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This GUIDE was prepared as a public service by the Association of Collegiate Schools of Planning (ACSP), a consortium of university based programs offering degrees and credentials in urban and regional planning. ACSP hopes to encourage a wide range of high school and undergraduate students to consider a rewarding and challenging career in planning. ACSP promotes education, research, service, and outreach in the United States and throughout the world by seeking to: recognize diverse needs and interests in planning; strengthen the role of planning education in colleges and universities through publications, conferences, and community engagement; improve and enhance the accreditation process, and; extend planning beyond the classroom into the world of practice. If you are interested in a career in which you can help your community, influence the direction of growth and change, and build a better future, you should read this GUIDE.

OBJECTIVES
This GUIDE is designed to show you: how fulfilling a career in planning might be; the wide variety of jobs which urban and regional planners do; the kind of education and training you need to become a planner; the range of universities which offer planning education and training; and how you might choose a university planning program matched to your interests and needs.

IS PLANNING THE CAREER FOR ME?


Are you interested in positive social, economic, environmental, and physical change? Do you want to work with people from various backgrounds to develop a better community? Do you like to communicate with others about ideas, programs and plans? Are you challenged by complex problems and excited about being part of a cooperative process to devise solutions to those problems? Do you think about the future?About what could be rather than about what is? If you answered YES to any of these questions, you should seriously consider becoming a planner!

TABLE OF CONTENTS
WHAT DO PLANNERS DO?...................................................................................................................... -iPLANNING SPECIALIZATIONS............................................................................................................. -iiLAND USE PLANNING ............................................................................................................... -iiENVIRONMENTAL PLANNING ................................................................................................. -iiECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT PLANNING . .............................................................................. -iiTRANSPORTATION PLANNING ................................................................................................ -iiHOUSING, SOCIAL, AND COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT PLANNING ................................ -iii-

OTHER IMPORTANT PLANNING JOBS .......................................................................................... -iiiWILL I GET A JOB? .................................................................................................................................... -iiiHOW CAN I FIND OUT MORE ABOUT PLANNING? ...............................................................-ivA PLANNERS EDUCATION ....................................................................................................................-viHOW TO CHOOSE THE BEST PLANNING PROGRAM ...........................................................-viiHOW TO USE THIS GUIDE ...................................................................................................................-viiiLISTINGS BY SCHOOL
ALABAMA A&M UNIVERSITY ...................................................................................................................... 1 ARIZONA STATE UNIVERSITY ...................................................................................................................... 3 AUBURN UNIVERSITY ................................................................................................................................... 7 BALL STATE UNIVERSITY .............................................................................................................................. 9 BOSTON UNIVERSITY .................................................................................................................................. 12 CALIFORNIA POLYTECHNIC STATE UNIVERSITY, SAN LUIS OBISPO ................................................... 15 CALIFORNIA STATE POLYTECHNIC UNIVERSITY, POMONA ................................................................. 19 CALIFORNIA STATE UNIVERSITY, NORTHRIDGE .................................................................................... 22 THE CATHOLIC UNIVERSITY OF AMERICA ............................................................................................. 24 CLEMSON UNIVERSITY ............................................................................................................................... 26 CLEVELAND STATE UNIVERSITY ............................................................................................................... 29 COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY ............................................................................................................................. 31 CORNELL UNIVERSITY................................................................................................................................ 35 EASTERN WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY ..................................................................................................... 40 FLORIDA ATLANTIC UNIVERSITY ............................................................................................................ 42

LISTINGS BY SCHOOL contd


FLORIDA STATE UNIVERSITY..................................................................................................................... 44 FROSTBURG STATE UNIVERSITY .............................................................................................................. 47 GEORGIA INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY .................................................................................................. 49 HARVARD UNIVERSITY ............................................................................................................................... 53 HUNTER COLLEGE OF THE CITY UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK ............................................................ 56 INDIANA UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA.............................................................................................. 59 IOWA STATE UNIVERSITY ........................................................................................................................... 61 KANSAS STATE UNIVERSITY ..................................................................................................................... 64 MASSACHUSETTS INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY .................................................................................... 66 McGILL UNIVERSITY .................................................................................................................................... 72 MIAMI UNIVERSITY ..................................................................................................................................... 74 MICHIGAN STATE UNIVERSITY.................................................................................................................. 75 MINNESOTA STATE UNIVERSITY, MANKATO .......................................................................................... 78 MISSOURI STATE UNIVERSITY ................................................................................................................... 80 MORGAN STATE UNIVERSITY .................................................................................................................... 81 THE NEW SCHOOL ...................................................................................................................................... 83 NEW JERSEY INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY ............................................................................................ 85 NEW YORK UNIVERSITY ............................................................................................................................. 88 NORTHERN ARIZONA UNIVERSITY .......................................................................................................... 91 OHIO STATE UNIVERSITY ........................................................................................................................... 94 PORTLAND STATE UNIVERSITY ................................................................................................................. 98 PRATT INSTITUTE ...................................................................................................................................... 102 RUTGERS, THE STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW JERSEY ........................................................................ 106 RYERSON UNIVERSITY .............................................................................................................................. 110 SAINT LOUIS UNIVERSITY ........................................................................................................................ 113 SAN DIEGO STATE UNIVERSITY .............................................................................................................. 115 SAN JOS STATE UNIVERSITY .................................................................................................................. 117 SAVANNAH STATE UNIVERSITY ............................................................................................................. 120 STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT ALBANY .................................................................................. 122 TEMPLE UNIVERSITY................................................................................................................................. 125 TEXAS A&M UNIVERSITY ......................................................................................................................... 128 TEXAS SOUTHERN UNIVERSITY.............................................................................................................. 132 TUFTS UNIVERSITY ................................................................................................................................... 135 UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO THE STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK ................................................. 138 UNIVERSITY OF AKRON ........................................................................................................................... 140 UNIVERSITY OF ARIZONA ........................................................................................................................ 143 UNIVERSITY OF BRITISH COLUMBIA ...................................................................................................... 146 UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA BERKELEY .............................................................................................. 149 UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA IRVINE ..................................................................................................... 153 UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA LOS ANGELES ........................................................................................ 157 UNIVERSITY OF CINCINNATI ................................................................................................................... 161 UNIVERSITY OF COLORADO DENVER ................................................................................................... 165 UNIVERSITY OF DELAWARE ................................................................................................................... 170 UNIVERSITY OF FLORIDA......................................................................................................................... 173

LISTINGS BY SCHOOL contd


UNIVERSITY OF HAWAII ........................................................................................................................... 176 UNIVERSITY OF IDAHO ............................................................................................................................ 180 UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS AT CHICAGO ................................................................................................. 184 UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS AT URBANA-CHAMPAIGN ........................................................................... 189 UNIVERSITY OF IOWA............................................................................................................................... 193 UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS .......................................................................................................................... 196 UNIVERSITY OF LOUISVILLE ................................................................................................................ 198 UNIVERSITY OF MARYLAND, COLLEGE PARK ...................................................................................... 201 UNIVERSITY OF MEMPHIS ........................................................................................................................ 204 UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN...................................................................................................................... 206 UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA ................................................................................................................... 210 UNIVERSITY OF MISSOURI- KANSAS CITY ............................................................................................. 213 UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA-LINCOLN.................................................................................................... 214 UNIVERSITY OF NEVADA ......................................................................................................................... 216 UNIVERSITY OF NEW MEXICO ................................................................................................................ 218 UNIVERSITY OF NEW ORLEANS.............................................................................................................. 220 UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA ....................................................................................................... 223 UNIVERSITY OF OKLAHOMA ................................................................................................................... 226 UNIVERSITY OF OREGON ......................................................................................................................... 228 UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA ............................................................................................................. 230 UNIVERSITY OF QUEENSLAND ............................................................................................................... 233 UNIVERSITY OF SOUTH AUSTRALIA ...................................................................................................... 236 UNIVERSITY OF SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA............................................................................................. 237 UNIVERSITY OF SOUTHERN MAINE ....................................................................................................... 241 UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS, ARLINGTON ..................................................................................................... 243 UNIVERSITY OF TOLEDO.......................................................................................................................... 247 UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO ........................................................................................... 249 UNIVERSITY OF UTAH .............................................................................................................................. 251 UNIVERSITY OF VIRGINIA ........................................................................................................................ 253 UNIVERSITY OF WASHINGTON ............................................................................................................... 255 UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN-MADISON................................................................................................. 259 UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN-MILWAUKEE ............................................................................................ 262 VIRGINIA COMMONWEALTH UNIVERSITY............................................................................................ 265 VIRGINIA POLYTECHNIC INSTITUTE AND STATE UNIVERSITY ......................................................... 267 WAYNE STATE UNIVERSITY .................................................................................................................... 271 WESTERN MICHIGAN UNIVERSITY ....................................................................................................... 273

APPENDICES
APPENDIX A - FACULTY BY SPECIALIZATION ....................................................................................... A-1 APPENDIX B - ALPHABETICAL FACULTY LISTING WITH CONTACT INFORMATION....................... B-1

WHAT DO PLANNERS DO?


Planning is a systematic, creative way to influence the future of neighborhoods, cities, rural and metropolitan areas, and even the country and the world. Urban and regional planners use their professional skills to serve communities facing social, economic, environmental, and cultural challenges by helping community residents to: develop ways to preserve and enhance their quality-of-life; find methods to protect the natural and built environment; identify policies to promote equity and equality; structure programs to improve services to disadvantaged communities, and ; determine methods to deal effectively with growth and development of all kinds. Urban and regional planners do many types of jobs and are involved in almost any kind of government or private activity which seeks to affect the future or respond to community change. The majority of planners work in traditional planning areas such as land use, environmental protection, economic development, transportation, community design, housing, and social planning. However individual planners can still have a wide variety of responsibilities within these broadly defined specialities. Other planners work in less traditional areas, often with people from other disciplines, such as healthy communities or energy development or school planning. Some planners become generalists. They develop a level of expertise in several substantive areas. Others become specialists and define themselves as housing or transportation or environmental planners. Most planners share a common set of skills and values even though they may specialize in one or two substantive areas. Using their planning toolkit they: involve all affected parties in important planning decisions; help communities develop their own vision of the future, preparing plans responsive to shared community objectives; analyze qualitative and quantitative information to suggest possible solutions to complex problems; evaluate the cost-effectiveness of proposed projects and plans; and present recommendations to public officials

and citizen groups in a comprehensive and understandable way. Planners work in government, with non-profit agencies, and in private industry. Those in the public sector often work for city or county governments or regional planning agencies but there are also planning jobs at the State and Federal level. International organizations like the United Nations and the World Bank also hire planners. Planners with jobs in the private sector can work with utility companies, law firms, real estate developers, and planning consultants. Planners also work in the nonprofit sector and with non-governmental agencies like the United Way or community development organizations or advocacy groups for the elderly. In their jobs, some planners have responsibility for specific geographic areas such as individual neighborhoods in a city or region; within those areas they may provide assistance on a variety of substantive issues from land use to transportation. Other planners have substantive responsibilities such as housing or environmental planningand provide assistance in their specific specialization to many communities within a city or region. Some planners work on projects which will be undertaken within a year or two while others focus their efforts on projects many years in the future. Today, planners may move back and forth between jobs in the public, non-profit, and private sectors over the course of their career. They may also work for different levels of government at different times. They may change their specialities or their focus long after they leave school in response to on-the-job experiences, or the opportunity for new challenges. While you may think of planning as an urban activity, it actually occurs in communities of all sizes. Many planners work in small cities, in rural areas, and for Indian Nations. Others work in suburban neighborhoods at the periphery of large regions while still others have jobs in the dense core of major metropolitan areas. In the next few pages well describe the most common planning specialities.

PLANNING SPECIALIZATIONS
Land Use Planning
Most planners are involved in this, the most traditional kind of planning practice. At the same time, there are many different kinds of land use planning jobs. Some land use planners develop ways to encourage growth or development in certain communities or along appropriate corridors while others work to discourage growth in environmentally sensitive areas or where supporting services cannot be effectively provided. Some land use planners work on long-range comprehensive plans which are designed to coordinate all the important activities in which a community engageshousing, recreation, transportation, water and air quality, and so forth. Some land use planners help develop or administer local regulations which establish the kind of housing, industrial, and retail facilities which can be built in the city. Others develop ways to finance public services while still other land use planners evaluate the impact of proposed residential or commercial development and suggest ways for communities to respond. Many land use planners coordinate their activities with other kinds of planners in order to protect open space and agricultural land in the face of increasing demands for new homes and businesses.

Economic Development Planning


Economic development planners, in North America and internationally, work to improve a community or region by expanding and diversifying the economic activities which support the families living there. Many planners do so by helping develop plans to attract businesses which create new jobs and provide additional tax revenues; others work to keep businesses from leaving distressed areas. Economic development planners at the local level often work to promote the special features of their community, sometimes by encouraging tourism or additional recreational opportunities. Some planners develop projects which bring housing and commercial enterprises as well as jobs into disadvantaged neighborhoods. Some economic development planners help communities find ways to finance the cost of new development while others work to overcome regulatory and other barriers to new projects. Economic development planners often work in conjunction with land use, housing, social and community planners to address the needs of distressed communities or declining business districts.

Transportation Planning
Transportation planners help develop programs to meet the current transportation needs of families and businesses, locally and across a region; they also attempt to predict future travel patterns in order to identify the need for additional transportation services and facilities. Some transportation planners are very technically oriented and work with advanced computer technology; others deal with the social and economic aspects of travel. Some focus on one mode such as cycling or public transit while others attempt to plan for multiple modes. Transportation planners working for local governments often respond to traffic congestion; others develop ways to finance new facilities. Some transportation planers help develop programs which are designed to encourage people to drive less, or which provide home-to-work options for welfare recipients trying to find jobs, or which organize special transportation services for the elderly. Many transportation planners coordinate their activities with environmental, land use, and economic development planners.

Environmental Planning
Environmental planners work to enhance the physical environment and minimize the adverse impacts of development. Some environmental planners focus on scientific and technical questions while others develop policies and programs to encourage the public to protect natural resources. Some planners develop expertise in one aspect of resource management while others attempt to identify the environmental implications of a range of government polices or proposed land use changes. Some environmental planners focus on cleaning up polluted areas or resources while others focus on preventing contamination and the destruction of ecosystems. Many environmental planners work to integrate a concern about pollution and the conservation of non-renewable resources into the plans developed in other substantive areas like transportation or economic development.

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Housing, Social and Community Development Planning


Many planners practice in these overlapping areas. Housing planners help develop strategies to increase the supply of affordable housing and expand home ownership among low income or disadvantaged groups. These planners often try to create incentives and remove constraints on private home builders or work with public or non-profit organizations to build housing units for low income families or senior citizens. Many housing planners try to encourage mixed use developments offering services and jobs closer to where people live; others promote projects which provide housing opportunities for people from a mixture of income levels. Planners concerned with the social aspects of a community often combine their interest in housing with efforts to increase the overall quality of life in poor or minority neighborhoods. Many social and community planners work to improve multiple aspects of a targeted neighborhood, combining many substantive planning skills from economic development to urban design. For example, community and social planners may work to improve transit service in disadvantaged communities or develop job training programs for unemployed residents or provide better public health facilities in low income neighborhoods. These planners often work with land use and transportation planners.

WILL I GET A JOB? YES !!


Planners continue to be in high demand throughout North America. There are promising career opportunities in every planning specialization, although sometimes there is more need for one specialization than another. Most planning programs help you get a jump start on finding a job at graduation by involving you in real-world planning projects and by encouraging or requiring you to do a planning internship as part of your education. These activities show you how different kinds of planners actually do their jobs, as well as giving you the opportunity to interact with practicing planners who might offer you a job when you graduate. In fact, many planning internships turn into full-time jobs after graduation. Planning is a great career for women and people of color. Just under 40% of those hired as planners are women and there are few salary discrepancies between men and women entering public services. While only 7% of practicing planners identify themselves as members of minority groups, this number is growing. Many planning programs strongly encourage minority students of every type to obtain planning degrees because planning is a profession which values varying perspectives and different experiences. We have every expectation, as more minority planners graduate from the programs listed in this GUIDE, that the number of professional planners from disadvantaged and minority backgrounds will substantially increase. You can lay the groundwork for a successful job search long before you graduate. If you attend local and state or provincial meetings of the American Planning Association (APA) or the Canadian Institute of Planners (CIP) you will meet professional planners involved in a variety of projectsand learn about current and future job openings. Its a great idea to join APA or CIP as a student because you get all the benefits of membership at a very low student fee. As an APA member you will receive regular correspondence and newsletters from your APA Chapter and Section; newsletters often contain job announcements (so even before you are in the job market you can see the kinds of jobs that do come available, the requirements, and the salary). In addition, APA publishes JobMart which lists job vacancies across the US (and sometimes Canada); APA members can subscribe to JobMart and most Planning Programs have a subscription.

Other important planning jobs


In addition to the substantive areas described above, you can find planning jobs in: public health historic preservation coastal management mediation and negotiation criminal justice public finance public policy and management urban design elementary and secondary education labor force development human services law

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HOW CAN I FIND OUT MORE ABOUT PLANNING?


There are many ways to determine if a career in planning is right for you. If your university sponsors a career day, practicing planners may well attend. Seek them out and ask what they do and what their focus is. Attend a local meeting of the American Planning Association (APA) or Canadian Institute of Planners (CIP). Introduce yourself to some of the planners present and discuss their jobs and responsibilities; question the kind of issues they tackle. Ask if a planning job would allow you to achieve your personal goals. You can also read about a host of planning issues and how planners are addressing them in Planning, the magazine published by the American Planning Association (APA). Canadian students will find Plan Canada, the magazine published by the Canadian Institute of Planners (CIP), to be equally useful. Both magazines feature the latest developments in planning. Your University or city library may have copies. On their website the APA has a section called Jobs and Careers which describes the profession, discusses the kind of issues planners might address, talks about planning education, and lists scholarships. Visit: www.planning.org The CIP has a series, Planners at Work, on their website which includes case studies illustrating the value of professional planning in Canadian cities: www.cip-icu.ca/English/home To more thoroughly research different kinds of planning jobs, and to explore in greater depth a variety of important planning topics, find the latest edition of The Practice of Local Government Planning, published by the International City Management Association (ICMA); many libraries will have a copy. It contains individual chapters by different authors; each explains what a certain type of planner does or explores a major planning issue. There are chapters on land use, environmental, transportation, economic development, and other planning specializations as well as those discussing other important planning concerns. You may also find it helpful to learn about the careers of a cross-section of practicing planners. In the next few pages you can read about the career paths, background, and education of six professional planners across the United States.

Paul C. Crawford, FAICP


Mr. Crawford received his bachelors degree in Community and Regional Planning from California Polytechnic University, San Luis Obispo. He is currently the president of a private planning firm, Crawford Multari & Clark Associates, which has provided city and regional planning services to more than 100 cities and 18 counties in California. Through his career, Mr. Crawford has served as planning director of the San Luis Obispo County Council of Governments and as an adjunct professor of city and regional planning at Cal Poly, San Luis Obispo. He was elected to the California Planning Roundtable in 1993 and received the 1998 Award for Distinguished Leadership from the California Chapter of the American Planning Association. Mr. Crawford is a nationally recognized expert on zoning and is currently the Co-Chair of the Planners Task Force of the Congress for New Urbanism. He is coauthor of Codifying New Urbanism How to Reform Municipal Land Development Regulations, published by the American Planning Association. Mr. Crawford was inducted as a Fellow of the American Institute of Certified Planners in 2001 in recognition of his many planning contributions.

Malik R. Goodwin
Mr. Goodwin has a BS in Architecture, a Masters in Architecture, and a Masters in Urban Planning, all from the University of Michigan. He is currently a project manager with the Detroit Economic Growth Corporation, a quasi-public agency whose mission is to attract and retain businesses in the City of Detroit. Mr. Goodwin is the general manager for the Lower Woodward Streetscape Improvement Project, a $21 million initiative to improve and enhance three main thoroughfares in the heart of downtown Detroit. He assists the City of Detroit in preparing grant applications and in developing short-term planning strategies for making capital investments in the downtown area. Mr. Goodwin also coordinates capital projects for the City with state and federal agencies. Prior to joining the Economic Growth Corporation, he was an urban designer with a private architectural firm. Mr. Goodwin was drawn to planning because his mother was a city planner. He felt that his interest in helping cities to develop strategies to optimize the use of their resources over time would be enhanced by a planning education. He believes that effective strategists and managers are in high demand among the kind of public agencies which serve as custodians of community resources.

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Angela Harper, FAICP


Ms. Harper received her Masters degree in Planning and Urban Design from the University of Virginia after her work for the Nashville/Davidson County Planning Department inspired her to continue her planning education. Since obtaining her degree she has worked with Henrico County, Virginia, in increasingly responsible positions. She has served as director of planning and deputy county manager and has helped the County achieve managed growth and a stable tax base. Ms. Harper was responsible for Henrico Countys first major thoroughfare plan and the Countys strategic plan. She also established the Countys Community Development Block Grant program. She has received awards from the National Association of Counties and the U.S. Department of Transportation for her planning accomplishments. In 1999 Ms. Harper was selected as Local Official of the Year by the National Association of Home Builders. She was inducted as a Fellow of the American Institute of Certified Planners (FAICP) in May of 2001 in recognition of her contribution to planning and the body of her planning accomplishments. She has served on many accreditation site teams, evaluating planning programs for PAB accreditation, and loves being a cheerleader for planning.

enhance quality of life, and bring cohesiveness to a diversified society.

Tripp Muldrow, AICP


Mr. Muldrow has a BA in English and a Masters in City Planning from Clemson University. He is currently a partner in a private planning firm, Arnett Muldrow & Associates, based in Greenville, South Carolina. The firm helps small towns and cities rebuild their aging downtowns, reinvigorate their historic neighborhoods, and create economic development opportunities while preserving the special characteristics that make each city and town unique. Mr. Muldrow has coordinated commercial corridor business associations, developed and implemented historic preservation policies, and authored downtown development studies, tourism strategies, and economic development master plans. Mr. Muldrow is currently the president of the South Carolina Chapter of the American Planning Association, a board member of Community Builders, a commissioner of the Greenville Housing Authority, and a member of the Board of Regents for Leadership Greenville. Mr. Muldrow was always fascinated by cities, particularly their downtowns, and how they worked. His career path was set once he learned about the breadth and scope of the planning field. He loves his job and finds the opportunities limitless; being a consultant means his work keeps changing which keeps everything exciting.

Emil R. Moncivais, AICP


Mr. Moncivais has a Bachelors degree in Architecture and a Masters of Urban and Regional Planning from Texas A & M University. He is currently the director of planning for the City of San Antonio, Texas; he previously served as the director of planning for the City of Fort Worth. Mr. Moncivias also served as a lieutenant in the U.S. Army and as a professor of urban geography at Texas Wesleyan University in Fort Worth. In his current position Mr. Moncivias directs and oversees the City of San Antonios comprehensive planning, neighborhood planning, historic preservation, and GIS (geographic information system) efforts. Under his leadership the City of San Antonio has received nine major awards from the Texas Chapter of the American Planning Association and the International City Management Association. He was drawn to a career in city planning by his experiences with the civil rights movement in the 1960s. He felt that the movement gave him a sense of joy and a vision for the future in which he could make a difference. He saw it was possible to make that goal operational by becoming a planner and helping to develop livable communities,

Terri Y. Montague
Ms. Montague has a Bachelors degree in Economics from the University of Chicago and a Masters Degree in City Planning and Real Estate Development from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. She is currently the president and chief operating officer of the Enterprise Foundation, which works with local and national partners to develop affordable housing for low income families and provides loans, grants, and technical assistance to nonprofit organizations that are building and revitalizing local neighborhoods. Prior to her job with Enterprise, Ms. Montague managed a strategic investment initiative in housing and community investment for Lend Lease Real Estate Investments. In her current position, she is responsible for the day-to-day operations of the community development nonprofit corporation with an annual budget of $50 million and 235 employees nationwide. She began

her community development career as a Geno Baroni Fellow at the Community Information Exchange in Washington, DC. Ms. Montague initially found planning so appealing because of its interdisciplinary nature and the promise it holds for creating effective public/ private partnerships. She feels that planning offers the potential to understand and shape the vital and varied institutions that transform the nature of opportunity in our citiesespecially for low income people and places.

one U.S. programs and nine Canadian programs give accredited degrees; a few Canadian schools are accredited by both organizations. Most of these programs are described in detail in the body of this GUIDE. You should try to attend a planning program accredited by either the Planning Accreditation Board (PAB) in the U.S. or the Canadian Institute of Planners (CIP) in Canada, because it can make a difference in your career. These organizations review Masters or Bachelors Planning programs to assure prospective students, employers, and the public that the education and training they provide measure up to the professions standardsand that they are therefore qualified to train future planners. The PAB does not evaluate PhD programs for accreditation because the primary focus of the doctoral degree is usually not professional practice. However, the CIP does evaluate Canadian PhD programs for accreditation. The PAB is jointly sponsored by ACSP the , organization of planning professors (and the authors of this GUIDE), and by an organization of professional planners, the American Institute of Certified Planners (AICP). The CIP is the Canadian organization of professional planners. The PAB strives to foster high standards for professional education in planning; accredited programs must meet strict standards developed cooperatively by both practicing planners and planning academicians. The same is true of the Canadian schools accredited by the Canadian Institute of Planners. Not all accredited schools teach the same courses or emphasize the same subjectsin fact, the differences between the schools appeal to different student interests. But the curriculum at all accredited schools will provide you with a core set of theories, methods, and techniques which properly prepare you for a career as a practicing planner. Graduating from an accredited program will make you more attractive to most agencies or firms hiring planners. In addition, you will be able to join the American Institute of Certified Planners (AICP) sooner after leaving school if you attend an accredited school. Being a certified planner can advance your professional career. This GUIDE also contains several universities outside North America; these programs may be very interesting to you. Remember however, no program outside of North America is eligible for either PAB or CIP accreditation.

A PLANNERS EDUCATION
What kind of an education should a planner have? Today most people need a professional Masters Degree in Planning to get the best planning jobs, although a Bachelors degree (BA or BS) can provide an entry into the profession. Universities offering both Bachelors and Graduate degrees are profiled in this GUIDE. People can enter Masters programs in planning with many different kinds of Bachelors degrees; it is not necessary to have a BA/BS in Planning to do graduate work in planning. Some planners are educated first in the social sciences like public administration, sociology, economics, geography, or government; others are trained first in the design professions like architecture, urban design, and landscape architecture. Still others have their undergraduate degree in professions such as public health, social work, nursing, or engineering. Many people with undergraduate degrees in the Arts or Humanities (English, Art, History) also choose to pursue a graduate planning degree. Some people use the new skills they acquire in graduate school to expand the emphasis of their undergraduate degree while others develop new approaches. For example, those with economics training may become economic development planners while those with degrees in biology or chemistry may choose to become environmental planners. But it is not unusual for someone trained at the undergraduate level as an architect to become a social policy planner or for someone with a BS in Nursing to become a housing planner! There are many universities where you can gain the education and training you need to become a planner. Today there are more than120 planning programs or planning departments which are members of the Association of Collegiate Schools of Planning (ACSP) or of the Association of Canadian University Planning Programs (ACUPP). Seventy-

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HOW TO CHOOSE THE BEST PLANNING PROGRAM


While all accredited planning programs cover the same set of core materials and techniques, they do so in different ways. Planning programs vary greatly in the issues they emphasize, the research they foster, and the professional projects in which they engage. As a result, programs may differ markedly in the kinds of topics to which you will be exposed, the other students with whom you attend class, and the kind of educational experience you will have. For example, planning programs located near the ocean may offer a concentration in coastal resource planning; programs located in farm states may focus on rural and small urban planning issues; those along the Mexican or Canadian border may stress comparative planning. Of course, other planning programs may offer these same concentrations in response to the backgrounds and research interests of their faculty. Individual programs also vary in the extent to which they emphasize practice in studios and workshops or in the degree to which they expose students to research and policy analysis. Some programs have established international ties; others have long worked with local communities to provide students with practical experience. To determine the planning program which will best provide you with the education and training you want, decide which issues you would like to highlight in your educational program and the professional specialization you think you might want to follow. Then look at the programs listed in this GUIDE to see which stress the topics you want to cover, which provide the courses you would like to take, which offer the experiences you seek. You may be interested in the background of the other students in the program; for example, if you would like to work or study for awhile in another country you might be interested in a school that has a fair number of international students or faculty with comparative research interests. If you would like to be part of a small, intimate program think about applying to schools with a relatively small number of students. If you are interested in research or think that you might want to go on for a PhD in Planning (which would allow you to teach at a university) you might want to consider those programs that offer both Masters and Doctoral degrees. If you are interested in learning through hands-on experiences, try to identify those programs offering a large number of project courses or requiring a

professional project (or capstone) report instead of a thesis to graduate. If you want to spend some time working internationally, you could select a university that has exchange programs in other countries. Perhaps you have an interest in another subject related to planning, like public health or law: look for programs with dual degrees in planning and these other fields. And of course, you have to consider financial and other practical detailsscholarships and grants, the possibility of getting a job or loans, the total cost of education, etc. This GUIDE is set up to help you quickly evaluate a large number of planning programs by comparing the major factors likely to be of most interest to students: the course offerings and requirements, the type of students in the program, the background and experiences of the faculty, the costs of attending, and the possibility of financial assistance. But the brief entries in this GUIDE can only help you narrow down your choicesthere simply isnt enough space to tell you all you want, or need to know about a prospective program. Once you have identified a number of programs that might meet your needs, contact them directly! Start by visiting their websites; then contact the chair of the program or individual faculty who work in the areas in which you have an interest. Most programs have a wealth of promotional material they will be happy to send you. Students often ask: Whats the best school for... this or that specialization. There is no one answer. The Association of Collegiate Schools of Planning has refused to rank schools because every planning program in the GUIDE has its own strengths and resources. There is simply no effective way to say that one school offers a better degree than another. Planning students bring their own goals, background, and experiences to their educational careerso different individuals will get very different things from any individual planning program. Only you can decide the best school for your needs, interests, and resources.

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HOW TO USE THIS GUIDE


In this section, well try to explain how to read each entry in the GUIDE. In order to provide you with a large amount of information in very little space, the entries in this GUIDE contain many abbreviations. In addition, you may not be familiar with some of the terminology. So well show you how to de-code the entries and use the data to compare and contrast some of the schools which have sparked your interest. The first line of each entry lists the name of the university. If this university were called America State University it would be one of the first entries in the GUIDE. However, if the official name is the University of America it will be near the back, with all the listings beginning with University of... This is the way in which most major student guides organize schools. It may be confusing initially but once you remember, it will be easy to find the school you want. Remember there may be two different schools, America State University and the University of America. The first line also tells you what planning degrees each university gives; the icon BA means that the university gives at least one undergraduate planning degree (which may be either a BA or a BS). The icon MA means that the university gives one masters degree in planning (which may be an MA or MS or other masters designation). The icon PhD means that the university gives at least one doctoral degree in planning. If the first line does not display a specific icon (BA, MA, or PhD) it means that the university does not give a planning degree at that level. The first line also shows you whether the undergraduate or Masters programs the university gives are accredited by either the Planning Accreditation Board (PAB) or the Canadian Institute of Planners (CIP). If the icon PAB or CIP is shown under the degree listed, at least one of the degrees given at that level at that university is accredited. Note that a school with multiple Masters degrees may have some that are, and some that are not accreditedfor example their Masters degree in Urban Planning may be accredited but not their Masters degree in Historic Preservation and Design. To save space on the first line, you will see the PAB or CIP icon if any of the Masters or undergraduate degrees given by this university are accredited. Be sure to check the text below to get complete information for the specific program or degree in which you have an interest.

Remember that doctoral programs are never accredited by the PAB because such programs dont generally focus on professional practiceso none of the U.S. schools offering a doctorate will show an accreditation status. This is not a deficiency! However the CIP does accredit PhD programs in Canada. Neither organization accredits international universities. Finally the first line of each schools entry tells you its membership status in the Association of Collegiate Schools of Planning, the sponsor of this GUIDE. FULL members are those giving planning degrees in the US. AFFILIATE members are generally those schools in the U.S. that give degrees related to planning but not planning degrees (urban studies or urban geography). Schools outside the U.S. are eligible for CORRESPONDING membership if they give planning or related degrees. The top of the left column of each entry generally gives you the name of the chair of the entire department and the departmental mailing address; it usually provides the department phone, fax, e-mail and website address as well. Note that the chair may not be the contact person for any or all of the planning degree programs offered; an individual entry may list a different contact person for each program. Remember phone numbers and addresses change; if you have trouble, seek out new numbers through telephone information or by visiting the university website which should be easily found by any net browser.

