-10:30Theme Local centres, sustainability and urbanityModerator Robin Goodman

Papers #338: Berglund, EevaThe British High Street as a Cultural Institution: an Anthropological Critique of Retail Planning

#650: Kurth, Detlef & Simon-Philipp, Christina & Brombach, KarolineAn International Perspective on District Centre Regeneration – Between Urban Planning and Promotion of Economic Development

#672: Mayer-Dukart, Anne: Retail and Urbanity – Urban Integration of Inner-City Shopping Centers

#433: Rantanen, Annuska: Evolution of the Shopping Mall Type, a Morphological Analysis

#217: Goodman, Robin & Taylor, Elizabeth & Buxton, Michael: The Difficulties of Directing Development: an Examination of the Effects of Recent Planning Policy in Melbourne, Australia

11:00-12:30Theme Temporary use of placeModerator Lauren Anders

Papers#517: Formato, Enrico & Berruti, Gilda & Vitellio, IlariaCities in the City: “Shelters”, “Glades” and “Tracks” (As Figures of an Innovative Urban Form,) as the Base of a Regeneration Strategy

#35: Kotval, Zenia & Machemer, Patricia & Mullin, JohnTemporary Uses as Strategies for Urban Redevelopment

#552: Polychronopoulos, Dimitris & Grigoriadou, Maria Alexandra“Under the Bridge” – Compressing the Urban Space and Time Into Happy Tiny Packages#347: Hackenbroch, Kirsten: Negotiating Open Space in Informal Spheres of Dhaka – Consequences for the Transformation of Space and Users’ Rights

#313: Andres, Lauren: Temporary Uses in Derelict Spaces: a Luxury for Tomorrow’S Planning?

YTK • Aalto University 35

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36 AESOP 2010

Room Hall 4A

TRACK 9: Culture, Heritage and Planning

TrackCo-Chairs

Zeynep EnlilMervi Ilmonen

Thursday 8th

09:00-10:30Theme Culture as a tool for urban changeModerator Mervi IlmonenDiscussant Jacob N Larsen

Papers#52: Paris, Didier & Baert, ThierryCulture as a Territorial Development Project : the Role of Culture in the Regeneration of Lille Métropole#81: Nour, Haysam: Urban Heritage in the New Startegic Plan for Cairo Mega Region: Vision 2050

#296: Ingallina, Patrizia“The Reorganization of University System in the Context of the “Greater Paris”: Questioning the Potential of Development Through Culture.”#471: De Leo, Daniela & Lieto, Laura & Basco, LauraThe “Mediterranean Cities Project”. Temporary Re-Uses of Urban Space and Urban Regeneration Strategies

11:00-12:30Theme Creative economy and place effectsModerator Mervi IlmonenDiscussant Didier Paris

Papers #754: Enlil, Zeynep: Creative Istanbul: a Vision (Im)Possible?#204: Oliveira, Carlos & Breda-Vázquez, Isabel & Guimarães, RitaUrban Creativity and ‘Place Effects’: the Case of Porto City-Centre#643: Durmaz, Bahar: Beyond the Standards: Is Quality of Place and Creativity Luxury?

#670: Choi, Haeok: Black-Box Approach for Analysis of Characteristics of Creative Industries and Regional Development Policy and Strategy in East Asia City

Thursday 8th 13:45-15:15 AESOP General Assembly

15:30-17:00Theme Reinvention of cultural heritageModerator Zeynep Enlil

Discussant Mervi Ilmonen

Papers#508: Volpiano, MauroHeritage as a Strategic Asset: How Planning Tools May Help a General Reconsideration of Territorial Policies on the Basis of Historical Knowledge. An Italian Case in Piedmont.#297: Asmervik, SigmundDilemmas Arising from the Idea of Improving Physical Accessibility in Relation to Aesthetics and

Architectural Heritage#328: Paadam, Katrin & Gromark, StenConverted Residences – Re-Inventing Urban Identities. A Sociological-Architectural Enquiry.

17:30-19:00Theme Revitalization through cultural planningModerator Zeynep EnlilDiscussant Katrin Paadam

Papers #448: Talone, Antonio & Porrello, AntoninoCultural Mapping: the Semantic Web as a Survey Tool for the Construction of the Cultural Plan#750: Sharma, Utpal: Revitalization Strategy for Historic City of Jaipur#455: Tani, Akihiko & Masuta, TatsuoA Study on Designation of Kuroshima as a National Historic District

YTK • Aalto University 37

Friday 9th

09:00-10:30Theme Heritage in a new contextModerator Sten GromarkDiscussant Zeynep Enlil

Papers#59: Tsolakaki, Panagiota“Developing Industrial Tourism in Greece. A Methodology Approach for the Identification and Recording of Industrial Heritage and Ex-Industrial Places.”

#271: Puttilli, Matteo & Albano, RobertoCities in Transition. Torino, Oxford and the Management of Cultural Heritage.

#210: Fukui, Miya & Miyagawa, TomokoCharacteristics of Local Resources and Modernisation Heritage at Sensyu Area − A Case Study of Wooden Textile Factories in Izumisano City, Osaka−

#551: Mälkki, MikkoHeritage Preservation and Persuasive Storytelling in the Changing Contexts of Planning.

11:00-12:30Theme Special session: Public spaces and urban cultures

Moderator Sabine Knierbein

Discussant Ali Madanipour

Papers #510: Knierbein, Sabine: Central Public Spaces as Interfaces Between Cohesion and Competition: Why ‘Culture‘ Matters.

#699: Sezer, Ceren: Public Visibility as a Constituter of Public Culture

#607: Tornaghi, ChiaraUrban Environmental Cultures and Public Space: New Challenges for Urban Planning

#746: Can, Isin: Development Plan Versus Urban Design: Experience of Izmir

Saturday 10th

09:00-10:30Theme Heritage in conflictModerator Mervi Ilmonen

Discussant Christer Bengs

Papers#753: Hammami, FerasCultural Conservation Under Occupation Conflictual Powers and Meanings in the Historic Centre of Nablus#295: Zoppi, MariellaConserving the Identity of a Territory Under the Pressure of Development: the Case of Montalbano in Tuscany#571: Mihajlovic, JelisavetaTown Planning Versus Built Heritage Conservation: Historic Urban Cores’ Development in Serbia#660: Budge, Trevor MurrayContested Space in Former Colonies: What Is the Role of Representations of European Colonial Heritage Outside of Europe?

11:00-12:30Theme Culture represented and reinterpretedModerator Zeynep Enlil

Papers #530: Neophytou, KaterinaSlow Food, Grow Food, Show Food, Know(Ledge Of) Food, Throw (Away) Food

#568: Kousidonis, Christos Th.: Front Page Planning

#516: Deffner, AlexThe Representation of the City in Recent US TV Series: an Element of Cultural Planning?

38 AESOP 2010

Room Room 22

TRACK 10: Sustainability: Climate Change, Risks and Planning

Track Co-Chairs

Peter DriessenLasse Peltonen

Thursday 8th

09:00-10:30Theme Energy issues and spatial planningModerator Peter Driessen

Papers #86: Verones, SaraEnergy Sustainability in Urban Renewal

#127: Hardy, MaeliosaPlanning, Energy Development and the Politics of Its Regulation#354: Ebert, Sebastian & Tuhkanen, HeidiDealing with Climate Change – Opportunities and Conflicts of Integrating Mitigation and Adaptation

11:00-12:30

Theme Climate change related risk managementModerator Lasse Peltonen

Papers#177: Runhaar, Hens & Driessen, Peter & Spit, TejoGoverning Climate Change Related Risks in the Netherlands: Challenges and Responses of Urban Planners#380: Lin, Yutzu KeatsIntegrating Climatic Risk into the System for Spatial Planning and Urban Disaster Prevention in Taiwan#401: Balamir, MuratApproaches to the Planning of ‘Low-Risk Urban Areas’

#502: Galderisi, Adriana & Ceudech, Andrea & Ferrara, Floriana FedericaResilience And/Or Vulnerability? Relationships and Roles in Risk Mitigation Strategies

Thursday 8th 13:45-15:15 AESOP General Assembly

15:30-17:00

Theme Climate adaptation and urban planning

Moderator Lasse Peltonen

Papers#221: Roessler, Stefanie & Mathey, JulianeUrban Adaptation to Climate Change by Urban Green Systems in Relation to Spatial Transformation in Cities#256: Allin, Simone & Henneberry, John & Keskin, BernaValuing Attractive Landscapes in the Urban Economy: Specific Challenges of Two UK Case Studies in the Context of Climate Change

#260: Mees, HeleenClimate Greening London, Rotterdam and Toronto: the Governance Capacity of Spatial Planning to Adapt Cities to Climate Change Through Green Space#278: Smith, Ian & Hopkins, DianeAdapting the English Suburbs for Climate Change: A Conceptual Model of Local Adaptive Capacity#685: Kopomaa, Timo MattiBomb Shelters in the Suburb – a Case Study and Discussions

17:30-19:00

ThemeThematic Group:Urban cultures and public spacesChair: Ceren Sezer

YTK • Aalto University 39

Friday 9th

09:00-10:30Theme Adaptation and mitigation policies: stakeholder involvemenetModerator Peter Driessen

Papers#327: Kule, Laila & Briede, AgritaClimate Change Adaptation in Latvia: from Water-Related and Academic-Driven to Cross-Sectorial and Stakeholder Involvement

#356: Mehmood, AbidAdaptation and Resilience: Securing Regional Futures Through Alliances

#363: Angignard, MarjoryA Prerequisite to Participation : Understanding the Addressees

#493: Desjardins, Xavier & Mettetal, LucileThe Social Acceptance of Planning to Mitigate Climate Change

11:00-12:30Theme Climate adaptation and regional and local planning strategies I

Moderator Hens Runhaar

Papers #519: Moccia, Francesco DomenicoFoundations of Eco-Planning

#436: Harvold, Kjell & Skjeggedal, TerjeA New Planning Focus? Climate Planning in Norwegian Municipalities

#169: Rongwiriyaphanich, SuwannaFlood Risk Management from a Cultural Perspective: a Review of Flood Risk Management Planning and Strategies in the Bangkok Delta-Metropolitan Region

#236: White, IainPlanning and Flood Risk Management: Risk, Resilience and More Sustainable Cities

Saturday 10th

09:00-10:30

Theme Climate adaptation and regional and local planning strategies II

Moderator Lasse Peltonen

Papers#657: Juhola, Sirkku & Haanpää, Simo & Peltonen, LasseRegional Challenges of Climate Change Adaptation: Grounding of National Climate Strategies in Finland#717: Cormont, PascalAdaptation to Climate Change as a New Stimulus for Regional Development? The Potential of Water Management in the Case of the Emscher-Lippe Region (Ruhr Basin) in North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany

11:00-12:30 No session

40 AESOP 2010

Room Luolamies

TRACK 11: Housing and Regeneration Policies

Track Co-Chairs

Nikos KaradimitriouAnneli Juntto

Thursday 8th09:00-10:30Theme Regenerating brownfield sites and industrial areasModerator Jasper Beekhams

Papers #491: Otsuka, Noriko & Dixon, Tim & Abe, HirokazuThe Regeneration of ‘Hardcore’ Brownifield Sites: England and Japan Compared#489: De Lima, Luis Vasconcelos & Aguilera, Dolores SánchezUrban Planning and Urban Inclusion. A Review of the Implementation of the Districts ACT LAW in Catalonia (Spain)#540: Schulze Bäing, Andreas & Wong, CeciliaBrownfield Regeneration and the Delivery of Sustainable Communities in England: What Happens to the Most Deprived Neighbourhoods?#216: Nakano, Mai & Otsuka, Noriko & Abe, HirokazuBrownfield Regeneration in Marginal Areas in Osaka, Japan – Comparative Study on Brownfield Regeneration Japan and UK

#254: Beekmans, Jasper: Causes of Decline of Industrial Estates11:00-12:30Theme Cities, policies and projectsModerator Nikos Karadimitriou

Papers #27: Verhage, RoelofMobilisation of Land and Provision of Housing: How to Articulate Public and Private Interests?#197: Federico, GuiatiUrban Integrated Regeneration Programs in Italy: Integration of Actions, Actors and Policies

#223: Cremaschi, Marco: Truly Neo Liberal Projects? A Critical Map of Urban Policies in Rome

#350: Canniffe, Eamonn: A Surfeit of Surface and an Excess of Space: New Islington, Manchester

#627: Barber, Austin: Urban Villages in the Heart of the City: Planning Contradictions and Challenges

Thursday 8th 13:45-15:15 AESOP General Assembly 15:30-17:00Theme Housing policies – international experiencesModerator Neriman Yörur

Papers#175: Saccomani, Silvia & Governa, FrancescaA Neo-Liberal Housing Policy? Convergence and Divergence between Italian Local Housing Policy and European Trends#596: Jinghuan, HeThe Evolution of Residential Spaces in Chinese Mega-Cities’ Peripheries

#325: Puustinen, Sari: The Housing Regime in the Helsinki Metropolitan Area#154: Pessoa, Denise FalcaoIncreasing the Availability of Low Income Housing in Sao Paulo, Brazil After the 2:002 Master Plan#707: Yörür, Neriman & Ünverdi, Levent & Karataş, NeslihanThe Role of the Central Government on Mass Housing Policies and Practices in Turkey

17:30-19:00Theme Housing qualityModerator Francisco Serdoura

Papers #41: Mace, Alan & Gallent, Nick & Madeddu, ManuelaInternal Housing Space: by Regulation or Negotiation?#93: Short, Michael James & Lambert, ChristineNew Urban Housing: Quality, Design and Delivery#266: Nelson, Suzy: The Intensification of Development and the Provision of Family Housing in London

#284: Gao, Wei-Jie & Chao, T.-Y: Using the Real Options to Evaluate the Effectiveness of Floor Area Bonus in Urban Renewal Projects in Taipei City

YTK • Aalto University 41

Friday 9th

09:00-10:30Theme Urban design in regenerationModerator Leena Aalto

Papers #171: Madureira, Ana MafaldaUrban Design as Tool for Transformation of De-Industrialized Cities

#435: Polko, Adam: Regeneration of Main Street in Post-Industrial City – Polish Experience

#494: Savvides, Andreas L.: Regenerating the Core: Adaptive Reuse and Housing in the Historic City

#:450: Serdoura, Francisco & Moreira, Graça: Creative Urban Regeneration in Lisbon

#231: Aalto, Leena: Multisensory Environmental Experience

11:00-12:30Theme Local interests and localised practices

Moderator Graham Squires

Papers #148: Carpenter, Juliet: Regeneration and Social Enterprise: a Model for the Future?

