000 01632nab a2200301 4500
999 _c11183
_d11183
003 OSt
005 20210127111123.0
007 cr aa aaaaa
008 210127b ||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d
100 _aThomas, June Manning
_941440
245 _aSocially Responsible Practice : The Battle to Reshape the American Institute of Planners
260 _bSage
_c2019
300 _aVol 55, Issue 4, 2019 : (258-281 p.)
520 _aThis article explores how events of a particular era, 1959–1974, contributed to the reshaping of ideas about planners’ social responsibilities. It describes encounters between Planners for Equal Opportunity and American Institute of Planners (AIP) relating to the need for planners to help protect the disadvantaged and to counter racial or economic oppression in professional practice. It suggests that the years from 1959, when AIP issued a slight revision of its code of professional conduct, to 1974, when it developed a proposal for dispersed advocacy planning, were the setting for major changes in understanding about the need for social justice in planning practice.
650 _arace relations
_941441
650 _apoverty
_941442
650 _asegregation
_941443
650 _aadvocacy planning
_941444
650 _aplanning eras/approaches
_941445
650 _aurban renewal
_941446
650 _aPaul Davidoff
_941447
650 _a professionalism
_941448
650 _aethics
_939670
650 _asocial issues
_941449
773 0 _011163
_915497
_dSage, 2019
_tJournal of planning history
856 _uhttps://doi.org/10.1177/1538513218786007
942 _2ddc
_cART