PROGRAM INFORMATION
This section in the left-hand column summarizes the most important details you might want to know about each of the planning degrees which the university offers. It shows the deadlines for application and for requesting financial assistance as well as what the application fee will be. The text may also indicate what tuition costs will be if you are a resident of the state or if you are from out-ofstate (this distinction usually only applies at public universities). This section gives you an idea of the availability of financial assistance by listing scholarships, research and teaching assistantships, and other job opportunities. In general, the more awards and assistantships the betterbut you will have to talk to each school to learn how likely it is that you will be able to get financial assistance of some kind. You should question the conditions of any

viii

scholarship or grant--will you receive it as long as you are in school or only for your first year? If a school has only a small amount of scholarship money it may choose to give it all to entering students, as a recruitment incentive. That means that second year students may be left without any aid. If the university offers research assistantships or other kind of paid work, find out how much work you will really have to do and how likely it is that you will be able to hold the job or assistantships for your entire education. This section also contains a small chart with some details about student enrollment. It should also give you an idea of how easy or difficult is to be accepted as a student. The chart shows the figures of students who applied for admission to the program, the number who were accepted by the program, and finally the number who actually enrolled. These numbers should give you an idea of the number of students in the program that interests you. Generally the number of students accepted is less than the number who applied; the number who are enrolled is usually less than the number accepted. Most universities turn down some students who apply; some students who apply and are accepted decide not to come. If there is a big gap between the number who applied and the number of students accepted, it generally signals that this is a very popular program and hard to get into. It is less clear why there may be a gap between the number accepted and the number who end up enrolling. Sometimes this means that acceptance decisions are made independent of financial aid decisions and that some students who were accepted were unable to find scholarship or other kinds of financial assistance.

The GUIDE next identifies the substantive specializations available for each degree. This can give an idea of the range of areas where you can concentrate your efforts; these specializations generally reflect the skills and interests of the faculty. Compare the size of the faculty (listed later in each schools entry) to the number of specializations offered; if a school claims many specializations but has a small faculty it may lack the resources to allow you to fully develop your skills in any given area. Also check the specializations offered against the background of individual faculty; if you are interested, for example, in the schools environmental planning or urban design specialization, make sure that some of the faculty actually have expertise in these areas. In addition, when you begin to contact schools of interest, ask about the actual number of classes the program gives in each specialization and when they are offered. Sometimes even large programs have only a few courses in certain specializations and those are given infrequentlyif so, you might actually have to stay in school longer just to be able to take the required courses! Pay special attention to whether the classes offered in your specialization of interest are planning courses or if they are actually taught by faculty in other departments. It is important to be able to take courses in other departments across campusbut make sure at least some of the courses in your specialization are actually taught by planners, with the professional focus of someone who is a planner. The text next indicates the prerequisites and other requirements needed to get into the program. Most programs describe any exams you must take (like the ACT or SAT for undergraduates and the GRE for graduates) and the minimum score you must achieve. Note that not all programs require such exams. The text will also indicate any other prerequisites needed to apply such as a minimum grade point average. You should ask the programs in which you have an interest for a list of prerequisite courses or skill levels and an idea of what you will have to do if you are missing some prerequisites. If you are required to make up missing prerequisites you will need more hours/credits than indicated to graduate. Planning programs often list this information on their websites; if not, they will be happy to send printed materials to answer most of your questions. Next, each university usually explains how many units or hours needed to obtain the degree in

DEGREE DESCRIPTIONS
The GUIDE next describes each of the degrees offered by the university, starting with any undergraduate degrees. Not every university has provided exactly the same information so not all entries are identical. However, in general, the text tells if the program or degree is accredited, how old it is, and the total number of degrees granted over the last few years. If a university has more than one undergraduate or graduate degree, the text will indicate which, if any, of those programs have received PAB or CIP accreditation. Remember that the top line of each schools entry only indicates if at least one of the degree programs is accredited; if they give more than one degree the specific degree which interests you may or may not be accredited.

ix

question, breaking those totals down into required courses, restricted and unrestricted electives, and the final product required--such as a thesis or professional report or capstone project. Most Masters programs require between 36 - 60 hours/ credits to graduate. However, if you are missing some prerequisites, for example economics or statistics, you might have to make them up either before you are allowed to officially enter the program or while enrolled in the program. Most programs require all students to take the same, core, courses, which cover material central to the educational experience offered in that degree program. In addition, students with different specializations are often required to take specific elective courses; for example, someone majoring in land use planning might well have to take different classes than someone majoring in housing. Most programs allow students to take some free or unrestricted electives. Compare the hours of core courses and the restricted versus unrestricted electives to get a general idea of the degree of flexibility you will have in the program. In general, the more hours in the core the fewer electives you can take; the more restricted the remaining the electives, the less freedom you may have in pursuing courses outside the planning department. Some students like to have many electives, preferably unrestricted, because they can customize their degrees to match their interests. Other students prefer a more structured curriculum because they want to be sure that they are developing the range of specific skills needed by planners. The text also indicates what kind of final product you will have to produce to get the degree; for example whether you must take an exam, write a thesis or dissertation, prepare a professional report, or take part in a capstone or joint professional project of some kind. Some schools allow you to choose among several options while others require the same final product from all students. Programs also vary in the extent to which they give class credit for preparing the final product; some programs indicate the number of hours/credits, if any, you are allowed to take to finish your thesis, etc.

taking courses with international students and if you will be working with students from various ethnic and racial backgrounds.

FACULTY DESCRIPTIONS
The GUIDE contains two separate entries for faculty. The text describing PLANNING FACULTY includes those people who spend at least half their time teaching in one or more of the listed planning programs. The second set of faculty descriptions, OTHER AFFILIATED FACULTY includes those people who teach in other university programs-like engineering, geography, or social work--for the majority of their time or those who are practicing professionals who teach occasionally or part-time in the universitys planning program. Sometimes this category includes retired professors or university administrators who teach planning courses occasionally. You will get the best educational experience from schools which effectively mix these faculty components. It is important to have courses with faculty who are active in professional practice and it is useful to take classes with those from other disciplines. However, be sure the university has a minimum number of faculty who are dedicated to the planning program for most of their time--or you could find it hard to get the courses you need or even to interact in any meaningful way with your professors. Also be sure there are enough faculty to cover the core curriculum from a planners perspective. The faculty entries give you a very brief idea of the background, skills, interests, and experiences of the faculty with whom you might be studying. If the faculty member has taken a professional certification exam through the American Institute of Certified Planners, the icon AICP will appear opposite his/her name. This generally indicates that the faculty member is very interested in professional planning practice. The icon FAICP means the faculty member has been named a Fellow of the AICP a very , prestigious honor for a professional planner. The first line of text below a faculty members name indicates his/her rank and senioritythe most senior (in U.S. schools) are Professors followed by Associate and then Assistant Professors. If someone is listed as visiting or adjunct it generally means that s/he is not a permanent member of the faculty--and may be gone before you arrive. If someone is listed as emeritus it means that s/he has retired--retired

STUDENT COMPOSITION
These charts give you an idea of the number and diversity of the students in each planning degree program the university offers. These student statistics are also useful in determining if you will be

professors vary greatly in the number of courses they teach. The text next indicates the degrees which the faculty member has and the university where they obtained those degrees; some, but not all, entries indicate the year(s) in which their various degrees were granted. While most planning professors have a PhD, not all do, particularly if they are or have been active practitioners. The next line indicates the specializations or expertise of each faculty member. If you have an interest in a certain specialization you may want to see how many of the programs faculty actually claim expertise in that area. You will also want to know who will actually be teaching core or elective courses in that specialization; to do so, get a copy of the course offerings directly from the school by visiting the website and/or contacting the program directly. Once you have seen the number and kind of courses taught in the concentrations in which you have an interest, you can directly question individual faculty about the program, the courses they teach, and the requirements of the specialization.

xi

LISTINGS BY SCHOOL

ALABAMA A&M UNIVERSITY


Urban and Regional Planning
P.O. Box 938 Normal, Alabama 35762 Phone (256) 372-5426 Fax (256) 372-5906 http://www.aamu.edu Dr. Chukudi Izeogu, Department Chair Phone (256) 372-4990 E-mail:chukudi.izeogu@aamu.edu

BA/BS PAB PAB

MA/MS PAB PAB

ACSP Member: FULL

UNDERGRADUATE ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS


Departmental Requirement: Completion of high school or junior College transfer Minimum GPA: C Average Minimum SAT or ACT Scores: 18 ACT (University Requirement)

UNDERGRADUATE GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

Hours of Core .......................................................................................... 54 Hours of Studio Courses ............................................................................ 8 Hours of Restricted Elective .................................................................... 18 Hours of Unrestricted Elective .................................................................. 6 Total Required Hours In Planning Program .......................................... 122 Senior Project ................................................................................ Required

FINANCIAL AID INFORMATION

PROGRAM INFORMATION
Admission Deadline ........................................................................................ July 15 Financial Aid Deadline ................................................................................... April 1 In-State Tuition and Fees: ............................ $1560-2340 per semester (10-16 hours) Out-of-State Tuition and Fees: .................... $2860-4420 per semester (10-16 hours) Other: .........................................................Additional hours $305/hour per semester Application Fee: .....................................................................................................$10 Additional Fees: ............................................................................. $265 per semester

L.L. Crump Scholarship: Call (256) 372-5426 or (256) 372-4990 for details

UNDERGRADUATE DEADLINES, TUITION AND FEES

MASTERS DEGREE
Master of Urban & Regional Planning
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail: Dr. Chukudi Izeogu, Chair (256) 372-4990 chukudi.izeogu@aamu.edu

Admission Deadline 2008-09 for Masters program ........................................ July 15 Financial Aid Deadline 2008-09 for Masters program.................................... April 1 In-State Tuition and Fees: ............................ $1560-2340 per semester (10-16 hours) Out-of-State Tuition and Fees: .................... $2860-4420 per semester (10-16 hours) Other: .........................................................Additional hours $378/hour per semester Application Fee ......................................................................................................$20 Additional Fees: ............................................................................. $265 per semester

GRADUATE DEADLINES, TUITION AND FEES

Year Initiated: 1975 PAB Accredited Degrees Granted through 5/31/08...........................................................168 Degrees Granted from 6/31/07 to 12/31/08 ................................................7

Annual Student Enrollment Applied


Undergraduate Masters 15 5 19 6

Accepted Enrolled
16 5 15 6 15 5 15 6

Housing and Community Development, Environmental Planning, International Development, Transportation Planning
MASTERS ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS
University Admission Policy: Minimum Undergraduate GPA: Minimum GRE: Minimum TOEFL Ranking in Undergraduate Class: Departmental Requirement:

Masters Specializations

07/08 08/09 07/08 08/09 07/08 08/09

UNDERGRADUATE DEGREE
Bachelor of Science in Urban Planning
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail: Dr. Chukudi Izeogu, Chair (256) 372-4990 chukudi.izeogu@aamu.edu

Bachelors degree from an accredited institution & GPA 2.5 2.8 (Department) Not Required Not Required Not Required Two letters of recommendation and a resume

MASTERS GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

Year initiated:1975 PAB Accredited Degrees Granted through 8/31/09...........................................................268 Degrees Granted from 9/1/08 to 8/31/09 ..................................................11

Housing and Community Development, International Development, Environmental Planning, Transportation Planning

Undergraduate Minors

Hours of Core ...........................................................................................28 Hours of Studio or Practice Related Courses .............................................9 Hours of Restricted Electives .....................................................................9 Hours of Unrestricted Electives ..................................................................9 Other ....................................................................................................... 3-6 Total Required Hours in Planning Program: ............................................46 Thesis or Final Project & Exam ....................................................Required

FINANCIAL AID INFORMATION

Research Assistantships: Call (256) 372-5426 or (256) 372-4990 for details

ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 1

TOTAL MASTERS STUDENT COMPOSITION 2008-2009

Joseph A. Lee

Assistant Professor. MURP, University of North Carolina (1972). Specializations: Citizen Participation, Community Development, Geographic Information Systems, Historic Preservation.

AICP

(256) 372-4991

joseph.lee@aamu.edu

Jacob Oluwoye
Hispanics* Of any Race White African American Native American/ Pacific Islander Asian American Mixed Other / Dont know Non-US Citizens Non- Permanent Residents

0 0 15 0 0 0 0 1 16

0 0 18 0 0 0 0 1 19

0 0 33 0 0 0 0 2 35

Professor. BS, University of Wisconsin, Madison; MCP, Howard University; PhD., University of New South Wales, Australia.. Specializations: Transportation.

(256) 372-4994

jacob.oluwoye@aamu.edu

Donald Outland

Associate Professor. MS, Alabama A&M University (1971). Specializations: Citizen Participation, International Development, Public Management/Strategic Planning, Rural Development.

(256) 372-4993

Deoutland@aol.com

Constance Wilson

Associate Professor. MURP, Fisk University (1973); PhD, University of Alabama (2000). Specializations: Citizen Participation & Race/Ethnicity and Planning and Transportation, Community Development, Planning Practice, Politics and Governance.

(256) 372-4992

cwilson93@aol.com

Total Students

OTHER AFFILIATED FACULTY


James Alexander
Professor. BA, University of Alabama (1970); PhD, University of Texas, Austin (1989). Specializations: Policy Economy.

*Do not double count Hispanics; Hispanics also appear in the racial categories above.

PLANNING FACULTY
Russell J. Fricano
Assistant Professor. (1977) Ph.D, University of Southern California, Los Angeles. Specializations: Environmental Planning, Growth Management, Land Use Planning, Infrastructure Financing.

(256) 372-4794

james.alexander@aamu.edu

Merilyn Dabbs

(256) 372.4995

rjfricano@aol.com

Associate Professor. BS, University of North Alabama (1965); MS., University of Alabama (1970); PhD, Candidate, University of Tennessee. Specializations: Geography.

(256) 372-5350

merilyn.dabbs@aamu.edu

Earl N. M. Gooding

Professor. M.Lit., Oxford (1965); PhD, University of Connecticut (1996); PhD, Vanderbilt University (1977). Specializations: Demography, Environmental Planning, International Development, Planning & Quantitative Methods.

FYI
Alabama A&M University is one of two Universities in the State of Alabama offering an accredited degree in urban and regional planning and one of the twelve universities in the nation with accredited urban planning degrees at both undergraduate and graduate level. Alabama A&M University offers scholarships and assistantships to eligible students. Academically qualified white residents of Alabama may apply for the Diversity Scholarship for the Undergraduate program. The Department of Community Planning & Urban Studies was established in 1970 as the Department of Urban Studies offering only the MS in Urban Studies. Following this was the undergraduate degree program in Urban Studies, which was later replaced by the BS degree program in Urban Planning. The Master of Urban & Regional Planning program evolved in 1982 from the Master of Community Planning program, which was established in 1975. It attained initial recognition in 1976.

(256) 372-4986

earlmg@aol.com

Berneece Herbert

Instructor, Research Associate. BSC, University of the Virgin Islands (1991), MURP, Alabama A&M University (1998), PhD Plant & Soil Science (2007).

(265) 372-4988

berneece.herbert@yahoo.com

Professor. BS, University of Nigeria (1971) MPL, University of Southern CAlifornia (1974); PhD, University of California, Los Angeles (1981). Specializations: Regional Economic Development Planning, Environmental Planning, Housing and Land Use Policy Evaluation and Planning, International Development Planning.

Chukudi Izeogu

(256) 372-4990

chukudi.izeogu@aamu.edu

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ARIZONA STATE UNIVERSITY


School of Geographical Sciences and Urban Planning
PO BOX 875302, Tempe, AZ 85287-5302 Phone: (480) 965-7533 FAX (480) 965-8313 Email: geoplan@asu.edu Web Site : http://geoplan.asu.edu Luc Anselin, Director Phone (480) 965-7533 E-Mail: Luc.Anselin@asu.edu

BA/BS PAB PAB

MA/MS PAB PAB

Ph.D.

ACSP Member: FULL

UNDERGRADUATE ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS


Departmental Requirement:

Students apply into the upper-division courses (junior and senior levels) after two years of study. Minimum GPA: 3.0. Minimum SAT or ACT Scores: ACT- 22 for in-state students and 24 for out -of-state students. SAT - 1040 for in-state students and 1110 for out-of state students.

UNDERGRADUATE GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

PROGRAM INFORMATION
Admission Deadline 2010-11 .................................................................May 1, 2010 Financial Aid Deadline 2010-11 .......................................................... March 1, 2010 In-State Tuition and Fees .............Full Time (7 credits or more) $3,423 per semester Out-of-State Tuition and Fees....Full Time (12 credits or more) $9,815 per semester Application Fee ...................................................................................................... $50 Additional Fees ...........................................................Special class fees and deposits Admission Deadline for Masters Program 2010-11 ........................ January 31, 2010 Admission Deadline for PhD program 2010-11 .............................. January 15, 2010 Financial In-State Tuition and Fees .............Full Time (7 credits or more) $3,988 per semester Out-of-State Tuition and Fees..Full Time (12 credits or more) $10,685 per semester Application Fee ...................................................................................................... $50 Additional Fees. ............................................................................................. Same

Hours of Core .......................................................................................... 30 Hours of Studio Courses .......................................................................... 12 Hours of Restricted Elective .................................................................... 19 Hours of Unrestricted Elective .................................................................. 3 Total Required Hours In Planning Program ............................................ 90 Total Required Hours to Graduate from University .............................. 120 Thesis or Final Product ............................................ Final Project Required

UNDERGRADUATE DEADLINES, TUITION AND FEES

FINANCIAL AID INFORMATION

Numerous Scholarships, Grants and Loans are available. For more details visit www.asu.edu/fa Federal Pell Grant/ Federal Supplemental Education opportunity Grant are based on financial need. Visit website www.edu/fa

GRADUATE DEADLINES, TUITION AND FEES

MASTERS DEGREE
Master of Urban and Environmental Design
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail Nan Ellin, Planning Program Director (480) 965-7533 Nan.Ellin@asu.edu

Year Initiated: 1978 PAB Accredited Degrees Granted through 6/31/09.............................................................89 Degrees Granted from 6/1/08 to 6/31/09 ..................................................23

Annual Student Enrollment


Applied Accepted Enrolled 07/08 08/09 07/08 08/09 07/08 08/09

Undergraduate Masters Doctoral

50 107 25

75 71 19

48 83 9

66 61 12

42 33 5

41 30 7

Community and Urban Planning, Environmental Planning, International Planning, Transportation Planning
MASTERS ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS
University Admission Policy: Minimum Undergraduate GPA: GRE: Minimum TOEFL Ranking in Undergraduate Class: Departmental Requirement: Bachelors degree from an accredited institution 3.0 Required 600 Not Required No Requirements

Masters Specializations

UNDERGRADUATE DEGREE
BS in Planning
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail Nan Ellin, Planning Program Director (480) 965-7533 Nan.Ellin@asu.edu

MASTERS GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

Year initiated:1990 PAB Accredited Degrees Granted through 6/31/09..........................................................370 Degrees Granted from 6/1/08 to 6/31/09 .................................................38

Hours of Core ...........................................................................................23 Hours of Studio or Practice Related Courses .............................................0 Hours of Restricted Electives .....................................................................0 Hours of Unrestricted Electives ................................................................24 Other .................................................................. 3 units Internship optional

ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 3

Total Required Hours in Planning Program.............47 (50 with internship) Exam, Thesis or Final Product: A Capstone studio, thesis or professional project is required. A comprehensive oral exam for students electing thesis or professional project option.

DOCTORAL DEGREE
Environmental Design and Planning
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail Jacques Giard, Director, Executive Committee (480) 965-4620 caed.phd@asu.edu

FINANCIAL AID INFORMATION

Tuition awards:.......................small numbers are available through Graduate College based on merit and need Grants and Loans:..................Federal Perkins Loans and/or William D Ford Direct Student Loans. Visit www.edu/fa Teaching and Research:..........TA and RA positions based on need Assistantships:........................Based on need

The School of Geographical Sciences and Urban Planning anticipates offering a PhD in Urban Planning effective Fall 2010. Year initiated 1996 Degrees Granted through 8/31/2008........................................................29 Degrees Granted from 9/1/2008 to 8/31/2008 ...........................................2 Dissertations Granted from 6/1/2008 to 6/01/2009 1. Tracking Progress: Development and Use of Sustainability Indicators in Campus Planning and Management. 2. The Impact of Suburban Neighborhood Design and Development Patterns on Public Health.

TOTAL MASTERS STUDENT COMPOSITION 2008 -2009 US Citizens & Permanent Residents
Hispanics* Of any Race White African American Native American/ Pacific Islander Asian American Mixed Other / Dont know Non-US Citizens Non- Permanent Residents

Male 6 22 1 0 0 9 4 42

Female 3 14 1 2 2 3 7 32

Total 9 36 2 2 2 12 11

Design, Planning, History, Theory & Criticism


DOCTORAL ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS
University Admission Policy: Minimum GRE: Departmental Requirement:

Doctoral Specializations

Must have a 3.0 GPA. If English is not the native language, TOEFL score of 600 Required. Masters degree in Architecture, Environmental Resources, Planning, Design or Landscape Architecture.

DOCTORAL GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

Total Students

74

*Do not double count Hispanics; Hispanics also appear in the racial categories below.

Hours of Core .............................................................................................6 Hours of Studio or Practice Related Courses .............................................0 Hours of Restricted Electives .....................................................................0 Hours of Unrestricted Electives ................................................................24 Other .........................................................................................................24

FINANCIAL AID INFORMATION

Numerous Scholarships, Grants and Loans are available. For more details visit www.asu.edu/fa Federal Pell Grant/ Federal Supplemental Education opportunity Grant are based on financial need. Visit website www.edu/fa

Page 4 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

TOTAL DOCTORAL STUDENT COMPOSITION 2008 - 2009 US Citizens & Permanent Residents
Hispanics* Of any Race White African American Native American/ Pacific Islander Asian American Mixed Other / Dont know Non-US Citizens Non- Permanent Residents

Hemalata Dandekar

Male 2 7 2 0 1 0 1 9 22

Female 0 9 0 0 1 0 0 9 19

Total 2 16 2 0 2 0 1 18

Emeritus Professor. B.Arch.,University of Bombay (1967); M.Arch.,University of Michigan (1969); Ph.D., University of California, Los Angeles (1978). Specializations: Gender Studies and Planning/ International Development Planning, Rural, Regional Development Policy, Economic Development Planning, Sustainable Development.

(480) 965-7533

Hema@asu.edu

Associate Professor. BA, Bryn Mawr (1981); MA, Columbia University (1983); MP, Columbia University (1994); PhD. Columbia University (1994). Specializations: Urban Design, Integral Urbanism, Sustainable Urbanism, Desert Urbanism, Authentic Urbanism, Urban & Suburban Revitalization, the Creative City, Canalscape, Hydroscape, and Envisioning Greater Phoenix.

Nan Ellin

(480) 965-7533

Nan.Ellin@asu.edu

Assistant Professor. SC, Virginia Polytechnic Institute; MME, Massachusetts Institute of Technology; PhD, University of California, Berkeley. Specializations: Urban Transportation Planning, Environmental and Social Impacts of Transportation, Environmental Justice, and International Transportation.

Aaron Golub

(480) 965-7533

Subhrajit Guhathakurta 41

Total Students

Professor. B.Arch., Jadarpur University, India; MCRP, Iowa State University; Ph.D., University of California, Berkeley. Specializations: International Development and Planning; Urban Modeling and GIS; Computer Applications; Economic Development Planning; Environmental Planning.

*Do not double count Hispanics; Hispanics also appear in the racial categories below.

PLANNING FACULTY

(480) 965-7533

Subhro-Guha@asu.edu

Ted Jojola

Luc Anselin

Foundation Professor and Director. Lic. (Economics), Free University of Brussels (1975); M.A. (Statistics, Operations Research), Free University of Brussels (1976); M.A. (Regional Science), Cornell University (1979); PhD. Cornell University (1980). Specializations: GIS and Spatial Analysis, Urban and Regional Modeling, Planning Methods.

Distinguished Visiting Professor. Regents Professor, University of New Mexico. BFA, University of New Mexico (1973); Master of City Planning, Massachusetts Technical Institute (1975);PhD, University of Hawaii (1982). Specializations: Indigenous Planning.

(480) 965-7533

Ted.Jojola@asu.edu

(480) 965-7533

Luc.Anselin@asu.edu

Nabil Kamel

Assistant Professor. LURP, University of Averio, Portugal; MRP, University of Massachusett, Amherst (1995); Ph.D., University of Massachusett, Amherst (2004). Specializations: Urban Revitalization, Transportation Planning, Sustainable Transportation Planning, Scholarship of Teaching, International Planning.

Carlos Balsas

AICP

Assistant Professor. BS, Cairo University, Egypt; MUP, Texas A&M; PhD., University of California, Los Angeles. Specializations: Housing and Urban Development, Regional Economic Development, Environmental Community Development.

(480) 965-7533

Joochul Kim

(480) 965-7533

Carlos.Balsas@asu.edu

Katherine Crewe

Associate Professor. BA, University of California, Berkeley; MUP and Ph.D., University of Michigan. Specializations: Community Planning; Economic Development Planning; Housing and International Planning.

Associate Professor. BA, Rhodes University, South Africa (1976); MLA, University of California, Berkeley (1980); Ph.D., University of Massachusetts, Amherst (1997). Specializations: Planning Practice and Transportation; Historic Preservation; Citizen Participation; Gender Studies and Planning; Physical Planning/Urban Design; International Urban Design.

(480) 965-7533

Joochul.Kim@asu.edu

Francisco Lara Valencia

(480) 965-7533

Katherine.Crewe@asu.edu

Assistant Professor. BE, Universidad Autonoma de Baja California, Mexico; MRD, El Colegio de la Fontera Norte, Mexico; Ph.D., University of Michigan, Ann Arbor. Specializations: SW Borderlands Development Planning; Economic Development Planning; Urban Health Disparities; Environmental Vulnerability.

(480) 965-7533

Francisco.Lara@asu.edu

ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 5

Emily Talen

Professor. BA, Calvin College (1980); Masters in City and Regional Planning, Ohio State University (1984); PhD. University of California, Santa Barbara (1995). Specializations: Urban Design, New Urbanism, Placemaking, Sustainable Cities, Smart Growth, and Urban Codes.

AICP

Noel Hebets

Faculty Associate. BS, Engineering Mechanics & Materials, Arizona State University, 2003; JD, Arizona State University Law School, 2006

(480) 965-7533

(480) 965-7533

Emily.Talen@asu.edu

John Keane

David Pijawka

Professor. BA, Brock University, Canada; MA and Ph.D., Clark University. Specializations: Sustainable Planning and Design; Socioeconomic Assessments; Disaster Management and Recovery Planning; Perception and Behavior Studies; Institutional Design.

Faculty Associate. BA, Cornell University; MS, Arizona State University. Specializations: Environmental Planning, Environmental Economics.

(480) 965-7533

Michael Pearce

(480) 965-7533

Pijawka@asu.edu

Faculty Associate. BA, University of Michigan; JD, University of Arizona. Specializations: Environmental Planning.

Ruth Yabes

(480) 965-7533

Michael.Pearce@asu.edu

Associate Professor. BA and BS, University of California, Davis;MCP, University of Pennsylvania; Ph.D., Cornell University. Specializations: Participation; Community Development; International Planning; Planning Pedagogy.

Darin Sender

(480) 965-7533

Ruth.Yabes@asu.edu

Faculty Associate. BSD, Arizona State University; JD, De Paul University College of Law. Specializations: Environmental Law and Policy.

(480) 965-7533

Professor. BA, University of Toronto (1969); MA, University of Waterloo (1972); PhD, University of California, Berkeley (1977). Specializations: Sustainable Urbanization, City Building in China, Southeast Asian Urbanization, Urban Competitiveness/City Development Strategies.

Douglas Webster

(480) 965-7533

Douglas.Webster@asu.edu

OTHER AFFILIATED FACULTY


Ambika Adhikari
Faculty Associate. B.Arch., University of Baroda, Gujarta; M of Arch, University of Hawaii, Honolulu; Fellow (Urban Planning) Massachusetts Institute of Technology: DD, Harvard University. Specializations: Environmental Planning.

(480) 965-7533

Ambika.Adhikari@asu.edu

Sherry Ahrentzen

Faculty Affiliate. Director for Research, Stardust Center for Affordable Homes and the Family. BA., University of California, San Diego (1977); MA. University of California, Irvine (1980); PhD. (1982).

(480) 965-7533

Sherry.Arentzen@asu.edu

Dean Brennan

Faculty Associate. BS, Iowa State University; Mpa, Arizona State University. Specializations: Urban Planning, Environmental Planning.

(480) 965-7533

Dean.Brennan@asu.edu

Ross Cromarty

Faculty Associate. BA, C.W. Post College of Long Island University; MEP, Arizona State University; Ph.D., Arizona State University. Specializations: Environmental Planning.

(480) 965-7533

rossc@asu.edu

Judith Dworkin

Faculty Associate. MA, Clark University; JD, Arizona State University. Specializations: Environmental Planning, Environmental Law.

(480) 965-7533

Page 6 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

AUBURN UNIVERSITY
Graduate Program in Community Planning
School of Architecture 104 Dudley Hall Auburn, AL 36849-5316 Phone (334) 844-4516 Fax (334) 844-5419

MA/MS PAB

ACSP Member: Full

www.cadc.auburn.edu/CPLN John J. Pittari, Jr., Program Chair Phone: (334) 844-5424 E-mail: pittajj@auburn.edu

Hours of Core ...........................................................................................30 Hours of Studio or Practice Related Courses .............................................3 Hours of Restricted Electives ...................................................................12 Hours of Unrestricted Electives ..................................................................3 Other .................................................................. 3 units Internship optional Total Required Hours in Planning Program .............................................45 Exam, Thesis or Final Product: ................................... Synthesis project or ........................................................................ comprehensive examination.

MASTERS GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

TOTAL MASTERS STUDENT COMPOSITION 2008-2009 US Citizens & Permanent Residents


Hispanics* Of any Race White African American Native American/ Pacific Islander Asian American Mixed Other / Dont know Non-US Citizens Non- Permanent Residents

PROGRAM INFORMATION
Admission Deadline 2008-09 ..................................................................June 1, 2007 Financial Aid Deadline 2008-09 .............................................................April 1, 2007 In-State Tuition and Fees: ............................................. $2,500 per semester. Out-of-State Tuition and Fees: ............................................... $7,500 per semester. Application Fee ......................................................................................................$25 Additional Fees: .................................................................................................. None

Male 0 15 1 0 0 0 0 3 19

Female 2 17 3 0 0 0 0 1 23

Total 2 32 4 0 0 0 0 4

GRADUATE DEADLINES, TUITION AND FEES

Annual Student Enrollment Applied


Masters

Accepted

Enrolled

07/08 07/08 07/08 07/08 07/08 07/08 32 17 35 26 23 12

MASTERS DEGREE
Master of Community Planning
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail John J. Pittari, Jr., Program Chair (334) 884-5424 pittajj@auburn.edu

Year Initiated: 1978 PAB Accredited Degrees Granted through 8/31/09...........................................................147 Degrees Granted from 9/1/08 to 8/31/09 ..................................................18

Total Students

42

*Do not double count Hispanics; Hispanics also appear in the racial categories below.

Urban Design and Community Development, Joint Degrees: with Public Administration, Landscape Architecture, and Architecture
MASTERS ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS
University Admission Policy: Minimum Undergraduate GPA: Minimum GRE: Minimum TOEFL Departmental Requirement:

Masters Specializations

PLANNING FACULTY
Assistant Professor. BS, Brigham Young 1999; MCRP, Iowa State 2001; Ph.D, University of California, Davis, 2005. Specializations: Transportation Planning, Transit, Land Use, Quantitative Methods.

Michael Clay

(334) 844-8412

claymic@auburn.edu

Bachelors degree from an accredited institution 2.5: University, 2.9: Department 1000: Department 550: University Applicants are looked at holistically

ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 7

John Gaber

AICP Professor. BA, University of California, Los Angeles 1986; MPL, University of Southern California 1988; Ph.D, Columbia University 1993. Specializations: Qualitative Methods, Research Methods, Community Development.

Charlene LeBleu

Assistant Professor. BS, University of Florida; MCP & MLA, Auburn 2003. Specializations: Site Design, GIS, Ecological Planning.