#621: Takahashi, Akira & Abe, HirokazuHarmonious Coexistence of Housings and Manufacturing in Industrial Area, Japan#107: Bailey, NickThe New Localism: Evaluating the Importance of Neighbourhood Governance in Delivering Regeneration Strategies.

#288: Larsen, Jacob Norvig: Local Firms, Place and Social Responsibility

#586: Hendrixen, Peter: Institutional Change and Governance Dynamics in Local Strategic Partnerships

Saturday 10th09:00-10:30Theme Housing markets, planning and regenerationModerator Eric Pollock

Papers #392: Sinning, Prof. Dr. Heidi & Eizenhöfer, Rebecca & Ziervogel, DanielaDemand-Orientation in Housing – Communicative Methods in Regeneration Policies

#659: Baker, Mark William & Hincks, StephenDefining Sub-Regional Housing Market Areas in the English Regions: Methodological Approaches and Practical Implications#554: Hincks, StephenThe Interaction of Housing and Labour Markets and the Implications for Spatial Planning in England#262: Ferrari, Edward TerenceHousing Search and Moving Intentions: Implications for Spatial Planning

#752: Pollock, EricAccessibility in Society; an Annotated Bibliography for Dealing with Impairments and Disability

11:00-12:30Theme Planning and regeneration in the face of conflicting needs Moderator Nick Bailey

Papers #739: Kuechel, LisaUrban Living in France Tendencies, Similarities and Differences – a French German Comparison

#172: Pisman, Ann & Allaert, Georges & Lombaerde, PietDifferent Neighbourhoods but Also Different People?

#119: Madeddu, ManuelaTenure Neutral Development, Space Standards, and Economic Shocks

#294: Squires, GrahamReinforcing the Problem: Poor Quality Physical Built Environments in Socio-Economically Disadvantaged Areas

42 AESOP 2010

Room Room 26

TRACK 12: Mobility: Transport Planning and Policy

Track Co-Chairs

Luca BertoliniTapio Luttinen

Thursday 8th

09:00-10:30Theme Supporting decision making on infrastructure projectsModerator Tapio Luttinen

Papers #656: Nicolaisen, Morten SkouUncertainties in Travel Demand Forecasting: Considerations for a Methodology of Appraisal

#120: Curtis, Carey & Burke, Matthew & Scheurer, JanThe Dead End of Demand Modelling: Supplying a Futures-Based Public Transport Plan

#520: Maloir, Catherine & Arts, Jos & Tillema, TaedeLiving near Roads: Exploring the Trade-Off Between Accessibility and Environmental Effects

#628: Andersen, Jeppe AstrupModels, Manipulation and the Environment: Power and Filtering of Knowledge in the Decision-Making Process on the Third Limfjord Crossing#194: Beukers, Els & Te Brömmelstroet, Marco & Bertolini, LucaSocial Cost-Benefit Analysis: Learning Tool Instead of Final Assessment

11:00-12:30Theme Institutional barriers and innovations in transport planningModerator Joseph Arts

Papers#47: Curtis, Carey & Armstrong, RachelThe Capacity of State and Local Planning Authorities to Deliver Sustainable Transport: the Case of Metropolitan Perth.#83: Tan, Wendy & Bertolini, LucaBarriers to Transit Oriented Developments in the Netherlands: a Luxury Problem?#13: Krummheuer, FlorianChances and Risks by Disintegrating Light Railway Systems – a Planers Approach#639: Dai, GuowenRenaissance of the HSR Ages? Effectiveness of Spatial Policy Under HSR Network Basedon Comparative Studies in China and Europe

Thursday 8th 13:45-15:15 AESOP General Assembly 15:30-17:00Theme Integrating infrastructure and spatial planningModerator Luca Bertolini

Papers#168: Zanon, BrunoChallenges of Multilevel Territorial Governance: Infrastructure Networks Development and Regional Planning. Lessons from a Case Study in Northern Italy.

#286: Webb, BrianSpatial Thinking Within Canadian Federalism: Creating the Asia-Pacific Gateway and Corridor#418: Heeres, NielsFrom Line Towards Area Oriented Approaches in Infrastructure Planning: a Historical, Comparative Analysis#222: Busscher, Tim & Tillema, Taede & Arts, Jos“Towards a Programmatic Approach in Dutch Infrastructure Planning? Lessons Learned from a Dutch Air Quality Programme”

17:30-19:00Theme Emerging mobility practices and conceptualizationsModerator Luca Bertolini

Papers #606: Moreira, Maria Da Graça Antunes & Serdoura, FranciscoPlanning Night Life in the City – a Transport Dilemma#141: Jaarsma, Rinus & Vries, Jasper R. De & Beunen, RaoulWhen Space Is Luxury: Planning for Competing Uses in a Recreation and Protected Area, the Meijendel Dunes, with a Long-Standing Visitor Monitoring Program

YTK • Aalto University 43

#398: Trampa, Anastasia & Zifou, MariaUrban Public Spaces’ Planning and Sustainable Urban Mobility: Users’ Perception#324: Vitale Brovarone, ElisabettaLand Use-Transport Studies: Immature Discipline or Multidisciplinary Field of Study?

Friday 9th09:00-10:30Theme Measuring accessibility, mapping mobilityModerator Carey Curtis

Papers #218: Scheurer, Jan & Silva, CeciliaRefining Accessibility Tools: SAL and Snamuts for Porto#335: Cheng, Hoa-Teng & Tsou, Ko-WanThe Influence of the Structure of Network in Metropolis on Tourism Industry Development#7:30: Ristimäki, Mika SakariTravel Related Zones of the Urban Form –A Well Known Urban Form?#191: Pucci, Paola & Manfredini, Fabio & Tagliolato, PaoloUncovering Urban Dynamics from Mobile Phone Data

11:00-12:30Theme Exploring the relationship between urban form and travel behaviorModerator Tapio Luttinen

Papers #201: Silva, Cecília & Næss, Petter & Pinho, Paulo; Balancing How Urban Structure Constraints and Influences Travel Behaviour: the Case Study of Oporto.

#14: Vojnovic, IgorThe Burdens of Place: a Socio-Economic and Ethnic Exploration into the Urban Built Environment, Travel Behavior, and Physical Activity in the Lansing Region, Michigan#721: Kanninen, Vesa & Kuoppa, JenniEveryday Mobility – the Actancy of the Urban Structure?#474: Murphy, EndaThe Dual of the Transportation Problem and Its Implications for Transport and Land-Use Planning

Saturday 10th

09:00-10:30Theme Mobility for all? Moderator Angela Hull

Papers #635: Bahl, Deepak & Banerjee, Dr. Tridib & Uhm, Dr. JungaPedestrian Safety of School Children: Toward Improving Walkability of Inner City Neighborhoods#629: Schmeidler, Karel RCost Action 358 – Pedestrians Users Needs#62: Li, JianlingMeasuring Accessibility to Healthcare Services: a GIS Application#243: Verma, IraThe Public Transport for People with Disabilities

11:00-12:30Theme Achieving the transition to sustainable mobilityModerator Jan Scheurer

Papers#541: Ruiz Lorbacher, Matias & Kracht, MatthiasSustainable Transportation in Mega Cities: Strategies and Instruments – Case Study on Hefei, China#649: Pacchi, Carolina & Gullino, SilviaGrassroots Organisations, Eco-Transport and Behavioural Change in the UK and in Italy: the Example of the Transition Towns Movement

#610: Buhler, Thomas: The Disconnect Between Mobility-As-Plan and Mobility-As-Practice Case Study Urban Parking Policies in Lyon

#200: Hull, AngelaWorkplace Interventions to Reduce CO2 Emissions and Encourage Active Travel#697: Driscoll, Patrick ArthurIs the Future Electric?

44 AESOP 2010

Room Hall 4B

TRACK 13: Resource Management, Energy and Planning

Track Co-Chairs

Thomas FischerJari Niemelä

Thursday 8th09:00-10:30Theme Climate change and urban planningModerator Thomas Fischer, Jari Niemelä

Papers#55: Sturzaker, John & Davoudi, SiminSustainable Urban Metabolism for Europe: Mitigating Climate ChangeThrough Urban Development#74: Aarsaether, Nils & Buanes, ArildLost at Sea? How Great Ambitions in Conservation Planning Are Subverted#706: Lin, Dan: Nature Conservation Management in China-A Case Study in a Rapid Growth Industrial Area, Shenzhen#132: Van Der Knaap, Wim & Davidse, Bart JanWhile Time Goes By; Dealing with Time and Multi-Dynamics in Spatial Planning and Design

11:00-12:30Theme System perspectives

Moderator Thomas Fischer, Jari Niemelä

Papers #289: Oliveira, Vitor Araújo & Cruz, Sara Santos & Barbosa, Magda CarvalhoDesigning the Metabolic Impact Analysis for Urban Planning#272: Svenfelt, Åsa & Gunnarsson-Östling, UlrikaTowards Just Social-Ecological Systems#323: Lyhne, Ivar: Exploring Potentials of Sense-Making Theory for Understanding Social Processes in Public Hearing

Thursday 8th 13:45-15:15 AESOP General Assembly 15:30-17:00Theme Settlement and Form

Moderator Thomas Fischer, Jari Niemelä

Papers #432: Voigt, Andreas & Walchhofer, Hans Peter & Mayerhofer, RainerPerspectives and Concepts for Developing Regional Settlement Systems

#704: Rigillo, MarinaEnvironmental Performance of the Urban Form.

#662: Wang, YanEnvironmental Policy and Politics in the Chinese Post-Reform Urban Growth Regime

17:30-19:00

ThemeThematic Group:Resilience and risk mitigationChair: Murat Balamir

Friday 9th

09:00-10:30Theme Networks perspectiveModerator Thomas Fischer, Jari Niemelä

Papers #503: Seardo, Bianca: Environmental Quality in “Ordinary Territories”: the Ecological Network Model in Spatial Planning. A Balance After a Decade of Practice.

#684: Murano, ChiaraIntegrating Strategic Environmental Assessment in River Basin Planning: Institutional Landings#213: Maricic, TamaaraAnalysing Social Impacts of Mining Activities

YTK • Aalto University 45

11:00-12:30Theme Marine and coastal areasModerator Thomas Fischer, Jari Niemelä

Papers #99: Ritchie, Heather JenniceMarine Spatial Planning: Is It Possible to Act in the “Sea Interest”?#143: Jay, StephenSpace at Sea: Manoeuvring Towards a Relational Understanding#609: Kidd, SueThe Purpose and Process of Marine Spatial Planning: Insights from Terrestrial Planning

Saturday 10th

09:00-10:30Theme Special session: Theoretical dimensions of urban resilienceModerator Thomas Fischer, Jari Niemelä

Papers#165: Van Der Knaap, Wim & Snep, RobbertMultiple Land Use Planning and Urban Designs for Building Resilience in Metropolitan

Landscapes#156: Wilkinson, Cathy & Brown, Rebekah & Tooma Saarne, Nils GöranssonResilient Ecosystem Services Management Through Urban Planning – Towards a Typology of

Approaches#445: Tezer, Azime & Aksehirli, Ilke & Ozyetgin, AyseIntegrating Resilience Theory with Ecosystem Services in the Case of Omerli Watershed: an Informally Developing Urban Biodiversity Hot-Spot of Istanbul

#393: Eraydin, Ayda“Resilience Perspective” for Urban Analysis and Planning#733: Tasan-Kok, Tuna & Stead, Dominic & Lu, PeiwenShifting from Sustainability to Resilience? Planning Strategies, Climate Change and Flood Risk in

Rotterdam#357: Lu, PeiwenUrban Resilience in Planning

#357: Lu, PeiwenUrban Resilience in Planning

11:00-12:30

Theme Special session: Empirical analysis of urban resilience

Moderator Thomas Fischer, Jari Niemelä

Papers#6: Morgado, Sofia & Costa, João Pedro & Dias, LuísAssessing Urban Resilience in the Metropolitan Area of Lisbon. The Cases of Cacém and

Alcântara#290: Cruz, Sara Santos & Vítor, Oliveira Araújo & Ana, Martins JorgeEvaluating Urban Policies from a Resilient Perspective: the Case of Oporto

#444: Dubois, Alexandre & Schmitt, Peter & Henriksson, AnuResilience and Polycentricity – the Case of the Stockholm Region

#599: Salgueiro, Teresa Barata & Cachinho, HerculanoRetail Policy for Resilient Cities

#532: Altay, DenizThe Transformation of Urban Social Geography and Urban Resilience Under the Influence of Global Processes

#581: Woltjer, JohanArticulating Resilience in Flood Risk Management and Regional Planning

46 AESOP 2010

Room Room 24

TRACK 14: Participation and Governance

Track Co-Chairs

Louis AlbrechtsAija Staffans

Thursday 8th

09:00-10:30Theme Networks and collaborative governance Moderator Aija Staffans, Louis Albrechts

Papers #11: Gallent, Nick & Robinson, SteveCommunity Planning Through Networks: Bonding Ties and Brokering Links#84: Van Dijk, TerryLocal Opposition Versus Political Opportunity Structures: Room for Uninvited Public Participation#114: Ellerton, ThomasConnections and Disconnections in Joined-Up Regeneration

11:00-12:30Theme Networks and collaborative governance

Moderator Aija Staffans

Papers #251: Nurse, Alexander: Meaningful Devolution or the State in Local Clothing? Local Area Agreements and Their Role in England’S ‘Local Government Modernisation Agenda’

#261: Kristiansen, Ronny: Non-Governmental Initiatives Meet Institutionalised Planning: Potentials for Influencing and Changing Urban Planning Practices.

