posted on 2022-03-28, 09:47authored byDavid Fingland
This dissertation provides a detailed analysis of the manner in which the notion of certainty is identified in the land use planning system in New South Wales as portrayed by the State government as a product of its processes. It focuses on three main components of the planning process where certainty is considered to be of benefit. These are the strategic plan, the assessment and determination of development applications and implementation where the stated intention of the plan is translated into outcome.
In the context of land use planning, the notion of certainty is vague depending on individual and group interest. The approach taken here therefore focuses on the feasible presence of those qualities in the planning system which could be expected to generate confidence in practical terms rather than merely as a rhetorical construct.
The method undertaken employs a mix of interviews with a range of participants, a series of case studies centred on the three main areas of interest and an analysis of the material prepared in the lead up to the publication of the recent Planning White Paper and the draft Bills.
The evidence indicates that at least two of the components of the planning system investigated here are not sufficiently robust or reliable to produce the confidence required to achieve the certainty claimed. These are the strategic plan and the outcomes of the process when compared with its stated aims. The third area, that related to the approvals process, is more questionable. Its output in terms of the rate of approval could be considered to be capable of providing confidence although the means employed to achieve this can be considered to be too compliant with the drive for developmentalism. The presence of certainty as an identifiable characteristic of the planning system cannot therefore be considered to be valid and the claims regularly made for it are more accurately seen as promotional rhetoric intended to justify the process itself and the need for change here defined as power used to reinforce the predictability of outcome.
History
Table of Contents
Part One. 1. Introduction
2. Certainty in the literature
3. Land use planning in New South Wales -- Part Two. 4. Certainty in the strategic plan - confidence in its processes?
5. Confidence in the approval process - streamlined and consultative?
6. Policy implementation - aims and outcomes -- Part Three. 7. Certainty in land use planning in New South Wales.
Notes
Bibliography: pages 245-294
Theoretical thesis.
Awarding Institution
Macquarie University
Degree Type
Thesis PhD
Degree
PhD, Macquarie University, Faculty of Arts, Department of Geography and Planning
Department, Centre or School
Department of Geography and Planning
Year of Award
2015
Principal Supervisor
Kristian Ruming
Additional Supervisor 1
Peter Davies
Rights
Copyright David Fingland 2015.
Copyright disclaimer: http://mq.edu.au/library/copyright