AICP

(334) 844-5434

gaberja@auburn.edu

Cheryl Morgan

(334) 844-0192

leblecm@auburn.edu

John J. Pittari, Jr.

Professor. BA & B. Arch, Auburn 1974; M. Arch, University of Illinois 1976. Specializations: Urban Design, Small Town Planning, Community Participation.

Associate Professor. BLA, University of Florida 1983; MUP, City College of New York 1985; Ph.D, University of Washington 1997. Specializations: Historic Preservation, Urban Design, Urban Form, Physical Planning, Planning History.

(205) 323-3592 morgace@auburn.edu

FYI
Our program is devised to prepare students with diverse backgrounds for professional planning careers in both the public and private sectors. Graduates are skilled at describing and analyzing urban processes and conditions; at creating and evaluating alternative measures to shape future growth and development; and at devising and recommending appropriate mechanisms for the implementation of their proposals. One-fourth of our students hold graduate assistantships, which provide a monthly stipend and full tuition waiver. We offer joint degree options with the Architecture, Landscape Architecture, and Public Administration programs; and study opportunities with the Center for Architecture and Urban Studies in Birmingham and the Auburn Abroad program in Rome.

(334) 844-5424

pittajj@auburn.edu

Rebecca Retzlaff

AICP

Assistant Professor. BS, Michigan State 1997; MS, School of the Art Institute of Chicago 1999; PhD, University of Illinois-Chicago 2006. Specializations: Environmental Planning and Policy, Historic Preservation, Land Use Planning and Regulation, Growth Management

(334) 844-5429

rcr001@auburn.edu

OTHER AFFILIATED FACULTY


Daniel Bennett
Professor. B Arch., Auburn University 1968; M.Arch, Rice University 1974. Specializations: Urban Design, Site Design, Urban Form.

(334) 844-4285 bennedd@auburn.edu AICP

Sharon Gaber

Professor. AB, Occidental College 1985; MPL, University of Southern California 1987; Ph.D. Cornell University 1993. Specializations: Housing, Community Development, Research Methods, Social Planning.

(334) 844-5771

gabersl@auburn.edu

TRANSPORTATION PLANNING
Transportation planners help develop programs to meet the current transportation needs of families and businesses, locally and across a region; they also attempt to predict future travel patterns in order to identify the need for additional transportation services and facilities. Some transportation planners are very technically oriented and work with advanced computer technology; others deal with the social and economic aspects of travel. Some focus on one mode such as cycling or public transit while others attempt to plan for multiple modes. Transportation planners working for local governments often respond to traffic congestion; others develop ways to finance new facilities. Some transportation planers help develop programs which are designed to encourage people to drive less, or which provide home-to-work options for welfare recipients trying to find jobs, or which organize special transportation services for the elderly. Many transportation planners coordinate their activities with environmental, land use, and economic development planners.

Page 8 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

BALL STATE UNIVERSITY


Urban Planning And Development
College of Architecture and Planning Muncie, Indiana 47306 Phone (765) 285-1963 Fax (765) 285-2648 www.bsu.edu/cap/planning Michael Burayidi, Chair Phone (765) 285-1963 E-mail: maburayidi@bsu.edu

BA/BS MA/MS PAB PAB

ACSP Member: FULL

Hours of Core .......................................................................................... 41 Hours of Concentration Area ................................................................... 82 Hours of Restricted Elective ............................... Included in concentration Hours of Elective ..................................................................................... 3+ Total Required Hours In Planning Program .......................................... 126 Total Required Hours to Graduate from University .............................. 126 Thesis or Final Product ............................................................ Not required

UNDERGRADUATE GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

FINANCIAL AID INFORMATION

PROGRAM INFORMATION
Admission Deadline 2009-10 ............................................................................. Open Financial Aid Deadline 2009-10 .......................................................... March 1, 2010 In-State Tuition and Fees: ................................................. $8,442 per academic year Out-of-State Tuition and Fees: ...................................... $19,000 per academic year Application Fee ......................................................................................................$35 Approximate Annual Cost ..........................................................................$8,442.00

Internship Opportunities: Required, department facilitates in finding suitable internships. Dept. Awards and Grants: Field trip and study abroad grants available. Financial Aid Information:Check with financial aid office www.bsu.edu/finaid

UNDERGRADUATE DEADLINES, TUITION AND FEES

MASTERS DEGREE
Masters of Urban Planning and Development
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail Dr. Francis Parker, Graduate Advisor (765) 285-5870 fparker@bsu.edu

GRADUATE DEADLINES, TUITION AND FEES

Admission Deadline 2009-10 ............................................................................. Open Financial Aid Deadline 2009-10 ...........................................................March 1, 2010 In-State Tuition and Fees: .................................................. $9,174 per academic year Out-of-State Tuition and Fees: ........................................ $20,094 per academic year Application Fee ......................................................................................................$35 Approximate Annual Cost Instate ..............................................................$9,174.00

Year Initiated: 1975 PAB Accredited Degrees Granted through 8/31/09.............................................................14 Degrees Granted from 9/1/08 to 8/31/09 ....................................................9

Annual Student Enrollment


03/04 04/05 05/06 07/08 08/09 Undergraduate Masters 61 28 58 30 50 29 57 36 54 37

Sustainable and Comprehensive Planning, Community and Economic Development Planning, Customized Urban Planning area.

Masters Specializations

MASTERS ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS


University Admission Policy: Bachelors degree from an accredited institution. BUPD take accelerated track (36 hrs), others take standard track (48 hrs). Applicants not meeting the minimum GPA may receive probationary status, on departments recommendation. Full admission from probationary status requires a 3.0 average in nine semester hours of preapproved graduate work. 2.75 Not Required for applicants who meet the above. None. Same as University.

UNDERGRADUATE DEGREE
BS in Urban Planning and Development
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail: Dr. Francis Parker, Undergraduate Advisor (765) 285-5870 fparker@bsu.edu

Year Initiated: 1985 PAB Accredited Degrees Granted through 8/31/09...........................................................260 Degrees Granted from 9/1/08 to 8/31/09 ..................................................15

Minimum Undergraduate GPA: Minimum GRE: Ranking in Undergraduate Class: Departmental Requirement:

UNDERGRADUATE ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS


Departmental Requirement: Suggested High School Courses: College prep core courses. Minimum GPA: 3.0 70th percentile. Minimum SAT or ACT Scores: Cutoff scores depend on pool of applicants

MASTERS GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

Hours of Core ...........................................................................................15 Hours of Studio or Practice Related Courses .............................................6 Hours of Restricted Electives .....................................................................6 Hours of Unrestricted Electives ..................................................................3 Total Required Hours in Planning Program .............................................36 Exam,Thesis or Final Product: .............................................. Written Essay

ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 9

FINANCIAL AID INFORMATION


Internship Opportunities: Teaching and Research Assistantships:

Required, department facilitates. Assistantships include tuition, does not include dedicated fee of $485. Other assistantships available dependent upon faculty grants.

J. Paul Foulger

Instructor. BA Georgraphy, San Diego State University; ABD, University of Illinois. Specializations: Physical Planning and Generalist Planning.

(765) 285-2423

jpfoulger@bsu.edu

Bruce W. Frankel

TOTAL MASTERS STUDENT COMPOSITION 2008-2009 US Citizens & Permanent Residents


Hispanics* Of any Race White African American Native American/ Pacific Islander Asian American Mixed Other / Dont know Non-US Citizens Non- Permanent Residents

Professor; BA, Rutgers University; MCP, University of Pennsylvania; Ph.D., University of Pennsylvania 1968; 1970; 1974. Specializations: Planning Practice and Master Planned Communities, Enterprise Planning, Community Health, Community Development/Affordable Housing. http:// www.bsu.edu/web/bfrankel

(765) 285-2680

bfrankel@bsu.edu

Male 0 19 1 0 0 0 0 4 24

Female 0 9 1 0 0 0 0 4 14

Total 0 28 2 0 0 0 0 8

Eric Damian Kelly

Professor; BA, Williams College; JD and MCP, University of Pennsylvania; Ph.D., The Union Institute 1969; 1975; 1992. Specializations: Economic Development Planning, Land Use/Growth Management, Planning Law, Planning Practice.

(765) 285-1909

ekelly@bsu.edu

Francis H. Parker

Professor. BA and MA, Wesleyan University; MRP, University of North Carolina; Ph.D., University of North Carolina 1960; 1964; 1970. Specializations: Land Use/Growth Management, Planning History, Planning Law, Planning Theory and Transportation.

(765) 285-5870

fparker@bsu.edu

M.C. Nihal Perera

Professor; BS, University of Sri Lanka; MS, University College, London; Ph.D., Binghamton University 1978; 1987; 1995. Specializations: International Development and Planning, Landscape/Site Design, Physical Planning/Urban Design, Race/Ethnicity & Planning.

(765) 285-8606

nperera@bsu.edu

David A. Schoen

Total Students

38

Professor; BS, University of Wisconsin; MS, Southern Illinois University; MURP, Ball State University; MLA, Ball State University 1968; 1972; 1981; 1984. Specializations: Computer Applications, Geographic Information Systems, Landscape/Site Design, Quantitative Methods.

(765) 285-5871

dschoen@bsu.edu

*Do not double count Hispanics; Hispanics also appear in the racial categories below.

PLANNING FACULTY
Vera Adams
Instructor. MBA, Northern Illinois University; MCRP University of California, Berkley; MARCH University of California Berkley. Specializations: Urban Design, Housing, Planning Education

Associate Professor. BS & B Architecture, Ball State University, 1980; MA, Ball State University, 1981. Specilaizations: Urban Design, Community Design & Sustainable Development Practices

Scott I. Truex

(765) 285-5188

struex@bsu.edu

(765) 285-1918

vadams@bsu.edu

Michael Burayidi

Distinguished Irving Professor and Chair. PhD, University of Louisville (1993), MEDes University of Calgary (1990), B.Sc (Hons) University of Science and Technology, Ghana (1985). Specializations: Land Use Planning, Economic Development, Comparative Planning Systems, Housing and Real Estate Development.

(765) 285-1963

maburayidi@bsu.edu

Page 10 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

FYI
The Ball State Bachelor of Urban Planning and Development is among only 15 accredited undergraduate programs in North America, and its graduate program is the only such program in Indiana. Our undergraduate program and the core of our traditional masters program are offered in Muncie. We are part of the nationally recognized College of Architecture & Planning, and housed within a state-of-the-art building amidst a bucolic, 750-acre main campus in Muncie, and a satellite campus in the heart of Indianapolis. Muncie is a city of 65,000 with a low cost of living and an easy lifestyle, enriched by a growing creative class and a large number of arts programs both at the university and in the community. Some courses in the accelerated track graduate program are offered in the Ball State Indianapolis facility, located just south of Monument Circle in the heart of the city. Plan Implementation - Simply, plans in the public interest are made useful if they are implemented. Students learn about the political, practical, legal and economic aspects of plan implementation, working with full-time and adjunct faculty members who have direct experience in that field. Learning Community - We are a faculty of teachers first. Our missions in research and service to our external constituencies of profession and the general community are not neglected, but those are subordinate to the obligations we have to our students. This collegiality and attention is nurtured and maintained as our hallmark.

THESE VALUES CONSTITUTE OUR PROGRAM ORIENTATION


Immersive Learning - Our program has an established tradition of a hands-on approach to professional education, a tradition that has become a model for Ball States comprehensive commitment to immersive learning. In our studio classes, students apply their classroom learning to real-world problems, working in teams with real-world stakeholders.

Experiential Learning In addition to the immersive experiences offered in many studios, students apply their learning to real issues, using real sites and real data, in other selected classes, in co-curricular community charrettes, and, at the students option, in many of the capstone student projects. Physical Context Every student will learn to analyze and understand the physical context in which planning takes place and to participate in the making of physical plans. Courses dealing with community development, economic development and social issues all acknowledge the physical world in which those planning issues are addressed. Sustainability Our curriculum and our courses recognize that healthy communities are socially, economically and ecologically sustainable ones.

ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 11

BOSTON UNIVERSITY
City Planning and Urban Affairs
Department of Applied Social Sciences Boston University - Metropolitan College 808 Commonwealth Ave., Room 238 Boston, MA 02215 http://www.bu.edu/cityplanning Enrique R. Silva, Assistant Professor, Faculty Coordinator Phone: (617) 358-3264 Email: ersilva@bu.edu

BA/BS MA/MS

ACSP Member: FULL

UNDERGRADUATE DEGREE
Bachelor of Science in Urban Affairs
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail: Enrique R. Silva (617) 358-3264 ersilva@bu.edu

New England Association of Schools and Colleges Accredited

UNDERGRADUATE ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS


High school graduation or have your GED and MET EN104 (English Composition) or its equivalent at another college or university and have earned a grade of "C" or higher in the course, Completion of a minimum six acceptable transfer courses for another accredited university of college and have a cumulative GPA of 2.50 or higher (The MET EN104 equivalent as mentioned above would need to be one of these six transfer courses). Completion of a minimum of six courses at Metropolitan College and have a cumulative GPA of 2.50 or higher (The MET EN104 equivalent as mentioned above would need to be one of these six transfer courses). Completion of a bachelor's degree at an accredited university or college and would like to pursue a second bachelor's degree at MUT.

PROGRAM INFORMATION
GRADUATE AND UNDERGRADUATE DEADLINES, TUITION AND FEES
Admission Deadline ......................................................................Rolling admissions Financial Aid Deadline .................................................................... Rolling Deadline Part-time Status Undergraduate (1-12 credits); Graduate (1-11.5 credits) Course Numbered 100-599 Tuition unless otherwise noted: 1-12 credits $350 per credit Course Numbered 600-999 Tuition unless otherwise noted: 1-11.5 credits $700 per credit Registration Fee: $40 Full-time Status Undergraduate (12.5-18 credits); Graduate (12-18 credits) Tuition: $18,955 per semester (additional charge of $1,184 per credit in excess of 18 credits). Undergraduate Student Fee: $265 per semester Graduate Student George Sherman Union Fee: $95 per semester Admissions Application Fee: Undergraduate Online $75; Undergraduate Offline $75; Graduate Application Fee, $70.

UNDERGRADUATE GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS


Distribution Requirements (Core): .......................................................... 48 Professional Core ..................................................................................... 40 Electives ................................................................................................... 32

FINANCIAL AID INFORMATION


Boston University Office of Financial Assistance (617) 353-2965

MASTERS DEGREE
Master of City Planning (MCP)
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail: Enrique R. Silva (617) 358-3264 ersilva@bu.edu

Annual Graduate Student Enrollment Applied


2007

Accepted Enrolled
22 25 18 16

2008 2007 2008 2007 2008

MCP & MUA

26

25

New England Association of Schools and Colleges Accredited Degrees Granted 1997-2007 ...................................................................140 Degrees Granted from Sept. 2007 - August 2008 ....................................21

Page 12 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

Community Development, Environmental/Sustainability Planing, Housing, Transportation Planning, Land Use/Law, Housing and Community Development, Urban Design, Comparative Urbanization

Masters Specializations

MASTERS GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

Hours of Core ...........................................................................................24 Hours of Electives.....................................................................................12 Internship ......................................................Optional, Course credit given Thesis: ........................................................................................Not offered

MASTERS ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS (MCP)


University Admission Policy: Bachelors degree from an accredited institution, 3 letters of reference and a personal essay. 3.0 Major Not Required. 84 iBT None.

FINANCIAL AID INFORMATION


See MCP information.

Minimum Undergraduate GPA: Minimum GRE: Minimum TOEFL Ranking in Undergraduate Class:

TOTAL MASTERS STUDENT COMPOSITION MCP & MUA 2008-2009 US Citizens & Permanent Residents
Hispanics* Of any Race White African American Native American Asian/Pacific Islander Mixed Other / Dont know Non-US Citizens Non- Permanent Residents

Male 1 20 1 0 1 0 8 2 33

Female 0 10 4 0 0 0 4 8 26

Total 1 30 5 0 1 0 12 10

MASTERS GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

Hours of Core ...........................................................................................24 Hours of Electives.....................................................................................40 Internship ......................................................Optional, Course credit given Thesis: .............................................................................................Optional

FINANCIAL AID INFORMATION

The Metropolitan College Graduate Financial Aid Office offers comprehensive financial aid services to graduate students. We assist students in financing their education through assistantships, the Federal Stafford Loan or the Graduate Plus Loan. Boston University Metropolitan College Graduate Financial Aid 755 Commonwealth Ave. Boston, MA 02215 Phone: (617) 358-3993 Fax: (617) 353-4190 Email: finanaid@bu.edu

MASTERS DEGREE
Master of of Urban Affairs (MUA)
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail: Enrique R. Silva (617) 358-3264 ersilva@bu.edu

Total Students

59

PLANNING FACULTY
Walter F. Carroll
Adjunct Professor, City Planning and Urban Affairs. B.A., M.A., Ph.D., American University (Sociology). Specializations: Race and Ethnicity, Urban Political Economy, Comparative Urban Policy

New England Association of Schools and Colleges Accredited

MASTERS ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS (MUA)


University Admission Policy:

Bachelors degree from an accredited institution, 3 letters of reference and a personal essay.

Adjunct Professor, City Planning and Urban Affairs. B.A., Salem State College; M.U.A. Boston University. Specializations Municipal Management, Public Finance and Budgeting.

Stephen Delaney

Minimum Undergraduate GPA: Minimum GRE: Minimum TOEFL Ranking in Undergraduate Class:

3.0 Major Not Required. 84 iBT None.

Adjunct Professor, Urban Design. B.Arch, Maniapl Institute of Technology, India; M.Arch, University of Texas at Austin, Ph.D. Candidate, Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Specializations: Urban Design

Madhu C. Dutta-Koehler

ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 13

Joshua Hassol

Adjunct Professor, Transportation and Environmental Planning. B.A., Wesleyan University, Ph.D., University of California, Fulbright Scholar, University of British Columbia. Specializations: Transportation, Infrastructure, Climate Change.

FYI
Boston University's Masters degree program in urban affairs (MUA) and city planning (MCP) offer a breadth of courses that individually and collectively challenge students to see not only cities, but also their own role as planners, policy makers and social advocates (current or future) in a critical and thoughtful light. Students are asked to consider the political, social and technical implications of each facet of planning and policy making, and to thus grapple with the fact that there are few, if any, simple solutions or approaches to urban issues. We match the breadth and substance of our courses with a program that is unparalleled in its flexibility for prospective students. BU students can pursue their MCP or MUA studies in a full-time or part-time basis depending on his or her own schedule, as well as professional and personal commitments. Without jeopardizing grades, academic standing or other commitments, BU students can start their MCP or MUA by taking anywhere from one to five courses per semester depending on his or her schedule and personalized study programs. Through its course schedule and degree requirements, financial arrangements and responsive staff, BU's MCP and MUA programs manage to remove many barriers to graduate education that would otherwise keep many people from considering much less completing a solid recognized graduate education in planning and urban affairs. This commitment to accessibility results in a student body that is truly diverse and it is this diversity that makes teaching and learning at BU so exciting. From a faculty's perspective, the diversity challenges each professor to prepare a course materials that engages a broad spectrum of interests and backgrounds, which, in turn, makes it way back to his or own thinking about the fields, city planning and ideas for future research and courses.

Daniel LeClair

Professor and Chair of Applied Social Sciences. BA, University of Rhode Island, M.A., Clark University, Ph.D., Tulane University. Specializations: Addiction Recovery and Prison Reform

B.A., University of Massachusetts Amherst (Urban Planning and Documentary Studies) M.S., The New School (LaGuardia Fellow in Nonprofit Management). Specializations: Housing and Community Development, Regional Development

Jennifer M. Raitt

Frank C. Smith, Jr.

Adjunct Professor, Real Estate Development. B.A., Dartmouth College, M.B.A. Boston University. Specializations: Real Estate Development.

Enrique R. Silva

Assistant Professor/Faculty Coordinator. BA, Columbia University, MScPI, University of Toronto, PhD, University of California, Berkeley. Specializations: Comparative Urbanization, Planning Theory, Planning Institutions, Citizen Participation

(617) 358-3264

ersilva@bu.edu

Donald Zizzi

B.A. Fordham University, M.P.A. Rockefeller School of Public Affairs and Policy SUNY Albany. Specializations: Urban Economics, Regional Development and Planning.

Page 14 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

CALIFORNIA POLYTECHNIC STATE UNIVERSITY, SAN LUIS OBISPO


City and Regional Planning Department
1 Grand Avenue, 21-128 San Luis Obispo, California 93407-0283 Phone (805) 756-1315 Fax (805) 756-1340 E-mail: crp@calpoly.edu www.planning.calpoly.edu Hemalata C. Dandekar Phone: (805) 756-1315 E-mail: hdandeka@calpoly.edu

BA/BS PAB

MA/MS PAB

ACSP Member: FULL

UNDERGRADUATE ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS


Departmental Requirement: Minimum GPA:

Same as university Average for College of Architecture and Environmental Design is 3.95 Minimum SAT or ACT Scores: ACT-28 for students SAT-1249 for university and 1269 for college.

UNDERGRADUATE GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS


Hours of Core .......................................................................................... 55 Hours of Studio Courses .......................................................................... 26 Hours of Restricted Elective .................................................................... 39 Hours of Unrestricted Elective .................................................................. 0 Total Required Hours in Planning Program ............................................ 90 Total Required Hours to Graduate from University .............................. 180 Thesis or Final Product .................................... Senior Project or Studio III

PROGRAM INFORMATION

UNDERGRADUATE DEADLINES, TUITION AND FEES

FINANCIAL AID INFORMATION


Ten departmental awards Eligibility Criteria: Four college awards Eligibility Criteria:

Admission Deadline 2010-11 ..........................................................October 31, 2009 Financial Aid Deadline 2010-11 .......................................................... March 2, 2010 In-State Tuition and Fees: .............. Full Time (6 credits or more) $1,942 per quarter Out-of-State Tuition and Fees: ........................................... $226 per unit per quarter Application Fee: .....................................................................................................$55

($250 to $7,000) for continuing students. Varies by endowment (e.g. grades, region, financial need, merit) ($250 to $2,000) Competitive. Varies by endowment, annual awards.

GRADUATE DEADLINES, TUITION AND FEES

MASTERS DEGREE
Master of City and Regional Planning
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail Michael Boswell, Associate Professor (805)756-2496 mboswell@calpoly.edu

Admission Deadline 2010-11 ...........................................................February 1, 2010 Financial Aid Deadline 2010-11 ...........................................................March 2, 2010 In-State Tuition and Fees: ........ Full Time (6 credits or more) $2,202 per per quarter Out-of-State Tuition and Fees: .............................................................. $226 per unit Application Fee: ..................................................................................................... $55

Annual Student Enrollment Applied Accepted


Undergraduate MCRP MS/MCRP 110 59 3 98 58 4 52 39 3 48 36 4

Enrolled
39 24 3 40 23 4

07/08 08/09 07/08 08/09 07/08 08/09

Year Initiated: 1976 PAB Accreditation Degrees Granted through 6/30/09...........................................................225 Degrees Granted from 7/1/08 to 6/30/09 ..................................................14

Masters Specializations
Environmental Planning Urban Development and Design
MASTERS ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS
University Admission Policy: Minimum Undergraduate GPA: Minimum GRE: Minimum TOEFL: Ranking in Undergraduate Class: Departmental Requirement:

UNDERGRADUATE DEGREE
BS in City and Regional Planning
Contact Person:

Phone: E-mail

Hemalata C. Dandekar Department Head (805) 756-1315 hdandeka@calpoly.edu

Year Initiated:1968 PAB Accredited Degrees Granted through 6/2009 .......................................................... 984 Degrees Granted from 7/1/08 to 6/30/09 ................................................ 33

Physical Planning and Urban Design, Transportation, Environmental Planning, Environmental Design

Undergraduate Specializations

Bachelors degree from an accredited institution. 2.5 in last 90 units Not required, unless borderline GPA 550-paper, 213-computer Not Required 3.0 in last 90 units. Knowledge of basic computer applications; statement of purpose, writing sample, 3 letters of recommendation, resume.

ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 15

MASTERS GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

Hours of Core ........................................................................................... 33 Hours of Studio or Practice Related Courses ........................................... 16 Hours of Restricted Electives ................................................................... 11 Hours of Unrestricted Electives .................................................................. 6 Other .......................................................................................................... 6 Total Required Hours in Planning Program ............................................. 72 Thesis or Final Product: ............. Thesis, Professional Project, or Studio III

TOTAL MASTERS STUDENT COMPOSITION 2008-2009 US Citizens & Permanent Residents


Hispanics* Of any Race White African American Native American/ Pacific Islander Asian American Mixed Other / Dont know Non-US Citizens Non- Permanent Residents

Male 4 8 0 0 1 0 2 1 26

Female 1 22 0 0 2 0 1 1 27

Total 5 40 0 0 3 0 3 2

Joint Master of City and Regional Planning/Master of Science in Engineering, Transportation


Contact Person: Phone: E-mail

Cornelius Nuworsoo, Assistant Professor


(805) 756-2573 cnuworso@calpoly.edu

Year Initiated:1992 PAB Accredited Degrees Granted through 6/30/09.............................................................19 Degrees Granted from 7/01/08 to 6/30/09 ..................................................3

MASTERS ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS


University Admission Policy: Minimum Undergraduate GPA: Minimum GRE: Minimum TOEFL Ranking in Undergraduate Class: Departmental Requirement:

Bachelors degree from an accredited institution. 2.5 in last 90 units Not required, unless borderline GPA 550-paper, 213-computer Not Required 3.0 in last 90 units. Knowledge of basic computer applications; statement of purpose, writing sample, 3 letters of recommendation, resume. CE 221, CE 381 or GEOL 201, CSC 231, Econ 201, Engl 148, Math 143, SCOM 101, Stat 321.

Total Students

53

PLANNING FACULTY
Associate Professor. BS (1989) University of Central Florida; MSP (1991) and Ph.D. (2000) Florida State University. Specializations: Environmental Planning, Hazard Mitigation, Planning Theory, Climate Action Planning, Sustainability.

MASTERS GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

Hours of Core ...........................................................................................50 Hours of Studio or Practice Related Courses ...........................................15 Hours of Restricted Electives ...................................................................25 Hours of Unrestricted Electives ..................................................................0 Other ......................................................................................................... 0 Total Required Hours in Planning Program ............................................90 Thesis or Final Product: ..............Thesis, professional project or Studio III

Michael Boswell

AICP

(805) 756-2496

mboswell@calpoly.edu AICP

Chris Clark

Lecturer. BA (1976) and MA (1977) University of Oregon; JD (1982) Franklin Pearce Law Center. Specializations: Land Use Law, Environmental Planning, Public Policy, Land Use Planning.

(805) 756-6605

cclark@calpoly.edu

W. David Conn

Vice Provost & Professor. BA (1968), MA (1972), and D. Phil. (1973) Oxford University. Specializations: Environmental Policy and Planning, Pollution Prevention and Control.

(805) 756-2246

dconn@calpoly.edu

Hemalata Dandekar

Professor. B.Arch., University of Bombay (1967); M.Arch., University of Michigan (1969); Ph.D., University of California, Los Angeles (1978). Specializations: Rural and Regional Planning, Sustainable Housing and Community Development, International Development, Gender Planning.

(805) 756-1315

hdandeka@calpoly.edu

Page 16 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

Adrienne Greve

Assistant Professor. BS, (1996) Cornell University; MS, (1999) Colorado State University; Ph.D., (2006) University of Washington. Specializations: Urban Ecology, Planning and Climate Change, Urban Hydrology and Stormwater.

OTHER AFFILIATED FACULTY


Doreen Liberto Blanck
Lecturer. BA (1978) University of California, Riverside; Master in Dispute Resolution (2003) Pepperdine University Law School. Specializations: Land Use Planning, Small Town Planning and Annexation, Environmental Analysis, Specific Plans, Facilitation, Mediation, Arbitration, Energy (Biofuel), Permit Processing.

AICP

(805) 756-1474

agreve@calpoly.edu

Zeljka Pavolich Howard

Lecturer. Diploma of Engineer Architect (1964) University of Belgrade; MS Urban and Regional Planning (1972) Florida State University. Specializations: Comprehensive Planning, Urban Design, History of Cities, Community Involvement.

(805) 203-5022

earthdesign@charter.net AICP

(805) 756-1507

zhoward@calpoly.edu AICP

Kelly Main

Assistant Professor. BA Economics, University of California, Davis (1982); M.A. Economics, Brown University (1983); Ph.D., University of California, Los Angeles (2007). Specializations: Community Planning, Land Use Planning, Public Realm, Cultural Aspects of Planning, Place Attachment.

Lecturer. BA, University of California, Santa Barbara; M.L.A. California Polytechnic State University, Pomona (1980). Specializations: Housing, Demographics, Urban Design and Historic Preservation, Cultural Resource Preservation.

Jeffrey Hook

(805) 781-7176

jwh4231@yahoo.com

(805) 756-2286

kdmain@calpoly.edu AICP

Michael Jencks

Cornelius Nuworsoo

Assistant Professor. BS, University of Science and Technology, Ghana (1981); MS Transportation Studies, Morgan State University (1986); MCP, University of California, Berkeley (2002); Ph.D., Engineering, University of California, Berkeley (2004). Specializations: Transportation Engineering, Transportation and Land Use Planning, Quantitative Methods in Planning.

Lecturer. BA, Williams College, JD, Boalt Law School, University of California, Berkeley. Specializations: Land Use Law, Environmental Law, Water Law.

(805) 473-2929

Jencks@maglaw.net

Michael Multari

(805) 756-2496

cnuworso@calpoly.edu

Lecturer. BA (1976) Yale University, MPA (1979) Princeton University. Specializations: Demography, Economic Development Planning, Infrastructure and Public Services, Land Use/Growth Management.

(805) 756-2818

mmultari@aol.com FAICP

Vicente del Rio

Professor. B. Arch. (1978), Federal University of Rio de Janeiro; Graduate Diploma in Urban and Regional Planning (1979), State University of Rio de Janeiro; MA in Urban Design (1981), Oxford Polytechnic; Ph.D. Architecture and Urbanism (1991), State University of Sao Paulo. Specializations: Urban Design, Environment-Behavior Studies, Revitalization, International Planning.

Kenneth Topping

Lecturer. BA Sociology (1956) University of Redlands; MS Public Administration (1972) California State University, Los Angeles. Specializations: Big City, County and Regional Planning, Infrastructure Development, International City Development and Disaster Management, Geographic Information System (GIS).

(805) 756-2572

vdelrion@calpoly.edu AICP

(805) 927-7773

KenTopping@aol.com AICP

William Siembieda

Professor. BA (1965), MCRP (1967), University of California, Berkeley; MPA (1970), California State University, San Diego; Ph.D. (1990), University of California, Los Angeles. Specializations: Housing and Real Property Development, International Planning, Disaster Mitigation Recovery Planning, Land Use and Strategic Planning.

Lisa Wise

Lecturer. M.S. Accounting (1990) DePaul University, MCRP (2001), California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo. Specializations: Housing Policy, Long-range Land Use Planning, Development Codes, Feasibility Analysis.

(805) 756-5085

wsiembie@calpoly.edu

(805) 595-1345

lisa@lisawiseconsulting.com

Umut Toker

Assistant Professor. B.Arch, Middle East Technical University (1996); Master of City Planning in Urban Design, Middle East Technical University (1999); Ph.D., North Carolina State University (2003). Specializations: Urban and Sustainable Design, Participatory Planning and Design, Environment-Behavior Research, Research/Data Analysis Methods, Computer-based Graphic Representation Techniques.

(805) 756-1592

utoker@calpoly.edu AICP

Paul Wack

Professor. BA (1969) San Fernando Valley State College; MA (1974) California State University, Northridge, MPA (1976) University of Southern California. Specializations: Environmental Planning, Planning Practice and Politics of Governance, Planning Regulation and Implementation, Sustainability and Climate Change.