#428: Switzer, Andrew & Janssen-Jansen, Leonie & Bertolini, LucaTrust in the Process: Inter-Actor Trust in Coordinated Public Transport – Land Use Planning

Thursday 8th 13:45-15:15 AESOP General Assembly 15:30-17:00Theme Networks and collaborative governance Moderator Aija Staffans

Papers #452: Perrone, Camilla & Paba, GiancarloParticipation and Planning: Wicked Problems in Tuscany, Italy

#542: O’Hare, PaulCommunity Capture in an Era of Multi-Level Governance

#598: Hopkins, DianeFive Rationales for Collaborative Governance

17:30-19:00Theme Strategic planning

Moderator Louis Albrechts

Papers #79: Oosterlynck, Stijn & Debruyne, Pascal: Going Beyond Physical Urban Planning Interventions: Fostering New Social Relations Through Urban Renewal in Brugse Poort, Ghent

#101: Fedeli, Valeria & Pasqui, Gabriele & Armondi, SimonettaA Decade of Strategic Plans in Italy: Hypothesis for an Evaluation

#153: Falleth, Eva Irene & Saglie, Inger-LiseDemocracy or Efficiency: Contradictory National Guidelines in Local Urban Planning in Norway

#186: Olesen, KristianExploring the Changing Practice of ‘Strategic Spatial Planning’ in Denmark

YTK • Aalto University 47

Friday 9th09:00-10:30Theme Strategic planning Moderator Louis Albrechts

Papers #274: Dillinger, Thomas: From Regional Management to Regional Governance – an Attempt to Bring a Theoretical Concept into the Regions of Lower Austria

#566: Hutter, Gerard: Learning to Plan in Partnerships for Innovation in Regional Development – a Typology and Examples from Dresden

#633: Cocks, Matthew: Exploring the Concept of Institutional Thickness as a Methodological Framework for Empirical Research: the Case of Liverpool

#749: Albrechts, Louis: Strategic Projects: Vehicles for Action?11:00-12:30Theme Special session: Digital tools in participatory planning Moderator Liisa Horelli Discussant Anna Kanervo

Papers #246: Wallin, SirkkuIct-Assisted Participatory Planning – Reinventing Practice and Research in Urban Planning#525: Staffans, Aija Katariina: Local Internet Forums, Interactive Land Use Planning and Urban Development in Neighbourhoods#228: Molin-Juustila, Tonja & Soudunsaari, Leena & Nuojua, JohannaParticipatory Urban Design with Advanced Information Technology Support#211: Kahila, Maarit & Snabb, KristofferSoftgis-Method as a Bridge Builder in Collaborative and Participative Urban Planning Practices

#337: Saad-Sulonen, Joanna: The Significance and Role of the Design of Digital Tools in the Context of Ict-Mediated Citizen Participation in Urban Planning: the Case of Urban Mediator

Saturday 10th

09:00-10:30Theme ICT-enabled planning and participation Moderator Aija Staffans

Papers #306: Tubio-Sanchez, Jose Maria & Sante-Riveira, Ines & Crecente-Maseda, RafaelIn a Public Participation Gis, What Is the “Public” and What Does “Participation” Mean?

#259: Malinen, Pekka & Haahtela, TeroNetwork Platform Concept in Renewal of Urban Infrastructures and Services

#:459: Ruffini, Giovanni & Lucchesi, Fabio & Carta, MassimoWeb, Bodies and Hyper-Local Communities

#3:00: Zhou, KaiInvestigate Collaborative Planning Support System for Local Transport Planning Practice

#602: Vasconcelos, Lia Teles & Caser, Ursula & Sá, Rita: Merging Virtual and Physical Participation Articulating and Orchestrating Different Stakeholders Voices

11:00-12:30Theme ICT-enabled planning and participation Moderator Aija Staffans

Papers #623: Devisch, Oswald: From Citizen Science to Grassroots Sensing

#680: Petrin, Julian & Matern, AntjeNexthamburg – a Future Lab as Catalyst for Emergent Strategies in the City?

#732: Hongisto, PatriziaThe Luxury of Edemocracy in Vast, Remote and Sparsely Populated Spaces

#738: Foutakis, Dimitris & Skordili, Sofia & Thoidou, ElisavetInternet Accessibility and E-Governance Applications: Spatial and Content Issues and some Evidence from Greece

48 AESOP 2010

Room Takka

TRACK 15: Planning, Law and Property RightsTrack Co-Chairs

Rachelle AltermanKauko Viitanen

Thursday 8th09:00-10:30Theme National planning laws: challenges and reformsModerator Rachelle Alterman Discussant Alex Lord

Papers #57: Marshall, Tim: National Level Planning, Especially for Infrastructure, in a Neoliberal Era

#17: Caceres, EduardoCrisis and Deconstruction in Fragmented Territory. The Case of the Canary Islands

#523: Marot, NajaComprehensive Assessment of the Role Planning Law Plays in Slovenian Planning System

#619: Lalenis, KonstantinosSpatial Plans and Their Promulgation: a Greek Case of Reversing Legal Hierarchies

11:00-12:30Theme Political ideologies and planning LawModerator Tim MarshallDiscussant Tim Marshall

Papers #241: Lord, Alexander Duncan: Putting a Price on Planning: Conceptualising the Marketisation of Land-Use Under England’S Reformed Spatial Planning System.#388: Beattie, Lee GrantChanging Urban Governance in the Auckland Region: Prospects for Land Use Planning

#714: Jin, Huiqing & Onishi, Takashi & Kidokoro, TetsuoThe Integrated Urban-Rural Planning During China Urbanization#427: Hananel, Ravit: Distributive Justice and Regional Planning: the Politics of Regional Revenue-Generating Land Uses in Israel

#135: Levelt, Melika & Janssen-Jansen, Leonie: Voluntary or Mandatory? On the Legitimacy of Policy-Making by Voluntary Regional Associations with the Amsterdam Metropolitan Area as Example

Thursday 8th 13:45-15:15 AESOP General Assembly 15:30-17:00Theme Special session: Property rights and land use regulations around the globeModerator Rachelle AltermanPapers Viitanen, Kauko

Searle, GlenKorthals Altes, WillemSullivan, Ed

17:30-19:00Theme Certainty versus flexibility in plan-makingModerator Leonie Janssen-Jansen

Discussant Leonie Janssen-Jansen

Papers #128: Searle, Glen & Mayere-Donehue, Severine & Stiftel, BrucePlanning Discretion Differences Between U.S. And Australian States: Initial Hypotheses#377: Buitelaar, Edwin & Galle, Maaike & Sorel, NielsPaper Versus Reality: the Dutch Plan-Led System in a Development-Led Practice#378: Steele, Wendy & Ruming, KristianFlexibility Versus Certainty: Unsettling the Land-Use Planning Shibboleth in Australia#594: Askew, Janet & Parkhurst, Graham: Popular Regulations for Popular Appeal: Misguided Attempts by Government to Address Climate Change

YTK • Aalto University 49

Friday 9th

09:00-10:30

Theme The changing roles of private developers and property marketsModerator Kauko ViitanenDiscussant Evelin Titz

Papers #425: Pasmans, Bart & Van Der Krabben, Erwin & Helderman, Jan-KeesPrivatization Strategies and the Institutional Context

#58: Korthals Altes, Willem K. & Ploeger, HendrikPlanning, Public Contracts and European Land Law

#283: Knappik, Magdalena & Renetzki, PeterDecreasing Land Consumption by Using PPP in Land Use Management

#369: Ploegmakers, Huub: Institutions in the Dutch Industrial Land and Property Market

#719: Turk, Sevkiye Sence: TWO Options in Turkish Inner City Areas: Agreement or Expropriation

11:00-12:30Theme Housing rights and social exclusion

Moderator Adri Van den Brink

Discussant Fatma Unsal

Papers #421: Oren, Michelle L & Alterman, RachelleHousing in the Constitutional Context: Bridging Housing Studies and Housing Law

#509: Triantafillou, Charikleia & Apostolopoulou, Ioli & Christodoulou, NektariosInfluence of Urban Regeneration Projects on Social and Functional Patterns and Proposals to Prevent Their Unequal Spatial Distribution

#538: Melot, RomainThe Price of Eviction : Disputed Compensations After Expropriation in French Civil Courts

Saturday 10th

09:00-10:30

Theme Land policies and land values

Moderator Erwin v.d. Krabben

Discussant Erwin v.d. Krabben

Papers #712: Havel, Barbara & Viitanen, Kauko: The Model of Property Rights Regime in Land Development

#688: Janssen-Jansen, LeonieChanging Landscapes, Challenged Planners: An Analysis of Two Recent Dutch Regional Area Developments in Which an Airport Becomes a Park and a Polder Is Converted into a Lake#389: Straalen, F.M. (Fennie) Van & Brink, A. (Adri) Van DenAn Assessment of Land Policy Strategies in Dutch Metropolitan Landscapes

11:00-12:30Theme Implementation and diversions: planning or legal failure?Moderator Glen SearleDiscussant Glen Searle

Papers #447: Pais, Carina & Carvalho, JorgeImplementation and Equity Guidelines in Portuguese Land Use Plans

#331: Unsal, Fatma & Firidin Ozgur, Ebru & Yesilirmak, Asuman: Planned ”Disorder” in Istanbul

#536: Rosa, Elisabetta & Rosa, Elisabetta: Abusivism and Territorial Planning: an Ethical Approach

#716: Maasikamäe, Siim & Hass, Helena & Jürgenson, EvelinUncontrolled Real Estate Development: Empirical Study of Urban Sprawl in Estonia

#352: Hossain, Shahadat: Space in the Negotiation of Water Supply in Dhaka

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Room Poli

TRACK 16: Planning ‘in’ or ‘for’ Multicultural Societies

Track Co-Chairs

Francesco Lo PiccoloHuw Thomas

Thursday 8th

09:00-10:30

Theme Knowledge and power in the socially diverse city

Moderator Paul Maginn

Papers #166: Watson, Vanessa JaneCommunity Self-Surveys: Appropriating a Technology of Rule

#332: Leone, Davide & Lo Bocchiaro, Giuseppe & Lo Piccolo, FrancescoImmigrants’ Employment Situation, Settlement Modalities and Housing Typologies in Middle and Small Sized Cities in Western Sicily.

#21: Meir, AvinoamPlanning Empowerment Among the Bedouin in Israel

11:00-12:30Theme Whose city?

Moderator Vanessa Watson

Papers#2:45: Lo Piccolo, Francesco & Bonafede, GiuliaRe-Building Public (Plural) Spaces Through Inclusionary Participative Processes in ‘Thresholds’ Places#708: Kondogiannis, GeorgiosSpace and Public Control

#570: Kalanje, Humphrey AlexanderPlanning and Spatial Justice in the City The Comprehensive School and Refugee Reception Centre as Sites of Resistance in the Contemporary Multi-Ethnic City

#224: Chao, TzuyuanDelivering an Age-Friendly Community in Taiwan – Developing a Physical Environment Assessment Indicator System

Thursday 8th 13:45-15:15 AESOP General Assembly

15:30-17:00Theme Public life in the multi-cultural city

Moderator Mark Oranje

Discussant

Papers#574: Rafferty, GavanReshaping Our Future, Reconciling Our Past: the Potential of Spatial Planning and Urban Governance in Transforming Contested Space

#121: Mohammadzadeh, MohsenIs Spatial Justice Possible in Planning Under the Hegemony of Globalization?

#411: Pellas, ThemistoklisMigration as a Radical Plateau for Planning

17:30-19:00

ThemeThematic Group:French and British planning studiesChair: Philip Booth

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Friday 9th

09:00-10:30

Theme Decentralization and empowerment

Moderator Giulia Bonafede

Papers #417: Todes, Alison Elaine & Williamson, AmandaDecentralisation, Planning and Women’S Rights: International Debates, South African Reflections

#176: Darmoyono, Laksmi Tungga Dewi Jaya Wisnu Wardani & Woltjer, JohanA Networking Experiment in a Decentralized Planning Regime, Urban Governance and Infrastructure Development in Indonesia

#582: Senol, Fatma -Elected Neighborhood Officers (Muhtars) in Turkey: How Did Gender Differences and the Neighborhood Scale Influence Their Candidacy and Office Work?

11:00-12:30Theme InterventionsModerator Francesco Lo Piccolo

Papers#408: Oranje, Mark Christiaan & Van Huyssteen, ElsonaSpace(S) for Empowerment: Reflections on the Preparation of ‘Area-Based Land Reform Plans’ in Metropolitan South Africa as Tools for ‘Inclusionary, Sustainable and Equitable Pro-Poor Growth’

#492: Briata, PaolaLiving or Leaving? Regeneration Policies in Multi-Ethnic Contexts in North Italy

#173: De Smet, Aurelie & Doevendans, KeesUrban Voids as Space Provision for a Diverse Society, Intermittent City Brussels

#499: Tschirk, Werner & Scheuvens, Rudolf & Krassnitzer, PhilipStrategic Planning for Neighbourhood Development – Learning from Vienna

Saturday 10th

No sessions

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Room Room 12

SEPARATE SPECIAL SESSION 1: Development and Implementation of GIS and other Computer Applicationsin Planning

SessionCo-Chairs

Elisabete A. SilvaChris Webster

Thursday 8th

09:00-10:30

Theme Planning support systems

Moderator Elisabete A. Silva, Chris Webster

Papers #164: Campagna, MichelePlanning Support Systems Design: a Metaplanning Approach

#625: Peel, Deborah & Peel, Deborah & Gunasekera, SanwaraLuxury Is…. Space to Write: Using Tablet PC Technology to Enhance Learning

#208: Kingston, RichardPlanning Support Systems – Will They Be Applied More Widely in a Web 2.0 World?

#751: Geertman, StanPlanning Support Systems: a Research Vision

#43: Artuso, MarioGIS and Local Planning in Niger.

11:00-12:30Theme Environmental planning

Moderator Elisabete A. Silva, Chris Webster

Papers#106: Roth, Michael & Gruehn, DietwaldComputer-Based Visual Landscape Assessment for Large Areas – Implementing Gis, Internet Surveys and Statistical Methodologies in Landscape Planning

#626: Broberg, Anna & Ikonen, Niilo & Kyttä, MarkettaSoftgis in Planning for the Eco-Socially Sustainable Environment

#669: Vico, Franco & Mildorf, Tomas & Ombuen, SimonePlan4All: Data Interoperability for Spatial Planning

Thursday 8th 13:45-15:15 AESOP General Assembly 15:30-17:00Theme Artificial intelligence

Moderator Elisabete A. Silva, Chris Webster

Papers #232: Silva, Elisabete A. & Wu, NingArtificial Intelligence Solutions for Urban Land Dynamics: a Review

#402: Grekousis, George & Photis, Yorgos NIntelligent Gis-Based Planning Support System for Emergencies.

17:30-19:00

ThemeThematic Group:New technologies and planningChair: Elisabete A. Silva

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Friday 9th

09:00-10:30Theme Positioning and patternsModerator Elisabete A. Silva, Chris Webster

Papers#462: Park, JoonCommuting Pattern and Regional Division of Housing Market: the Case of Seoul, London, Los Angeles#209: Harder, Henrik & Bro, Peter & Knudsen, Anne-Marie SanvigOn the GPS Track of 169 Young Danes in the Urban Landscape: the Aalborg Case – Gps-Tracking of Young Adults in the Central City

#698: Kuo, Hsing-Fu & Tsou, Ko-WanThe Dynamic Effects Assessment of the Growth Boundary Strategy on Future Urban Land Development Patterns

11:00-12:30 No session

Saturday 10th

No sessions

Room Room 13

SEPARATE SPECIAL SESSION 2: Planning in Uncertainty for the Planning Theory

Session Co-Chair Jean Hillier

Thursday 8th

17:30-19:00

Moderator Jean Hillier

Papers #36: Hillier, JeanMultiplanar Planning as Strategic Navigation

#46: Wilkinson, CathyStrategic Navigation

#44: Nyseth, TorillThe Tromsø Experiment: Temporary Resting as Planning Strategy

#:45: Balducci, AlessandroPlanning as Discovery

#37: Boelens, LuukMainport Rotterdam – Going Beyond the Next Planning Disaster

Room Room 12

SEPARATE SPECIAL SESSION 1: Development and Implementation of GIS and other Computer Applicationsin Planning

SessionCo-Chairs

Elisabete A. SilvaChris Webster

Thursday 8th

09:00-10:30

Theme Planning support systems

Moderator Elisabete A. Silva, Chris Webster

Papers #164: Campagna, MichelePlanning Support Systems Design: a Metaplanning Approach

#625: Peel, Deborah & Peel, Deborah & Gunasekera, SanwaraLuxury Is…. Space to Write: Using Tablet PC Technology to Enhance Learning

#208: Kingston, RichardPlanning Support Systems – Will They Be Applied More Widely in a Web 2.0 World?

