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PHYSICAL REGENERATION NEWS: SECOND OPINION - Towns and Cities Strategy for the East of England

23 January 2004

Each week we ask a regeneration practitioner or commentator to assess a recently published planning document. This week Robert Cowan reviews the Towns and Cities Strategy and Action Plan for the East of England.

AGENDA TO 25 MARCH

23 January 2004

29 January: Local Strategic Partnerships: Work in Progress. Organiser: Room@RTPI . Venue: London. Fee: £75-95. Details: Mary Murphy (tel) 020 7929 9488. 29 January: Integrating Land Use and Transport...

BOOK REVIEW: The dimensions of urban decline

23 January 2004

Urban decline is a complex, multi-dimensional phenomenon. While much academic work on different aspects is available, many working in the field, such as academics, students, and particularly campaigners, need an accessible reference providing links across space, time and topic. Poverty Street provides just this.

DIARY: Crowded cemeteries, the case of the cranberry and a capital craze

23 January 2004

This high density lark seems to be catching on. As money pours in to stack more blocks of flats onto brownfield sites across the South-East, so the region's population increases. And, as a result, so do the number of those urban sophisticates kicking the bucket.

TURNING POINT: A life of challenging perceptions

23 January 2004

I was born and brought up in Kenya as an East African Asian. As a child, I contracted polio that left me with impaired mobility in my right leg. I was aware of the concerns my parents had for my future, and was determined to prove that I could become someone despite my disability.

ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT: The battles of black business

23 January 2004

Constraints on ethnic minority businesses are undermining regeneration. Black business leaders tell Ben Walker where the problems crop up, and how they should be addressed

EDITORIAL: Schools scheme success shows up in GCSE grades

23 January 2004

It is always good to be able to report that a regeneration programme is bearing fruit. Last week's GCSE statistics (see Community Renewal News, p8) confirm the effectiveness of Excellence in Cities (EiC) partnerships, the coalitions of schools set up to improve standards in deprived areas.

OPINION: We're on the right track, at last

23 January 2004

Just when I'd started whistling "Move Over Darling" in the sure and certain knowledge that the eponymous transport minister was about to be reshuffled on account of the trains not getting anywhere fast (or indeed at all), he raised an eyebrow and the earth moved - at least for Richard Bowker and the Strategic Rail Authority (SRA). Mr Darling has done that most difficult thing under this regime: Something. In so doing, he has restored some faith in the Department for Transport by, correctly, undermining faith in just about every other body involved in 'delivering' the rail 'system'. I'm delighted.

OPINION: Root causes that make outlaws

23 January 2004

While the furore over Robert Kilroy-Silk's idiotic remarks continues to rage, another race-related story may have escaped general notice, broached first in the Daily Telegraph and then in a subsequent discussion on Radio 4's Today programme. It arose from a police report which observed that the majority of group rape is perpetrated by ethnic minorities.

OPINION: How to spend a penny in a risk-averse culture

23 January 2004

When you reach a certain age, especially in this chilly weather, there's one basic piece of urban infrastructure you increasingly need but don't find: a public lavatory. Ours were great glories of the Victorian age, that era of minimal public spending. Our ancestors put them on or under every street corner.

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