(805) 756-6331

pwack@calpoly.edu ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 17

FYI
The City and Regional Planning Program at Cal Poly-San Luis Obispo is part of the nationally recognized College of Architecture and Environmental Design, which is the largest college of its kind in California. We have awarded over 1,000 degrees (Bachelors and Masters level) since the program began in 1968. Students often use the phrase "get an education, get a job, make a difference" when talking about their experience at Cal Poly. We are proud of the program's strengths in land use planning, environmental planning, urban design and community sustainability. We utilize the "learn by doing model" where the student acquires a strong professional skill set as well as an understanding of the planning process. Students learn how to develop and implement community plans. Students complete at least one internship in an actual planning agency, private firm or non-profit organization. This gives each student realworld experience and, many times, a head start on finding a job after graduation. Both public and private employers seek to hire our program's graduates, as we have a well-earned reputation for providing students an excellent professional education. CRP graduates have become planning directors of major US cities and principals in highly acclaimed private firms. Students work with a faculty that has an excellent balance of professional experience and academic preparation and, more importantly, who are exceptional instructors. Our faculty (full-time and part-time) are involved in environmental planning, sustainability, urban design, plan implementation, international planning, geographic information systems, community development, climate change, disaster mitigation planning, form based codes, transportation and the land use development process. The award-winning and nationally ranked City and Regional Planning

Department is recognized for its educational excellence and student achievement including the American Institute for Certified Planners (AICP) student project award for best applying the planning process, the American Planning Association (APA) awards for best paper in transportation planning, APA award for outstanding leadership by a student planner, and many California state awards for community plans and lowcost housing projects proposals. The masters program ranks #1 nationally for programs without a Ph.D. program in the 2009 Planetizen Guide to Graduate Planning Education. CRP students have the advantage of being able to to take courses in the College of Architecture and Environmental Designs other disciplines that include Architecture, Landscape Architecture, and research units of the college such as the Collaborative Agent Design Research Center (CADRC) and the Community Safety and Sustainability Group (CSSG). Students have the opportunity to complete minors in the following areas: Real property development, sustainable environments, and construction management. Access to these departments provides an exciting opportunity to work in various areas of environmental design practice. To understand our everglobalizing world, CRP offers its students opportunities to study abroad in partner universities in Brazil, Switzerland, Mexico, Portugal and Honduras. The city of San Luis Obispo (about 44,000 people) is located on California's scenic Central Coast, about halfway between San Francisco and Los Angeles. There is a small town feel to the community that enjoys many arts and music festivals, a wonderful year-round temperate climate, close proximity to the beautiful Pacific Ocean, and excellent outdoor recreation activities in the nearby hills and beaches. It is a wonderful place for learning and enjoying the exceptional natural environment offered by the Central Coast.

Master of City and Regional Planning California Polytechnic State University San Luis Obispo
Our mission is to educate talented, civic-minded, diverse students about planning and environmental design, and cultivate in them the principles of leadership, innovation, and action-oriented research. We provide an applied, comprehensive, interdisciplinary, professionally based education in urban and regional planning within a context of state, national, and global awareness. environmental planning . urban design . sustainability . social equity . community participation . zoning . smart growth. politics . computer applications globalization . green design . hazard mitigation . real property development . affordable housing . natural resources . governance. transportation Nationally accredited professionally-oriented 2-year masters degree. Among the best planning programs in the nation (Planetizen 2009). Community outreach projects and hands-on approach to education. Several national, state, and local student project awards. International exchanges and study-abroad opportunities. All faculty with professional planning experience. Highly successful job placement at great salaries! Fabulous San Luis Obispo in beautiful California Central Coast!

http://planning.calpoly.edu

Cal Poly / City & Regional Planning Department 1 Grand Avenue . San Luis Obispo, CA 93407-0283 phone: (805) 756-1315

Page 18 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

CALIFORNIA STATE POLYTECHNIC UNIVERSITY, POMONA


Department of Urban and Regional Planning
3801 West Temple Avenue Pomona, California 91768 Phone (909) 869-2688 Fax (909) 869-4688 www.csupomona.edu/urp Dr. Jerry Mitchell, Chair Phone (909) 869-4656 E-mail: jvmitchell@csupomona.edu

BA/BS PAB

MA/MS PAB

ACSP Member: FULL

UNDERGRADUATE ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS


Departmental Requirement: Minimum GPA: Minimum SAT or ACT Scores: See above See above

See www.csupomona.edu/~admissions/

UNDERGRADUATE GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

PROGRAM INFORMATION
UNDERGRADUATE DEADLINES, TUITION AND FEES
Admission Deadline 2008-09 ..................................................... November 30, 2008 Financial Aid Deadline 2008-09 ..........................................................April 15, 2008 In-State Tuition and Fees: ..............................................................$1,016 per quarter Out-of-State Tuition and Fees: ..................................................... $226 per unit unit Application Fee: .................................................................................................... $55 Additional Fee: ............................................................................$161.52 per quarter

Hours of Core .......................................................................................... 52 Hours of Studio Courses .......................................................................... 20 Hours of Restricted Elective .................................................................... 32 Hours of Unrestricted Elective .................................................................. 0 Total Required Hours In Planning Program .......................................... 104 Total Required Hours to Graduate from University .............................. 180 Thesis or Final Product ..........................................................Senior Project Needs based Federal and Cal Grants: Merit and need-based--Check ..... with Office of Financial Aid. Dept. Awards $200 - 1000: For continuing students: Competitive, merit-based.

FINANCIAL AID INFORMATION

MASTERS DEGREE
Master of Urban and Regional Planning (MURP)
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail Herschel Farberow, Graduate Coordinator (909) 869-2716 hfarberow@csupomona.edu

Admission Deadline 2008-09 ................................................................ July 15, 2009 Financial Aid Deadline 2008-09 ...........................................................April 15, 2009 In-State Tuition and Fees: ............................................................ $1,521 per quarter Out-of-State Tuition and Fees: ............................................................. $226 per unit Application Fee: .....................................................................................................$55 Additional Fees: ................................................................................ $172 per quarter

GRADUATE DEADLINES, TUITION AND FEES

Annual Student Enrollment Applied


Undergraduate Masters 116 99 123 121

Accepted
87 54 90 32

Enrolled
57 25 56 26

Year Initiated: 1970........................................................... PAB Accredited Degrees Granted through 8/31/09...........................................................321 Degrees Granted from 9/1/08 to 8/31/09 ..................................................18

08/09 09/10 08/09 09/10 08/09 09/10

Community Development, Land Use, Environmental Planning, Transportation


MASTERS ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS
University Admission Policy: Minimum Undergraduate GPA: Bachelors degree from an accredited institution 3.0 or 2.5 with 1000 on the combined GRE verbal and quantitative score with no score less than 450 See above 580 Not Required Earned bachelors degree from an accredited institution.

Masters Specializations

UNDERGRADUATE DEGREE
BS in Urban and Regional Planning
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail Jerry Mitchell, Chair (909) 869-4656 jvmitchell@csupomona.edu

Minimum GRE: Minimum TOEFL Ranking in Undergraduate Class: University Requirements:

Year initiated: 1967

Degrees Granted through 8/31/09.........................................................1697 Degrees Granted from 9/1/08 to 8/31/09 ..................................................59

PAB Accredited

Community Development, Environmental Planning, Land Use & Physical Planning, Transportation Planning, GIS minor offered

Undergraduate Specializations

MASTERS GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

Hours of Core ...........................................................................................32 Hours of Studio or Practice Related Courses ...........................................16 Hours of Restricted Electives ...................................................................12 Hours of Unrestricted Electives ................................................................14 Exams or Written Requirements ............................. Thesis or Comp. Exam

ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 19

FINANCIAL AID INFORMATION

Grants and Loans: Need and merit based federal and Cal grants-Check with Office of Financial Aid. Department Awards $200-$1000--for continuing students--competitive, merit based.

Assistant Professor. BS, Kyung-Hee University (1991); MS in URP, University of Wisconsin, Madison (1999); Ph.D., University of Florida (2005). Specializations: GIS, Collaborative Urban Design, Transportation Modeling.

Do-Hyung Kim

(909) 869-4645

dohyungKim@csupomona.edu

Herschel Farberow TOTAL MASTERS STUDENT COMPOSITION 2008-2009 US Citizens & Permanent Residents
Hispanics* Of any Race White African American Native American/ Pacific Islander Asian American Mixed Other / Dont know Non-US Citizens Non- Permanent Residents

Professor. BS, California State Polytechnic University, Pomona (1972); MA, University of California, Los Angeles (1974). Specializations: Design Foundations, Landscape Architecture, Urban Design. www. csupomona.edu/~hfarberow/

AICP

(909) 869-2716

hfarberow@csupomona.edu

Male 6 21 3 0 3 6 0 4 43

Female 9 11 1 0 9 5 0 3 38

Total 15 32 4 0 12 11 0 7

Professor. BS, University of Illinois (1971); J.D., (1975); Ph.D., University of Michigan (1986). Specializations: Planning Law, Environmental Planning.

Jerry V. Mitchell

(909) 869-4656

jvmitchell@csupomona.edu

Gwendolyn H. Urey

Professor. BA, Bryn Mawr College (1979); M.U.P., University of Oregon (1983); Ph.D., Cornell (1995). Specializations: Planning Methods, Infrastructure Planning, International Planning. www.csupomona. edu/~gurey

(909) 869-2725

gurey@csupomona.edu FAICPU

Richard W. Willson

Professor. Bachelor of Environmental Studies, University of Waterloo, (1978); Master of Planning, University of Southern California, (1983); Ph.D., University of California, Los Angeles, (1991). Specializations: Planning Theory, Transportation Planning, Policy Analysis. www. csupomona/~rwwillson

(909) 869-2701

rwwillson@csupomona.edu

Total Students

81

Richard J. Zimmer

*Do not double count Hispanics; Hispanics also appear in the racial categories below.

Lecturer. BA, California State Polytechnic University, Pomona (1973); MPA, University of Southern California (1975). Specializations: Community Development, Politics & Government, Public Finance, Real Estate Development.

AICP

PLANNING FACULTY
Professor. B.A., Rutgers University (1978); M.C.R.P. (1980); Ph.D. (1986). Specializations: Planning Methods, Urban Theory, Housing, Urban Economics. www.csupomona.edu/~fbarreto

(909) 869-4943

rzimmer@csupomona.edu

Felix R. Barreto

OTHER AFFILIATED FACULTY


Kip Kobayashi
Lecturer, BFA, UC Berkeley, Berkeley, CA (1983); MFA, USC, Los Angeles, CA (1986). Specialization: Urban Design.

(909) 869-2727

fbarreto@csupomona.edu

Juliana Delgado

Assistant Professor, BA, UCLA (1971); Master of Arts in Design, University of Paris (1974); Master of Architecture, UC, Berkeley, Berkeley, CA (1981); PhD in Architecture, UC, Berkeley (1992). Specialization: Land Use, Design, Planning Studios.

AICP

khk@mythograph.com

(909) 869-5427

jdelgado@csupomona.edu

Bonny Lay

Lecturer, BA, National Taiwan Normal University, Taipei, Taiwan (1967); Masters, Western Michigan, Kalamazoo, Michigan (1970). Specialization: Planning Administration.

bonny_lay@yahoo.com Page 20 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

Charles Loggins

Professor Emeritus. A.B., San Francisco State University (1971); M.C.P., Harvard University (1973). Specializations: Community Development, Social Policy, Planning Research Methods.

Lecturer. Ph.D. UCLA (2008). Specializations: Research Methods, Policy Analysis, Housing. Professor Emeritus. BA, University of California, Los Angeles (1967); M. Architecture, University of California, Berkeley. Specializations: Planning Graphics, Urban Design, Land Use, Design and Planning History. http://www.csupomona.edu/~amcwhitaker

Abishek Tiwari

loggins@csupomona.edu

Ana Maria Whitaker

AICPU

Hollie M. Lund

Lecturer. BA, Western Washington University (1997); Ph.D., Portland State University (2001). Specializations: Neighborhood Design and Planning, Community Development, Transportation Planning, Community and Environmental Psychology. www.csupomona.edu/~hlund

amcwhitaker@csupomona.edu

(909) 869-2710

hlund@csupomona.edu

Robert Manford

FYI
The award winning programs offer many opportunities for student enrichment, including: * Use of the Southern California region as a laboratory, which has produced many APA award-winning projects. The program has a continuing involvement in community action research in the City of Pomona and other communities. Summer programs in China, Greece and other locations and field trip courses in the Western US. An interdisciplinary GIS Minor and extensive GIS offerings for graduate students. Numerous internship opportunities in the public, non-profit, and private sectors. The annual Dale Prize program, which brings scholars and practitioners to campus for dialogue on focused planning topics. An ability to take courses in the Lyle Center for Regenerative Studies, an innovative environmental demonstration and research facility. Opportunities to participate in CPP's Presidents Climate Committee Initiative Active student organizations for graduate students, undergraduate students and a chapter of Planners' Network. An active and supportive alumni organization.

Lecturer, B.A., University of Ghana (1991); Masters, USC, Los Angeles, CA (1994); Ph.D., USC, Los Angeles, CA (2003). Specialization: Environmental Planning.

abeiku@aol.com

Lecturer. JD, Law, Loyola University (1998). Specializations: Environmental Planning, California Water.

Meredith McKenzie

meredith@arroyoseco.org *

Meenaxi Panakkal

Lecturer. MURP, California State Polytechnic University, Pomona (2003). Specializations: Land Use Planning, Urban Design.

meenaxipanakkal@lsa-assoc.com

* * *

Lecturer. MCP, Harvard, (1963). Specializations:Undergraduate Seminar, General Plan.

Robert Paternoster

robertpaternoster@yahoo.com

Marta Perlas

Lecturer, B.Arc, SciArc, Santa Monica, CA (1987). Specialization: Urban Design.

mp@mythograph.com

Lori Pullman

Lecturer. BFA, University of California, Los Angeles (1997). Specializations: Urban Design, Studios, Planning History.

llpullman@csupomona.edu

* * *

Lecturer. Planning BA, University of Thesssady, Volos, Greece (1996); M.C.P., Ph.D., University of Pennsylvania (2002). Specializations: Planning Methods and Modeling, Transportation, GIS, Land Use. www. csupomona.edu/~dpoulakidas

Dimitris Poulakidas

(909) 869-4645

dpoulakidas@csupomona.edu FAICP

Steve Preston

Lecturer. BA, MA California Polytechnic State University, Pomona (1984). Specializations: Facilitating, Visioning and Consensus Building.

David Salazar

Lecturer. MURP, California Polytechnic State University, Pomona (1990). Specializations: Campus Planning, Planning Practice.

davidsalazar@csupomona.edu

ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 21

CALIFORNIA STATE UNIVERSITY, NORTHRIDGE


Urban Studies and Planning
18111 Nordhoff Street Northridge, California Phone (818) 677-2904 Fax (818) 677-5850 E-mail: urban.studies@csun.edu http://www.csun.edu/csbs/departments/ urban_studies_and_planning/index.html Robert B. Kent, Department Chair Phone: (818) 677-2904 E-mail: rob.kent@csun.edu

BA/BS

ACSP Member: FULL

UNDERGRADUATE ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS

Departmental Requirement: ................................................................None University Requirement: ......................................................... See website: http://www.csun.edu/~hfanr055/reg/ftfadmr2.html Minimum GPA: ...................................................................................... 2.0 Minimum SAT or ACT Scores: ................................... SAT: 510, ACT: 10

Hours of Core ...........................................................................................37 Hours of Studio Courses ............................................................................8 Hours of Restricted Elective ....................................................................12 Hours of Unrestricted Elective ................................................................11 Total Required Hours In Planning Program........................................48-51 Total Required Hours to Graduate from University................................120 Thesis or Final Product ............................................................Not required

UNDERGRADUATE GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

PROGRAM INFORMATION
Admission Deadline 2008-09 .............................................................. March 1, 2008 Financial Aid Deadline 2008-09 .......................................................... March 3, 2008 In-State Tuition and Fees: ............................. $1524 per semester (12 units or more) Out-of-State Tuition and Fees: ............... $1524 + $339 per unit (12 units or more) Application Fee ......................................................................................................$55 Additional Fee ................................................................................No additional fees

FINANCIAL AID INFORMATION


University-wide: Eligibility criteria: Departmental:

UNDERGRADUATE DEADLINES, TUITION AND FEES

Over 300 Varies. Two, awarded by achievement.

GRADUATE CERTIFICATE IN URBAN PLANNING

Applied Accepted Enrolled (Past 5 Fall Terms) Undergraduate Fall 04 75 Fall 05 79 Fall 06 100 Fall 07 79 Fall 08 115

The department has been authorized to offer a 15 credit graduate certificate in urban planning. The certificate program is designed primarily to serve working professionals. It seeks to assist those already working in the field of planning who seek educational opportunities beyond the bachelors degree and also professionals working in closely related areas who wish more exposure and knowledge of planning practice. The program is designed to be completed in one year. The program is designed to be completed in one year. This entails two semesters of class work (6 credits per semester) and a capstone fieldwork project (3 credits) completed during the summer. Interested applicants should contact the department for further information on this program.

UNDERGRADUATE DEGREE
BA in Urban Studies and Planning
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail Rob Kent, Chair (818) 677-2904 rob.kent@csun.edu

PLANNING FACULTY
Kenya Covington
Assistant Professor. Ph.D. University of Maryland, Baltimore County (2003). Specializations: Urban and Social Policy, Geography of Child Care, Affordable Housing

(818) 677-6463

kenya.covington@csun.edu

Year initiated:1971 Degrees Granted through August 2008 ........................................ Over 776 Degrees Granted from September 2005 to August 2008....................... 126

Chair and James R. Ring Professor of Urban Studies and Planning. PhD, Syracuse University (1983). Specializations: Urban and Regional Planning, Development Planning, Cartography/GIS, Latin America.

Robert B. Kent

Urban and Regional Planning Housing, Community and Economic Development Sustainability and Environmental Planning

Undergraduate Specializations

(818) 677-4372

rob.kent@csun.edu

Henrik Minassians

Assistant Professor. Ph.D. University of Southern California (2002). Specializations: Public Administration, Urban Policy Design and Management, Urban Governance, Contract Design and Management, Policy Implementation Theory

(818) 677-7246

henrik.minassians@csun.edu

Page 22 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

Ward Thomas

Associate Professor. Ph.D. University of California, Los Angeles (1997). Specializations: Economic Development, Public Policy Analysis, Environmental Planning

Regina Sadono

Part-Time Lecturer. Ph.D. University of California, Los Angeles (1998). Specializations: Grant Writing, Development, Communications, Arts and Theater, Los Angeles

(818) 677-7247

ward.thomas@csun.edu

(818) 677-2904

regina.sadono@csun.edu rsadono@alum.calarts.edu

Zeynep Toker

Assistant Professor. Ph.D. North Carolina State University (2004). Specializations: Community Participation, Research Based Urban Design, Housing and Gender in Planning, Research Methods

(818) 677-2872

zeynep.toker@csun.edu

Part-Time Lecturer. Ph.D. University of California, Los Angeles (2006). Specializations: Urban Planning, Built Environment, Gender, Architecture.

Orit Stieglitz

(818) 677-2904

orit@ucla.edu

M. Teresa Vzquez

Assistant Professor. Ph.D., Cornell University (2001). Specializations: Regional and International Planning, Latin American Studies (US-Mexico), Community Development,Planning Theory and History, Urban Policy and Politics, Community Development

Abhishek Tiwari

Part-Time Lecturer. Ph.D. University of California, Irvine (2009). Specializations: Housing Policy, Demography, Green Building, Community Development, Public Health

(818) 677-2027

tere@csun.edu

(818) 677-2904

tiwari.abhishek@csun.edu abhishek@vtaengineering.com AICP

Phyl Van Ammers

Lecturer. J.D. University of California, Los Angeles (1981) Specializations: Housing Policy, Utopian Communities, Law and Planning, Sustainable Planning

Dev Vrat

(818) 677-2881

phyl.ammers@csun.edu

Part-Time Lecturer. M.A. University of California, Santa Barbara (1986). Specializations: CEQA/NEPA Compliance, General Plans and Specific Plans, Land Use Feasibility Studies, Infrastructure and Services Finance Plans

OTHER AFFILIATED FACULTY


Euripedes De Oliveira
(818) 677-2904
Part-Time Lecturer. M.A. University of California, Los Angeles (2002). Specializations: Third World Cities, Latin America, Brazil

(818) 677-2904

dev.vrat@csun.edu Dev_Vrat@URSCorp.com

David Weintraub

euri@csun.edu AICP

Part-Time Lecturer. M.A. California State University, Northridge (1992). Specializations: Long Range Community Planning, Facilities Master Planning, Environmental Review, Case Processing/Entitlements

(818) 677-2904

John Dugan

david.weintraub@csun.edu David.Weintraub@lacity.org

Part-Time Lecturer. MCP Harvard University (1971). Specializations: Planning Administration, Long Range Land Use Planning, Urban Design.

Garfield Whittaker

(818) 677-2904

john.dugan@csun.edu John.Dugan@fresno.gov

Part-Time Lecturer. M.A. and M.P.A. California State University, Northridge (2005 and 1995). Specializations: Urban Education, Urban Geography, Transportation Planning, Caribbean Region

Ali Farassati

(818) 677-2904

Part-Time Lecturer. Ph.D. University of Paris, France (1998). Specializations: Environmental and Urban Planning, Community Development, Architecture.

garfield.whittaker@csun.edu Shugapro@aol.com

Claude Willey
AICP

(818) 677-2904

ali.farassati@csun.edu

Charles Keynejad

Part-Time Lecturer. M.A. University of California, Irvine (2001). Specializations: Transportation History, California Water, Environmental History, Art and Urbanism, Los Angeles

Part-Time Lecturer. M.A. University of Southern California (1979). Specializations: Planning in the Public Sector (Comprehensive and Regional Planning), Transportation Planning, Environmental Planning, Public Policy Making and Planning

(818) 677-2904

claude.willey@csun.edu claudewilley@sbcglobal.net

(818) 677-2904

charles.keynejad@csun.edu

FYI
Mission Statement
The mission of the Department of Urban Studies and Planning is to prepare students, at both the undergraduate and graduate level, for professional careers in urban studies and planning. In addition, the department seeks to provide a broad based educational experience, set in the context of the social sciences, which contributes to the development of informed and thoughtful individuals prepared to contribute to the society at large. Department faculty supports the mission through teaching, research and publication, community outreach and action, and university service. ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 23

Elton Massey

Part-Time Lecturer. Ph.D. University of Southern California (2009). Specializations: Economic Development, Tourism, Urban Planning, Real Estate Development, Entrepreneurship, Globalization, Community Development

(818) 677-2904

massey.elton@csun.edu emassey@theithacagroup.com

THE CATHOLIC UNIVERSITY OF AMERICA


Graduate Program in City and Regional Planning
School of Architecture and Planning 620 Michigan Avenue, N.E. Washington, D.C. 20064 Phone (202) 319-5188 Fax (202) 319-5728 http://architecture.cua.edu/academicprograms/ mcrp.cfm Hazel R. Edwards, Ph.D., AICP, Program Director Phone (202) 319-6265 E-mail: edwardsh@cua.edu

BA/BS MA/MS

ACSP Member: FULL

MASTERS ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS


University Admission Policy: Minimum Undergraduate GPA: Minimum GRE: Minimum TOEFL: Ranking in Undergraduate Class: Departmental Requirement:

Bachelors degree from an accredited institution 3.0 1000 required for financial aid 580 paper; 237 computer; 92 Internet Not Required No Requirements

MASTERS GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

Hours of Core .......................................................................................... 21 Hours of Studio or Practice Related Courses ............................................ 6 Hours of Restricted Electives .................................................................... 9 Hours of Unrestricted Electives ................................................................. 3 Thesis ......................................................................................................... 9 Hours of Design Option Courses ............................................................. 12 Total Required Hours in Planning Program ............................................ 48 Total Required Hours in Planning Program with Design Option ........... 60

PROGRAM INFORMATION
Admission Deadline for Masters program ................................... rolling admissions Financial Aid Deadline for Masters program ................................................ March 1 Tuition and Fees (Full-time, 10 or more credits) ..................... $16,235 per semester Tuition and Fees (Part-time, 9 or fewer credit hours) ............. $1,255 per credit hour Application Fee ......................................................................................................$55 Additional Fees ...................... $450 (one time fee); $25 (activities fee per semester)

FINANCIAL AID INFORMATION


Tuition Awards: Eligibility Criteria:

GRADUATE DEADLINES, TUITION AND FEES

MCRP Scholarship; Teaching and Research Assistantships Academic and Need/Merit; 1000 GRE, 3.0 GPA

Annual Student Enrollment


Applied 08/09 09/10 12 10 Accepted 08/09 09/10 11 9 Enrolled 08/09 09/10 10 4

TOTAL MASTERS STUDENT COMPOSITION 2009-2010


U.S. Citizens & Permanent Residents Hispanics of Any Race White African American Native American/ Pacific Islander Asian American Mixed Other/Dont Know Male 0 6 1 0 1 0 0 1 9 Female 0 3 1 0 0 0 0 0 4 Total 0 9 2 0 1 0 0 1 13

Masters

MASTERS DEGREE
Master of City and Regional Planning
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail: Hazel R. Edwards, Program Director (202) 319-6265 edwardsh@cua.edu

Year Initiated: 2008 Degrees Granted through 8/31/09...........................................................0

Sustainable Design and Planning; Real Estate Development and Planning; Urban Design

Masters Specializations

Non-US Citizens Non-Permanent Residents Total Students

Page 24 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

PLANNING FACULTY
Hazel R. Edwards, Ph.D.,
Associate Professor. B.Arch., Howard University (1981); MAUD, Harvard University (1989); Ph.D., University of Illinois at UrbanaChampaign (1993). Specializations: Planning History, Theory, and Ethics, Urban Design, Design Behavior, Livability Issues, Research Methods, Qualitative Methods, Community Engagement. http://architecture.cua.edu/People/edwards.cfm

Terrance Williams
AICP

Professor. B.Arch., University of Oregon; M.Arch., Cornell University. Specializations: Urban Design, Community Design, Land Use Planning, Architectural Design, Zoning. http://architecture.cua.edu/People/williams.cfm

FAIA

(202) 319-5565

williams@cua.edu

(202) 319-6265

edwardsh@cua.edu FAICP

FYI
Building on the strong tradition of CUAs architecture programs, the Master of City and Regional Planning (M.C.R.P.) links design with policy to assist planners in the stewardship of the built, natural, and cultural environments. The curriculum prepares students with the foundation to become generalist planners and steward planners according to the CUArch mission. In todays climate, planning and design interventions should consider the impact on the environment. At CUArch students will learn about creating better environments from the perspective of sustainable design and planning principles. The Washington, D.C., metropolitan area provides an excellent laboratory to explore planning issues, in urban, suburban, and exurban locations. The planning curriculum integrates planning history, theory, practice, zoning and legal aspects, land use, transportation, and analytical methods, all of which form the foundation of the generalist planners perspective. Coupled with a design orientation, these policy-related subjects will be framed within sustainable design and planning principles as well as the context of regionalism. The program is also aligned closely with the Master of Science in Sustainable Design program. The M.C.R.P. is a minimum two-year, 48-credit hour program with an optional design focus that increases the program to 60-credit hours. This added coursework will strengthen the physical design skills for those who do not have an architectural background or who want to extend their training in the context of physical planning.

Julius Levine

Professor. BSCE, City College of New York; MCP, Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Specializations: Planning History, Real Estate Development, Land Use Planning, Public and Private Policy and Implementation, Infrastructure Planning, Planning Practice. http://architecture.cua.edu/People/levine.cfm

(202) 319-5188

levinej@cua.edu

Assistant Professor. B.Arch., Suzhou Institute of Urban Construction and Environmental Protection (1992); MCP, University of Cincinnati (1997); Ph.D., The Ohio State University (2008). Specializations: GIS, Geography, Urban Economics, Quantitative Methods, Population and Employment Modeling. http://architecture.cua.edu/people/lu.cfm

Jia Lu, Ph.D.

(202) 319-6682

lu@cua.edu

OTHER AFFILIATED FACULTY


Christopher P. Grech
Associate Professor. BA (1982) and B.Arch. (1985), University of Liverpool. Specializations: Sustainable Design, Building Envelope Design. http://architecture.cua.edu/People/grech.cfm

RIBA

(202) 319-6398

grech@cua.edu

Miriam Gusevich

Joint Masters Degrees:


Architecture

Associate Professor. B.Arch. and M.Arch., Cornell University. Specializations: Urban Design, History, and Theory, Integration of Buildings, Landscapes, and Infrastructure, Collaborative Design Processes.

(202) 319-5188

gusevicm@cua.edu AICP

Lecturer. BAE, University of Florida (1977); MAURP, University of Florida (1979); Ph.D., Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University (2007). Specializations: Infrastructure Funding, Growth Management, Demographics, Transportation Planning, Quantitative Methods.

Dwayne Pierce Guthrie, Ph.D.

(202) 319-5188

guthrie@cua.edu FAICP

Judith Meany, Ph.D.

Professor of Practice. BA, George Washington University (1971); MCRP, The Catholic University of America (1974); Ph.D., University of Maryland (1989). Specializations: Real Estate Development and Design, Land Use Planning and Law, Principles of Urbanization.

(202) 319-5188

meany@cua.edu

ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 25

CLEMSON UNIVERSITY
Department of Planning and Landscape Architecture
124 Lee Hall Clemson, South Carolina Phone (864) 656-3926 Fax (864) 656-7519

MA/MS PAB

Ph.D.

ACSP Member: FULL

MASTERS GRADUATION Requirements

www.clemson.edu/caah/pla Elaine Worzala, Interim Chair Phone (864) 656-3925 E-mail: cuplanning-l@clemson.edu

Hours of Core ...........................................................................................23 Hours of Studio or Practice Related Courses .............................................8 Hours of Restricted Electives ............................................................. 15-18 Hours of Unrestricted Electives ..................................................................0 Thesis or Terminal Project ....................................................................6-9 Total Required Hours in Planning Program .............................................56 Exam,Thesis or Final Product: ..........Thesis or Terminal Project and Oral defense.

PROGRAM INFORMATION
GRADUATE DEADLINES, TUITION AND FEES
Admission Deadline 2009-10 ........................... Rolling Admission, March 1 Priority Financial Aid Deadline 2009-10 ....................................................... March 1 Priority In-State Tuition and Fees: .................. $4,037; $1,020 per semester with assistance Out-of-State Tuition and Fees: ............ $8,033; $1,020 per semester with assistance Application Fees: ...................................................................................................$65 Additional Fees: ....................Four core and three elective classes have $75 lab fees

The program offers approximately 13 departmental assistantships of roughly $3,500 each year plus tuition reduction to only $1020 per semester. These are awarded based on merit, financial need, timely submittal and faculty needs. Additional assistantships may be available based on faculty research funding. Graduate and research assistantships are made available to attract high caliber students. Most second year students have 15 hour (2 days/week) assistantships with local planning entities, earning around $4,500 for the academic year plus tuition reduction to $1020 per semester. These are based on job availability; auto access is usually necessary for these positions.

FINANCIAL AID INFORMATION

Annual Student Enrollment Applied


09/10 Masters 47

Accepted
09/10 33

Enrolled
09/10 23

TOTAL * MASTERS STUDENT COMPOSITION 2009-2010 US Citizens & Permanent Residents


Hispanics* Of any Race White African American Native American/ Pacific Islander Asian American Mixed Other / Dont know Non-US Citizens Non- Permanent Residents

MASTERS DEGREE
Master of City and Regional Planning
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail Barry Nocks, Director (864) 656-4094 nocks2@clemson.edu

Male 0 22 1 0 0 0 0 1

Female 2 14 1 0 0 0 0 3

Total 2 36 2 0 0 0 0 4

Year Initiated: 1968 PAB Accredited Degrees Granted through 8/31/09...........................................................487 Degrees Granted from 9/1/07 to 8/31/08 ..................................................15

Environmental/Land Use, Housing/CD, Development, Transportation, Urban Design, GIS


MASTERS ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS
University Admission Policy: Minimum Undergraduate GPA: Minimum GRE: Minimum TOEFL Ranking in Undergraduate Class: Departmental Requirement: Bachelors from an accredited institution 2.7, University; 3.0 Major Prefer 470V, 610Q, 4.0 Writing Prefer 600 Not Required Bachelors from an accredited institution; transcripts, 3 letters of recommendation, Statement of Objectives

Masters Specializations

Total Students

24

20

44

*Do not double count Hispanics; Hispanics also appear in the racial categories below.

Page 26 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

DOCTORAL DEGREE
Planning, Design and the Built Environment
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail Year initiated 2005 Mickey Lauria, Director (864) 656-0520 mlauria@clemson.edu

Clifford D. Ellis

Associate Professor. B.A. History and Philosophy, Colorado College (1973); MPCD. Planning and Community Development, University of Colorado at Denver (1982); Ph.D. City and Regional Planning, University of California, Berkeley (1990). Specializations: Urban Design, New Urbanism, Site Planning.

