Essays about: "German National Urban Policy"

Found 3 essays containing the words German National Urban Policy.

  1. 1. Integrated and sustainable urban development planning : An empirical case study on the reflection of the Leipzig Charter’s principles in the context of German local urban planning

    University essay from Blekinge Tekniska Högskola/Sektionen för planering och mediedesign

    Author : Martin Stumpler; [2011]
    Keywords : Integrated planning; Sustainability; Urban planning; ISEK;

    Abstract : This master’s thesis deals with the concept of integrated urban development planning as e.g. promoted in the Leipzig Charter on Sustainable European Cities. The legally non-binding character of the EU policy document raises the question of its implementation. READ MORE

  2. 2. Forming Urban Policy : The relationship of the European ‘Urban’ Policy and the German National ‘Urban’ Policy

    University essay from Blekinge Tekniska Högskola/Sektionen för planering och mediedesign

    Author : Martina Hengst; [2010]
    Keywords : urban policy; EU; Germany; Euroepan Urban Policy; German National Urban Policy;

    Abstract : The presented thesis deals with the urban dimension of the European and the German National Policy and their interconnection. After defining urban policy in general, the European and the German national level have been analyzed in terms of their development of an urban dimension, the involved institutions and actors and the subjects as well as the obstacles of an imple-mentation of urban policy. READ MORE

  3. 3. Participatory Urban Upgrading : The Case of Ezbet Bekhit, Cairo, Egypt

    University essay from KTH/Infrastruktur

    Author : Zeinab Noureddine Tag-Eldeen; [2003]
    Keywords : Informal settlement; Low-income Housing; Urban Upgrading; Community Participation; Project Evaluation; Participatory Program Evaluation; Action Planning; German-Egyptian Cooperation; Egypt; Cairo;

    Abstract : As a mega-city and the most populated city in Africa, Cairo is characterised by a high birth rate, escalating rural-urban migration and where the socio-economic services are centralized and overwhelmed, these generally poor migrants have no choice other than to create and develop their own informal shelter in the outer city areas that lay farthest from the reach of the authorities and from where they then search for better job opportunities. The expansion of these slum areas places an extra burden on the already deteriorated natural and unplanned urban environments. READ MORE