#751: Geertman, StanPlanning Support Systems: a Research Vision

#43: Artuso, MarioGIS and Local Planning in Niger.

11:00-12:30Theme Environmental planning

Moderator Elisabete A. Silva, Chris Webster

Papers#106: Roth, Michael & Gruehn, DietwaldComputer-Based Visual Landscape Assessment for Large Areas – Implementing Gis, Internet Surveys and Statistical Methodologies in Landscape Planning

#626: Broberg, Anna & Ikonen, Niilo & Kyttä, MarkettaSoftgis in Planning for the Eco-Socially Sustainable Environment

#669: Vico, Franco & Mildorf, Tomas & Ombuen, SimonePlan4All: Data Interoperability for Spatial Planning

Thursday 8th 13:45-15:15 AESOP General Assembly 15:30-17:00Theme Artificial intelligence

Moderator Elisabete A. Silva, Chris Webster

Papers #232: Silva, Elisabete A. & Wu, NingArtificial Intelligence Solutions for Urban Land Dynamics: a Review

#402: Grekousis, George & Photis, Yorgos NIntelligent Gis-Based Planning Support System for Emergencies.

17:30-19:00

ThemeThematic Group:New technologies and planningChair: Elisabete A. Silva

54 AESOP 2010

YTK • Aalto University 55

Roundtables

All Roundtables will be organized in the Book Exhibition Area on the upper floor of the Dipoli building. Just check day & time to identify the Roundtable you are interested in.Original texts have been edited for printing purposes.

How to write a good paper and publication processModerator: Ceren Sezer, Department of Urbanism, TU Delft (NL)THU, July 8th, 1100–1230 Cecilia Wong, (UK)David Shaw, (UK)

This roundtable is organized by Young Academics Network. Writing a good journal paper and a good research proposal is an essential part of the academic career. Both forms of the academic writing follow some rules, which make it easier for authors to communicate through her/his research, and for readers to follow the ideas presented with a certain logic. In this session, we aim to provide basic guidelines to the young academics to understand the steps of these two forms of writing.

The first session, “Writing a good journal paper” will be presented by Prof. Cecilia Wong. Writing an academic paper is a difficult, and trying task for many young academics. In her presentation, Wong will explain us the basic steps of academic writing, including issues of getting started, choosing a topic, organization of the paper, citations and references. The first part of her presentation will be followed by a brief explanation of publishing process of a paper in an academic journal.

Prof. David Shaw will present the second session of roundtable discussion, “Writing a good research proposal”. The quality of a research proposal depends not only on the quality of the project, but also on the quality of proposal writing. David Shaw will explain us the essential points of writing a research proposal: How can we write a rationale – convincing support of need for the research? How can we define our research questions? How can we explain detailed research steps very clearly? What are the basic requirements to provide a related literature? These are some of the issues that he will address in his presentation. In the final part, David Shaw will give us some examples from different research proposals which address at different types of research bids.

We planned this event in an informal atmosphere. So please bring your questions with you and feel free to address them to our guest speakers.

Companion to Urban Design: Roots, Influences, and TrendsModerators: Tribid Banerjee, School of Policy, Planning and Development (USA); Anastasia Loukaitou-Sideris, Urban Planning, UCLA (USA) FRI July 9th, 0900–1030 Participants: Matthew Carmona (UK), Ali Madanipour (UK), Danilo Palazzo (IT), Rafael Pizarro (DE), Niraj Verma (USA)

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The roundtable is based on a forthcoming book Companion to Urban Design, edited by the moderators. The Companion is a collection of 52 chapters. Paticipating authors will briefly introduce their contributions to the Companion. The premise of the Companion is that the field of urban design has emerged as an important area of intellectual pursuit, involving theory, research, and pedagogy, all intended to inform and improve practice. In the early stages of its modern professional identity, the field of urban design was defined by the interstices of the more established fields of architecture, landscape architecture, and urban planning with each claiming some proprietary rights.

The practice of urban design, while still involving participation from architecture, landscape architecture, and planning, has long eschewed its interstitial legitimacy. It has forged a distinctive identity with applications at many different scales -- ranging from the block or street scale to the scale of metropolitan and regional landscapes, with such intermediate scales of applications as planned new communities, or conservation and design of urban neighborhoods. Because of its multiple scales of application, the practice of urban design now interfaces, if not engages, many aspects of contemporary public policy – multiculturalism, healthy cities, environmental justice, economic development, climate change, energy conservation, protection of natural environments, sustainable development, community livability, and the like. For students of the built environment and urban design, the field now comprises a core body of knowledge that includes a rich history of ideas, paradigms, principles, tools, research, and applications involving aspirations of a good city form, and the consequences of the built environment on human activity. In its remarkable evolution, the field has become increasingly eclectic and interdisciplinary, enriched by influences from the humanities, and social and natural sciences.

Courses on urban design are increasingly a requirement not just for graduate or undergraduate professional studies in architecture, landscape architecture, and urban planning, but also undergraduate studies in urban studies, urban affairs, geography, and the like. General interest in these areas as courses of post-secondary studies is also growing as the world population and developing economies are undergoing an unprecedented urban transformation. The growing awareness of the importance of the quality of life and livability of the built environment extend much beyond the traditional design disciplines.

Space is luxury meets better cities better lifeModerator: Peter Ache, Centre for Urban and Regional Studies, School of Science and Technology, Aalto University, (FI)FRI July 9th 1100-1230h Participants: Wenhui Shan (PRC), Denise Pessoa (BR), Uptal Sharma (IND), David Amborski (CAN), Paul Maginn (AUS), Jüri Soolep (EE)

This Roundtable intends to explore current issues of planning using the theme of the World Exhibition in Shanghai, better cities – better life, and the umbrella theme of the 24th AESOP conference, space is luxury.

Questions for discussions are– what essentially determines better cities and a better life?

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– from which general perspectives can we discuss the luxury of space?– what are the current perspectives of the general political or societal debate about

urban spaces?– in consequence, what should be future lines of our professional and individual

perspective?Participants will give short statements regarding their continental views, before an open discussion will explore up-coming issues.

Fair Share CitiesOrganisers: Inés Sánchez de Madariaga, Universidad Politecnica de Madrid (ES)Marion Roberts, University of Westminster (UK)SAT, July 10th 0900 -1030 & 1100 –1230

Roundtable 1

Mainstreaming gender-sensitive concepts and a review of the structural frameworks for urban planningPanel discussants: Barbara Zibell (DE), Lidewij Tummers (NL), Heidrun Wankiewicz (DE)

The inspiration for this roundtable discussion comes from an edited book which the participants are preparing on the topic of a gender-sensitive approach to urban planning and design. It is now ten years since the Treaty of Amsterdam (1999) ensured that gender mainstreaming achieved legislative recognition. It is therefore timely to consider what has been achieved, what has been misconceived or resisted and how the future might be influenced. In the context of the EU, where urban development has ensured a contest for land and resources, the relations between the genders are particularly pertinent to the conference theme of 'space is a luxury'. Previous academic work has highlighted issues such as the exclusion of women from planning processes and the structural inequalities between women and men that are inscribed through the built environment at different spatial scales that work to reduce women's life choices and life chances. In this first of two linked roundtables the panel members will critically examine key concepts associated with a gender sensitive approach and the structures for planning that underpin its delivery. Following a brief five minute introduction from each of the chairs and panel on their individual chapters, the discussion will draw together themes and tease out issues. The topics for the discussion of concepts include a gender sensitive approach to social justice as embedded in the three-pronged model of sustainability, the lack of consideration of social care as carried out (mainly) by women in approaches to mobility and to changes in attitudes and practices with regard to night-time activities. This discussion illustrates the manner in which women's voices are still not heard despite overt calls to equality and empowerment. This leads on to a review of structures and frameworks, where issues of governance, participation and the political structure of decision making come to the fore. Attention will be paid to the extent to which new structures of governance represent an improvement in planning to ensure gender sensitive sustainable development, or the reverse. Progress can be reviewed in different member states from an account of

58 AESOP 2010

institutional resistance to the explicit inclusion of gender mainstreaming into national planning policy in Spain, to discussion of its inclusion in the rubric of sustainability in Germany,to a review of the history of gender sensitive planning instruments in the Netherlands. In short the discussion will revolve around the effectiveness of gender mainstreaming as a concept to be embedded in institutional structures. There are many theoretical questions that underpin the discussion but perhaps the most pertinent concern is the extent to which gender equality and gender mainstreaming can be can be mobilised within existing power relations to challenge the status quo.

Roundtable 2

Learning from gender-sensitive experiences in urban planning, urban design and architecture.Panel discussants: Doris Damyanovic (AT), Liisa Horelli (FI), Sirkku Wallin (FI), Eeva Berglund (UK)

In this second of two linked roundtables the panel members provide insight through a valuable series of case studies. Time does not permit detailed exploration of each. Rather each participant will be invited to provide a five-minute 'snapshot' of their particular experience and the learning points that may be derived from it. These cover a wide variety of policies and practices. In the case of Vienna, gender mainstreaming has been introduced to the heart of the city's planning processes and, it will be argued, has assisted in its designation as a city with a high quality of life where each gender can enjoy the 'luxury of space' in a different way. The small town of Villach, also in Austria, provides the example of an experiment in mainstreaming on a smaller scale, at a community level. Women have also been able to gain greater access into planning at the local scale, through new technologies and approaches to government. Helsinki itself provides the example of community informatics, where two women's networks are supported. In England, the Women's Design Service has provided architectural and planning services to groups of women who re often excluded from mainstream planning process, such as the elderly and recent immigrants. Gender-sensitive approaches have been taken up by architects and urban designers, in the planning and design of new urban spaces, housing projects and small-scale regeneration proposals. Discussion of these different examples will identify where advances have been made and experience could be generalised. The resistances and difficulties that were experienced in the case study examples provide learning points for structures, institutions and frameworks. The chairs will endeavour to make connections to the more theoretical discussion in the linked first roundtable in order to deepen our collective knowledge base and critical appraisal of gender mainstreaming as a concept and set of practices that ensure fairness in each gender's experience of space and place.

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Special Sessions

Original texts have been edited for printing purposes.

Property Rights and Land Use Regulations around the Globe Organiser: Rachelle Alterman, Technion (IL) THU July 8th 1530–1700 / Hall 4Participants: Please consult track program – see Track 15: PLPR

No land-use law in the world can evade the need to address the relationship between land use regulation and property values. Especially contentious are situations where planning decisionsF lead to a reduction in property values without actually taking the title to the land and – that thus without expropriation-based compensation. This is called by Americans “reulatory takings” and by the British “worsenment”. The issue is to what extent should there be a right to claim compensation from government.

A recently published book (Alterman 2010) presents path-breaking research to fill in some of this void. It provides systematic comparative knowledge on the laws and practices of 13 countries located on four continents. The findings show a surprising variety of approaches to “regulatory takings”. No county’s laws and policies are similar to others’. Many of the conclusions are counter-intuitive, negating many prior images we hold about presumed property rights in some countries.

In the roundtable, scholars from the participating countries will report on the laws and policies of their respective countries. Rachelle Alterman will open with a report on her comparative analysis, some of which systematic comparative research can indeed be valuable for cross-learning about alternative legal norms and their policy implications.

Gender issues in planning educationOrganiser: Marilyn Higgins, School of the Built Environment (UK)FRI, July 9th, 0900 – 1030 / Room 25Participants: Please consult track program – see Track 3: PE

Gender is increasingly considered a relevant category to describe and explain spatial development patterns as well as individual spatial behaviour. Research findings show that demographic change, mobility and migration are as much linked to gender roles and stereotypes as are the use and appropriation of public and private spaces. Gender identities and power relations are found to be shaped and reproduced through institutional and individual action and intertwined – amongst others – with race, class and sexual orientation. One political impact of both research and NGO pressure has been the world-wide adoption of the gender mainstreaming principle, which has since been integrated into funding schemes, legislation and political procedures.

Research findings and political obligations indicate that gender issues are relevant for planners. In spite of this, however, gender issues are still not well represented in planning education curricula. The roundtable discusses why this is the case, where the holdups are (institutional, practical, and even personal resistances) and how gender issues can

60 AESOP 2010

be better mainstreamed and fully integrated into undergraduate and graduate planning programs. Which role do inter-generational differences play? After 5-10 minutes inputs by each participant, the floor will be open for discussion.

The EU Strategy for the Baltic Sea Region Organisers: Peter Schmitt and Ole Damsgaard, Nordregio, Nordic Centre for Spatial Development, Stockholm (SE) FRI July 9th, 0900–1030 & 1100–1230 / Room 23Participants: Please consult track program – see Track 5: ETCP With the recent adoption of a macro-regional strategy for the Baltic Sea Region (BSR), in 2009, it appears that the European Commission has invented a new policy approach for coordinating a range of different territorial policies (e.g. environmental protection, maritime safety, economic development) that are targeted on a specific zone of intense territorial cooperation. A considerable part of the EU has been singled out in order to gain a stronger commitment from the relevant local, regional and national stakeholders to use the available financial resources more efficiently. In this respect, the Baltic Sea Region serves as a macro-regional test-bed. This concept may in turn be applied to other macro-regions in the future (cf. the ongoing discussions on a similar strategy for the Danube macro-region).