(864) 656-2477

cliffoe@clemson.edu

Mickey Lauria

Regional & Community Development & Design Built Environment & Health Restoration, Sustainability & Land Ecology Technology, Materials & Construction Processes
DOCTORAL ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS
Minimum GRE: Minimum TOEFL: Minimum GPA: Program Requirement: Prefer 600, 600, 5.0 minimum Prefer 600 UG-3.0 Grad.-3.5 Masters degree in appropriate discipline; 3 letters of recommendation, statement of interest; financial aid application.

Doctoral Specializations

Professor. A.B., UCLA (1975); M.A. (1977); Ph.D., University of Minnesota. Specializations: Planning Theory, Housing, Community Development, Research Methods, Urban Politics and Policy.

(864) 656-0520

mlauria@clemson.edu

James B. London

Professor. B.S., (1971); M.A., University of South Carolina (1974); Ph.D., Clemson University (1979) Specializations: Natural Resource Policy and Planning, Economic Development, Sustainable Development, Impact Assessment.

(864) 656-3927

london1@clemson.edu

Professor. B.S., Cornell University (1969); MRP (1972); Ph.D. (1978), University of North Carolina. Specializations: Planning Theory and History, Planning Process and Strategic Planning, Quantitative Methods, Health Planning.

Barry C. Nocks

(864) 656-4094

nocks2@clemson.edu

DOCTORAL GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

Hours of Core ..................................................................................... 23-26 Hours of Studio or Practice Related Courses .............................................6 Hours of Restricted Electives ...................................................................15 Hours of Unrestricted Electives ..................................................................9 Other ...........................................................................................................0 Exams or Written Requirements: Comprehensive Exam and Dissertation

Stephen L. Sperry

Associate Professor. BLA, SUNY, Syracuse University (1970); MLA, Harvard University, (1975) Specializations: Land Use Planning and GIS, Database Technology, Spatial Modeling, Image Processing, Raster and Vector Technology.

(864) 656-3635

sperrys@clemson.edu

FINANCIAL AID INFORMATION

Graduate and Research assistantships available to attract high caliber students.

OTHER AFFILIATED FACULTY


David J. Allison
Professor. B.S. Pre-Architecture, Clemson University (1978); MArch, Clemson University (1982). Specializations: Health Care Design, Healthy Communities.

PLANNING FACULTY
Associate Professor. B.A., Duke University (1979); M.A., University of South Carolina (1985); Ph.D., Clemson University (1995). Specializations: Coastal Management, Resource Policy, Communications, Community Development.

M. Grant Cunningham

(864) 656-3897

adavid@clemson.edu

(864) 656-1587

cunninm@clemson.edu

Dina G. Battisto

Anne E. Dunning

Assistant Professor. B.A., Cornell University (1992); MCP, and M.S., Georgia Institute of Technology (1998); Ph.D., Georgia Institute of Technology (2004). Specializations: Transportation Planning & Engineering, Transit Planning, Transportation Innovation, Quantitative Methods.

Associate Professor. Bachelors Architecture, University of Tennessee Knoxville (1991); MArch, Clemson University (1993); PhD. Michigan. Specializations: Health Care Design, Healthy Communities, Aging.

(864) 656-3887

dbattis@clemson.edu

Ted Cavanaugh

(864) 656-0151

anned@clemson.edu

Professor. B.S. Architecture, McGill University (1971); MArch, McGill University (1974); PhD. History of Technology, Lehigh University (2002). Specialization: Building Technology and Design.

Caitlin Dyckman

(864) 656-3898

tcavana@clemson.edu

Assistant Professor. B.A. English, UCLA(1997); MCP University of California, Berkeley (2001); J.D. University of California, Davis (2001), Ph.D. University of California, Berkeley (2006). Specializations: Environmental Planning, Planning Law, Water Policy and Law, Land Use Planning Process.

(864) 656-2496

cdyckma@clemson.edu ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 27

Victoria Chanse

Assistant Professor of Landscape Architecture.B.A. Oberlin College, M.C.P. University of California at Berkeley, Ph.D. University of California at Berkeley. Specializations: Landscape Ecology, Community Participation, Regional Design, Watershed Planning, Ecological Design.

Stephen Verderber

Professor, School of Architecture. BS 1975, March 1977, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee; ArchD, University of Michigan-Ann Arbor. Specializations: Health Care Design, Aging and Research Methods.

(864) 656-4408

vchanse@clemson.edu

(864) 656-3902

sverder@clemson.edu

Shima Clarke, Ph.D.


(864) 656-4498

Elaine Worzala

Associate Professor, Department of Construction Science and Management

shimac@clemson.edu

Associate Professor. A.B., St. Louis University (1972); MUP (1974) Ph.D., Michigan State University (1996). Specializations: Real Estate Development, Public-Private Partnerships, Housing and Community Development, Market and Feasibility.

J. Terrence Farris

Professor and Director, Center for Real Estate Development. Ph.D., Real Estate and Urban Land Economics; MS in Real Estate Appraisal and Investment Analysis, University of Wisconsin-Madison. Specializations: Real Estate Principles, Process and Market Analysis, Valuation, Roundtables on the Role of the Architect and Contractor, Feasibility Analysis, and Real Estate Finance and Investments.

(864) 656-3925

eworzal@clemson.edu

(864) 656-3903

jfarris@clemson.edu

Keith Evan Green

Associate Professor. BArch, Istanbul Technical University (1979). M.U.R.P., Istanbul Technical University (1981); PhD. Urban Planning, Istanbul Technical University (1988). Specialization: Urban Design, Landscape Design, Design Technology.

Umit Yilmaz

Associate Professor. B.A., University of Pennsylvania (1985); M Arch., University of Illinois at Chicago; M.S. and PhD., University of Pennsylvania (1998); Regional Architect. Specializations: Digital Environment, Advanced Materials, Housing, Architectural History/ Theory/Criticism.

(864) 656-7349

uyilmaz@clemson.edu

(864) 656-3887

kegreen@clemson.edu

Assistant Professor of Landscape Architecture. Dipl.-Vorprfung Landschaftsplanung (B.L.A), Dipl.-Ing. Landschaftsplanung, (M.L.A.) University of Natural Resources and Applied Life Sciences (BOKU), Vienna, Ph.D. Kassel University, Germany. Specializations: Open Space, Community Design

Doris Gstach

(864) 656-2472

dgstach@clemson.edu

Robert Hogan

Professor and Assistant Interim Chair, Department of Architecture.

(864) 656-3914

hrobert@clemson.edu

Roger W. Liska

Professor. B.S. Michigan Technological University (1965); M.S. Wayne State University (1967); PhD. University of Georgia (1998). Specializations: Construction Personnel Management, Resource Control, Best Practices.

(864) 656-3878

riggor@clemson.edu

Assistant Professor. B.S., Pennsylvania State University, M.S., The Pennsylvania State University, M.AG., The Pennsylvania State University, PH.D., The Pennsylvania State University. Specializations: Nature-based Land Art, Design

Hala Nassar

(864) 656-2499

hnassar@clemson.edu

Allen Thompson

Assistant Professor of Philosophy and Religion. BA, Evergreen State College, 1992.;MA,1995, PhD,2005, University of Washington-Seattle. Specializations: Environmental Ethics.

(864) 656-2380

athomp6@clemson.edu

Page 28 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

CLEVELAND STATE UNIVERSITY


Master of Urban Planning, Design and Development

MA/MS PAB

ACSP Member: FULL

MASTERS ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS


Minimum Undergraduate GPA: Minimum GRE: Minimum TOEFL 2.75 University, 3.0 Department 50th Percentile Department internet-based: 17 in reading, speaking and listening, 14 in writing/ computer-based: 197/paper-based: 525

Maxine Goodman Levin College of Urban Affairs 1717 Euclid Avenue Cleveland, Ohio 44115 Phone (216) 687-2136 Fax (216) 687-9342 www.urban.csuohio.edu/academics/graduate/mupdd/ Wendy Kellogg, Chair Phone: (216) 687-5265 E-mail: w.kellogg@csuohio.edu

MASTERS GRADUATION Requirements

Hours of Core ...........................................................................................32 Hours of Studio or Practice Related Courses ................................. 12 to 16 Hours of Restricted Electives .....................................................................0 Hours of Unrestricted Electives ................................................................16 Exit Project/Thesis ......................................................................................4 Total Required Hours in Planning Program .............................................48 Exams or Written Requirements ..........................................................None

PROGRAM INFORMATION
Admission Deadline 2009-2010 ............................................................ July 13, 2009 Financial Aid Deadline 2009-2010 .................................................February 15, 2010 In-State Tuition and Fees: ..................................................... $439.25 per credit hour Out-of-State Tuition and Fees: ............................................. $834.25 per credit hour Application Fee .................................................................................................$30.00 Additional Fees: .................................................................................................. None

FINANCIAL AID INFORMATION

GRADUATE DEADLINES, TUITION AND FEES

Internship Opportunities: Check with department for availability. Department Awards and Grants: Dively Fellowship, W. Dale Fellowship and Premier Industry. Teaching and Research Assistantships: Three to five total in state and out of state, include tuition and stipend.

TOTAL MASTERS STUDENT COMPOSITION Spring 2008 US Citizens & Permanent Residents
Hispanics* Of any Race White African American Native American/ Pacific Islander Asian American Mixed Other / Dont know Non-US Citizens Non- Permanent Residents

Annual Student Enrollment Applied Accepted


Masters 59 55 -

Enrolled
66 66

07/08 08/09 07/08 08/09 07/08 08/09

Male 0 25 5 0 1 3 5 39

Female 2 14 4 0 1 4 3 28

Total 2 39 9 0 2 7 8

MASTERS DEGREE
Master of Urban Planning Design and Development
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail Dennis Keating, Director (216) 687-2298 w.keating@csuohio.edu

Year Initiated: 1990 PAB Accredited Degrees Granted through 5/17/09...........................................................265 Degrees Granted from 12/15/08 to 5/17/09 ..............................................29

Housing and Neighborhood Development Economic Development Environmental Sustainability Real Estate Development and Finance GIS Historic Preservation

Masters Specializations

Total Students

67

*Do not double count Hispanics; Hispanics also appear in the racial categories below.

ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 29

PLANNING FACULTY
Mittie Davis Jones
Associate Professor. Ph.D., Wayne State University (1985) Specializations: Citizen Participation, Community Development, Housing and Neighborhood Planning, Politics and Government.

Brian Mikelbank

Associate Professor. Ph.D., Ohio State University (2000) Specializations: Quantitative Spatial Analysis, Urban Geographic Information Systems, Urban Geography, Economic Geography. http://urban.csuohio.edu/~mik/

b.mikelbank@csuohio.edu

(216) 687-3861

m.d.jones97@csuohio.edu

Robert Simons

Joel A. Elvery

Assistant Professor. Ph.D. University of Maryland (2004). Specializations: Labor Economics, Urban Economics, Public Policy.

Professor. Ph.D., University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill (1990). Specializations: Brownfield Redevelopment, Real Estate Development, Urban and Regional Economics.

(216) 687-2259

j.elvery@csuohio.edu

(216) 687-5258

r.simons@csuohio.edu

Edward W. Hill

Professor. Ph.D., Massachusetts Institute of Technology (1981) Specializations: Economic Development Planning, Urban Economics, Regional Economics.

(216) 687-2174

e.hill@csuohio.edu

OTHER AFFILIATED FACULTY


Mark Salling
Research Faculty. Ph.D., Kent State University (1982). Specializations: Demography, Geographic Information Systems.

Sung-Gheel Jang

Assistant Professor. Ph.D. University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (2005). Specializations: GIS, Environmental and Regional Land Use.

(216) 687-5597

s.jang75@csuohio.edu

(216) 687-3716

m.salling@csuohio.edu

Sanda Kaufman

Michael Spicer

Professor. Ph.D., Carnegie Mellon University (1985) Specializations: Citizen Participation, Computer Applications, Quantitative Methods, Conflict Management. http://urban.csuohio.edu/~sanda/

Professor. Ph.D., Ohio State University (1974). Specializations: Politics and Governance, Public Management/Strategic Planning, Urban and Regional Economics.

(216) 687-3571

m.spicer@csuohio.edu

(216) 687-2367

s.kaufman@csuohio.edu

Alan Weinstein

Professor. JD University of Pennsylvania (1968); Ph.D., University of California-Berkeley (1978) Specializations: Community Development, Housing and Neighborhood Planning, Planning Law.

W. Dennis Keating

Associate Professor. J.D. University of California-Berkeley (1977). Specializations: Planning Law.

(216) 687-3758

alan.weinstein@law.csuohio.edu

(216) 687-2298

w.keating@csuohio.edu

Wendy A. Kellogg

Professor. Ph.D., Cornell University (1993) Specializations: Citizen Participation, Environmental Land Use Planning, Coastal Management, Smart Growth. http://urban.csuohio.edu/~wendy/wendy.htm

FYI

(216) 687-5265

w.kellogg@csuohio.edu

Norm Krumholz

Professor. M.C.R.P., Cornell University (1965). Specializations: Community Development, Housing/Neighborhood Planning, Metropolitan/ Regional Planning, Planning Practice and Politics.

(216) 687-6946

n.krumholz@csuohio.edu

Sugie Lee

Assistant Professor. Ph.D., Georgia Institute of Technology (2005). Specializations: Land Use Planning, Growth Management, Urban/ Metropolitan Spatial Analysis, GIS. http://urban.csuohio.edu/faculty/lee

(216) 687-2381

s.lee56@csuohio.edu

Page 30 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY
Graduate Program in Urban Planning
413 Avery Hall 1172 Amsterdam Avenue New York, NY 10027

MA/MS PAB

Ph.D.

ACSP Member: FULL

Housing and Community Development Urban Economic Development International Planning & Development Physical Planning/ Transportation Planning
MASTERS ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS
University Admission Policy Application form (available on-line), 3 letters of recommendation, transcripts from undergraduate school, GRE scores No minimum requirements 450 verbal/450 quantitative 600 on paper test N/A N/A

Masters Specializations

Phone 212 854 3518 Fax 212 864 0410 E-mail: urbanplanning@columbia.edu www.urban.columbia.edu Dr. Robert Beauregard, Department Chair Phone 212 854 6280 rab48@columbia.edu

University Undergrad GPA Minimum GRE Minimum TOEFL Ranking in Undergraduate Class Department Requirements

PROGRAM INFORMATION
GRADUATE DEADLINES, TUITION AND FEES
Deadline for Fall Admission .......................................................................January 15 No Spring Admission Financial Aid Deadline ...............................................................................January 15 In-State Tuition and Fees 2008-2009 ......................................$ 19,350 per semester Out-of-State and Intl Tuition & Fees .....................................$ 19,350 per semester Application Fee .................................................................................................... $ 75 Additional Fees .................................................................................................... N/A

MASTERS GRADUATION Requirements

Hours of core curriculum:.........................................................................27 Hours of studio (included in core) ..............................................................6 Hours of restricted electives .....................................................................24 Hours of specialization (minimum) ............................................................9 Hours of thesis (included in core) ..............................................................6 Total Required Hours in Planning Program: ............................................60

FINANCIAL AID INFORMATION

Financial aid available, need-based. Apply directly to Columbia GSAPP

DOCTORAL DEADLINES, TUITION AND FEES

Admission Deadline ......................................................................................January 1 Financial Aid Deadline ........................................................................................ N/A In-State Tuition and Fees ..........................................................$ 17,182 per semester Out-of-State/ International Tuition & Fees .............................$ 17,182 per semester Application Fee .................................................................................................... $ 75 Additional Fees .....................................................................Approx. $3000 per year

TOTAL MASTERS STUDENT COMPOSITION 2009-2010 US Citizens & Permanent Residents


Hispanics* Of any Race White African American Native American/ Pacific Islander Asian American Mixed Other / Dont know Non-US Citizens Non- Permanent Residents

Male 1 19 2 0 1 0 2 13 38

Female 3 24 2 0 6 0 6 16 57

Total 4 43 4 0 7 0 8 29

Annual Student Enrollment Applied


Masters Doctoral 221 50 270 56

Accepted
166 3 150 3

Enrolled
49 3 53 1

07/08 08/09 07/08 08/09 07/08 08/09

MASTERS DEGREE
Masters of Science in Urban Planning Graduate School of Architecture, Planning and Preservation
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail Janet W. Foster, Associate Director for Planning and Preservation (212) 854-3518 jf2060@columbia.edu

Year Initiated: 1943 PAB Accredited Degrees Granted 1982 through May 09 .................................................740

Total Students

95

*Do not double count Hispanics; Hispanics also appear in the racial categories below. ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 31

Dual Masters Programs:

MSUP and Masters in Historic Preservation (3 years) MSUP and Masters in Architecture (4 years) MSUP and Masters in Business Administration (3 years) MSUP and Masters in Public Health (3 years) MSUP and Masters in International Affairs (3 years) MSUP and Juris Doctor (Law) (4 years) MSUP and Masters of Social Work (3 years) Dual degrees require separate application and independent admission to both programs. Contact both program of a dual degree for appropriate information on application.

TOTAL DOCTORAL STUDENT COMPOSITION 2008-2009 US Citizens & Permanent Residents


Hispanics* Of any Race White African American Native American/ Pacific Islander Asian American Mixed Other / Dont know Non-US Citizens Non- Permanent Residents

Male 0 7 1 0 0 0 0 3 11

Female 0 5 0 0 2 0 0 4 11

Total 0 12 1 0 2 0 0 7 22

DOCTORAL DEGREE
Ph.D. in Urban Planning Graduate School of Art and Sciences
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail Dr. Lance Freeman, Director for PhD Program (212) 854-8495 LF182@columbia.edu

Degrees Granted through May 2008 .......................................................52

Total Students

*Do not double count Hispanics; Hispanics also appear in the racial categories below.

Housing, International Development Land Use & Environment Urban Economic Development Urban Redevelopment

Doctoral Specializations

PLANNING FACULTY
Robert Beauregard, Director
Professor of Urban Planning. Ph.D., Department of City and Regional Planning, Cornell University, (1975), B.A. Architecture, Department of Design, Rhode Island School of Design, (1969). Specializations: Postwar Urbanization, Economic Restructuring of Urban Environments, the post-Apartheid City.

rab48@columbia.edu

DOCTORAL ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS


University Admission Policy: Minimum GRE: Departmental Requirement:

Must have 3.5 GPA. If English is not the native language, TOEFL score of 600. 1200 Masters degree in Planning or related field.

Associate Professor of Urban Planning (tenured). Ph.D., City and Regional Planning, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, December (1997). Master of Regional Planning, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, December (1991), Bachelor of Science, Business Administration, State University of New York at Buffalo, December, (1987). Specializations: Housing, Affordable Housing, Gentrification, Neighbhorhood Revitalization.

Lance Freeman

DOCTORAL GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

lf182@columbia.edu

Hours of core ............................................................................................21 Hours of Thesis ....................................................................................... 24 Hours of Restricted Electives ....................................................................... Hours of Unrestricted Electives .................................................................... Other .........................................................................................................27 Total Required Hours in Planning Program .............................................72

Sigurd Grava

Professor Emeritus of Urban Planning. Ph.D., Transportation Planning, Columbia University, (1965). Master of Urban Planning, Columbia University, (1957), B.S., Civil Engineering, City College of New York, (1955). Dr. Gava has taught a full range of graduate courses in planning since (1960). Specializations: Urban Transportation, Physical Services Infrastructure, Systemic Planning Theory, Land-Use Controls, Computer Use and Modeling, Developing Countries.

sg19@columbia.edu

Page 32 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

Assistant Professor of Urban Planning (nontenured, tenure track). Graduate School of Architecture, Planning and Preservation, Columbia University (2008-). Assistant Professor of Urban Planning (tenure-track), School of Policy, Planning, and Development, University of Southern California (2002-2008). Ph.D. in Architecture (2002), University of California, Berkeley. Master of Architecture, University of California, Berkeley (1994). MSc in Physical Planning and Urban Design, Universidad Central de Venezuela (1993). Specializations: International Planning, Latin American Planning, Urban Design, Social and Cultural Aspects of Planning and Place-making.

Clara Irazabal

OTHER AFFILIATED FACULTY


Moshe Adler
Adjunct Assistant Professor of Urban Planning. Ph.D. Economics, U.C.L.A., Los Angeles, California, (1982), M.A. Economics, Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Israel, (1976), B.Sc. Mathematics, Tel-Aviv University, Tel-Aviv, Israel, (1972). Specializations: Urban Economics, Quantitative Techniques for Planners

cei2108@columbia.edu

David King

Assistant Professor of Urban Planning (nontenured, tenure track). Graduate School of Architecture, Planning and Preservation, Columbia University. PhD Urban Planning, UCLA (2008), MURP Transportation planning and policy, Humphrey Institute of Public Affairs, University of Minnesota (2003). Specializations: Transportation Finance and Planning, Travel Behavior, Urban Governance and the Role of Public Policy in Adopting New Transportation Technologies.

Adjunct Assistant Professor of Urban Planning. M.Arch. Columbia University (2005). B.S. Design, Arizona State University College of Architecture & Environmental Design, (2002). Specialization: Digital Design for Planners

Tim Boyle

Richard Froelich

dk2475@columbia.edu

Peter Marcuse

Professor Emeritus of Urban Planning. Ph.D., University of California, Berkeley (1972), J.D., Yale Law School, (1952), M.A. Columbia University,(1963), M.U.S., (Master of Urban Studies), Yale School of Architecture, Department of City Planning, (1968), B.A., Harvard College (1948). Specialization: Social Justice in Planning.

Adjunct Assistant Professor of Urban Planning. Columbia College (1985), Columbia University School of Law (1988). Richard Froelich has been employed at the New York Housing Development Corporation as Senior Vice President and General Counsel since 2003. Prior to that he worked with the New York State Housing Finance Agency and the State of New York Mortgage Association. He is a member and past presdient of the American Bar Association's Forum on Affordable Housing and Community Development Law. His specializations are public financing of housing and the legal issues related to public-private development projects.

Briavel Holcomb

pm35@columbia.edu

Elliott Sclar

Professor of Urban Planning (tenured). PhD Economics, (1972); M.A. Tufts, (1966); BA Hofstra, (1963). Specializations: Economic Development, International Development, Transportation Planning

Adjunct Assistant Professor of Urban Planning. Ph.D. Geography, University of Colorado (1972). Master of Arts in Geography, University of Colorado (1967). Diploma of Education, Oxford University, England (1964). B.Sc., Geography, University of Nottingham (1963). Specializations: Geography, womens issues in planning; planning for tourism and planning in cyberspace.

eds2@columbia.edu

Andrea Kahn

Assistant Professor of Urban Planning (nontenured, tenure track). Director of the Technological Change and Urban Social Policy Research Unit, Columbia University. Ph.D. Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Certificate, Economics, Graduate Institute of International Studies, Geneva, Switzerland. M.S. Physics, Yale University, B.A. Math & Physics, Smith College. Specializations: Industrial and Echnological Change and their links to social policies, health care and skills development. Also Institutional and Development theories, Microeconomics Research Design and Methodology.

Smita Srinivas

Adjunct Professor of Architecture. M.Arch, Princeton University; BA Bennington College. Specialization: Design for presentations; teaching architects and urban designers to articulate the merits of a strong idea to the public through presentaton skills and graphics.

Mohammad Karamouz

ss3079@columbia.edu

Assistant Professor of Urban Planning (nontenured, tenure track). Director of the Community, Capital and the City Action Research Lab (C3ARL), Columbia University. Ph.D. Urban Planning and Sociology, Rutgers University (2006), MBA Economics and Organizational Behavior, New York University (2000). Specializations: Local Economic Development, Neighborhood Change, Entrepreneurship and Neighborhood Economies, and race as a feature of socio-spatial vision and structure.

Stacey Sutton

Adjunct Assistant Professor of Urban Planning. Ph.D. Civil Engineering, Pudue University (1983); M.Sc. Environmental Engineering and Water Resources, George Washington Unviersity (1979); B.Sc. Civil Engineering, Shiraz University, Iran (1977). Professor Karamouz teaches Civil Engineering at Polytechnic University in Brooklyn, and has also been affiliated with University of Tehran, Pratt Institute, and Purdue University. Specializations: Infrastructure, Water Delivery Systems in Urban Areas, Water Sustainability Issues.

Floyd Lapp

Adjunct Associate Professor of Urban Planning. Masters and doctoral degrees in public administration, majoring in urban and regional planning, from New York Universitys Wagner School, (1964) and (1972). Specialization: Transportation Planning, Physical Planning.

ss3115@columbia.edu

ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 33

Peter Marcotullio

Adjunct Associate Professor of Urban Planning. Research Fellow at The United Nations University, New York, NY. Ph.D. Urban Planning, Columbia University, (1996), M.A. Geography, Columbia University, (1989). M.A. Biology/Ecology, University of Pennsylvania, (1983 B.A. Major: Psychology; Minor: Chemistry, University of Pennsylvania, (1979). Specialization: Environmental Planning.

Graham Trelstad

Adjunct Assistant Professor of Urban Planning. M.E.S., Yale University School of Forestry and Environmental Studies, (1994), B.A., Urban Studies, Columbia University, (1989), Member APA and ULI; AICP Certification. Specialization: Environmental Review and Planning.

Sarah Williams

Jonathan Martin

Adjunct Associate Professor of Urban Planning. Doctoral Candidate (ABD)Ph.D. City and Regional PlanningCornell University (2006 expected) Master of Regional Planning (MRP)Cornell University, 2001), BSD-Architecture, (1995 (Magna Cum Laude)Arizona State University, (1995). Specialization: Housing.

Adjunct Assistant Professor of Architecture and Urban Planning; Director of Geospatial Analysis and Remote Sensing, Columbia University Masters in City Planning, MIT, (2005), BA Clark University, (1997). Specialization: GIS, Mapping Urban Issues.

Lee Miller

Adjunct Associate Professor of Urban Planning. JD Harvard Law School. Lee Miller is the Managing Director of NegotiationPlus.com, and a Senior Consultant with The Cabot Advisory Group. He works with organizations and individuals on how they can more effectively lead and influence others. His specialization is negotiation, a key part of any planners skill set.

Lionel McIntyre

Nancy and George Rupp Associate Professor in the Practice of Community Development. M.S. Urban Planning, Columbia University, (1988), B.A. Dillard University, (1987). Director of the Planning Program, Columbia University GSAPP from (1993 through (1999. Specialization: Community Development.

Associate Professor of Sociomedical Sciences, Mailman School of Public Health. Ph.D. Epidemiology, Columbia University College of Medicine, (1993), M.P.H. Environmental Health, Rutgers University, (1988), M.T. Medical Technology, Morristown (NJ) Memorial Hospital, (1981), B.A. Biochemistry, University of Virginia, (1980). Specialization: Public Health Planning.

Mary Northridge

Adjunct Professor of Urban Planning. Executive Director, Legal Service of New York City. J.D. New York University School of Law, (1978), B.A. University of Pennsylvania, Urban Studies, (1972). Specializations: Planning Law, Law and Social Change.

Andrew Scherer

Adjunct Assistant Professor of Urban Planning. President of the American Planning Association, New York Metro Chapter; member AICP; Consultant to Community Organizations on Development, Planning and Social Services. M.A. Political Science, Columbia University, B.A. Brooklyn College. Specializations: Politics and Community Planning/Advocacy.

Ethel Sheffer

Kian Tajbakhsh

Visiting Professor of Urban Planning. Ph.D., Columbia University, Urban Planning (1993); University College, London University, Development Planning Unit (D.P.U.); M.Sc.. Economics in Urban Development Planning. 1984; Imperial College, London University, B.Sc. Civil Engineering (Minor: Economics) 1983. Iranian Kian Tajbakhsh works as an international consultant in the areas of local government reform, urban planning, social policy and social science research. Specializations: Municipal Governance, Democracy Promotion, and Political Islam.

Page 34 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

CORNELL UNIVERSITY
City and Regional Planning
106 Sibley Hall Ithaca, New York 14853 Phone (607) 255-4331 Fax (607) 255-1971 www.crp.cornell.edu

BA/BS

MA/MS PAB

Ph.D.

ACSP Member: FULL

UNDERGRADUATE ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS


Departmental Requirement: Suggested high school courses Minimum GPA: Not required. Minimum SAT or ACT Scores: Must take-no minimum score.

UNDERGRADUATE GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS


Hours of Core .......................................................................................... 22 Hours of Studio Courses ............................................................................ 0 Hours of Restricted Electives (major) ..................................................... 18 Hours of University Distribution Requirement ....................................... 33 Hours of Unrestricted Electives ............................................................... 67 Other (Language) ....................................................................................... 6 Total Required Hours to Graduate from the University ........................ 120 Thesis or Final Product ...........................................................Not Required

Kieran P. Donaghy, Chair Phone: 607-255-4331 E-mail: crpchair@cornell.edu

PROGRAM INFORMATION
Admission Deadline 2010-11-early dec. .......................................November 1, 2009 Admission Deadline 2010-11-regular dec. ........................................ January 1, 2010 Financial Aid Deadline 2010-11 ........................................................ January 2, 2010 Tuition and Fees: ...................................................................... $18,875 per semester Application Fee ......................................................................................................$70 Additional Fee-Activity Fee .......................................................... $102 per semester Admissions Deadline 2010-11 ......................................................... January 10, 2010 Financial Aid Deadline for 2010-11 ................................................ January 10, 2010 Tuition and Fees: (Masters) ..................................................... $12,350 per semester Tuition and Fees: (PhD)............................................................ $14,750 per semester Application Fee ......................................................................................................$70 Additional Fees .... $35 Activity per semester, $1,590 Health Insurance (12 Months)

UNDERGRADUATE DEADLINES, TUITION AND FEES

FINANCIAL AID INFORMATION

All Undergraduate aid is centrally administered through the University Financial Aid Office, all need-based.

MASTERS DEGREE
Master of Regional Planning
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail: Mildred Warner, Director of Graduate Studies (607) 255-6816 mew15@cornell.edu

GRADUATE DEADLINES, TUITION AND FEES

Annual Student Enrollment Applied


Undergraduate Masters (MRP) Masters (MA) Doctoral 71 182 35 62 73 240 24 77

Year Initiated: 1942 PAB Accredited Degrees Granted through 5/31/09.........................................................1248 Degrees Granted from 6/1/05 to 5/31/09 ................................................112

Accepted
40 109 21 11 43 137 15 9

Enrolled
28 34 8 5 29 58 8 6

08/09 09/10 08/09 09/10 08/09 09/10

Land Use, Environmental Planning and Design Historic Preservation Planning, Economic Development Planning: Communities and Regions, International Studies in Planning, Individualized Curriculum

Masters Specializations

MASTERS ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS


University Admission Policy: Minimum Undergraduate GPA: Minimum GRE: Minimum TOEFL:

UNDERGRADUATE DEGREE
BS in Planning Bachelor of Science in Urban and Regional Studies
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail: Richard S. Booth, Director (607) 255-4613 aap_admissions@cornell.edu

Ranking in Undergraduate Class: Departmental Requirement:

Bachelors degree from an accredited institution 3.0 General IBT (Internet Based TOEFL) Writing-20, Listening-15, Reading-20, Speaking-22 (University) Not Required No Requirements

Year Initiated: 1986 Degrees Granted through 5/31/09..........................................................558 Degrees Granted from 9/1/08 to 5/31/09 .................................................26

MASTERS GRADUATION Requirements

Undergraduate Specializations
Urban and Regional Studies

Hours of Core ..................................................................................... 20-26 Hours of Studio or Practice Related Courses .............................................4 Hours of Restricted Electives .....................................................................0 Hours of Unrestricted Electives ................................................................30 Total Required Hours in Planning Program .............................................60 Exam,Thesis or Final Product: ............ Oral exam on final writing project

ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 35

FINANCIAL AID INFORMATION


Tuition and stipend awards:

Includes Master of Regional Planning, Master of Historic Preservation and Ph.D


Grants and Loans: Teaching Assistants Sage PhD Fellowships: Clarence Stein Awards: FLAS Fellowships: Diversity Sage Fellowships: Provost South Africa Fellowship: Summer Internships and Travel Awards

TOTAL MASTERS STUDENT COMPOSITION 2009 2010 US Citizens & Permanent Residents
Hispanics* Of any Race White African American Native American/ Pacific Islander Asian American Mixed Other / Dont know Non-US Citizens Non- Permanent Residents

Graduate Teaching Research Specialists 62-1st year, 35-2nd year (11) (2) (non-competitive) (9) (contact Michael Tomlan) (0) (3) (0) (29)

Male 1 34 2 0 2 1 1 4 45

Female 3 31 1 0 7 3 2 5 52

Total 4 65 3 0 9 4 3 9

Historic Preservation Planning Program


Contact Person: Phone: E-mail: Michael Tomlan, Director (607) 255-7261 mat4@cornell.edu

Year Initiated: 1975 Degrees Granted through 5/31/09...........................................................180 Degrees Granted from 6/1/05 to 5/31/09 ..................................................27

Masters Specializations
Historic Preservation
MASTERS ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS
University Admission Policy: Minimum Undergraduate GPA: Minimum GRE: Minimum TOEFL: Ranking in Undergraduate Class: Departmental Requirement:

Total Students

97

Bachelors degree from an accredited institution 3.0 General IBT (Internet Based TOEFL) Writing-20, Listening-15, Reading-20, Speaking-22 (University) Not Required No Requirements

*Do not double count Hispanics; Hispanics also appear in the racial categories below.

