Reviews: Spatial Models and GIS: New Potential and New Models, GISDATA 7, the Internet: An Ethnographic Approach, Valuing the Built Environment: GIS and House Price Analysis, City Region 2020: Integrated Planning for a Sustainable Environment, the Urban Moment: Cosmopolitan Essays on the Late-20th-Century City, the Sustainable City: Urban Regeneration and Sustainability, Introduction to Planning Practice, Innovations in GIS 7: GIS and Geocomputation, Handbook of Environmental and Resource Economics, Transport Investment and Economic Development

2001 ◽  
Vol 28 (4) ◽  
pp. 623-636
Author(s):  
Harvey J Miller ◽  
Martin Dodge ◽  
Iain Lake ◽  
Patsy Healey ◽  
Richard Smith ◽  
...  
2011 ◽  
Vol 36 (2) ◽  
pp. 24-35
Author(s):  
Bob Brown

A new urban paradigm, the global city, emerged in the late 20th Century finding acceptance in discussions of urban development. Tied into a global network of exchange, it exists principally as a place of financial speculation and transaction. It is marked by a parallel economy of culture, which underpins a re-conceptualisation and spatial re-formation of the city. Despite its widespread currency, criticisms have challenged its economic sustainability. Further questions have contested its tendency to impose a singular, homogenized space prioritizing consumption while marginalising other concerns. Post-independence Riga's recent experience provides a platform from which to critique the global city paradigm, which the city embraced as it sought to embed itself in the West not only politically but culturally and economically as well. In opposition to this model's intrinsic singular emphasis and exclusionary tendencies, this text will explore the concept of palimpsest; this proposition understands the city as a multiplicity of layers, within which convergences and divergences offer a site from which to generate synergies. This will be framed in reference to recent discourse on the sustainable city and development practice. Recent design-led inquiry situated in the context of Riga will then provide a lens on palimpsest as an alternative form of praxis.


2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sigrid Wertheim-Heck ◽  
Melika Levelt ◽  
Lisa ten Brug ◽  
Jessica van Bossum

2019 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
pp. 59-82 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yongyang Cai

Computational methods are required to solve problems without closed-form solutions in environmental and resource economics. Efficiency, stability, and accuracy are key elements for computational methods. This review discusses state-of-the-art computational methods applied in environmental and resource economics, including optimal control methods for deterministic models, advances in value function iteration and time iteration for general dynamic stochastic problems, nonlinear certainty equivalent approximation, robust decision making, real option analysis, bilevel optimization, solution methods for continuous time problems, and so on. This review also clarifies the so-called curse of dimensionality, and discusses some computational techniques such as approximation methods without the curse of dimensionality and time-dependent approximation domains. Many existing economic models use simplifying and/or unrealistic assumptions with an excuse of computational feasibility, but these assumptions might be able to be relaxed if we choose an efficient computational method discussed in this review.


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