Such a comprehensive inter-sectoral strategy is naturally contested in particular since it is coupled to other polices, programmes and action plans in such larger transnational areas as the BSR. This sheds light on the following questions: • Why and how has the EU Commission launched this strategy? What view do other

National states and NGOs in the BSR have? • How is the EU Strategy for the Baltic Sea Region related to the objective of territorial

cohesion, as adopted in the Lisbon Treaty? • What is the relevance of the co-existence of other transnational policy programmes

with a similar focus (e.g. INTERREG)? • What kinds of tensions and challenges, in view of coordination and implementation,

might arise within such a complex macro-regional governance system? In this context, one should not forget that the BSR can be seen as one of the forerunners of transnational cooperation in Europe. A well-known example is the VASAB cooperation, established already in 1992, an inter-governmental network of 11 countries (including Russia and Belarus) advancing cooperation in spatial planning and development in the BSR. Just recently, in late 2009, the network launched a strategic paper, a 'Long Term Perspective for the BSR,' focusing on urban networking, urban-rural relations, accessibility and management of the Baltic Sea; it lists actions (such as the EU BSR Strategy does) so as to stimulate territorial development potentials and to promote territorial cohesion. Can that strategic paper be seen as a complementary 'place-based' guideline, or is it instead a controversial attempt to promote territorial cohesion by the national states around the Baltic Sea?

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Public Spaces and Urban CulturesOrganiser: Sabine Knierbein, Interdisciplinary Centre for Urban Culture and Public Space, TU Wien (AT)FRI, July 9th, 1100–1230 / Hall 4a Participants: Please consult the Track Program – see Track 9: CHPPublic spaces as arenas of social interaction are one of the vital elements of city’s public life as they play a significant role to bring together different groups of people from different cultural backgrounds regardless to aspects of class, ethnic origin, gender and age. Public spaces, however, are under the pressure of globalization, privatization at the macrolevel and of city image and marketing strategies as well as other private sector inspired regeneration strategies at the microlevel. During the phase of postfordist transitions, especially cultural approaches within the planning community have characterized debates on how to deal with this manifest pressures on public spaces.

With rising rhythms of development. the degree of conflicts and fragmentation in public spaces – taken from a descriptive perspective – is changing. From a normative perspective, the role of public spaces as places for integration and democracy is, therefore, challenged and contested. The special session will be organized by the new AESOP Thematic Group on Public Spaces and Urban Cultures aiming at an improved understanding of the relational nature of public spaces by using different concepts of urban culture as analytical perspectives. Thereby, debates shall be stimulated that relate to three main strands of investigation: Issues of artistic and intellectual practices and urban planning; emerging urban cultures and socio-spatial practices in public spaces and postdisciplinary academic education regarding urban cultures and public spaces.

Digital Tools in Participatory Planning Organiser: Liisa Horelli; Centre for Urban and Regional Studies, School of Science and Technology, Aalto University (FI)FRI July 9th, 1100–1230 / TakkaParticipants: Please consult track program – see Track 14: PG

The information and communication technology (ICT) is part of everyday life, the experience and interaction in urban space. There is a growing interest in the use and development of ICTs and digital tools for participatory urban planning. In research, different disciplines and fields have so far addressed the topic from their own perspectives and a truly inter-disciplinary inquiry on the subject lies still ahead.

This session aims to address ICT- assisted participatory urban planning from two perspectives, from the urban planning approach and the technology design and development approach. How can these two approaches be brought together within an inter-disciplinary or even a transdisciplinary framework? What are the main questions that each approach strives to answer? As a conclusion, the session will refine the inter-disciplinary framework by finding its position within fields, such as eParticipation, Community Informatics, and Participatory Design.

The session starts by asking the following question: • What is it that we are talking about when we put cities, urban planning, digital tools

and citizen participation together?

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o Is it e-planning? o Is it ICT-mediated participatory planning? o Is it urban informatics? The session presents an overview of cases that deal with ICT and participatory urban planning. These are presented by the session organisers and a few selected participants. The cases cover examples of participatory GIS and public web portals designed for master plan processes, specialized tools and mash-ups for public participation in local development projects which use multi-channel technology of GPS, web 2.0 and urban screens.

A set of relevant topics for discussion are gathered from the cases and addressed through open discussion moderated by session leaders. The topics might include: • the characteristics of participation with the used technologies • the analysis of the gathered data and its use in the planning process • the challenges and processes of ICT-assisted urban planning

Sustainable urban land-use policies for resilient citiesOrganisers: Ayda Eraydin (Middle East Technical University, Department of City and Regional Planning, TR), Dominic Stead (Delft University of Technology, OTB Research Institute for Housing, Urban and MobilityPStudies, NL, Tuna Tasan-Kok (Delft University of Technology, OTB Research Institute for Housing, Urban and Mobility Studies, NL) SAT July 10th, 0900–1030 Participants: Please consult Track program – see Track 13: RMEP SAT July 10th, 1100–1230 Participants: Please consult Track program – see Track 13: RMEP

European urban landscape is changing profoundly under different dynamics. Creation of an integrated-land use policy and to increase the ability of urban systems to absorb changes, reorganize and develop them in a sustainable way is increasingly important. The economic conditions as well as the changing ecological pressures necessitate effective land use policy instruments both to confront the problems at hand and assessing conditions of uncertainty. The changes that has been imposed by the global economic relations in the last two decades enforced new policies on urban development and urban form, which are not compatible with the principles of resilience. Current policy instruments, which are shaped under the entrepreneurial mode of governance pay limited attention to the sustainable land use and social and ecological resilience of cities.

Within this framework the aim of this special session is to explore sustainable land use policies, plans and instruments with reference to the question of 'resilience both' theoretically and practically and to put together papers that aim to address following questions: • What is the importance of 'resilience thinking' for urban analysis and planning? • Does urban resilience represent a new paradigm for planning or is it merely the 21st

century incarnation of sustainable development? Does it represent a new rationale for planning policy?

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• Which land use policies, projects/plans/instruments are important for creating resilient cities?

• Which instruments are important for enhancing the adaptive capacities of cities? • What are the main characteristics of the changing urban built environment and their

relations to urban resilience?

Global winners and local losers? Regeneration Strategies in Shrinking CitiesOrganisers: Helen Mulligan, Cambridge Architectural Research Ltd (UK), Jasmin Aber (FR)SAT 0900–1030 & 1100–1230 AuditoriumParticipants: Please consult Track program – see Track 6: GCLR

In current planning debates the term ‘shrinking city’ usually describes a densely populated urban area that has on the one hand faced a population loss in large parts and is on the other hand undergoing economic transformations with some symptoms of a structural crisis. According to Oswalt (2006) more than a quarter of the world’s metropolises shrank in the 1990s and this will continually increase, notwithstanding the ongoing urbanization processes. However, shrinking cities do not occur everywhere. They pool in certain areas, like the US-American rustbelt, Japan and in particular in Europe.

Most European countries see an increasingly ageing population and internal migrations from backward areas to more competitive locations. Therefore, dealing with the results of demographic contraction processes – often linked with economic and physical contraction processes – and designing the restructuring of shrinking urban regions present some of the most challenging tasks for Europe’s cities in the near future. On a pan-European scale the still dominant one-sided growth strategy is risky. Considering the low birth rates population decrease in many cities is inevitable in the coming decades. In general, a growth-oriented strategy intensifies the negative consequences of shrinkage because it goes along with a single-edge orientation toward massive external investment, without which the break of the economic trend cannot be realized.

The shrinking cities phenomenon represents a challenge to change and review the principles upon which urban policy and planning has been traditionally based. Accepting the inevitable might mean to plan for the future of a considerably smaller city, to empty out run-down neighbourhoods, to regreen once populated areas, and to adopt an economic development plan that boils down to controlled shrinkage in a smaller but nevertheless livable place.

In the framework of the 24th AESOP Annual Conference in Helsinki the Shrinking Cities International Research Network (SCiRN) would like to initiate four sessions on regeneration strategies in shrinking cities. The sessions take up the track theme by focussing on the tension between global winners and local losers in a globalized world where growth and shrinkage, wealth and decline increasingly occur in close proximity to each other.

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Separate Special Sessions Development and Implementation of GIS and other Computer Applications in Planning Session co-chairs: Elisabete A. Silva, Cambridge University (UK), Chris Webster, Cardiff University (UK)THU to FRI, Room 12Please consult Abstract book for more information

The use of computers and software for both quantitative and qualitative analysis in planning is a requirement for most planning practitioners and researchers. Focus groups and workshops require new ways of participative methodologies that use computers; spatial planning, sector and integrated planning use GIS and other spatial explicit computer applications in order to analyse and simulate the world.

This session aims at addressing the previous needs through the use of computers in planning.

Topics to be address might include: • Computer applications to produce spatial analysis • Computer applications to develop future simulations • The inclusion of computation and Planning in the education system • Other topics that might be considered relevant by those interested in these areas

Planning in Uncertainty for the Planning Theory Organiser: Jean Hillier, School of Architecture, Planning & Landscape, Newcastle University (UK)THU, July 8th 1730 –1900 Room 21The participants in presentation order: Alessandro Balducci (IT), Luuk Boelens (NL), Torill Nyseth (NO), Cathy Wilkinson (UK), Jean Hillier (UK) Please consult Abstract book for more information

The papers in this Special Session attempt to take forward practical and theoretical ideas about strategic spatial planning in uncertainty. They serve as a bridge between traditional forms of spatial planning principles which dealt with uncertainty by reducing its dimensions to those which could be managed, or rendered certain, and what we believe is the generation of a new, more promising, poststructuralist orientation. The five authors who contribute papers to this Special Issue have all developed their practices and theories from different bases, but have all ended up working with poststructural notions of the world and planning practice. Instead of struggling ‘alone’ in different parts of the world to experiment with, to theorise and to practise untried, poststructuralist concepts of spatial planning, the five have been able to gain confidence from coming together in conversation. Their ideas and practices resonate with each other to offer a strong theoretical and practical introduction for planning scholars to how we might plan in circumstances of uncertainty. Our aims in this session are: to present four first-hand accounts of international empirical cases of poststructuralist planning in practice; and to offer a poststructuralist theory for strategic spatial planning.

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AESOP Meetings

Convenors: AESOP President Willem Salet, AESOP Secretary General Anna Geppert, Ilena Apostol

ExCoTuesday 6th July, 0900-1800 / Room 13 CoRepWednesday 7th July, 0900-1230 / Room 26

AESOP General AssemblyThursday 8th July, 1345-1515 / AuditoriumThe General Assembly provides the unique opportunity to share ideas and thoughts about developments in AESOP. The Executive Committee will report to the AESOP community about decisions, policies and actions taken and inform about new members. The General Assembly is also the moment for coming and going of elected officials in the AESOP organisation. Also the winners of the various AESOP prices will be presented to AESOP members. Therefore, the AESOP General Assembly is certainly a meeting you should not miss as a member. Also non members are welcome, as this is the meeting to learn more about AESOP and its activities.

Best Congress Paper Prize CommitteeConvenor: Nikos Karadimitriou and Karel MaierVarious times /Room 11

Thematic Groups Thematic Groups will meet on Thursday afternoon, from 1730-1900.Rooms are listed below please consult Dipoli Floor Plans.Planning and ComplexityChair: Gert de Roo Room 13Transport Planning and Policy: European ExperiencesChair: Angela Hull Room 23Urban Cultures and Public SpacesChair: Ceren Sezer Room 22Resilience and Risk Mitigation Chair: Murat BalamirLuolamiesFrench and British Planning StudiesChair: Philip Booth PoliNew Technologies and PlanningChair: Elisabete A. Silva Room 12

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Business Meetings

GPEAN

The Global Planning Education Association Network scheduled several meetings during the conference.

Tuesday, 6.7. 15:30–18:00 YTK

Wednesday, 7.7 9–12:30 Room 24

Saturday, 10.7 1230-15–15 Dipoli Room to be confirmed

General Assembly of the Shrinking Cities Interational Research Network [SCIRN] Convenor; Thorsten WiechmannWednesday, July 7th09:00-14:00/ Room 24

Editorial Board MeetingsPlanning Theory and PracticeThursday, July 8th, 12:30 – 14:00 /Room: 12

Planning Theory Wednesday, July 7th12:00 -14:00 /Room 12

For further business meetings see separate announcements!

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Mobile Workshops

Overview: Parallel Mobile Workshops

Time: Friday, 9 July 2010 at 14:00-18:00General Instructions: Gathering at 14:00 at meeting points specified below. Please consult Dipoli floor plans for the location of the rooms and halls. Return to the hotels at 18:00, just in time to prepare for Conference Dinner at 20:00.

Architecture and living spaces 1. Architecture by Alvar Aalto, Hall 1 2. New housing at the waterfronts of Helsinki, Auditorium 3. Tapiola: The Garden City, Luolamies 4. Wooden Helsinki, Hall 4A 5. Happy Kallio, Room 22 6. Suomenlinna sea fortress: World heritage site and housing area, Klondyke

Infrastructure spaces 7. Aviapolis: An edge city growing around the Helsinki-Vantaa Airport, Hall 4B 8. Going underground: Helsinki district heating and cooling, Takka 9. New gateway: Vuosaari harbour, Palaver

Nature in the city 10. Rantaraitti – Espoo's waterfront walkway, Room 24 11. Forest in the city: Nuuksio national park, Room 26

Detailed Description

Architecture and living spaces 1. Architecture by Alvar AaltoBuildings designed by Alvar Aalto are an important part of Helsinki's urban image and a valuable architectural heritage. Helsinki has about 20 buildings or other sites designed by Aalto, the majority of which are internationally recognised however many sites and buildings have also remained quite unknown until now. The buildings designed by Aalto in Helsinki include a variety of structures that differ in terms of function, including private homes, office and commercial buildings as well as public buildings. In addition to Aalto's extensive international production, these Helsinki sites offer an interesting cross-section of the development that occurred during his architectural career.

A coach tour – max number 50 participants

Meeting Point: Hall 1Tour Guide: Leena Makkonen, Helsinki City Planning Department ([email protected]; +3589310 37262)

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Contact: Reetta de Wan, Helsinki City Planning Departments ([email protected]; +358931037440), YTK Contact: ([email protected]; +358505124593)

2. New housing on the waterfronts of HelsinkiConstruction of the Vuosaari Harbour will completely transform the inner city of Helsinki. As a cargo port operations will be transferred from the old harbours to Vuosaari. Helsinki is faced with changes on a magnitude that has not been seen there for more than a century. Whole new waterfront areas will be made accessible to city residents. Firstly, there is Arabianranta, a housing area located next to the arts, crafts and design centre of Arabia and the two will share a close connection. The area further unified by its sharing of a wide shorefront, stretching from Kalasatama harbour to the mouth of the Vantaanjoki river. Secondly Kalasatama will become a densely built up and urban-flavoured city district. The area is centrally located on the city centre’s eastern shoreline joining Helsinki’s city centre. Thirdly is Jätkäsaari. Position in the inner city already supports the principles of sustainable development; the urban structure is dense and the area has an effective public transport network. In the future, energy-effective solutions will be favoured for all buildings. Finally, in Kruunuvuori a new seaside housing district will be built on the site of the present oil harbour and the adjoining land. There are diverse land- and seascapes with valuable natural, cultural and historical features. The area has a long and varied shoreline. The tour shows the current state of the developing waterfront. Presentation of the future plans is on display in the exhibition space Laituri.