DOCTORAL DEGREE
Doctor of Philosophy
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail: Mildred Warner, Director of Graduate Studies (607) 255-6816 mew15@cornell.edu

MASTERS GRADUATION Requirements

Hours of Core ...........................................................................................10 Hours of Studio or Practice Related Courses .............................................6 Hours of Restricted Electives .....................................................................0 Hours of Unrestricted Electives ................................................................44 Total Required Hours in Planning Program .............................................60 Exam,Thesis or Final Product: ............ Oral exam on final writing project.

Year initiated: 1951 Degrees Granted through 5/31/2009......................................................275 Degrees Granted from 6/1/2005 to 5/31/2009 .........................................18

Sibley Hall

New York Fall Field Trip

Sibley Dome

Rebuildingtheninth.org web page regarding Katrina

Page 36 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

Land Use and Environmental Planning, Historic Preservation Planning, Economic Development Planning: Communities and Regions, International Studies in Planning, Individualized Curriculum

Doctoral Specializations

PLANNING FACULTY
Lourdes Beneria
Professor. Lic., University of Barcelona (1961); M.Phil. (1974) and Ph.D; (1975), Columbia University. Specializations: Labor Markets, Womens Work, Globalization, Gender and Development, European Integration, Latin American Development. http://www.crp.cornell.edu

DOCTORAL ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS


University Admission Policy: Minimum Undergraduate GPA: Minimum GRE: Minimum TOEFL:

Ranking in Undergraduate Class: Departmental Requirement:

Masters degree from an accredited institution Very high General IBT (Internet Based TOEFL) Writing-20, Listening-15, Reading-20, Speaking-22 (University) Not Required No Requirements

(607) 255-2148

lb21@cornell.edu

Richard S. Booth

Director of Urban and Regional Studies Program, Professor. BA, Amherst College (1968); JD, George Washington University (1972). Specializations: Land Use and Environmental Law, Regional Land Use Planning, Critical Area Preservation, Historic Preservation Law, Environmental Politics. http://www.crp.cornell.edu

(607) 255-4025

rsb6@cornell.edu

Nancy Brooks
DOCTORAL GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS
Semesters in Residence...............................................................................6 Passing Qualifying Exam-Admission to Candidacy ..................... A-Exam Completion of Dissertation Defense of Dissertation................................................................... B-Exam

Visiting Associate Professor. BA, College of William and Mary (1985); Ph.D., University of Pennsylvania, (1995). Specializations: Public Economics, Urban Economics, Environmental Economics and Research Methods. http://www.crp.cornell.edu Professor. BA, University of Minnesota (1972); Ph.D., University of California, Berkeley (1983); Specializations: Labor Markets, Labor Flexibility, Economic Development, Media Industries, Market Governance, European Studies. http://www.crp.cornell.edu

Susan M. Christopherson

TOTAL DOCTORAL STUDENT COMPOSITION 2009-2010 US Citizens & Permanent Residents


Hispanics* Of any Race White African American Native American/ Pacific Islander Asian American Mixed Other / Dont know Non-US Citizens Non- Permanent Residents

(607) 255-8772

smc23@cornell.edu

Male 0 6 0 0 0 0 0 8

Female 1 6 2 0 0 0 0 10

Total 1 12 2 0 0 0 0 18

Associate Professor. AB (1978), M.Arch (1982, University of California, Berkeley. Specializations: Historic Preservation Design & Planning, Architecture, Cultural Landscapes. http://www.crp.cornell.edu

Jeffrey Chusid

(607) 254-8579

jmc286@cornell.edu

Pierre Clavel

Professor. AB, Haverford College (1957); MRP, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, (1959) and Ph.D. (1966), Cornell University. Specializations: Politics, Administration, Local Economic Development. http://www.crp.cornell.edu

(607) 255-6212

pc29@cornell.edu

Chair and Professor. BA, SUNY, Albany, (1978), MS (1984) PhD (1987, Cornell University. Specializations: Dynamic Systems Modeling, Globalization, Macroeconomic Policy, Regional Planning, International Conflict, Environmental Policy. http://www.crp.cornell.edu

Kieran Donaghy

(607) 254-4865

kpd23@cornell.edu

Total Students

14

19

33

*Do not double count Hispanics; Hispanics also appear in the racial categories below.

Professor. BS (1970), MS (1971), MCP (1975) and Ph.D. (1978), University of California at Berkeley. Specializations: Participatory Planning Process, Ethics and Deliberative Democracy, Public Dispute Resolution and Multi-party Mediated Negotiations, Oral Histories of Planning Practitioners. http://www.crp.cornell.edu

John Forester

(607) 255-5179

jff1@cornell.edu

ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 37

Ann Forsyth

Professor. BSc, University of Sydney (1985), MA University of California, Los Angeles (1989), Ph.D. Cornell University, (1993) Specializations: Social Aspects of Physical Planning and Urban Design, Urban and Environmental Theory, Gender and Diversity, Research Methods, Professional Ethics, Planning and Design Education. http://www.crp.cornell.edu

Faculty Director of Cornell Urban Scholars Program (CUSP),Sr. Lecturer. BA, Rice University (1971), University of Pennsylvania (1976), MCP. Specializations: Community economic development and program incubation efforts, Neighborhood development and residential displacement issues http://www.crp.cornell.edu

John Nettleton

David Funk

(607) 255-8210

jsn10@cornell.edu

Senior Lecturer and Director, Program in Real Estate. BA (1986) MA (1987) Ohio University, Ph.D. University of Wisconsin, (1999). Specializations: Use of Real Estate Gifts in Fundraising, Real Estate Transactions, Property Management, University Administration, International Education and Programs. http://www.crp.cornell.edu or http://www.realestate.cornell.edu Director of International Studies in Planning, Professor. BSCE, University of California, Berkeley (1963); Ph.D.,Cornell University (1968). Specializations: United States Urban Policy, Political Economy, International Urbanization, Development and Underdevelopment, Latin America and the Caribbean. http://www.crp.cornell.edu

Porus Olpadwala

William W. Goldsmith

Professor. MBA, University of Calcutta (1972); MRP (1976) and Ph.D. (1979), Cornell University. Specializations: Political Economy, Comparative International Development, International Urbanization, Technology Development and Transfer, Transnational Corporation, Asia & Western Europe http://www.crp.cornell.edu

(607) 255-2957

pdo1@cornell.edu

(607) 255-2333

wwg1@cornell.edu

Senior Lecturer. BS, Cornell University (1963); MBA, University of California (1967). Specializations: Urban Redevelopment and Large Scale Community Development. http://www.crp.cornell.edu or http://www.realestate.cornell.edu/

C. Brad Olson

(607) 255-1114

cbo3@cornell.edu AICP

Post-doctural Associate. University of North Carolina (2007) PhD, London School of Economics (1997) MS; Universidad de las Americas (Mexico) Bachelors (1994). Specializations: Economic development, Regional economics, globalization and trade openness, Poverty and inequality, Effect of corruption on economic growth http://www.crp.cornell.edu

Marcela Gonzalez-Rivas

Rolf Pendall

(607) 255-3489

mg265@cornell.edu

Associate Professor. BA, Kenyon College (1984); MSCRP, University of Texas, Austin (1989); Ph.D., University of California, Berkeley (1995). Specializations: Land Use Planning, State, Regional, and Local Growth Management, Zoning and Subdivision Regulation, Affordable Housing, Domestic (US) Environmental Planning & Policy. http://www.crp.cornell.edu

(607) 255-5561

rip17@cornell.edu

Neema Kudva

Associate Professor. Dip. Arch., CEPT, India (1989); M.Arch./ MCP (1993) and Ph.D. (2001), University of California, Berkeley. Specializations: International Development Planning, Non-Government Organizations, Community Based Planning Practices, International Urbanization. http://www.crp.cornell.edu

Arturo Sanchez

(607) 255-3939

nk78@cornell.edu

Assistant Professor. BA, St. Francis College, (1971), MA, New York University, (1974), MS, Columbia University (1982), PhD, Columbia University, (2003). Specialization: Latina/o Studies, Transnationalism, Immigration Theory, Latin American Urban Economic Restructuring, Global Cities. http://www.crp.cornell.edu

(607) 255-6226

as875@cornell.edu

Assistant Professor. BA, Pomona College, (1987), MA (1997) PhD (2006), University of California, Berkeley. Specializations: Racism and Space, City and Communities of Color, Asian American Studies, Social Movements, Racial Theory, Property. http://www.crp.cornell.edu

Clement Lai

(607) 254-6540

CKL28@cornell.edu

Assistant Professor. BA, Washington University, (1995), MLA, University of Washington, (2000), PhD, Rutgers University, (2006). Specialization: Environmental Planning, Social Context of Open Space: Preservation, Planning in International Comparison, Urban Design, Privatization of Public Space Provision. http://www.crp.cornell.edu

Stephen Schmidt

David Lewis

(607) 254-4846

sjs962@cornell.edu

Professor. BS (1962) and MS (1966), Stanford University; Ph.D., Cornell University (1973). Specializations: Science and Technology Policy in Developing Nations, Quantitative Methods for Policy Evaluation, Rural Development, Project Planning, Development Management, South Asia, Southeast Asia, Africa, and the Middle East. http://www.crp.cornell.edu

Michael Tomlan

(607) 255-0177

DBL2@cornell.edu

Director Historic Preservation Planning Program, Professor. B.Arch., University of Tennessee (1973); MA, Columbia University (1976); Ph.D., Cornell University (1983). Specializations: Building Conservation Technology, Documentation Methods for Preservation, History of the Preservation Movement, China, India, Canada. http://www.crp.cornell.edu

(607) 255-7261

mat4@cornell.edu

Page 38 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

Mildred Warner

Director Graduate Studies City and Regional Planning, Professor. BA, Oberlin College (1979); MS (1985) and Ph.D.(1997), Cornell University. Specializations: Community Development, Economic Development, State & Local Government Policy. http://www.crp.cornell.edu

(607) 255-6816

mew15@cornell.edu

Research Associate Professor. BA (1961), MS (1978) and Ph.D.(1988), Cornell University. Specializations: Environmental Planning, ,International Development & Planning, Natural Resource Planning, Political Economy, Politics and Governance. http://www.crp.cornell.edu

Barbara Lynch

(607) 255-2186

BDL5@cornell.edu

OTHER AFFILIATED FACULTY


Senior Lecturer. BS, Cornell University (1953); MBA, Harvard University (1957). Specializations: Commercial Real Estate Management and Marketing. http://www.crp.cornell.edu or http://www.realestate.cornell.edu

Robert Abrams

Professor Emeritus. AB, Dartmouth (1943); MRP, Cornell University (1947). Specializations: History of American City Planning. http://www.crp.cornell.edu

John Reps

(607) 255-5391

jwr2@cornell.edu

Sidney Saltzman

(607) 255-1748

rha3@cornell.edu

Iwan Azis

Professor. AB University of Indonesia (1978), MS (1982) and Ph.D. (1983), Cornell University. Specializations: Sectoral and Regional Modeling, CGE and Econometric Modeling for Policy Analysis and Forecasting, Decision-Making Analysis. http://www.crp.cornell.edu

Professor Emeritus. BS (1943), MS (1950) and Ph.D. (1963). Specializations: Regional Modeling, Public Policy Analysis & Management, Regional Development in Developing Nations, Indonesia, the Middle East, Russia. http://www.crp.cornell.edu

(607) 255-4271

ss47@cornell.edu FAICP

Stuart W. Stein

(607) 255-4271

ija1@cornell.edu

Sherene Baugher

Associate Professor and Acting Director Archaeology Program. BA (1969), MA, Hunter College, CUNY (1971); MA (1976), MUP (1976) and Ph.D. (1978), State University of New York, Stony Brook. Specializations: Historic Preservation, American Indians and Planners, Urban Planning History, Urban Archaeology, Canada and Mexico. http://www.crp.cornell.edu

Professor Emeritus. MCP, Massachusetts Institute of Technology (1954). Specializations: Urban Land Use, Planning Design, Housing, Historic Preservation, Local Government in Development, Urban Planning Practice. http://www.crp.cornell.edu

(607) 255-4331

sws8@cornell.edu

Roger Trancik

(607) 255-1648

sbb8@cornell.edu

Matthew Drennan

Professor Emeritus. MLA, Harvard University (1968). Specializations: Urban Design, Landscape Architecture & Environmental Planning, Spatial Design Theory and Analysis, International Studies in Scandinavia, Italy, and Panama. http://www.crp.cornell.edu

Professor Emeritus. BS, University of Detroit (1959); MA, University of Michigan (1962); Ph.D., New York University (1971). Specializations: Microeconomics, Public Finance, Basic Statistics, Urban Economics, Economic Transformation, Fiscal Conditions of Cities and States. http://www.crp.cornell.edu Professor Emeritus. BA, Temple University (1939), MA University of Chicago (1941), Ph.D., Harvard University (1943). Specializations: Regional Science and Policy Planning, Conflict-Management Procedures, Peace Science, General Social Science Theory & Methods. http://www.crp.cornell.edu

(607) 255-6229

rtt2@cornell.edu

Thomas Vietorisz

Walter Isard

Adjunct Professor. BA, Massachusetts of Technology (1952), Ph.D., Massachusetts Institute of Technology (1956). Specializations: Regional, Industrial and International Development, Human Resources/Corporate Strategy, International Joint Ventures. http://www.crp.cornell.edu

(607) 255-2333

tv12@cornell.edu

(607) 255-3306

wi11@cornell.edu

Executive Director of Cornell University Advance. BA Hebrew University (1994), M.Sc.Pl. (1998) and Ph.D. (2003), University of Toronto, Canada. Specializations: Human Capital & Regional Economic Development, Local & Regional Economic Development Policy & Planning, Sustainable Transportation Planning. http://www.crp.cornell.edu

Yael Levitte

(607) 255-6545

yl343@cornell.edu

ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 39

EASTERN WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY


Department of Urban Planning, Public and Health Administration
668 North Riverpoint Spokane, Washington 99202 Phone (509) 358-2230 Fax (509) 358-2267 E-mail: rmorgan@ewu.edu www.ewu.edu/x10390.xml Fred Hurand, Chair Phone (509) 358-2229 E-mail: fhurand@mail.ewu.edu

BA/BS PAB

MA/MS PAB

ACSP Member: FULL

UNDERGRADUATE ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS


Departmental Requirement: Minimum GPA: Minimum SAT or ACT Scores: None Required 2.0 Either SAT or ACT

UNDERGRADUATE GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

Hours of Core, Including Studio ............................................................. 73 Hours of Restricted Electives .................................................................. 17 Hours of Unrestricted Electives ............................................................... 28 Total Required Hours In Planning Program ............................................ 90 Total Required Hours to Graduate from University .............................. 180 Thesis or Final Product ............................................................ Not required

FINANCIAL AID INFORMATION

Two scholarships available, eligibility based on academics and need.

PROGRAM INFORMATION
Admission Deadline 2005-0 .................................................... No Deadline Financial Aid Deadline 2005-06 .............................................. No Deadline In-State Tuition and Fees ................................................. $1682 per quarter Out-of State Tuition and Fees .......................................... $4456 per quarter Application Fee .......................................................................................$50 Additional Fee.................................................................... $435 per quarter

MASTERS DEGREE
Master in Urban and Regional Planning
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail Fred Hurand, Chair (509) 358-2229 fhurand@mail.ewu.edu

UNDERGRADUATE DEADLINES, TUITION AND FEES

GRADUATE DEADLINES, TUITION AND FEES

Year Initiated: 1978 PAB Accredited Degrees Granted through 8/31/08...........................................................232 Degrees Granted from 9/11/08 to 8/31/09 ................................................11

Admission Deadline 2005-06 ...................................................No Deadline Financial Aid Deadline 2005-06 ...............................................No Deadline In-State Tuition and Fees .................................................$2492 per quarter Out-of-State Tuition and Fees..........................................$6010 per quarter Application Fee: ..................................................................................... $50 Additional Fees: .................................................................$435 per quarter

Masters Specializations
Tribal Planning Environmental Planning, Small Town Planning

Annual Student Enrollment


Applied Undergraduate Masters 20 17 20 19 Accepted 20 12 19 19 Enrolled 11 9 9 13
07/08 08/09 07/08 08/09 07/08 08/09

MASTERS ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS


University Admission Policy: Minimum Undergraduate GPA: Minimum GRE: Minimum TOEFL Ranking in Undergraduate Class: Departmental Requirement:

UNDERGRADUATE DEGREE
BA in Urban and Regional Planning
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail Fred A. Hurand, Chair and Undergraduate Advisor (509) 358-2229 fhurand@ewu.edu

None Required 3.0 Not Required Not Required Not Required Two letters of recommendation and a letter of interest.

MASTERS GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

Year Initiated: 1968 PAB Accredited Degrees Granted through 8/31/08...........................................................534 Degrees Granted from 9/1/08 to 8/31/09 ....................................................5

Hours of Core, including studio ...............................................................46 Hours of Restricted Electives .....................................................................0 Hours of Unrestricted Electives ................................................................26 Total Required Hours in Planning Program .............................................72 Exam,Thesis or Final Product: ......................... Comprehensive Exam and Research Report required

FINANCIAL AID INFORMATION

Undergraduate Specializations
Urban and Regional Planning
Page 40 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

Three work study grants available, eligibility based on academics and need. Two scholarships available, eligibility based on academics and need.

TOTAL MASTERS STUDENT COMPOSITION 2008-2009


U.S. Citizens & Permanent Residents Hispanics of Any Race White African American Native American/ Pacific Islander Asian American Mixed Other/Dont Know Non-US Citizens Total Students Male 0 17 0 0 1 0 0 0 18 Female 0 7 0 1 0 0 0 0 8 Total 0 24 0 1 1 0 0 0 26

Professor. AB, University of California, Los Angeles; MCP, San Diego State University; PhD, University of Washington. Specializations: Environmental Planning, Growth Management, Sustainable Communities, Comparative Urbanization.

Gabor Zovanyi

(509) 358-2228

gzovanyi@mail.ewu.edu

OTHER AFFILIATED FACULTY


Michael Folsom
Professor. BS, Portland State; MA, Michigan State; PhD, Michigan State. Specializations: Physical Geography, Wetlands Science, Environmental Planning.

(509) 359-2460

mfolsom@mail.ewu.edu

William Grimes

Lecturer. BA, University of California, Riverside; MURP, Cal State Pomona. Specializations: Urban Design, Land Development, Urban Morphology, Comparative Urbanization.

(509) 835-3770

bgrimes@studiocascade.com

Larry Luton

Professor. BS, University of Tennessee; MA, Claremont; PhD, Claremont. Specializations: Planning Methods, Public Administration.

(509) 358-2247

lluton@mail.ewu.edu

Terry Novak

Professor. BA, South Dakota State; MA, University of Colorado; PhD, University of Colorado. Specializations: Public Administration, Public Finance.

*Do not double count Hispanics; Hispanics also appear in the racial categories below.

(509) 358-2261

tnovak@mail.ewu.edu

PLANNING FACULTY
Charles Dotson
Lecturer. BA, Eastern Washington University; M. Environmental Science, Western Washington University. Specializations:Planning Administration.

Robert Quinn

Professor. BS, MS, PhD, Oregon State. Specializations: Physical Geography, Meteorology.

(509) 359-7050

rquinn@mail.ewu.edu

(509) 559-5818

charlesdotson48@cs.com

Daniel Turbeville

Professor. B.Arch, Ohio State; MUR, University of Washington; PhD, Pennsylvania State University. Specializations: Urban Design, Land Use Planning, Disaster Mitigation, Environment/Behavior Studies.

Fred A. Hurand

Professor. BS, University of South Carolina; MA, Western Washington University; PhD, Simon Fraser. Specializations: Physical Geography, Human Geography, Architectural History.

(509) 359-2270

dturbeville@mail.ewu.edu

(509) 358-2229

fhurand@mail.ewu.edu

Stacy Warren

William Kelley

Associate Professor. BA, University of Delaware; MA, Clark University; PhD, University of British Columbia. Specializations: GIS

Professor. BA, Pan American University; MURP, Texas A&M; ABD, University of Washington. Specializations: Transportation Planning, Planning Methods, Small Town Planning.

(509) 359-7962

swarren@mail.ewu.edu

Robert Zinke

(509) 358-2226

wkelley@mail.ewu.edu

Professor. BA, Washington State; MA, Drew University; PhD, New York University.

Richard Rolland

Lecturer. BS, Portland State; MURP, Eastern Washington University. Specializations: Tribal Planning, Tribal Transportation Planning.

Dick Winchell

Professor. BA, Wartburg College; MURP, University of ColoradoDenver; PhD, Arizona State University. Specializations: Community Development, Tribal Planning, Neighborhood Planning, Housing.

(509) 358-2214

dwinchell@mail.ewu.edu

ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 41

FLORIDA ATLANTIC UNIVERSITY


Urban and Regional Planning
111 East Las Olas, HEC, Suite 1009B Fort Lauderdale, Florida 33301 Phone (954) 762-5652 Fax (954) 762-5673 Email: durp@fau.edu http://www.fau.edu/surp Jaap Vos, Director Phone: (954) 762-5653 E-mail:jvos@fau.edu

PAB

BA/BS MA/MS PAB PAB

ACSP Member: FULL

UNDERGRADUATE ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS


School Requirement: Completion of Associate Degree or 60 credits of approved lower level college courses Minimum GPA: 2 (University) Minimum SAT or ACT Scores: 860-1140 (University)

UNDERGRADUATE GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

Hours of Core .......................................................................................... 39 Hours of Studio Courses ............................................................................ 3 Hours of Restricted Elective ...................................................................... 6 Hours of Unrestricted Elective ................................................................ 15 Total Required Hours In Planning Program ............................................ 60 Thesis or Final Product ............................................................Final Project

FINANCIAL AID INFORMATION


None

PROGRAM INFORMATION
Admission Deadline ......................................................................................... June 1 Financial Aid Deadline ...................................................................................... None In-State Tuition and Fees: .......................................$122.06 credit hour per semester Out-of-State/International Tuition and Fees: ..........$579.82 credit hour per semester Other: .........................................................................................................................0 Application Fee: .....................................................................................................$30 Additional Fees: .......................................................................Lab fees approx. $100 Admission Deadline 2009-10 for Masters program .......................................... July 1 Financial Aid Deadline 2009-10 for Masters program............................ February 15 In-State Tuition and Fees: .......................................$270.40 credit hour per semester Out-of-State/International Tuition and Fees: ..........$915.87 credit hour per semester Other: .........................................................................................................................0 Application Fee ......................................................................................................$30 Additional Fees: .......................................................................Lab fees approx. $100

UNDERGRADUATE DEADLINES, TUITION AND FEES

MASTERS DEGREE
Master of Urban and Regional Planning
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail: Jaap Vos, Director (954) 762-5653 jvos@fau.edu

GRADUATE DEADLINES, TUITION AND FEES

Year Initiated: 1989 PAB Accredited Degrees Granted through 8/31/08...........................................................159 Degrees Granted from 9/1/08 to 8/31/09 ....................................................9

Annual Student Enrollment Applied


Undergraduate Masters 55 59 88 64

Economic Development and Tourism, Environmental Planning,


MASTERS ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS
University Admission Policy: Minimum Undergraduate GPA: Minimum GRE: Minimum TOEFL Ranking in Undergraduate Class: School Requirement:

Masters Specializations

Accepted Enrolled
35 26 50 27 29 15 39 17

07/08 08/09 07/08 08/09 07/08 08/09

UNDERGRADUATE DEGREE
Bachelor of Urban and Regional Planning
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail: Asli Ceylan Oner, Coordinator (954) 762-5652 aoner@fau.edu

Bachelors degree from an accredited institution & GPA 2.5 3.0 (Department) 1000 550 Not Required Personal statement and two reference letters

MASTERS GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

Year Initiated:1997 Degrees Granted through 8/31/08...........................................................186 Degrees Granted from 9/1/08 to 8/31/09 ..................................................27

Hours of Core ...........................................................................................30 Hours of Studio or Practice Related Courses .............................................9 Hours of Restricted Electives .....................................................................9 Hours of Unrestricted Electives ..................................................................9 Total Required Hours in Planning Program: ............................................48 Exam,Thesis or Final Product: ..........................................Planning Project

Page 42 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

10 2 to 4

FINANCIAL AID INFORMATION

1 Eligibility Criteria:

Excellence in Planning Scholarships Environmental Growth Management Fellowships per Year. Innovation in planning GPA above 3.2 GRE above 1200

Professor. BS, University of the West Indies; MS, University of Puerto Rico; Ph.D., University of Massachusetts, Amherst. Specializations: GIS and Planning Technology, Emergency Management.

Ann-Margaret Esnard

(954) 762-5646

aesnard@fau.edu

TOTAL MASTERS STUDENT COMPOSITION 2008-2009 US Citizens & Permanent Residents


Hispanics* Of any Race White African American Native American/ Pacific Islander Asian American Mixed Other / Dont know Non-US Citizens Non- Permanent Residents

Yanmei Li

Assistant Professor, Ph.D., University of Ohio State. MA, Beijing Normal University in China. Specializations: Statistics, Geography and Urban Planning.

(954) 762-5037

yli22@fau.edu

Male 4 13 1 0 0 0 0 1 19

Female 6 9 5 1 1 0 0 1 23

Total 10 22 6 1 1 0 0 2 42

Assistant Professor. Ph.D., University of Cincinnati. MA, Indiana University, Purdue University, Indianapolis. Specializations: GIS Applications, GIS Data Collection, Environmental Modeling.

Diana Mitsova

(954) 762-5674

dmitsova@fau.edu

Assistant Professor. Ph.D., University of Virginia Tech. MA, London School of Economics and Political Science, London. Specializations: Globalization Planning and Governance of Global Cities.

Asli Ceylan Oner

(954) 762-5357

aoner@fau.edu

FYI
The School of Urban and Regional Planing is a locus of scholars, teachers, practitioners, agents and students committed to the continuous improvement of urban regions and the planning enterprise through research, teaching and service. The School provides an environment to discuss, develop and disseminate new ideas and concepts, and contribute to the practice of planning directed towards a future that is environmentally, economically and humanly beneficial. The focus of our work relies on the recognition and use of multi-scalar connections and interactions of systems and planning activities including policy framework development, participatory decision-making and community stewardship. The School seeks to exploit the potential of emerging technologies and collaborative engagement in creative and innovative ways. Current initiatives include global urban network's climate change, metropolitan form, disaster management, place making, healthy cities and housing market issues.

Total Students

*Do not double count Hispanics; Hispanics also appear in the racial categories below.

PLANNING FACULTY
Jaap Vos
Associate Professor. MS, Wageningen University; Ph.D., University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. Specializations: Environmental Planning, Equity, Sustainable Development, Climate Change.

(954) 762-5653

jvos@fau.edu

Assistant Professor. Ph.D., University of Melbourne. MA, University of Melbourne, Australia. Specializations: Architecture and Urban Design theory, Sustainable Urban Design.

Kasama Polakit

(954) 762-5655

kpolakit@fau.edu

David Prosperi

Professor. AB Geography, Villanova University; MA, Temple University; Ph.D., Indiana University. Specializations: Citizen Participation and Internet, E-Government, Economic Development.

(954) 762 5642

prosperi@fau.edu

ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 43

FLORIDA STATE UNIVERSITY


Department Of Urban & Regional Planning
113 Collegiate Loop Tallahassee, Florida 32306-2280 Phone (850) 644-4510 Fax (850) 645-4841 durp@coss.fsu.edu http://fsu.edu/~durp Timothy S. Chapin, Department Chair Phone: (850) 644-4510 E-mail: tchapin@fsu.edu

MA/MS PAB

Ph.D.

ACSP Member: FULL

MASTERS GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

Hours of Core ...........................................................................................21 Capstone (Research paper, studio or thesis) ...............................................3 Hours of Restricted Electives ...................................................................12 Hours of Unrestricted Electives ................................................................12 Other ...........................................................................................................0 Total Required Hours in Planning Program .............................................48

FINANCIAL AID INFORMATION

1-3 University Fellows, stipend of $18,000, IS/OS tuition. Based on GRE upward of 1300; outstanding GPA. 1 Doctoral Presidential Fellow, stipend of $23,000, IS/OS tuition. Based on GRE upward of 1300; outstanding GPA. 3-6 Doctoral awards, stipend of $13,500, IS/OS tuition. Based on merit and need. 4-7 Research Assistants, stipend of $6,500, IS/OS tuition. Based on merit and need. 2 Transit fellows, stipend of $15,000, IS/OS tuition. Awarded to outstanding students wishing to pursue careers in public transportation planning. Cooperative Internship awards, stipend of $7,500-$8,200, IS/OS tuition. Based on merit and need.

PROGRAM INFORMATION
GRADUATE DEADLINE, TUITION AND FEES
Admission Only Deadline (US) Fall term ......................................................... July 1 Admission and Financial Aid (US) Fall term.. .....................February 15 Admission and Financial Aid (International) Fall term......................... November 15 In-state Tuition and Fees Per Term ................................................................... $3,370 Out-of-state Tuition and Fees Per Term ......................................................... $10,946 Application Fee ...................................................................................................... $30 Additional Fees .......................................................................................................... 0

Annual Student Enrollment Applied Masters Doctoral


150 33 130 29

Accepted
92 7 72 8

Enrolled
60 3 49 3

07/08 08/09 07/08 08/09 07/08 08/09

MASTERS DEGREE
Master in Urban and Regional Planning
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail Jeffrey R. Brown (850) 644-4510 jrbrown3@fsu.edu

TOTAL * MASTERS STUDENT COMPOSITION 2008-2009 US Citizens & Permanent Total Male Female Residents
Hispanics* Of any Race White African American Native American/ Pacific Islander Asian American Mixed Other / Dont know Non-US Citizens Non- Permanent Residents

6 47 10 1 2 0 1 1 62

3 33 6 0 3 0 1 0 43

9 80 16 1 5 0 2 1 105

Year Initiated: 1965 PAB Accredited Degrees Granted through 12/31/08......................................................1,141 Degrees Granted from 01/01/08 to 12/31/08 ............................................34

Environmental and Natural Resource Planning, Growth Management and Comprehensive Planning, Housing and Community Development, Transportation Planning, Planning for Developing Areas
MASTERS ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS
University Admission Policy: Minimum Undergraduate GPA: Minimum GRE: Minimum TOEFL Ranking in Undergraduate Class: Departmental Requirement: Bachelors from an accredited institution 3.0 1000 550 Not Required No Requirement

Masters Specializations

Total Students

*Do not double count Hispanics; Hispanics also appear in the racial categories below.

Page 44 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

DOCTORAL DEGREE
Urban and Regional Planning
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail Rebecca S. Miles (850) 644-4510 rmiles@fsu.edu

TOTAL DOCTORAL STUDENT COMPOSITION 2008-2009 US Citizens & Permanent Residents


Hispanics* Of any Race White African American Native American/ Pacific Islander Asian American Mixed Other / Dont know Non-US Citizens Non- Permanent Residents

Male 0 3 1 0 0 0 0 4 8

Female 0 3 1 0 0 0 0 4 8

Total 0 6 2 0 0 0 0 8 16

Year initiated: 1972 Degrees Granted through 12/31/2008......................................................49 Degrees Granted from 01/01/08 to 12/31/08 .............................................3 Dissertations Granted from 01/01/2008 to 12/31/2008 1. Housing and Urban Development in a Post-Soviet City: A Case Study of Vilnius, Lituhania. 2. Social Capital and Philanthropic Contributions to Community Development Organizations: A Case of Florida's Neighborhood Assistance Program 3. Means, Ends and the Constitution of 'Good' Planning: Evaluating the Tax Increment Finaincing Approach to Redevelopment in Florida.

Alternative Transportation in the Modern City, Built Environment and Public Health, Environmental and Natural Hazards Planning Strategies, Growth Management and Comprehensive Planning, Race and Planning, Social and Spatial Contexts of Urban Change, and Transportation and Accessibility.
DOCTORAL ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS
Minimum GRE: Minimum TOEFL: Minimum GPA: Departmental Requirement: 1000 550 3.0 Masters degree in urban planning, urban studies, environmental studies, policy science, law, social science.

