Publication | Closed Access
Sustainable development control? Zoning and land use regulations for urban form, biodiversity conservation and green design in Australia
26
Citations
38
References
2014
Year
EngineeringLand UseUse PlanningSustainable DevelopmentSustainable Land UseUrban FormEnvironmental PlanningEnvironmental PolicySocial SciencesAustralian Land UseUrban Land UseGreen DesignLand-use PlanningLand Use PlanningClimate ChangePublic PolicySustainable Development ControlSustainable CitiesGeographyUrban EcologyUrban PlanningSustainable Land-use ManagementSustainable Urban FormRegional PlanningLand Conservation
This paper examines how Australian land use plans incorporate provisions for sustainable urban form, design, biodiversity conservation, and climate change. Despite the long-standing sustainability objectives in state policy frameworks, a survey of 291 comprehensive plans finds implementation within local instruments is far from universal. Differences in patterns of policy adoption, as well as potential explanations for these differences, including geographical location, patterns of residential growth, the socio-economic composition of local communities, political forces, and policy evolution over time, are explored. Overall, areas experiencing more intensive growth tend to have newer plans, which in turn, contain more sustainability provisions, suggesting a responsive rather than repressive relationship between development pressures and regulatory development control.
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