A coach tour – max number 50 participants

Meeting point: AuditoriumTour Guide: Ulla Kuitunen, Helsinki City Planning Department ([email protected]; +358931037443)Contact: Reetta deWan, Helsinki City Planning Department ([email protected]; +358931037440)YTK Contact: Tuomas Ilmavirta ([email protected]; +358505124576)

3. Tapiola: The Garden CityTapiola Garden City is situated in Espoo about ten kilometres west of Helsinki close to the Gulf of Finland and the archipelago. It is a garden city tailored for Finnish conditions. Being a model example for urban planning in Finland after the post-war period. All leading Finnish architects from that period contributed to the design of Tapiola and left their distinctive marks on it. As a result, Tapiola has gained international reputation for its high-class architecture and landscape architecture as well as an ideologically interesting experiment.

On the professional guided walking tour you will get a closer presentation of Tapiola, the WeeGee Exhibition Centre, originally designed as a printing house and the neighbouring Otaniemi – Keilaniemi area, the dynamic hub for a top-level technological research and business.

A walking and coach tour – max number 50 participants

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Meeting Point: LuolamiesTour Guides: Meiri Siivola, Espoo City Planning Department ([email protected]; +358468772587), Patricia Broas, Espoo City Planning Department [email protected]; +358465723026), Kaisa Rauhalammi, Espoo City Planning Department ([email protected]; +358468772593)Contact: Lea Keskitalo, Espoo City Planning Department ([email protected]; +358468772478)YTK Contact: Simo Haanpää ([email protected]; +358505124557)

4. Wooden HelsinkiNordic cities have traditionally been built of wood. Also in Helsinki wood was the main material in construction until the 19th century when the stone city started to take over. Unfortunately, most of the wooden areas were demolished by the 1960s, at a time when criticism against modernity and appreciation of traditional Nordic urban environments increased. Wooden Vallila and Käpylä, which were also planned to be pulled down, survived as a result of strong citizens’ resistance movement. They are both housing areas built by working class co-ops in the early 20th century and protected by preservation order today. In the recent years using wood as a construction material has gained popularity again and there are a few modern examples to date. This tour shows the old and new wooden housing in the Helsinki area.

A coach tour – max number 50 participants

Meeting Point: Hall 4ATour Guide: Maire Mattinen, National Board of Antiquities ([email protected]; +358940509423)YTK Contact: Kaisa Schmidt-Thome ([email protected], +358505124629)

5. Happy KallioKallio is an inner city district northeast of the centre of Helsinki. As a former working class neighbourhood, it was once one of the most densely populated urban areas in Europe. During its history it has transformed from a district of wooden huts bordering the factory and harbour area of Sörnäinen and populated by large families into a neighbourhood which until recent decades has had a somewhat bad reputation. It remains a densely built urban area, now predominantly populated by young adults and seniors due to its small flats. With its many bars, small shops, cultural activities and perhaps a peculiar mixture of, on the one hand, a vivid urban culture and warm, social atmosphere and, on the other, loneliness, alcohol and narcotics abuse as well as other darker sides of human life. However, Kallio and adjacent districts have so far remained unique urban districts in Helsinki, and the whole Finland. Environmental NGO Dodo has a project called 'Happy Kallio' that focuses on experimenting and finding concrete ways for people to influence their neighbourhood gathering together people working with local issues relating to culture, social responsibility, town planning etc. Dodo invites AESOP conference participants to experience and define the key elements of the happy and functioning urban life! Welcome to Happy Kallio!

A coach tour and by foot – max number 30 participants

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Meeting Point: Room 22Tour Guide: Jarre Parkatti, Dodo ry ([email protected], +358405237021)YTK Contact: Eeva Mynttinen ([email protected]; +358503841651)

6. Suomenlinna sea fortress: World heritage site and housing areaThis tour takes you to the Suomenlinna fortress. Located on islands off Helsinki, Suomenlinna is a unique historical monument and one of the largest maritime fortresses in the world. In 1991, Suomenlinna was included on the UNESCO World Heritage List as a unique monument of military architecture. The buildings of Suomenlinna date mainly from the end of 18th century, the Swedish era, and 19th century Russian era. Suomenlinna is also a suburb of Helsinki, with 850 people living in the renovated ramparts and barracks. Furthermore, about 400 people work on the island throughout the year and about 700 000 people visit the island annually.Suomenlinna is renovated, maintained and promoted by The Governing Body of Suomenlinna, whose objective is to safeguard the fortress – the atmosphere, buildings and open spaces – for the coming generations. At the same time the area must remain a living part of the city, and tourism needs to be promoted.

A tour by coach, ferry and by foot – max number 40 participants

Meeting Point: KlondykeTour Guides: Heikki Lahdenmäki, The Governing Body of Suomenlinna ([email protected]; +358405288777) and Seija Linnanmäki, National Board of Antiquities ([email protected]; +358500170757)YTK Contact: Kristoffer Snabb ([email protected]; +358505124613)

Infrastructure spaces

7. Aviapolis: An edge city growing around the Helsinki-Vantaa AirportThe City of Vantaa aims at building lively living and working quarters around the Helsinki-Vantaa Airport. The area named Aviapolis has already become the most attractive business location in Helsinki region. During the tour we will see medieval landscapes and church, a small housing area designed by Alvar Aalto, the Kaivoksela protected suburb of the 1960s, new colourful housing areas in Aviapolis, growing shopping and business centres around the airport, an old factory being transformed to exclusive housing and the famous Science Centre Heureka and, it includes a coffee break and short walking tours in the various areas. The tour is organized and guided by city planners of Vantaa.

A coach tour – max number 50 participants

Meeting Point: Hall 4BTour Guides and Contacts:Jukka Kullberg, Vantaa City Planning Department ([email protected]; +358405418986) and Paula Mäki, Vantaa City Planning Department ([email protected]; +3584151994000) YTK Contact: Petteri Niemi ([email protected]: +358505124592)

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8. Going underground: Helsinki district heating and coolingThe district heating and cooling system in Helsinki is one of the most advanced and largest in the world. In this mobile work shop we go underground and get familiar with this eco-efficient way of cooling and heating homes, hotels, offices and shopping centres. There are two stops in the route: Katri Vala’s district heating and cooling plant located under the Katri Vala Park and the world’s most eco-efficient computer hall computer hall located under Uspenski Cathetdral.

A coach tour – max number 40 participants

Meeting Point: TakkaTour Guides and Contacts: Niko Wirgentius, Helsingin Energia ([email protected]; +35896172906) and Juha Sipilä, Helsingin Energia ([email protected]; +35840334663)YTK Contact: Timo Heikkinen ([email protected]; +358505124570)

9. New gateway: Vuosaari harbourThe Port of Helsinki opened a new cargo harbour in the Vuosaari district in November 2008. The construction project lasted close to 6 years and also attracted keen interest outside of Finland. The new Vuosaari Harbour is specialised in unitised cargo, i.e. containers, trucks and trailers. The competitive advantages of the Vuosaari harbour include large, stable and balanced cargo volumes as well as frequent scheduled traffic. In terms of urban planning, the new location of the cargo harbour has created large possibilities for waterfront development – mainly housing and office buildings – in the central city area in Helsinki. The needs and values of local inhabitants were given special consideration in relation to the traffic routes, industrial and service areas during the construction of the harbour. In addition, the church of the Finnish Seamen’s Mission, the Gatehouse, and some other constructions including prize winning noise wall are representing top Finnish architecture in the area.

A coach tour – max number 50 participants

Meeting Point: PalaverTour Guide: Teemu Palo: APRT ([email protected]; +358503676175)Contact: Kari Noroviita, Vuosaari Harbour ([email protected]; +358500403990)YTK Contact: Sirkku Wallin ([email protected]; +358505124625)

Nature in the city

10. Rantaraitti – Espoo's waterfront walkwayIn a modern city the waterfront walkway, connecting interesting places, is an important means of recreation. The town planning of Espoo's maritime waterfront started in the 1970's. The aim is to create a continuous, 40-50 km long walk and cycle path along the sea shore. At the moment about 30 kilometres of the walkway has been completed. The nature of the walkway varies from spacious urban to small scale verdant. There are many swimming beaches, marinas and parks along the way. The guided bicycle tour of approximately 10 km will take you to interesting places along the beautiful seashore.

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Make sure you wear comfortable shoes and suitable cloths according to the weather.

A bicycle tour – max number 30 participants

Meeting Point: Room 24Tour Guides: Jaana Salo, Espoo City Planning Department ([email protected]; +358468771854) and Sami Suviranta, Espoo City Planning Department ([email protected]; +358503707365). Contact: Lea Keskitalo, Espoo City Planning Department ([email protected]; +358468772478)YTK Contact: Anna Broberg ([email protected]; +358505124554)

11. Forest in the city: Nuuksio national parkThe Nuuksio National Park was established in 1994 and is located just half-an-hours drive from Helsinki. The park, partly in the northern parts of Espoo covers an area of 4 500 hectares and there are plans for expansion. It is the most significant national park in the Southern Finland and offers excellent opportunities for relaxation in the wilderness. Nuuksio is a rocky upland area with a total of fifty lakes and ponds and unspoilt forests. It is the home of many rare plants and animals, including dozens of endangered species. The guided tour will begin with a presentation of the new Nuuksio Centre which will be set up in the near future. The centre is to be a window into the entire network of national parks and nature in Finland.

The guided walk on the marked trails is 4 km with a campfire lunch.

Make sure you have comfortable shoes and suitable clothing according to the weather. A coach tour and by foot – max number 50 participants

Meeting Point: Room 26Tour Guides: Tanja Hämäläinen, Espoo City Planning Department ([email protected]; +358503667740) and Jorma Ahola, Espoo City Planning Department ([email protected]; +358981624331)Contact: Lea Keskitalo, Espoo City Planning Department ([email protected]; +358468772478)YTK Contact: Aino Simola ([email protected]; +358505124424)

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Social Events

Opening ReceptionDay and Time: Wednesday 7th July, 19:00-21:00Location: Espoo Museum of Modern Art EMMA, Ahertajantie 5, Tapiola, Espoo.Instructions: Shuttle buses from Dipoli parking area in between 18:00-19:00, and to the hotels after the event. Radisson Blu Seaside customers can use the bus provided by the hotel. When returning, it is also possible to use public transport. Please consult the AESOP 2010 Googlemap or other maps for bus stops in Tapiola.

Young Academics Network DrinksDay and Time: Thursday 8th July, 19:00-03:00Place: Teekkarien Rantasauna, on the beach of Jämeräntaival 7, Espoo. Consult AESOP 2010 Googlemap or other maps.

Instructions: Optional Finnish sauna experience – bring your own towel and swimming suit! Traditional Finnish sauna barbeque (very simple) and live music played by The Affordable House Band. Warm clothes recommended, nights can be chilly on the beach.

AESOP President W.G.M. Salet invitation to Track Co-Chairsinvitation onlyDay and Time: Thursday 8th July, 20:00-22:00Place: Lasipalatsi.

Conference DinnerDay and Time: Friday 9th of July, 20:00-03:00. From 23:00 the doors are open to all conference participants. Conference badge must be shown at the entrance!Place: Korjaamo Culture Factory, Töölönkatu 51a, HelsinkiInstructions: The doors will be open at 19:30. Take tram 4, 7A or 10 from Helsinki city centre to Töölön halli stop. Then walk about 2 minutes. Consult AESOP 2010 Googlemap or other maps. Dress code smart casual.

With your booking of a dinner place, you will receive one Welcoming Drink and two accompanying drinks with the meal. Afterwards, you can buy drinks from the bar.

Participants (and their accompanying guests) with special diets who signed up for the Dinner will find a coloured card in their registration envelope. This card can be brought to the Dinner and put up next to your plate. This way the personnel of the restaurant will be alerted about special requirements.

FIFA World Cup 2010 South AfricaDay and Time:Semi-finalsTue 6th July at 21:30

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Wed 7th July at 21:303/4 PlaceSat 10th July at 21:30FinalSun 11th July at 21:30Place: Sokos Tapiola Garden Hotel, Tapionaukio 3, Espoo. Instructions: After Opening reception on Wednesday short walk from EMMA to Tapiola Garden HotelPublic transportation to Helsinki city centre. Consult AESOP 2010 Googlemap or other maps for the location of bus stop.

Post Conference Tours Congrex, the conference office, organises several Post Conference Tours. These are commercial packages, with the following destinations:

St.Petersburg tour to Russia, 11–13 July, Sunday-Tuesday, 2 nights and 3 daysTallinn tour to Estonia, 11 July, Sunday, day trip (morning-evening)

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General Information

Conference location

FinlandFinland is a member of the European Union and one of the five Nordic countries. Helsinki region consist of cities of Helsinki, Espoo, Vantaa and Kauniainen. The region inhabits more than 1 million people, 1/5 of the whole population of the country. Due to its location on the globe, there are highly competitive direct flight connections from Helsinki to Asia, for example. Helsinki-Vantaa Airport is located 20 kilometres from Helsinki city centre.

Espoo and Otaniemi campusThe conference will be held in Otaniemi campus in Espoo, about 10 km to west from Helsinki city centre. Espoo is the second largest city in Finland and Otaniemi is the leading technology hub in the Nordic countries, featuring a unique mix of top-level research organizations, academic institutions and company headquarters like those of Nokia and KONE. Otaniemi is a community of over 31,000 people that includes 15,000 students from the Aalto University School of Science and Technology and 16,000 technology professionals.

Otaniemi is also one of the most interesting sites of Finnish architecture. The general plan of the campus was made by the architect Alvar Aalto. His office was in charge of the main building and the Otahalli sports hall, built for the Olympics, and of several other buildings. The oldest dormitories, the Servin Mökki restaurant and the Otaniemi chapel were designed by the office of Heikki and Kaija Siren.

Dipoli Congress CentreDipoli Congress Centre in Otaniemi (address Otakaari 24, Espoo) is one of the premier prestigious venues in Finland for meetings, seminars, international conferences and festive events. Dipoli has received Green Office certificate and it is of great architectural significance. Its design has been admired throughout the world and many know its fascinating exteriors and the pinecone-shaped sculpture outside. Dipoli was designed by architects Reima Pietilä and Raili Paatelainen Pietilä, postmodernists before the time.

Transportation to and from conference venue Dipoli

Free AESOP 2010 regional transportation ticketEach participant has received free of charge AESOP 2010 public transportation during the registration or already at the AESOP 2010 welcoming desk in airport (Tue 6th July 14-19 & Wed 7th July 09-13). The regional transportation ticket is valid on buses, trams, metro, Suomenlinna ferry and local trains.