Doctoral Specializations

Total Students

*Do not double count Hispanics; Hispanics also appear in the racial categories below.

PLANNING FACULTY
Ivonne Audirac
Associate Professor. B.Arch., Technologico de Monterrey, MX (1978); M.A., Colorado State University (1982); MURP and Ph.D., University of Florida (1987). Specializations: Land Use/Growth Management; Environmental Planning; International Development. http://www.fsu.edu/~durp (850) 644-4510 iaudirac@fsu.edu

DOCTORAL GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

Hours of Theory ........................................................................................21 Hours of Studio or Practice Related Courses .............................................0 Application Area .......................................................................................12 Methods.......................................................................................................9 Dissertation ...............................................................................................24 Total ..........................................................................................................66 Exams or Written Requirements: Qualifying and Comprehensive Exams

Jeffrey Brown

Associate Professor. BA (1996), MA (1998) and Ph.D., UCLA (2003). Specializations: Transportation Planning, Methods, Geographic Information Systems. http://www.fsu.edu/~durp (850) 644-4510 jrbrown3@fsu.edu

Associate Professor and Chair. BA, Emory University (1992); MCP, Georgia Institute Technology (1994); Ph.D., University of Washington (1999). Specializations: Economic Development, Infrastructure/Public Services, Land Use/Growth Management, Quantitative Methods. http://www.fsu.edu/~durp (850) 644-4510 tchapin@fsu.edu

Timothy Chapin

ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 45

Christopher Coutts

Assistant Professor. B.C.H., New Mexico State University (1997); M.P.H., New Mexico State University (2003); Ph.D., University of Michigan (2006). Specializations: Community Health and Health Behavior. http://fsu.edu/~durp (850) 644-4510 ccoutts@fsu.edu

Professor. AB, University of California, Davis (1968); MCP, University of California, Berkeley (1970); Ph.D., University of California, Irvine (1987). Specializations: Transportation Policy and Analysis, Planning History, Transportation Methods. http://www.fsu.edu/~durp (850) 644-4510 glthompson@fsu.edu

Gregory Thompson

Robert Deyle

Professor. BA, Dartmouth College (1972); MS, Duke University (1977); Ph.D., State University of New York, Syracuse (1987). Specializations: Environmental Planning and Policy Analysis, Plan Implementation, Geographic Information Systems, Natural Resource Planning. http://www.fsu.edu/~durp (850) 644-4510 rdeyle@fsu.edu

OTHER AFFILIATED FACULTY


Karen Jumonville
Adjunct. B.S., Florida State University (1994); MSP, Florida State University )1997). Specializations: Growth Management, Land Use and Environmental Planning.

Steve Leitman

Petra Doan

Associate Professor. BA, Haverford College (1977); MRP (1984); Ph.D. (1988), Cornell University. Specializations: Gender Studies and Planning, International Development, Infrastructure/Public Services, Metropolitan/Regional Planning and Rural Development. http://www.fsu.edu/~durp (850) 644-4510 pdoan@fsu.edu Senior Planner: B.A., University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill (2001), M.S.P. Florida State University (2004). Specialization: Transportation planning. http://fsu.edu/~durp (850) 644-4510 pkoeppel@fsu.edu

Adjunct. B.A., Florida Atlantic University (1972); M.S.P., Florida State University (1977). Specializations: Environmental Planning.

Tom Taylor

Adjunct. BA, Iowa State University (1970); MS, New Orleans University (1980); Ph.D., Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University (1989). Specializations: Negotiation and Conflict Management. http://consensus.fsu.edu

Peter Koeppel

FYI
FSU DURP is the oldest accredited planning program in the State of Florida and since 1965 has graduated over 1,200 students with Masters and Ph.D.'s in urban and regional planning. As such, FSU DURP is one of the largest producers of planners in the nation. FSU DURP's faculty are dedicated to preparing their Master's and Ph.D. students for careers as leaders in planning practice and university teaching and research. The program has also added three certificate programs that reflect interest from students for training in specific areas in demand by employers. Masters and PhD students can earn certificates in Conflict Resolution, Real Estate, and Urban Design. These certificates build upon DURPs connections to other campus units, including the Florida Conflict Resolution Consortium and the College of Business. 90-100 percent of FSU DURP's master's students obtain planning positions within a few months of graduation and recent Ph.D. graduates have obtained planning school teaching positions at the University of Iowa, Oklahoma University, Texas A and M University, University of Minnesota, Izmir Institute of Technology, University of Toledo, and Queensland University of Technology. Graduates of both programs are now employed in 49 states and over 38 foreign nations as professional staff in private consulting firms, development companies, law firms, universities, research organizations, and in local, state, regional, and national offices. FSU DURP endeavors to attract a large and diverse set of students to urban planning. In recent years, approximately half of the incoming graduate students have received financial aid generated by the Department. Much of this aid comes from sources external to Florida State such as grants, contracts, and gifts.

Assistant Professor. B.B.A., Howard University (1987); M.C.R.P., Morgan State University, (1995); Ph. D., Rutgers - The State University of New Jersey (2001). Specializations: Housing and Community Development, Role of Non-Profits in Community Development. http://fsu.edu/~durp (850) 644-4510 jslowe@.fsu.edu

Jeffrey S. Lowe

Rebecca Miles

Professor. BA, Harvard University (1977); MRP (1983); Ph.D. (1988), Cornell University. Specializations: Gender Studies and Planning, International Development, Rural Development, Community Health Planning. http://www.fsu.edu/~durp (850) 644-4510 rmiles@fsu.edu

Melissa Saunders

Planner in Residence. B.A., University of Wisconsin, Madison (1981); M.A. Rutgers University, New Brunswick (1986); M.C.P., University of Pennyslvania (2001); Ph.D., University of Pennyslvania (2008). Specializations: Urban Design and Site Planning, Land Use Planning http://www.fsu.edu/~durp (850) 644-4510 msaunders@fsu.edu

Page 46 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

FROSTBURG STATE UNIVERSITY


Department of Geography
101 Braddock Road Frostburg, MD 21432 Phone: 301-687-4369 Fax: 301-687-4495 http://www.frostburg.edu/dept/geog/ Dr. Craig Caupp, Department Chair Phone: 301-687-4755 E-mail:ccaupp@frostburg.edu

BS

ACSP Member: ASSOCIATE

UNDERGRADUATE GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

General Education Program ......................................................................40 Introductory Level Courses ......................................................................25 Professional Core Courses ........................................................................34 Major Electives ...........................................................................................6 Advanced Planning Focus ..........................................................................6 Total Required Hours in Planning Program ..........................................120 Thesis or internship......................................................................... optional

FINANCIAL AID INFORMATION:

PROGRAM INFORMATION
GRADUATE DEADLINE, TUITION AND FEES
Admission Deadline .......................................................................................... rolling Financial Aid Deadline .....................................................................................April 1 In-State Tuition and Fees ..............................................................$3275 per semester Contiguous County Tuition and Fees ...........................................$6235 per semester Out-of-State Tuition and Fees.......................................................$8081 per semester Application Fee ...................................................................................................... $30

Students are eligible for numerous need and merit based scholarships. In addition, the endowed Edith and William Bullamore Scholarships are limited to Urban and Regional Planning majors. Call the Financial Aid Office at (301) 687- 4301.

UNDERGRADUATE DEGREE
Bachelor of Science (with a major in Environmental Analysis and Planning)
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail: Dr. Craig Caupp (301) 687-4755 ccaupp@frostburg.edu

Annual Student Enrollment


07/08 07/08

Undergraduate

53

55

Year initiated: 1980.............................................................Not accredited Degrees Granted through 8/31/09...........................................................200 Degrees Granted from 9/1/08 to 8/31/09 .................................................. 8

UNDERGRADUATE DEGREE
Bachelor of Science in Urban and Regional Planning
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail Dr. Henry W. Bullamore (301) 687-4413 hbullamore@frostburg.edu

UNDERGRADUATE GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

General Education Program ......................................................................40 Courses in Biology ............................................................................. 21-23 Courses in Geography......................................................................... 46-47 Other Required Courses ...................................................................... 17-18 Total Required Hours .............................................................................120 Thesis or Internship ........................................................................ optional

FINANCIAL AID INFORMATION:

Year Initiated: 2002 Not accredited Degrees Granted through 8/31/09.............................................................24 Degrees Granted from 9/1/08 to 8/31/09 ....................................................4

Students are eligible for numerous need and merit based scholarships. In addition, the endowed Walter Brock Scholarships are limited to Environmental Analysis and Planning majors. Call the Financial Aid Office at (301) 687- 4301.

PLANNING FACULTY
Undergraduate Planning Focus Options:
Community Planning, Tourism Development, Mapping Science, and Environmental Planning Henry W. Bullamore
Professor. BA, Valparaiso University (1971), MA, University of Illinois (1973), Ph. D., University of Iowa (1978). Specializations: Urban Geography, Urban Planning, Comparative Planning, Small Town Planning. AICP (301) 687-4413 hbullamore@frostburg.edu

UNDERGRADUATE ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS


Departmental Requirements: Minimum SAT or ACT Scores:

Admission to University Core High School Courses required SAT required, no minimum

Professor and Chair. BS, Ball State University (1970), MS, Indiana University (1979), Ph.D., Utah State University (1987). Specializations: Environmental Planning, Land Development, Environmental Law. (301) 687-4755 ccaupp@frostburg.edu

Craig C. Caupp

ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 47

Professor. BS, University of New Hampshire, MS University of Minnesota, Ph. D., West Virginia University. Specializations: Urban Economics, Public Finance, Regional Development (301) 687-4418 mdalton@frostburg.edu

Margaret M. Dalton

FYI
Frostburg State University offers the only undergraduate major in urban and regional planning in Maryland. The major in urban and regional planning, begun in 2002, replaces the concentration in urban planning that was completed by more than 200 graduates since it began in 1970. The Environmental Analysis and Planning major began as a program to train specialists in coal mine reclamation, and was revised in 1990 to have a broader focus on environmental planning. Internships for 9 or 15 credits are offered each semester and summer. Students must apply and meet academic progress requirements to earn internship credit. Planning programs are coordinated within the Department of Geography which has labs for environmental science, field equipment, and four computer laboratories for GIS, mapping science and environmental design. Students in both planning programs must complete a capstone project, but the experience is built into required courses. Also, several major courses meet general education requirements of the university (17 hours in urban and regional planning, and 18 hours in environmental analysis and planning) allowing students to complete minors or second majors in other fields.

Fritz Kessler

Associate Professor. BS, Ohio University (1988), MS, Pennsylvania State University (1991), Ph.D., University of Kansas (1999). Specializations: Mapping Science, Cartographic Design. (301) 687-4266 fkessler@frostburg.edu

Assistant Professor. BS, Frostburg State University, MA, West Virginia University, Ph.D., Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University. Specializations: Urban Sociology, Community Development, urban Ecology (301) 687-3162 jmcmullen@frostburg.edu

John McMullen

John ORorke

Associate Professor. BA, Williams College, MPA, State University of New York at Albany, Ph. D., University of Pennsylvania. Specializations: Public Administration, Urban Politics (301) 687-4277 jororke@frostburg.edu

Francis Precht

Professor. BS, Towson University, MA, Michigan State University, Ph.D., University of Georgia. Specialization: Conservation and Resource Management, Geographic Information Science (301) 687-4440 fprecht@frostburg.edu

Assistant Professor. BS, University of Nebraska (1998), MS, Texas State University (2000), Ph.D., University of Kansas (2006). Specializations: Remote Sensing, Geographic Information Systems. (301) 687-4412 mramspott@frostburg.edu

Matthew E. Ramspott

James C. Saku

Associate Professor. BA, University of Cape Coast (1985), MA, Wilfrid Laurier University (1991), Ph. D., University of Saskatchewan (1995). Specializations: Economic Development, Regional Planning. (301) 687-4724 jsaku@frostburg.edu

Page 48 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

GEORGIA INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY


City and Regional Planning Program College of Architecture
245 Fourth Street, NW Suite 204 Atlanta, Georgia 30332-0155 Phone (404) 894-2350 Fax (404) 894-1628 www.planning.gatech.edu Bruce Stiftel, Director Phone (404) 894-2350 E-mail: crp@coa.gatech.edu
MASTERS DEADLINES, TUITION AND FEES

MA/MS PAB
University Admission Policy:

Ph.D.

ACSP Member: FULL

MASTERS ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS


Minimum Undergraduate GPA: Minimum GRE: Minimum TOEFL: Ranking in Undergraduate Class: Departmental Requirement:

Bachelor's Degree from an Accredited Institution 3.0 450V/550Q /4.0AW 600/250/100 Not Required 3-Letters, specific essays.

MASTERS GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

PROGRAM INFORMATION

Admission Deadline 2010-11 ...........................................................................April 1 Financial Aid Deadline 2010-11...............................................................February 15 In-State Tuition and Fees: .......................................................... $4,160 per semester Out-of-State Tuition and Fees: ..................................................$13,196 per semester Application Fee: ..................................................................................................... $50 Additional Fees: ..............................................................................$579 per semester

Hours of Core ...........................................................................................20 Hours of Studio or Practice Related Courses .............................................4 Hours of Restricted Electives ...................................................................12 Hours of Unrestricted Electives ................................................................15 Applied Research Paper ..............................................................................4 Total Required Hours in Planning Program .............................................55 Exam,Thesis or Final Product: ............Degree completed through Applied Research Option Paper or Thesis

FINANCIAL AID INFORMATION

DOCTORAL DEADLINES, TUITION AND FEES

Admission Deadline 2009-10 .....................................................................January 15 Financial Aid Deadline 2009-10 .................................................................January 15 In-State Tuition and Fees: .......................................................... $4,160 per semester Out-of-State Tuition and Fees: ..................................................$13,196 per semester Application Fee: ..................................................................................................... $50 Additional Fees: ..............................................................................$579 per semester

Fellowship: $7,200 - $12,000/AY Stipend, plus tuition Graduate Research Assistantship: $7,042 -$8,240 /AY Stipend, plus tuition Co-Op Internship: Variable Awards: $500 $2,000 Loans: Need Based Work-Study: Need Based

TOTAL MASTERS STUDENT COMPOSITION 2009-2010


US Citizens & Permanent Residents Hispanics* Of any Race White African American Native American/ Pacific Islander Asian American Mixed Other / Dont know Non-US Citizens Non- Permanent Residents Total Students Male 2 65 8 0 3 0 0 4 82 Female 4 56 6 0 3 2 2 6 77 Total 6 121 14 0 6 2 2 10 159

Annual Student Enrollment Applied


Masters Doctoral 122 16 149 38

Accepted
70 4 86 9

Enrolled
46 1 49 6

08/09 09/10 08/09 09/10 08/09 09/10

Master of City and Regional Planning


Contact Person: Phone: E-mail Dracy R. Blackwell (404) 894-2352 dracy.blackwell@coa.gatech.edu

MASTERS DEGREE

Year Initiated: 1952 PAB Accredited Degrees Granted through 8/31/09........................................................1,174 Degrees Granted from 09/01/07 to 08/31/09 ............................................35

Economic Development, Environmental Planning, Transportation, Land Use, Geographic Information Systems, Land and Community Development, Urban Design

Masters Specializations

*Do not double count Hispanics; Hispanics also appear in the racial categories below. ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 49

DUAL DEGREES ARE ALSO AVAILABLE IN THE FOLLOWING AREAS:


1. Urban Design: MCRP and MArch (with the Georgia Tech Architecture Program). 2. Transportation: MCRP and MSCE (with the Georgia Tech School of Civil and Environmental Engineering). 3. Law: MCRP and JD (with the Georgia State University College of Law). 4. Water Resources: MCRP and MSCE (with the Georgia Tech School of Civil and Environmental Engineering). 5. Environmental Engineering: MCRP and MSCE (with the Georgia Tech School of Civil and Environmental Engineering). 6. Public Policy: MCRP and MSPP (with the Georgia Tech School of Public Policy).

TOTAL DOCTORAL STUDENT COMPOSITION 2009-2010


US Citizens & Permanent Residents Hispanics* Of any Race White African American Native American/ Pacific Islander Asian American Mixed Other / Dont know Non-US Citizens Non- Permanent Residents Total Students Male 0 4 1 0 0 0 0 4 9 Female 0 4 0 0 0 0 0 4 8 Total 0 8 1 0 0 0 0 8 17

DOCTORAL DEGREE
City and Regional Planning
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail Dr. Michael Elliott, Ph.D. Coordinator (404) 894-9841 michael.elliott@coa.gatech.edu

Year initiated: 1982 Degrees Granted through 8/31/2009........................................................12 Degrees Granted from 9/1/2008 to 8/31/2009 ...........................................2 Dissertations Granted from 9/1/2008 to 8/31/2009 1. The Application of Advanced Inventory Techniques in Urban Inventory Data Development to Earthquake Risk Modeling and Mitigation in MidAmerica. 2 Georgias Structurally Unemployed Workers: Do State Jobs Training Program Help?

*Do not double count Hispanics; Hispanics also appear in the racial categories below.

PLANNING FACULTY
Michael A. Dobbins
Professor of Practice. BA, Yale University (1960); M Arch, Yale University (1965). Specializations: Urban Design, Community Planning. (404) 385-4243 michael.dobbins@coa.gatech.edu

Housing, Community and Economic Development; Land Use and Transportation; Environment/ Sustainability; Collaborative Governance; GIS.

Doctoral Specializations

FAIA, AICP

William J. Drummond

DOCTORAL ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS


Minimum GRE: Minimum TOEFL: Minimum GPA: Departmental Requirement: 550+/Section 600/250/100 No Requirements Minimum GRE & TOEFL

Associate Professor. AB, Duke University (1975); M. Div, GordonConwell Theological Seminary (1979); Ph.D., University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill (1989). Specializations: Computer Applications, Historic Preservation, Geographic Information Systems, Land Use/ Growth Management, Quantitative Methods.

(404) 894-9840

bill.drummond@coa.gatech.edu

Michael L. Poirier Elliott

DOCTORAL GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

Hours of Core ...........................................................................................16 Major Field ...............................................................................................15 Hours of Restricted Electives .....................................................................0 Hours of Unrestricted Electives ..................................................................6 Minor Field .................................................................................................9 Exams or Written Requirements: Qualifying Paper; Comprehensive Exams; Dissertation Proposal and Defense.

Associate Professor. BS, Massachusetts Institute of Technology (1974); MCP, University of California, Berkeley (1978); Ph.D., Massachusetts Institute of Technology (1984). Specializations: Environmental Planning, Planning Theory, Negotiation & Conflict Management, Politics & Governance.

(404) 894-9841

michael.elliott@coa.gatech.edu

Page 50 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

Harley F. Etienne

Assistant Professor. BA, Morehouse College, (1996); MA, Temple University (2002); Ph.D., (2007). Specializations: Urban Community Development, Inner-city Revitalization, Neighborhood Change, Urban Poverty and Qualitative Research Issues in Planning.

(404) 385-3343

hfe@gatech.edu FAICP

Associate Professor. BA (1993); MEM, Duke University (1996); Ph.D., Georgia Institute of Technology (2001). Specializations: Environmental Planning, Urban Ecology, Land Use and Air Quality, Climate Change and Urban Heat Island.

Brian Stone Jr.

(404) 894-6488

brian.stone@coa.gatech.edu

Steven P. French

Jiawen Yang

Professor and Associate Dean. BA, University of Virginia (1971); MURP, University of Colorado, Denver (1973); Ph.D., University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill (1980). Specializations: Land Use & Growth Management, Computer Applications, Environmental Planning, Geographic Information Systems, Quantitative Methods.

Assistant Professor. BS (1997); MS, Beijing University (2000); Ph.D., Massachusetts Institute of Technology (2005). Specializations: Transportation Planning, Metropolitan Planning, Urban Economics, Quantitative Methods, GIS and Transportation.

(404) 385-7215

jiawen.yang@coa.gatech.edu

(404) 385-0900

steve.french@coa.gatech.edu

Associate Professor. BS, Northwestern (1984); MPP, Michigan (1987); Ph.D., University of Illinois, Chicago (1996). Specializations: Housing Policy, Real Estate Finance and Development, Community Development, Economic Development.

Daniel Immergluck

Perry Pei-Ju Yang

Associate Professor. BSc (1991) and MSc (1994), Taiwan University; MS, Massachusetts Institute of Technology (2000); Ph.D., National Taiwan University (2001). Specializations: Urban Design, GIS and Urban Simulation.

(404) 385-7214

dan.immergluck@coa.gatech.edu FAICP

(404) 894-2076

perry.yang@coa.gatech.edu

Nancey Green Leigh

Professor. BA (1975) and MRP (1979), University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill; M.Economics (1984); Ph.D., University of California, Berkeley (1989). Specializations: Metropolitan/Regional Planning, Urban/Regional Economics, Economic Development Planning.

OTHER AFFILIATED FACULTY


Douglas C. Allen
Professor and Associate Dean. BLA, University of Georgia (1971), MLA, Harvard University (1976). Specializations: Urban Design.

ASLA

(404) 894-9839

nancey.leigh@coa.gatech.edu

(404) 894-0907

doug.allen@coa.gatech.edu

Barbara Lynch

Jennifer Joy Clark

Visiting Associate Professor. BA, Cornell University (1961); MS, Cornell University (1978); Ph.D., Cornell University (1988). Specialization: International Planning.

(404) 385-6884

barbara.lynch@inta.gatech.edu

Assistant Professor. BA, Wesleyan Univesity (1995); MPlan, Hubert H. Humphrey Institute of Public Affairs, University of Minnesota (1999); Ph.D., Cornell University (2004). Specializations: Regional Economic Development Policy, Agglomeration Economics, Industry Studies, Labor Markets.

Catherine L. Ross

(404) 385-7224

jennifer.clark@gatech.edu AICP

Harry West Endowed Professor and Director, Center for Quality Growth and Regional Development. BA, Kent State University (1971); MCRP (1973) and Ph.D., (1979), Cornell University. Specializations: Metropolitan/Regional Planning, Transportation, Politics & Governance, Economic Development Planning, Real Estate Development.

Jamie Cochran

(404) 385-5133

catherine.ross@coa.gatech.edu

Visiting Lecturer. BA, Florida State University (1975); MPA, Harvard University (1989). Specializations: Transportation Planning, Transportation Investment Analysis, Infrastructure Planning and Management.

FAICP Professor. BSCE, Worcester Polytechnic Institute (1965); Ph.D., Cornell University (1971). Specializations: Urban & Regional Economics, Demography, Community Development, Economic Development Planning, Social Policy/Human Services.

David S. Sawicki

(404) 285-7577

jacoch@bellsouth.net

Richard Dagenhart

(404) 894-0569

david.sawicki@coa.gatech.edu FAICP

Associate Professor. BA, B Arch, University of Arkansas (1970); MCP, M Arch, University of Pennsylvania (1972). Specializations: Urban Design, Everyday Urbanism.

(404) 894-2992

richard.dagenhart@coa.gatech.edu

Professor and Director. BS, State of New York at Stony Brook (1975); MRP (1981) and Ph.D., (1986), University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Specializations: Planning Theory, Dispute Resolution, Environmental Planning.

Bruce Stiftel

Nickolas L. Faust

Senior Lecturer. BS (1969); MS, Georgia Institute of Technology, (1975). Specializations: Remote Sensing.

(404) 894-0021

nick.faust@gtri.gatech.edu AICP

(404) 894-2350

bruce.stiftel@coa.gatech.edu

Anthony Giarrusso

Research Scientist. BS, Georgia State University (1992); MSRP, Georgia Institute of Technology (2000). Specialization: Geographic Information Systems.

(404) 894-0127

anthony.giarrusso@coa.gatech.edu

ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 51

Randall Guensler

Associate Professor. BS (1985), MS (1989) and PhD (1993), University of California, Davis. Specializations: Transportation and Air Quality, Transportation Energy Use.

Seth Weissman

(404) 894-0405

randall.guensler@ce.gatech.edu

Lecturer, BA University of Pennsylvania (1975); MRP, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, (1978); JD, Duke University (1979). Specializations: Planning Law

seth.wnclaw.com

David F. Haddow

AICP Senior Lecturer. BA, Emory University (1975); MCP, Georgia Institute of Technology (1979); MBA, Georgia State University (1982). Specializations: Real Estate Investment Analysis, Market Analysis, Land Development Planning.

FYI
We believe the integration of our educational mission and institutional setting with the extensive professional opportunities available to students within the City and Regional Planning Program; we position our graduates to be among the most competitive in the globally expanding field of planning. Our mission is to be a global leader in the creation of sustainable cities and regions. We incorporate this mission into our teaching and research through a strong commitment to the interdisciplinary nature of planning. With this goal in mind, we offer our students six dual degree programs as well as seven areas of specialization that may be combined through our curriculum to develop integrated programs of study. Our nationally recognized faculty advances this mission both in the classroom and through a wide range of research and professional activities, including the editorship of the Journal of the American Planning Association (JAPA). Our institutional setting within the College of Architecture and one of the nations premiere technology institutes enables students to acquire expertise in every area of the urban development process, including planning, design, construction/engineering, and management. The City and Regional Planning Program is home to two major research centers, the Georgia Center for Quality Growth and Regional Development and the Center for Geographic Information Systems; which provide research opportunities and financial support to many of our students and establish critical linkages between the Program and the larger regional community. Through these linkages we have created a highly successful co-op program with regional employers. Our regional location in one of the largest, most diverse, and rapidly growing metropolitan areas of the United States which affords our students direct access to a vibrant laboratory for urban planning. Due to its unique combination of urban amenities, temperate climate, and employment opportunities, Atlanta attracts more young professionals annually than any other U.S. city. We take advantage of our dynamic metropolitan setting through the development of three to four applied studio courses per year, which involves numerous regional planning practitioners as adjunct professors. Our access to a wide range of federal, state, local, and private sector planning organizations affords us the opportunity to employ a large percentage of our graduates.

(404) 577-7222

dhaddow@haddowandcompany.com

Lecturer. BS, Southern Polytechnical State University (1988); MCP, Georgia Institute of Technology (1979); MBA, Georgia State University (1982). Specializations: Real Estate Investment Analysis, Market Analysis, Land Development Planning.

Edrick Harris

(404) 330-1036

eharris@hjrussell.com

Julian Conrad Juergensmeyer


(404) 651-2437

Adjunct Professor. BA (1959) and JD (1963), Duke University. Specializations: Land Use Law, Growth Management Law.

jjuergensmeyer@gsu.edu

E. Gates Kellett

Lecturer. BS (1994) and MCP (1996), Georgia Institute of Technology. Specializations: Real Estate Finance, Affordable Housing.

(404) 371-1230 x 211

gatesk@mindspring.com

Karen Leone deNie

Lecturer. BA, English, University of Wisconsin, Madison (1995); MCRP Georgia Institute of Technology, (2005). Specialization: Health and The Built Environment

(404) 217-1458

karen.leone@coa.gatech.edu

Michael D. Meyer

Professor. BS, University of Wisconsin-Madison (1974); MS, Northwestern University (1975); Ph.D., Massachusetts Institute of Technology (1978), Ph.D., Georgia Institute of Technology and Georgia State University (2006). Specializations: Regional Transportation Planning, Transportation Finance, Transit Planning and Operation.

(404) 385-2246

michael.meyer@ce.gatech.edu

Subrahmanyam Muthukumar

Research Scientist. B Arch, University of Roorkee (1989); M Arch, University of Texas, Austin (1994); MCRP, Georgia Institute of Technology (2000); Ph.D., Georgia Institute of Technology (2008). Specializations: Geographic Information Systems, Land Use and Growth Management.

(404) 894-0128

smuthu@coa.gatech.edu

John Weitz FAICP Lecturer, BA Emory University (1983); MCP, Georgia Institute of Technology, (1985); Ph.D., Portland State University (1998). Specializations: Land Use Planning and Growth Management; and Policy Analysis.
jweitz@bellsouth.net

Page 52 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

HARVARD UNIVERSITY
Department of Urban Planning and Design
Graduate School of Design 48 Quincy Street, Gund Hall Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138 Phone (617) 495-2521 | Fax (617) 496-9521 E-mail: evansaun@gsd.harvard.edu www.gsd.harvard.edu Edna Van Saun, Department Contact E-mail: evansaun@gsd.harvard.edu Judith Grant Long, PhD, AICP, Program Director Phone: (617) 495-2521 E-mail: evansaun@gsd.harvard.edu

MA/MS PAB

Ph.D.

ACSP Member: FULL

MASTERS GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

Units of Core.............................................................................................28 Units of Studio or Practice Related Courses ............................................24 Units of Restricted Electives ....................................................................24 Units of Unrestricted Electives .................................................................24 Total Required Units in Planning Program ..............................................80 Exam or Final written Requirement: ................................................. None

FINANCIAL AID INFORMATION

Need based aid for US Citizens, US Permanent Residents, with limited funding available for International Students (new program started in 2009)

TOTAL MASTERS STUDENT COMPOSITION 2008-2009 US Citizens & Permanent Residents


Hispanics* Of any Race White African American Native American/ Pacific Islander Asian American Mixed

PROGRAM INFORMATION
Admission Deadline 2009-2010 for Masters program .......................January 1, 2010 Admission Deadline 2009-2010 for Ph.D program...........................January 1, 2010 Financial Aid Deadline 2009-2010 for Masters program......... New students 1/01/10 Returning students ...........................................................................................1/01/10 Financial Aid Deadline for Ph.D Program ..........................................January1, 2010 In-State Tuition and Fees: ..........................................................$35,992 per semester Out-of-State Tuition and Fees: ..................................................$35,992 per semester Application Fee: .....................................................................................................$80 Additional Fees: .......... Health Services Fee $1,126; Health Insurance (Blue Cross) $2,606; Activity fee $100 per semester

Male 0 21 0 0 2 0 0 4 27

Female 0 13 1 0 4 0 0 4 22

Total 0 34 1 0 6 0 0 8 49

GRADUATE DEADLINE, TUITION AND FEES

Annual Student Enrollment


55 7 55 6

06/07 07/08 08/09 09/10 Masters Doctoral 49 5 58 5

Other / Dont know Non-US Citizens Non- Permanent Residents

MASTERS DEGREE
Master in Urban Planning
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail: Judith Grant Long, PhD, AICP (617) 495-2521 evansaun@gsd.harvard.edu

Total Students

*Do not double count Hispanics; Hispanics also appear in the racial categories below.

DOCTORAL DEGREE
Ph.D. in Urban Planning
Contact Person:
Phone: (617) 495-2337 E-mail: belfman@gsd.harvard.edu Year initiated 1942 Degrees Granted through 8/31/2004........................................................74 Degrees Granted from 9/1/2003 to 8/31/2004 ...........................................0 Dissertations Granted from 9/1/2002 to 8/31/2003 ............................ None

Year Initiated: 1994 PAB Accredited Degrees Granted through 8/31/09...........................................................240 Degrees Granted from 9/1/08 to 8/31/09 ..................................................22

MASTERS ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS


University Admission Policy: Minimum Undergraduate GPA: Minimum GRE: Minimum TOEFL: Ranking in Undergraduate Class: Departmental Requirement:

Barbara Elfman

None Specified None Specified Required Required International Students None Specified None Specified

ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 53

DOCTORAL ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS


University Admission Policy: Minimum GRE: Minimum TOEFL: Minimum GPA: Departmental Requirement: None Specified Required Required None Specified None Specified

Jose A. Gomez-Ibanez

Professor. AB, Harvard College; MPP, Harvard University; PhD, Harvard University. Specializations: Urban Economics, Transportation, Infrastructure/Public Services.

(617) 495-1341

jose_gomez-ibanez@harvard.edu

Jerold S. Kayden

Hours of Core ........................................................................................N/A Hours of Studio or Practice Related Courses ........................................N/A Hours of Restricted Electives ................................................................N/A Hours of Unrestricted Electives .............................................................N/A Total Required Hours in Program .........................................................N/A Thesis or Final Product: Oral Examination and Thesis

DOCTORAL GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

Professor. AB, Harvard College; MCRP, Harvard University; JD, Harvard University. Specializations: Planning and Environmental Law, Public and Private Development, International Planning and Development, Public Space.