From HelsinkiTake busses 102 (platform 41) or 103 (platform 42) from Kamppi Bus Terminal by Narinkkatori to Otaniemi. Bus stop is nearby to Dipoli. Consult the maps and timetables from Arrival Information at the AESOP 2010 webpage.

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From TapiolaIf You don’t like to walk, take bus 2, 4, 10, 15 from Tapiola Bus Terminal to Otaniemi. Bus stop is nearby to Dipoli. Consult the maps and timetables from Arrival Information at the AESOP 2010 webpage.

From Dipoli to Helsinki or TapiolaBus stops are located in Otaniementie (to Helsinki and Kalastajatorppa) and Vuorimiehentie (to Tapiola). Consult the maps from Arrival Information at the AESOP 2010 webpage.

TaxiThe address of Dipoli is Otakaari 24, Espoo. Nearest taxi rank is next to Dipoli.

Radisson SAS Blu Hotel shuttle bus time table

Wednesday 7th July: 08:30 from hotel to Dipoli12:00 from hotel to Dipoli13:00 from hotel to Dipoli21:00 from EMMA (welcome reception) to hotel

Thursday 8th July:08:30 from hotel to Dipoli17:30 from Dipoli to hotel19:00 from Dipoli to hotel19:30 from Dipoli to hotel

Friday 9th July08:30 from hotel to Dipoli14:15 from Dipoli to hotel (those not going on mobile workshops)

Saturday 10th July08:30 from hotel to Dipoli17:00 from Dipoli to hotel

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Practical information during the conference

Registration deskParticipants can pick up their personal conference material at the registration desk, which is open at Dipoli Congress Centre (Otakaari 24, Espoo), near gala entrancelower level as follows:

Wed 7th July 10:00-18:30Thu 8th July 08:00-17:00Fri 9th July 08:00-14.00Sat 10th July 08:00-17:00

The conference secretariat will be available to assist you at the registration desk during the conference.

Information deskThe information desk will be available at Dipoli Congress Center in the registration area during the conference hours.

Name badges and entry ticketsParticipants and accompanying persons are requested to wear the official conference name badges in all conference events as the badge serves as a ticket to the conference venue and events. The delegates will have a name badge without colour and accompanying persons have a pink name badge. Organisers and volunteers have neon yellow colour. A fee will be charged for reproduction of lost name badges. Entry tickets for the social events should be shown upon entrance to each event.

Please wear your conference badge at all times in the Dipoli premises!

Lunch and refreshmentsLunch is included in the participants’ registration fee. Also Coffee and tea in the lobby area(s) during the breaks are included in the registration fees. Fresh, drinkable water will be available at all times.

Photographing, recording and mobile phonesPhotographing or recording of oral presentations is not allowed. Mobile phones and communicators must be switched off in the lecture halls since they may interfere with the audio system of the halls.

LanguageThe conference language is English. There will be no simultaneous interpretation.

ElectricityElectricity supply in Finland is 220 volts (50 Hz), and wall outlets are the Northern European Standard (CEE7/4) with two round contacts. The standard two-pin Euro plug (CEE 7/16) can be connected to these outlets.

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Non-smoking policySmoking is prohibited in the conference and exhibition areas. In Finland, smoking is not allowed indoors in public buildings and other places open to the public, except in designated smoking areas.

Internet connectionsWireless internet connection is available at Dipoli Congress Centre in the lobby areas, and free Wi-Fi called Aalto Open (by Aalto University) is available in the whole Otaniemi campus area.

PresentationsPresentations should be up-loaded at latest during the breaks before your session or during the day before your presentation. Volunteers in session rooms will assist you. Each file should be named by the track number, abstract registration number (paper ID), and the family name of the presenter (e.g. T05-XXX-Smith.ppt).

LiabilityBy registering into the conference and/or by participating in the exhibition joined to the conference, participants and exhibitors agree that neither the organising committee nor the conference secretariat assume any responsibility for damage or injuries to persons or property during the conference. Participants and exhibitors are advised to organise their own insurance.

Currency and credit cardsThe official currency in Finland is euro (€ or EUR). Most major credit cards are accepted in hotels and shops. VISA, Eurocard and MasterCard are accepted at the conference registration desk. Personal or company cheques are not accepted at the registration desk or shops. Travellers’ cheques can be cashed in banks and exchange bureaus.

CloakroomCloakroom is available free of charge next to the gala entrance on the ground floor of Dipoli Congress Centre.

Dress codeDress code is casual throughout the conference and social events and smart casual for the conference dinner.

Conference assistants and volunteersConference assistants and in-house technical staff of Dipoli Congress Centre are assisting in practical issues in the lecture halls before and during the sessions (e.g. setting up the presentations on the computers and handing microphones for questions).

PhotographerA photographer will document the main conference events.

Book ExhibitionThe exhibition will take place in the area of the upper lobby. Access to the exhibition is free for registered participants. The exhibition will be open throughout the conference hours. See Dipoli floor plan.

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Thanks to SponsorsPresident Tuula Teeri, Aalto UniversityExecutive Dean Matti Pursula, Aalto University, School of Science and Technology TKKHead of Communications, Leila Teräsalmi-Sovijärvi, Aalto University, School of Science and Technology TKKFederation of Finnish Learned Societies TSVHelsinki Region Transport HSL Deputy Mayor Hannu Penttilä, City of HelsinkiDirector of Economic Development Eero Holstila, City of HelsinkiDirector Pekka Timonen, Helsinki World Design Capital 2012Director of Planning Tuomas Rajajärvi, City of Helsinki City Planning DepartmentDirector of Planning Kari Moilanen, City of Espoo City Planning DepartmentHead of Research Office Rikhard Manninen, City of Helsinki City Planning DepartmentExhibition Coordinator Reetta de Wan, City of Helsinki City Planning DepartmentHead of Communication Heikki Mäntymäki, City of Helsinki City Planning DepartmentHead of City Planning Jukka Kullberg, City of Vantaa City Planning DepartmentCity Planning Manager Ossi Keränen, City of Espoo City Planning DepartmentDeputy City Planning Manager Marjut Huvinen, City of Espoo City Planning DepartmentCommunications Manager Lea Keskitalo, City of Espoo City Planning DepartmentHead of Department Maire Mattinen, National Board of AntiquitiesHead of Planning Unit Heikki Lahdenmäki, The Governing Body of SuomenlinnaDirector Niko Wirgentius, Helsingin EnergiaDirector Kari Noroviita, Vuosaari Harbour CentreDODO ryCEO Jaana Tuomi, Espoo Convention & MarketingCongress Manager Ann-Brit Jukka, Espoo Convention & MarketingProfessor Kauko Viitanen, Aalto University Graduate School of Built Environment

General Thanks toYTK staffJussi Saari and Congrex teamJan Fagerström, Dipoli Congress CentreKati Gustafsson and Dipoli Congress Centre teamMia Luostarinen Sodexo DipoliAri Korolainen, Private Case OyHeikki Holvikari, One Stop PromotionsTatu Laurila, Greater Helsinki Promotion LtdYC Felin, Greater Helsinki Promotion LtdOssi Luoto, Pluto Finland OySalla Patrikainen and Korjaamo teamHanna Kekäläinen, Nora Paananen and Soupster teamAnna Henriksson, Sublime Music Agency OyDalindèoDj Arttu PartinenHotel and Restaurant Manager Jouko Puranen Sokos Hotel Tapiola Garden

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Special Thanks to all the Volunteers

Emmanuel Adu-tutu Bofah Johanna Aigner Ilona Akkila Michael Ernst Lukas Franta Daniela Grotenfelt Eva Haggren Henna Hintsala Fredriika Jakola Maija Jokela Mari Jyrkiäinen Senni Jyrkiäinen Tuuli Jäntti Sini Koivaara Miska Koivulehto Heidi Koponen Minerva Koski Maija Kotimäki Petteri Kummala Riikka Latti Yan Liu

Sofia Lång Kati Matilainen Giulia Melis Andrei Mitrea Laura Nurmi Emmi Oksanen Satu Onnela Kaisa Paavilainen Tsolakaki Panagiota Sini Parikka Sara Pietilä Santtu Pyykkönen Juhana Rautiainen Annegret Repp Orna Rosenfeld Mirka Salonen Noora Seppälä Outi Silfverberg Inkeri SuutariMoritz Valeriano Anna Villeneuve

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Alphabetical List of Presenters/Authors

AAalto, Leena, 41Aarsaether, Nils, 44Abe, Hirokazu, 40-41Aber, Jasmin, 28Adams, David, 32Adams, Neil, 27Agata, Spaziante, 31Aguilera, Dolores Sánchez, 40Aksehirli, Ilke, 45Alatalo, Elina, 25Albano, Roberto, 37Albecker, Marie-Fleur, 29Albrechts, Louis, 47Alexander, Ernest, 19Alfasi, Nurit, 18Allaert, Georges, 41Allin, Simone, 19, 38Altay, Deniz, 45Alterman, Rachelle, 49Alves, Teresa, 29Amati, Marco, 22Amdam, Roar, 31Ana, Martins Jorge, 45Andersen, Jeppe Astrup, 42Andres, Lauren, 34Angignard, Marjory, 39Antoninetti, Maurizio, 24Apostol, Ileana, 32Apostolopoulou, Ioli, 49Armondi, Simonetta, 46Armstrong, Rachel, 42Arts, Jos, 42Artuso, Mario, 52Askew, Janet, 48Asmervik, Sigmund, 36Atanackovic-Jelicic, Jelena, 21Atkinson, Rob, 28BBaert, Thierry, 36Bahl, Deepak, 43Bailey, Nick, 41Baker, Mark William, 41Balamir, Murat, 38Balducci, Alessandro, 18, 53Banerjee, Tridib, 43Barber, Austin, 40

Barbosa, Magda Carvalho, 44Basco, Laura, 30, 36Beattie, Lee Grant, 48Beauregard, Robert, 18Becker, Elke, 19Beeftink, Marc, 24Beekmans, Jasper, 40Benach, Nuria, 28Bengs, Christer, 28Berglund, Eeva, 34Beriatos, Elias, 21Bernt, Matthias, 33Berruti, Gilda, 34Bertolini, Luca, 42, 46Beukers, Els, 42Beunen, Raoul, 30, 42Bevilacqua, Carmelina, 28Boelens, Luuk, 53Bonafede, Giulia, 50Boyko, Christopher, 32Brand, Peter, 22, 29Breda-Vázquez, Isabel, 36Briata, Paola, 51Bricocoli, Massimo, 32Briede, Agrita, 39Brink, Margo Van Den, 19Bro, Peter, 53Broberg, Anna, 52, 72Brombach, Karoline, 34Brown, Rebekah, 45Buanes, Arild, 44Budge, Trevor Murray, 37Buhler, Thomas, 43Buhnik, Sophie, 29Buitelaar, Edwin, 48Burke, Matthew, 42Busscher, Tim, 42Buunk, Willem, 18Buurmans-Niemi, Karen, 19Buxton, Michael, 34Bürgow, Grit, 33CCabral, Joao, 28Caceres, Eduardo, 48Cachinho, Herculano, 45Campagna, Michele, 52

Campbell, Heather J., 19Can, Isin, 37Canniffe, Eamonn, 40Carmona, Matthew, 32Carpenter, Juliet, 41Carta, Massimo, 47Carvalho, Jorge, 49Caser, Ursula, 47Cassatella, Claudia, 33Ceudech, Andrea, 38Chao, T.-Y, 40Chao, Tzuyuan, 50Chatzicocoli, Sophia, 21Chen, Yi-Ling, 29Cheng, Hoa-Teng, 43Cho, Deokho, 31Choi, Haeok, 36Christodoulou, Nektarios, 49Chudoba, Minna, 20Cocks, Matthew, 33, 47Combrink, Aneri, 22Contursi, Andrea, 20Cormont, Pascal, 39Ćorović, Dragana, 21Costa, João Pedro, 45Cotella, Giancarlo, 26-27Couch, Chris, 33Coucill, Laura Suzanne, 30Crecente-Maseda, Rafael, 47Cremaschi, Marco, 40Cruz, Sara Santos, 44-45Curtis, Carey, 42DDabovic, Tijana, 33Dai, Guowen, 42Damyanovic, Doris, 24Darchen, Sebastien, 33Davidse, Bart Jan, 44Davoudi, Simin, 22, 44De Leo, Daniela, 28, 36De Lima, Luis Vasconcelos, 40De Luca, Giuseppe, 27De Magalhaes, Claudio, 32De Roo, Gert, 30De Smet, Aurelie, 51De Vries, Jasper, 24

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De Vries, Jochem, 28Debruyne, Pascal, 46Deffner, Alex, 37Demaziere, Christophe, 19Desjardins, Xavier, 39Devisch, Oswald, 47Diab, Youssef G., 23Dias, Luís, 45Diker, Nazire, 24Dillinger, Thomas, 47Dixon, Tim, 40Djordjevic, Dejan, 33Doevendans, Kees, 51Driessen, Peter, 38Driscoll, Patrick, 43Dross, Michael, 25Droste, Christiane, 23Duarte, Paulette, 32Dubois, Alexandre, 45Durmaz, Bahar, 36Dühr, Stefanie, 18, 22EEbert, Sebastian, 38Eizenhöfer, Rebecca, 41Ellerton, Thomas, 46Enlil, Zeynep, 36Eraydin, Ayda, 45Eskelinen, Heikki, 26Este, David, 28FFabbro, Sandro, 26Falleth, Eva Irene, 46Faludi, Andreas, 26Farthing, Stuart Miller, 31Fedeli, Valeria, 46Federico, Gigli, 20Federico, Guiati, 40Fernandez-Martinez, Cristina, 29Ferrara, Floriana Federica, 38Ferrari, Edward Terence, 41Finka, Maros, 27Firidin Ozgur, Ebru, 49Fischer, Thomas, 23Fol, Sylvie, 29Forino, Giuseppe, 33Formato, Enrico, 34Foutakis, Dimitris, 47Frank, Andrea I., 22Frassoldati, Francesca, 22

Frenkel, Amnon, 24Fritsch, Matti, 26Fukui, Miya, 37GGalderisi, Adriana, 38Galle, Maaike, 48Gallent, Nick, 40, 46Gao, Wei-Jie, 40Gebhardt, Matthew F, 18Geertman, Stan, 52Gemenetzi, Georgia, 24Giacopelli, Anna Licia, 28Giampino, Annalisa, 28Gkartzios, Menelaos, 31Gonçalves, Fernando, 28Gong, Yi, 32Goodman, Robin, 34Governa, Francesca, 40Green, Nick, 32Grekousis, George, 52Grigoriadou, Maria Alexan-dra, 34Gromark, Sten, 36Groth, Niels Boje, 33Gruehn, Dietwald, 52Grunfelder, Julien, 33Gu, Dazhi, 22Gualini, Enrico, 19Guimarães, Rita, 36Gullino, Silvia, 43Gunasekera, Sanwara, 52Gunder, Michael, 18Gunnarsson-Östling, Ulrika, 18, 44Görmar, Wilfried, 27HHaag, Sebastian, 25Haahtela, Tero, 47Haanpää, Simo, 39, 69Haas, Tigran, 25Hackenbroch, Kirsten, 34Hall, Stephen George, 28Hammami, Feras, 37Hananel, Ravit, 48Hanegreefs, Griet, 31Hannikainen, Matti Olavi, 21Harder, Henrik, 53Hardy, Maeliosa, 38Harinasuta, Supapim, 33

Hartman, Stefan, 30Harvold, Kjell, 39Haselsberger, Beatrix, 26Hass, Helena, 49Hattori, Keiro, 30Hatz, Gerhard, 20Havel, Barbara, 49Hayangah, Rosemary, 30Healey, Patsy, 18Heeres, Niels, 42Helderman, Jan-Kees, 49Hemberger, Christoph, 24Hendrixen, Peter, 41Henneberry, John, 38Henriksson, Anu, 45Herslund, Lise, 26Higgins, Marilyn, 22Hillier, Jean, 53Hincks, Stephen, 41Hirschler, Petra, 30Hirvonen-Kantola, Sari, 20Hongisto, Patrizia, 47Hopkins, Diane, 38, 46Hossain, Shahadat, 49Huang, Wei-Ju, 29Hull, Angela, 43Humer, Alois, 27Huning, Sandra, 23Hutter, Gerard, 47Håkansson, Maria, 19Ierides, Vassilis, 31IIkonen, Niilo, 52Ingallina, Patrizia, 36Ioannou, Byron, 31Israel, Emil, 24JJaarsma, Rinus, 42Jabareen, Yosef, 19Jamecny, Lubomir, 27Janssen-Jansen, Leonie, 46, 48-49Jauhiainen, Jussi S., 26Jay, Stephen, 45Jefferies, Thomas Edward, 32Jessen, Johann, 19Jin, Huiqing, 48Jinghuan, He, 40Juhola, Sirkku, 39

83YTK • Aalto University 83

Jürgenson, Evelin, 49KKahila, Maarit, 47Kalanje, Humphrey, 50Kangasoja, Jonna, 18, 29Kanninen, Vesa, 43Karataş, Neslihan, 40Kase, Urmas, 25Keskin, Berna, 38Kidd, Sue, 45Kidokoro, Tetsuo, 48Kim, Byungkyu, 31Kim, Geunyoung, 30Kim, Sangwon, 30Kingston, Richard, 52Knappik, Magdalena, 49Knieling, Jörg, 26, 28Knierbein, Sabine, 37Knudsen, Anne-Marie, 53Kondogiannis, Georgios, 50Kooij, Henk-Jan, 33Kopomaa, Timo, 38Korthals Altes, Willem K., 49Kostres, Milica, 21Kotval, Zenia, 34Kousidonis, Christos Th., 37Kracht, Matthias, 43Krakover, Shaul, 28Krassnitzer, Philip, 51Kristiansen, Ronny, 46Krogh, Birgit, 31Krummheuer, Florian, 42Kruse, Alexandra, 31Kuechel, Lisa, 41Kule, Laila, 39Kuo, Hsing-Fu, 53Kuoppa, Jenni, 43Kurth, Detlef, 22, 34Kyttä, Marketta, 52LLaitinen, Karitta, 20Lalenis, Costas, 32Lalenis, Konstantinos, 48Lambert, Christine, 28, 40Lapintie, Kimmo, 9Larsen, Jacob Norvig, 41Leducq, Divya, 31Leinfelder, Hans, 31Leone, Davide, 50

Levelt, Melika, 48Li, Jianling, 43Lieto, Laura, 18, 36Lin, Dan, 44Lin, Yutzu Keats, 38Lindblad, Sverker, 27Lindholm, Gunilla, 25Lingua, Valeria, 27Linzer, Helena, 30Lo Bocchiaro, Giuseppe, 50Lo Piccolo, Francesco, 50Lombaerde, Piet, 41Lord, Alexander Duncan, 48Lu, Peiwen, 45Lucchesi, Fabio, 47Lyhne, Ivar, 44Løbner, Kristian, 31MMaasikamäe, Siim, 49Mace, Alan, 40Machemer, Patricia, 34Madanipour, Ali, 32Madeddu, Manuela, 40-41Madureira, Ana Mafalda, 41Mady, Christine, 28Malinen, Pekka, 47Maloir, Catherine, 42Manfredini, Fabio, 43Maricic, Tamaara, 44Marot, Naja, 48Marshall, Stephen, 32Marshall, Tim, 48Martinez-Perez, Alona, 20Masuta, Tatsuo, 20, 36Matern, Antje, 26, 28, 47Mathey, Juliane, 38Mayer-Dukart, Anne, 34Mayere-Donehue, Severine, 48Mayerhofer, Rainer, 44Mcneill, Margot, 22Mees, Heleen, 38Mehmood, Abid, 39Meir, Avinoam, 50Melot, Romain, 49Mettetal, Lucile, 39Metzger, Jonathan, 27Meyer, Christine Julia, 28Mihajlovic, Jelisaveta, 37Mildorf, Tomas, 52

Miot, Yoan, 29Mironowicz, Izabela, 22, 29Mitrea, Andrei, 30Miyagawa, Tomoko, 37Moccia, Francesco Domenico, 39Mohammadzadeh, Mohsen, 50Moilanen, Helka, 26Molin-Juustila, Tonja, 47Mollo, Luigi, 20Moreira, Graça, 41Morgado, Sofia, 45Morton, Richard, 30Moulaert, Frank, 19Mueller, Klaus, 25Muller, Larissa, 28Mulligan, Helen, 28Mullin, John, 34Murano, Chiara, 31, 44Murphy, Enda, 43Mäkinen, Kirsi, 33Mälkki, Mikko, 37Mäntysalo, Raine, 18, 29NNæss, Petter, 43Nagano, Sinichiro, 20Nakano, Mai, 40Napoleone, Claude, 31Nedovic-Budic, Zorica, 33Nelson, Suzy, 40Neophytou, Katerina, 37Nes, Akkelies Van, 30Nicolaisen, Morten Skou, 42Nielsen, Thomas Sick, 33Nour, Haysam, 36Nucci, Lucia, 33Nunes, Richard Joseph, 27Nuojua, Johanna, 47Nupponen, Terttu, 20Nurse, Alexander, 46Nyseth, Torill, 53OOfosu-Kwakye, Yvonne, 30O’Hare, Paul, 46Olesen, Kristian, 46Oliveira, Carlos, 36Oliveira, Vitor Araújo, 44Olsson, Krister, 25Ombuen, Simone, 52Onishi, Takashi, 48

84 AESOP 201084

Oosterlynck, Stijn, 46Oranje, Mark Christiaan, 51Oren, Michelle L, 49Orenstein, Daniel, 24Othengrafen, Frank, 19, 26, 28Otsuka, Noriko, 40Ozyetgin, Ayse, 45PPaadam, Katrin, 36 Paba, Giancarlo, 46Pacchi, Carolina, 43Pais, Carina, 49Pallagst, Karina M., 29Papageorgiou, Marilena, 21Paris, Didier, 36Park, Joon, 53Park, Wonseok, 31Parkhurst, Graham, 48Pasmans, Bart, 49Pasqui, Gabriele, 46Paterson, Elaine Margaret, 32Peel, Deborah, 52Pellas, Themistoklis, 50Peltonen, Lasse, 39Pemberton, Simon, 30Perrone, Camilla, 46Pessoa, Denise, 40Petit, Steven, 31Petrikova, Dagmar, 23Petrin, Julian, 47Photis, Yorgos N, 52Picone, Marco, 33Pinho, Paulo, 29, 43Pisman, Ann, 31, 41Pizarro, Rafael E, 33Pizzo, Barbara, 19Platt, Stephen, 29Ploeger, Hendrik, 49Ploegmakers, Huub, 49Polko, Adam, 41Pollock, Eric, 41Polychronopoulos, Dimitris, 34Ponzini, Davide, 18Porrello, Antonino, 36Portokalidis, Costas, 32Pozoukidou, Georgia, 19Prada, José, 29Prosperi, David C., 24, 29Pucci, Paola, 43Puttilli, Matteo, 37

Puustinen, Sari, 40RRaagmaa, Garri, 25Rafferty, Gavan, 50Raja, Samina, 19Rantanen, Annuska, 34Rebelo, Emília Malcata, 29Reimer, Mario, 19Renetzki, Peter, 49Renzoni, Cristina, 20Rigillo, Marina, 44Ristimäki, Mika, 43Ritchie, Heather Jennice, 45Roberts, Marion, 33Robinson, Steve, 46Rocco, Roberto, 29Roessler, Stefanie, 38Rongwiriyaphanich, Suwanna, 39Roo, Gert De, 19Roodbol-Mekkes, Petra, 24, 31Rosa, Elisabetta, 49Rossignolo, Cristiana, 28Roth, Michael, 31, 52Ruffini, Giovanni, 47Ruiz Lorbacher, Matias, 43Ruming, Kristian, 48Runhaar, Hens, 38Runkel, Carolin, 19SSá, Rita, 47Saad-Sulonen, Joanna, 47Saarinen, Sakari, 27Saccomani, Silvia, 40Sager, Tore, 18Saglie, Inger-Lise, 46Salgueiro, Teresa Barata, 45Sante-Riveira, Ines, 47Santos, João Rafael, 33Sapounakis, Aris, 32Savoldi, Paola, 32Savvides, Andreas L., 41Scarwell, Helga-Jane, 31Scheurer, Jan, 42-43Scheuvens, Rudolf, 51Schilleci, Filippo, 33Schmeidler, Karel R, 43Schmitt, Peter, 27, 45Schoenwandt, Walter, 24Scholles, Frank, 22

Schreurs, Jan, 19Schubert, Dirk, 21Schulze Bäing, Andreas, 40Scott, Mark, 31Seardo, Bianca, 44Searle, Glen, 48Seigneuret, Natacha, 32Senol, Fatma, 51Serdoura, Francisco, 41-42Serrano, José, 22Sezer, Ceren, 37Sharma, Utpal, 36Shaw, David, 30Shin, Dong-Chun, 29Short, Michael James, 40Silva, Cecília, 43Silva, Elisabete A., 52Simon-Philipp, Christina, 34Sireni, Maarit, 31Skayannis, Pantoleon, 21Skjeggedal, Terje, 39Skordili, Sofia, 47Smith, Ian, 38Snabb, Kristoffer, 47, 70Snep, Robbert, 45Sorel, Niels, 48Soudunsaari, Leena, 47Sousa, Sílvia Ávila De, 29Spit, Tejo, 38Squires, Graham, 41Staffans, Aija, 47Stanilov, Kiril, 33Stead, Dominic, 26, 45Steele, Wendy, 48Stein, Axel, 31Stiftel, Bruce, 48Sturzaker, John, 44Sweet, David, 27Svenfelt, Åsa, 44Switzer, Andrew, 46Syrakos, Stephanos, 21Syrakoy, Athena-Christina, 21TTagliolato, Paolo, 43Takahashi, Akira, 41Tali, Taivo, 25Talone, Antonio, 36Tan, Wendy, 42Tani, Akihiko, 20, 36

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Tasan-Kok, Tuna, 45Taylor, Elizabeth, 34Te Brömmelstroet, Marco, 42Tellios, Anastasios, 33Terzi, Fatih, 24Teräväinen, Helena, 22Tezer, Azime, 24, 45Thibault, Serge, 18Thierstein, Alain, 25Thoidou, Elisavet, 26, 47Thompson, Matthew, 28Tiesdell, Steve, 32Tiesdell, Steven, 32Tillema, Taede, 42Todes, Alison, 51Tornaghi, Chiara, 37Toufengopoulou, Anastasia, 24Toussaint, Verena, 25Trampa, Anastasia, 43Triantafillou, Charikleia, 49Trillo, Claudia, 28Tschirk, Werner, 51Tsolakaki, Panagiota, 37, 80Tsou, Ko-Wan, 43, 53Tubio-Sanchez, Jose Maria, 47Tuhkanen, Heidi, 38Tulumello, Simone, 28Tummers, Lidewij, 18Turk, Sevkiye Sence, 49Törnqvist, Anders, 22UUemura, Tetsuji, 29Unsal, Fatma, 49Uttke, Angela, 23V, WWalchhofer, Hans Peter, 44

Wallin, Sirkku, 47, 71Van Den Brink, Adri, 31Van Der Knaap, Wim, 44-45Van Der Krabben, Erwin, 49Van Dijk, Terry, 46Van Huyssteen, Elsona, 51Van Rensburg, Leon, 22Wang, Shifu, 22Wang, Yan, 44Wankiewicz, Heidrun, 24Varna, George, 32Vasconcelos, Lia, 47Vasconcelos, Ricardo Borges, 32Waterhout, Bas, 28Watson, Paul, 22, 29Watson, Vanessa Jane, 50Webb, Brian, 42Weeks, George, 32Weith, Thomas, 25Verbeek, Thomas, 31Verdelli, Laura, 18Verhage, Roelof, 40Verma, Ira, 43Verma, Niraj, 19Vermeulen, Rick, 29Verones, Sara, 38Vestby, Guri Mette, 30Vestergaard, Maja Sig, 31Vettorato, Daniele, 32Weyman, Tamara, 29White, Iain, 39Vico, Franco, 52Wiechmann, Thorsten, 29Wiemer, Ellen, 24Viitanen, Kauko, 48-49Wilkinson, Cathy, 45, 53

Williamson, Amanda, 51Vitale Brovarone, Elisabetta, 43Vitellio, Ilaria, 34Vítor, Oliveira Araújo, 45Voigt, Andreas, 44Vojnovic, Igor, 43Vojvodik, Martin, 31Vojvodikova, Barbara, 31Volpiano, Mauro, 36Woltjer, Johan, 45, 51Von Löwis, Sabine, 28Wong, Cecilia, 40Vries, Jasper R. De, 42Wu, Ming, 32Wu, Ning, 52XXenophontos, Maria, 31Xu, Zhen, 22YYesilirmak, Asuman, 49Ünverdi, Levent, 40Yörür, Neriman, 40ZZanon, Bruno, 42Zavraka, Despoina, 33Zenia, Kotval, 23Zhou, Kai, 47Zibell, Barbara, 24Ziervogel, Daniela, 41Zifou, Maria, 43Zonneveld, Wil, 28Zoppi, Mariella, 37Zygouri, Foteini, 32ÖÖzatağan, Güldem, 29