(617) 496-0830

jkayden@gsd.harvard.edu

Alex Krieger

TOTAL DOCTORAL STUDENT COMPOSITION 2008-2009 US Citizens & Permanent Residents


Hispanics* Of any Race White African American Native American/ Pacific Islander Asian American Mixed Other / Dont know Non-US Citizens Non- Permanent Residents

Professor in Practice. BA, Cornell University; MCPUD, Harvard University. Specializations: Physical Planning/Urban Design, Housing and Neighborhood Planning, Metropolitan/Regional Planning.

(617) 495-4803

akrieger@gsd.harvard.edu

Judith Grant Long Male 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Female 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 Total 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1

Assistant Professor and Program Director. BA, Economics, Huron College, Canada; BAA, Planning, Ryerson University, Canada; MDes, Harvard Design School; PhD Planning, Harvard University. Specializations: Urban Redevelopment, Infrastructure, and Tourism; Planning for the Olympic Games; Studio Pedagogy.

(617) 495 2521

evansaun@gsd.harvard.edu

Professor. BA, Yale University; MBA, Harvard University; PhD, University of Cambridge. Specializations: New Towns, Development Finance, International Development, Real Estate.

Richard B. Peiser

(617) 495-9558

rpeiser@gsd.harvard.edu

Professor. BArch, Melbourne University; MArch, Rice University. Specializations: Housing and Neighborhood Planning, Physical Planning/Urban Design, Planning History, Planning Theory, International Planning and Design.

Peter G. Rowe

(617) 495-4237

mmoran@gsd.harvard.edu

A. Hashim Sarkis

Total Students

Professor. BArch, Rhode Island School of Design; MArch, Harvard University; PhD, Architecture, Harvard University. Specializations: Urbanism in Muslim Societies, Urban Design, Theory.

(617) 496-0330

hsarkis@gsd.harvard.edu

*Do not double count Hispanics; Hispanics also appear in the racial categories below.

PLANNING FACULTY
Alan Altshuler
Professor. BA, Cornell University; MA, University of Chicago; PhD, University of Chicago. Specializations: Impact Assessment, Infrastructure/Public Services, Land Use/Growth Management, Planning Practice, Political Economy.

OTHER AFFILIATED FACULTY


Eric Belsky
Lecturer. MA, Clark University; Ph.D. Clark University.

(617) 495-7559

aaltshul@gsd.harvard.edu

ebelsky@gsd.harvard.edu

Professor. AB, Harvard College; Ph.D, MIT. Specializations: Politics and Economics of Urban Redevelopment, Tourism, Comparative Urban and Social Policy, Planning Theory, and Issues of Gender and Planning

Susan Fainstein

Joan Busquets

Professor in Practice. BArch, University of Barcelona; PhD, Architecture, University of Barcelona. Specializations: Urban Design.

(617) 495-9901

fainstein@gsd.harvard.edu

(617) 496-8811

jbusquet@gsd.harvard.edu

Page 54 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

Paul Cote

Lecturer. BA, Geography, Indiana University; MCP, MIT. Specializations: Geographic Information Systems.

(617) 496-0546

pbcote@gsd.harvard.edu

Felipe Correa

Assistant Professor of Urban Design. B.Arch. Tulane, MAUD, Harvard Design School. Specializations: Comparative Urbanism, Urban Design.

(617) 495 2521

fcorrea@gsd.harvard.edu

Leland Cott

Adjunct Professor. BArch, Pratt Institute; MAUD, Harvard University. Specializations: Urban Design, Housing, Adaptive Re-Use/Historic Preservation.

(617) 495-2521

lcott@gsd.harvard.edu

Richard Dimino

Lecturer. BS, Northeastern University; MBA, Boston University. Specializations: Transportation Planning, Project Planning and Management.

(617) 495-2521

rdimino@gsd.harvard.edu

Toni Griffin

Adjunct Associate Professor, and Director of Community Development, City of Newark, NJ. BArch, Notre Dame. Specializations: Urban Redevelopment, Affordable Housing, and Urban Design.

(617) 495 2521

tgriffin@gsd.harvard.edu

Rodolfo Machado

Professor in Practice. Diploma of Architecture, Universidad de Buenos Aires, Argentina; MArch, University of California, Berkeley. Specializations: Urban Design.

(617) 495-2659

rmachado@gsd.harvard.edu

Nicolas Retsinas

Lecturer. AB, New York University; MCP, Harvard University. Specializations: Housing and Neighborhood Planning, Housing Finance, Community Development.

(617) 496-3676

retsinas@gsd.harvard.edu

James Stockard

Lecturer. MCP, Harvard University. Specializations: Affordable Housing, Community Development, Housing and Neighborhood Planning.

(617) 495-5988

stockard@gsd.harvard.edu

ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 55

HUNTER COLLEGE OF THE CITY UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK


Graduate Program in Urban Planning
695 Park Avenue New York, New York 10065 Phone (212) 772-5518 Fax (212) 772-5593

MA/MS PAB

ACSP Member: Full

MASTERS GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

Hours of Core ...........................................................................................24 Hours of Studio or Practice Related Courses .............................................6 Hours of Restricted Electives .....................................................................0 Hours of Unrestricted Electives ................................................................30 Total Required Hours in Planning Program .............................................60 Exams or Written Requirements: ................................ Internship and Paper

http://maxweber.hunter.cuny.edu Lynn McCormick, Director Phone (212) 772-5733 E-mail: lmccormi@hunter.cuny.edu

TOTAL MASTERS STUDENT COMPOSITION 2008-2009 US Citizens & Permanent Residents


Hispanics* Of any Race White African American Asian/ Pacific Islander Asian American Mixed Other / Dont know Non-US Citizens Non- Permanent Residents

PROGRAM INFORMATION
Admission Deadline 2009-10 ........................................................ Nov. 1 and April 1 Financial Aid Deadline 2009-10 .......................................................................April 1 In-State Tuition and Fees: ........................................................... $3,680 per semester Out-of-State Tuition and Fees: ........................................................... $575 per credit Application Fee ....................................................................................................$125 Additional Fees: ........................................................................ $127.85 per semester

Male* -

Female* -

Total 2 26 5 3 6 0 74 -

GRADUATE DEADLINE, TUITION AND FEES

Annual Student Enrollment Applied


Masters 93 93

Accepted
59 59

Enrolled
26 36

09/08 09/09 09/08 09/09 09/08 09/09

MASTERS DEGREE
Master of Urban Planning
Contact Person Phone: E-mail: Lynn McCormick, Director (212) 772-5733 lmccormi@hunter.cuny.edu

Total Students

110

Year Initiated: 1965 PAB Accredited Degrees Granted through 8/31/09...........................................................628 Degrees Granted from 9/1/08 to 8/31/09 ..................................................39

*Hunter students are not required to identify or report race or ethnicity. The gender breakdown overall is approximately Males - 60; Females - 50.

FINANCIAL AID INFORMATION


Assistantships: Internships:

Community Planning and Advocacy, Economic Development, Transportation and Infrastructure, Sustainability and the Environment, Housing and the Built Environment, General Practice
MASTERS ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS
University Admission Policy: Minimum Undergraduate GPA: Minimum GRE: Minimum TOEFL Departmental Requirement: No Requirements 3.3 Not Required 550 No Requirements

Masters Specializations

There are 3-5 assistantships available each year. Stipends range from $1500-2500. There are hundreds of internship opportunities in the New York area. Many are paid.

PLANNING FACULTY
Thomas Angotti
Professor. BA (1964) Indiana University; MCRP (1971) Rutgers; PhD (1973) Rutgers. Specializations: Environmental Planning, Community Development, Housing and Neighborhood Planning, International Development and Planning.

(212) 650-3130

tangotti@hunter.cuny.edu

Page 56 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

John Chin

Associate Professor. BA (1988) Cornell, MS (1993) New School for Social Research, M of Phil and PhD (2001) Columbia University. Specializations: Immigrant Communities, Urban Health, Non-profit Organizations, Community Participation

Sigmund Shipp

(212) 772-5603

john.chin@hunter.cuny.edu

Associate Professor. BS (1977), Howard; MA (1982), Johns Hopkins; PhD (1992), Cornell. Specializations: Citizen Participation, Community Development, Economic Development Planning, Social Policy/Human Services.

(212) 650-5591

sshipp@hunter.cuny.edu

Jill Gross

Associate Professor. BA (1984) SUNY-Cortland; MSc (1987) London School of Economics; PhD (1998) CUNY. Specializations: Citizen Participation, Economic Development, Community Development, International Development and Planning.

Joseph Viteritti

Professor. BA (1969) and MA (1973), Hunter College; PhD (1978), CUNY. Specializations: Social Policy/Human Services, Politics and Governance, Metropolitan/Regional Planning.

(212) 772-5600

igross@hunter.cuny.edu

(212) 772-5597

joseph.viteritti@hunter.cuny.edu

Associate Professor. BA (1985) Vassar College, MA (1990) Columbia University, PhD (1998) Columbia University. Specializations: 20th Century Sprawl, History of the City

Owen Gutfreund

Elaine Walsh

Associate Professor. BA (1996), Pace University; MSW (1976) and PhD (1986), Fordham University. Specializations: Public Management/ Strategic Planning, Social Policy/Human Services.

(212) 772-5595

ewalsh@hunter.cuny.edu

owen.gutfreund@hunter.cuny.edu

Peter Kwong

Professor. BS (1965), Mphil (1975) and PhD (1978), Columbia. Specializations: Race/Ethnicity and Planning.

OTHER AFFILIATED FACULTY


Albert F. Appleton (Al Appleton)
Adjunct Associate Professor and International. Consultant Specialization: Interlocking Expertise in Water Resource and Water Utility Management, Infrastructure and Public Finance, Land Use and Landscape Preservation, and Promoting Sustainable Development.

(212) 772-5598

pkwong@hunter.cuny.edu

Associate Professor. BS (1973) and MS (1980), University of Wisconsin, Madison; PhD (1996), MIT Specializations: Community Development, Economic Development Planning, Planning History, Urban and Regional Economics.

Lynn McCormick

(212) 772-5733

lmccormi@hunter.cuny.edu

Adjunct Professor and Architect. BA (1978) University of Pennsylvania; MArch (1986) University of Virginia. Specializations: Architecture, Landscape Architecture and Urban Design And Planning.

Alice Blank

Susan Turner Meiklejohn

Associate Professor. BA (1979) and MUP (1989), SUNY-Buffalo; PhD (1995), University of Michigan Specializations: Community Development, Economic Development Planning, Housing and Neighborhood Planning, Planning Theory.

Donovan Finn

PhD candidate in Regional Planning at the University of Illinois (Urbana-Champaign), Specializations: Regional Planning, Sustainable Development and ParticipatoryPlanning.

(212) 650-3679

sturn@hunter.cuny.edu AICP

Kevin Keenan

Associate Professor. BA (1970), St. Peters College; MCRP (1973), Rutgers; PhD (1982), University of Michigan. Specializations: Environmental Planning, Transportation, Quantitative Methods, Demography.

William Milczarski, MCRP

Adjunct Instructor. BA, SUNY-StonyBrook, MA StonyBrook, MA and PhD Clark University. Specializations: Qualitative Methods, Suburbanization

Mitchell Korbey, Esq.

(212) 772-5601

wmilczar@hunter.cuny.edu

Stanley Moses

Professor. BA (1959), City College of NY; MA (1965), Hunter College; PhD (1971), Syracuse. Specializations: Metropolitan/Regional Planning, Political Economy, Politics and Governance, Urban and Regional Economics.

Adjunct Professor and Partner at Herrick, Feinstein, LLP (former Commissioner on the NYC Zoning Board of Standards and Appeals). BS Suffolk University; MUP Cornell University; JD Brooklyn Law School. Specializations: Land Use Law.

Kathryne Leak

(212) 772-5518

smoses@hunter.cuny.edu

Adjunct Professor. BA (1990) Hunter College; MS (1992) and EdD (2003) Columbia University. Specializations: Youth Development and Fatherhood Development.

Associate Professor. BA (1986), University of Madras; MArch (1988), Anna University; MCP (1991), MIT; PhD (1998), University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee. Specializations: Physical Planning/Urban Design, Geographic Information Systems, Landscape/Site Design, Community Development.

Laxmi Ramasubramanian

Peter Marcotullio

Distinguished Lecturer. PhD, Columbia University. Specializations: Urban Environmental Transitions, Globalization and Urban Development, Ecosystem Approaches to Urban and Regional Environmental Planning and Management and Impacts of Urbanization on the Environment.

(212) 772-5594

laxmi@hunter.cuny.edu

ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 57

Adjunct Instructor and Director, Manhattan/Bronx Bus Service Planning, New York City Transit. BA (72) State University at Albany; MS (74) Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute. Specializations: Public Transportation Systems and Planning.

Theodore Orosz

FYI
The program takes full advantage of its location in the heart of New York City. Students work throughout the city in public, private and non-profit organizations to fulfill internship and studio requirements. Adjunct instructors and guest speakers include public officials and renowned experts on planning and policy issues. Special topics courses address contemporary issues such as immigration policy, sustainable development, and the politics of education.

Mark Page

Adjunct Instructor and Director, Management and Budget for New York City. BA (1970) Harvard College; JD (1974) New York University Law School. Specializations: Public Finance.

Adjunct Professor and Managing Director, Community Resource Exchange. BA (1992) Dartmouth College; MBA (2000) Columbia Business School. Specializations: Nonprofit Management, Strategic Planning, Fundraising.

Randall Quan

Robert Rosenberg

Adjunct Professor and President of Rosenberg Housing Group Inc. B.S (1955) New York University; LLB (1958) Columbia Law School. Specializations: Affordable Housing, Urban Revitalization, Real Estate Development.

Joseph J. Salvo

Adjunct Professor and Chief Demographer/Director, Population Division, New York City Department of City Planning. BA (1976) Iona College; MA (1978) and PhD (1982) Fordham University. Specializations: Demography, Urban Sociology.

Brian Sahd

BA Dickinson College, MA University of Pittsburgh, PhD Columbia University. Specializations: Political Economy of Cities and Cities in the Developing World

Victoria Santiago

Adjunct Associate Professor. BA Yale, MA Hunter College, PhD University of California, Los Angeles. Specializations: Planning in NYC and Urban Health

Lisa Schreibman

Adjunct Professor and Senior Quality Control Specialist, Capital Programs, Department of Subways, New York City Transit. BA 1992 NYU; MUP 1997 Hunter College. Specializations: Transportation and Environmental Planning.

Vice Chairman of the New York Landmarks Preservation Commission and Architect. M.S.U.P. from Columbia University. Specializations: Site Planning, Architecture, Urban Design and Preservation.

Pablo Vengoechea

Wilbur Woods

Adjunct Lecturer and Director of Waterfront Planning, NYC Department of City Open Space Planning. Specialization: Waterfront and Open Space Planning.

Page 58 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

INDIANA UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA


Department of Geography & Regional Planning
Room 9 Leonard Hall 421 North Walk Indiana, PA 15705-1087 Phone (724) 357-2250 Fax (724) 357-6479 http://www.iup.edu/geography Dr. John Benhart, Jr. Department Chair Email jbenhart@iup.edu
Minimum GPA: Class Rank: SAT: ACT: Honors Program:

MA/MS

ACSP Member: Full

UNDERGRADUATE ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS


2.0 N/A None None Yes, 3.0 GPA minimum

UNDERGRADUATE GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

PROGRAM INFORMATION
Admission Deadline .......................................................................Rolling Admission Financial Aid Deadline ..................................................................... August 28, 2010 In-State Tuition and Fees ................................................................$3604.70 per term Out of State Tuition and Fees .......................................................$74822.70 per term Application Fee ...................................................................................................... $40 Additional Fee................................................................................. Included in above

Hours of Core ...........................................................................................36 Hours of Studio .........................................................................................12 Hours of Restricted Elective .....................................................................12 Hours of Elective ................................................................................ 19-25 Total Required Hours in Planning Program .............................................48 Total Required Hours to Graduate from University ...............................120 Thesis or Final Product ...........................................................................Yes

UNDERGRADUATE DEADLINE, TUITION AND FEES

Master of Science in Geography - Regional Planning Track


Contact Person Phone: E-mail: Dr. Robert Begg, Director (724) 357-2250 bobbegg@iup.edu

MASTERS DEGREE

GRADUATE DEADLINES, TUITION AND FEES

Admission Deadline ..................................................................... Rolling Admission Financial Aid Deadline ..................................................................... March 14, 2010 In-State Tuition ..............................................................................$4,141,95 per term Out of State Tuition .......................................................................$6,193.50 per term

Annual Student Enrollment Applied


Undergraduate Masters N/A N/A

Year Initiated: 1972 Degrees Granted through 8/31/09...........................................................262 Degrees Granted from 8/31/08 to 8/31/09 ..................................................7

Accepted
N/A N/A

Enrolled
07/08 08/09 20 28 18 22

N/A N/A N/A N/A

GIS/Cartography, Environmental Planning, Regional Planning


MASTERS ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS
University Admission Policy: Minimum Undergraduate GPA: Minimum GRE: Minimum TOEFL: IELTS Test: Ranking in Undergraduate Class: Departmental Requirements: Bachelors from accredited institution 3.0 (conditional admission possible with 2.5 and above) Must take test but no minimum 550, but can be admitted through the University American Language Institute 5.5, but can be admitted through the University American Language Institute N/A Same as university

Masters Specializations

UNDERGRADUATE DEGREE
BS in Regional Planning
Contact Person Phone: E-mail: Dr. Robert Begg, Director (724) 357-2250 bobbegg@iup.edu

Year Initiated: 1972 Degrees Granted through 8/31/09...........................................................183 Degrees Granted from 8/31/08 to 8/31/09 ................................................12

MASTERS GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

Landuse and GIS, Environmental Planning

Undergraduate Specializations

Hours of Core .............................................................................................9 Hours of Studio or Practice-Related Courses .............................................6 Hours of Restricted Elective .....................................................................15 Hours of Unrestricted Elective ............................................................. 9-15 Total Required Hours in Planning Program ....................................... 33-39 Thesis or Final Product Required ...........................................................Yes

ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 59

FINANCIAL AID INFORMATION


Graduate Assistantships:

Several each year including tuition waiver and stipend available on a competitive basis

Robert P. Sechrist

PLANNING FACULTY
Professor. Ph.D. University of Iowa. Specializations: Community Development; Economic Development Planning

Professor. Louisiana State University. Specializations: Cartography, Geographic Information Systems, Public Infrastructure

(724) 357 2250

rpsecrst@iup.edu

Robert B. Begg
(724) 357 2250

bobbegg@iup.edu

Professor. Ph. D. University of Tennessee Knoxville. Specializations: Environmental Planning, Geographic Information Systems, Transportation, Urbanization

John E. Benhart, Jr.

(724) 357 7652

jbenhart@iup.edu AICP

Assistant Professor. Ph. D. West Virginia University. Specializations: Environmental Planning, Geospatial Applications for Land Use Planning, Urban Development

Richard J. Hoch

(724) 357 5990

rhoch@iup.edu

Calvin O. Masilela

Professor. Ph. D. Virginia Polytechnic and State University. Specializations: Land Use Policy, Planning Techniques, Planning Theory, Urban Planning

(724) 357 2250

cmasilel@iup.edu

D. Whit Watts
(724) 357 2250

Assistant Professor. Ph. D. Virginia Polytechnic and State University. Specializations: Landscape Design, Land Use Law, Land Use Planning

whit@iup.edu

AFFILIATED FACULTY
Professor. Ph.D. Pennsylvania State University. Specializations: Environmental Systems

Joseph W. Bencloski
(724) 357 2250

joeben@iup.edu

Professor. Ph.D. University of Tennessee Knoxville. Specializations: Economic Development, Transportation

Donald W. Buckwalter
(724) 357 2250

donaldb@iup.edu

Assistant Professor. Ph.D. University of Guelph. Specializations: Conservation, Environment, Sustainable Development

Brian W. Okey

(724) 357 2250

bokey@iup.edu

Professor. Ph.D. University of North Carolina. Specializations: Cartography, Cultural Landscapes, Economic Development, Urbanization

Kevin J. Patrick

(724) 357 2250

kpatrick@iup.edu

Page 60 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

IOWA STATE UNIVERSITY


Department of Community and Regional Planning
146 College of Design Ames, Iowa 50011-3095 Phone (515) 294-8958 Fax (515) 294-2348 http://www.design.iastate.edu/CRP/ Douglas M. Johnston, Ph.D., Department Chair E-mail: crp@iastate.edu

BA/BS PAB

MA/MS PAB

ACSP Member: FULL

Hours of Core ..........................................................................................39 Hours of Studio Courses ..........................................................................16 Hours of Restricted Elective ....................................................................67 Hours of Elective .....................................................................................80 Hours of Unrestricted Electives ...............................................................14 Total Required Hours In Planning Program ..........................................129 Total Required Hours to Graduate from University .............................129 Thesis or Final Product ...........................................................Not required

UNDERGRADUATE GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

FINANCIAL AID INFORMATION

Three Departmental Scholarships (1 for incoming students). Eligibility Criteria include academic achievement, professional potential and financial need.

PROGRAM INFORMATION
Admission Deadline 2009-10 ..................................................................... January 1 Financial Aid Deadline 2009-10 ....................................................................March 1 In-State Tuition and Fees: .................................................... $3,325.35 per semester Out-of-State Tuition and Fees: ............................................ $8,935.35 per semester Application Fee:.............................................................................$30, US; $50, Intl

MASTERS DEGREE
Master of Community and Regional Planning
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail Prof. Francis Owusu (515) 294-8958 crp@iastate.edu

UNDERGRADUATE DEADLINES, TUITION AND FEES

Admission Deadline 2009-10 ...................................................................... January 1 Financial Aid Deadline 2009-10 ................................................................... March 1 In-State Tuition and Fees: .................................................... $3,782.35 per semester Out-of-State Tuition and Fees: ............................................. $9,332.35 per semester Application Fee: .......................................................................... $30, US; $70, Intl

GRADUATE DEADLINES, TUITION AND FEES

Year Initiated: 1947 PAB Accredited Degrees Granted through 8/31/09 ..........................................................330 Degrees Granted from 9/1/08 to 8/31/09..................................................8

MASTERS ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS


University Admission Policy: Minimum Undergraduate GPA: Minimum GRE: Minimum TOEFL: Departmental Requirement:

Annual Student Enrollment Applied


Undergraduate Masters N/A 27

Accepted
N/A 20

Enrolled
30 8 30 11

07/08 08/09 07/08 08/09 07/08 08/09 N/A N/A 30 12

Bachelors from an accredited institution; None. None. TOEFL Paper (PBT) 550; TOEFL Computer (CBT) 213; TOEFL Internet (iBT) 79 IELTS 6.5 None

MASTERS GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

UNDERGRADUATE DEGREE
BS in Community and Regional Planning
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail: Malinda Cooper, Academic Advisor (515) 294-3680 macooper@iastate.edu

Hours of Core ..........................................................................................29 Hours of Studio or Practice Related Courses ............................................5 Hours of Restricted Electives ....................................................................0 Hours of Unrestricted Electives ......................................................... 19-21 Total Required Hours in Planning Program ............................................48 Exams or Written Requirements: ............Thesis (6 credit) or Professional Report (4 credit) includes an oral defense.

Year Initiated: 1967 PAB Accreditation Degrees Granted through 8/31/09 .......................................................1093 Degrees Granted from 9/1/08 to 8/31/09..................................................40

FINANCIAL AID INFORMATION

Approximately nine, 1/4 - time TA and 4-5 RA appointments at total approx. $8,000 per nine month appointment (includes Annual Stipend $5,768; Tuition Scholarship Credit $1,679). Eligibility criteria: Academic achievement, experience, and professional potential.

UNDERGRADUATE ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS


Departmental Requirement:

Enrollment managed: admission through application review after 1st year design core or through transfer. Minimum GPA: None. Minimum SAT or ACT Scores: University admission based on composite score of ACT, GPA, class rank, and core courses.

ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 61

TOTAL MASTERS STUDENT COMPOSITION 2008-2009


STUDENTS IN THE PROGRAM

Paul Coates

ENROLLMENT STATUS AND GENDER


Part-Time M F 5 3 1 1 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 2 5 10 9

Associate Professor. BA-Political Science (1969), University of Wyoming; MPA (1971) University of Wyoming, Ph.D. (1980), Iowa State University. Specialization: Local Governmental Financial Management, Government Structure and Management, Governmental Performance Measurement, Community Performance Indicators, Citizen Participation.

Full-Time M F U.S. White 3 4 African American 0 0 Native American 0 0 Asian American 0 0 Hispanic 0 0 Other 0 0 Foreign 1 1 Total 4 5

(515) 294-1844

paulc@iastate.edu

Total
15 2 0 0 2 0 9 28

Assistant Professor. BA (1988), Federal University of Minas Gerais, Brazil; MA (2000), University of Illinois at Urbana. Specializations: Spatial Analysis (GIS), Human Development, Social Equity, Public Investments, Regional Policies. http://www.public.iastate.edu/~Ehaddad/

Monica A. Haddad

(515) 294-8979

haddad@iastate.edu

Douglas M. Johnston

Professor and Chair. BS-Environmental Studies (1979), State University of New York; BLA (1980) State University of New York, MLA (1982), Harvard University; Ph.D.-Civil and Environmental Engineering (1986), University of Washington. Specialization: Environmental Planning, Environmental Economics, Water Resources, GIS.

*Do not double count Hispanics; Hispanics also appear in the racial categories below.

(515) 294-8958

dmjohnst@iastate.edu

PLANNING FACULTY
Associate Professor. BS (1975), South Dakota State University; MA (1978), University of South Dakota; Ph.D. (1992), Iowa State University. Specializations: Community Economic Development, Leadership Development, Rural Sociology and Development, Public Policy Development.

Riad G. Mahayni

Timothy O. Borich

Professor. BS (1966), Oregon State University; MUP (1969), University of Oregon; Ph.D. (1972), University of Washington. Specializations: Transportation Planning, Planning Theory, Regional Planning, Planning in Developing Nations.

(515) 294-8524

rmahayni@iastate.edu

Francis Y. Owusu

(515) 294-8707

borich@iastate.edu

Carlton Basmajian

Assistant Professor. BA-History (1996), University of Chicago; MCP (2000), Georgia Institute of Technology, Ph.D. (2008), University of Michigan. Specialization: Regional Planning, Planning History, Suburbia, Land Use

Associate Professor. BA (1987), University of Ghana; MA (1990), University of Ghana; MA (1992), Carleton University, Canada; Ph.D. (20 Specializations: Community Economic Development, Environmental Planning, Planning Methods, GIS, Third World Development. http://www.public.iastate.edu/~fowusu/homepage.html

(515) 294-7769

fowusu@iastate.edu

(515) 294-6942

carlton@iastate.edu

Gerardo Sandoval

Associate Professor. BA (1984), McMaster University; MA (1987), University of Waterloo; Ph.D. (1989), University of FloridaGaineseville. Specializations: Community Economic Development, Telecommunications Planning, Small Town and Rural Planning, Plan Development and Implementation.

Susan L. Bradbury

Assistant Professor. BS (2000), University of California, Davis; MCP (2002) University of California, Berkeley; Ph.D. (2007), University of California, Berkeley. Specialization: Intersection of Economic & Community Development in Immigrant, Rural, and Inner-city

(515) 294-6764

gsandoval@iastate.edu

Gary D. Taylor

(515) 294-8720

bradbury1@iastate.edu

Tara Lynne Clapp

Assistant Professor. BS (1985), Northwest Missouri State University; JD (1988), University of Nebraska; MCRP (1996), Iowa State University. Specializations: Planning Law and Implementation, Intergovernmental Coordination, Small Town Planning.

Assistant Professor. BES (1985), University of Manitoba; MEDes (1995), University of Calgary; Ph.D. (2003), University of Southern CAlifornia. Specializations: Environmental Planning and Policy, Land Use Growth Management, Planning History and Theory, Research Methods. http:// www.public.iastate.edu/~Etclapp/

(515) 294-2973

gtaylor@iastate.edu

Ferruccio Trabalzi

(515) 294-7759

tlclapp@iastate.edu

Assistant Professor. BA Sociology, Universita La Sapienza, Roma, Italy; MA (1994) Environmental Planning, UCLA; Ph.D. (2002) Urban and Regional Planning. Specializations: Urban Design, Critical Studies of Cities and Regions, Territorial Development in Europe, North America and Africa, Small-scale Industrialization, and Alternative Food Systems.

(515) 294-8393

trabalzi@iastate.edu

Page 62 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

OTHER AFFILIATED FACULTY


Susan Cosner
Vice President of Community Initiatives for Iowa Area Development Group (S2008)

FYI
Department offers individual courses via distance education.

Stuart H. Huntington Alan Jensen Eric Jensen Jerry Knox

Associate Emeritus. BA (1964), North Park College; MS (1969), University of Missouri. GIS Coordinator, ISU Extension (MCRP, Iowa State University)

AICP AICP

Development Administrator, Planning and Building Department, City of Ankeny (MCRP) (S2008) Associate Emeritus. BA (1962), University of Iowa; MUP (1968), Michigan State University.

William Malone Phil Mescher

Associate Emeritus. BS (1947), MS (1950), Iowa State University. Transportation Planner III, Team Leader Traffic Forecasting and Modeling, Office of Systems Planning, Iowa Department of Transportation (F2008) (MS Transportation)

AICP

Gary Reiners

Principal, Public Management Resource Group. (S2008)

BA, J.D

R. Duane Shinn

Professor Emeritus. BArch (1960), University of Idaho; MS (1962), University of Southern California; Ph.D. (1969), University of Washington.

David Swenson

Adjunct Assistant Professor. BS (1979) University of South Dakota; MA (1981) University of South Dakota; MA (1985) University of Iowa. Specializations: Urban Economics.

(515) 294-7458

dswenson@iastate.edu

CENTRAL CAMPUS

ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 63

KANSAS STATE UNIVERSITY


Department of Landscape Architecture/ Regional and Community Planning
302 Seaton Hall Manhattan, Kansas 66506 Phone (785) 532-5961 Fax (785) 532-6722 E-mail: la-rcp@ksu.edu http://larcp.arch.ksu.edu/larcp/ Stephanie Rolley, FASLA, AICP, Head

MA/MS PAB PAB

ACSP Member: Full

Hours of Core ...........................................................................................34 Hours of Studio or Practice Related Courses .............................................0 Hours of Restricted Electives ................................................................. 2-6 Hours of Unrestricted Electives ............................................................ 8-12 Total Required Hours in Planning Program .............................................48 Exams or Written Requirements: .............. Comp. exam and specialization paper, or Master Report/Thesis

MASTERS GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

TOTAL MASTERS STUDENT COMPOSITION 2008-2009 US Citizens & Permanent Residents


Hispanics* Of any Race White African American Native American/ Pacific Islander Asian American Mixed Other / Dont know Non-US Citizens Non- Permanent Residents

PROGRAM INFORMATION
GRADUATE DEADLINES, TUITION AND FEES
Admission Deadline 2008-2009 ........................................................................varies Financial Aid Deadline 2008-2009 ....................................................................varies In-State Tuition and Fees ............................................. $3,569.40 for 12 credit hours Out-of State Tuition and Fees ...................................... $7,773.60 for 12 credit hours Application Fee ............................................. $70.00 Resident; $80.00 International Additional Fees ....................................................................... $19.00 per credit hour

Male 0 7 0 0 1 0 1 0 9

Female 0 7 0 0 2 0 1 3 10

Total 0 14 0 0 3 0 2 3

Annual Student Enrollment Applied


Masters 23 11

Accepted
22 6

Enrolled
18 19

07/08 08/09 07/08 08/09 07/08 08/09

Master of Regional and Community Planning


Contact Person: Phone: E-mail Stephanie Rolley, Professor and Head (785) 532-5961 srolley@ksu.edu

MASTERS DEGREE

Year Initiated: 1957 PAB Accredited Degrees Granted through 8/31/08...........................................................408 Degrees Granted from 9/1/07 to 8/31/08 ....................................................4

Total Students

19

* Do not double count Hispanics; Hispanics also appear in the racial categories below.

PLANNING FACULTY
Community Planning and Development Regional Resource Planning and Management
MASTERS ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS
University Admission Policy: GPA > 3.0 for regular admission; 2.75>GPA<3.0 for probationary admission 3.0 No Requirements 550: University; 600: Department Undergraduate Statistic Course and American Government.

Masters Specialization

Assistant Professor. BA Architecture, Washington University; MCP, University of Pennsylvania; PhD Candidate, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign. Specializations: Urban Design, design inquiry and methodology, planning theory and history.

Jason Brody

(785) 532-5961

jbrody@ksu.edu
AICP

C.A. Keithley

Minimum Undergraduate GPA: Minimum GRE: Minimum TOEFL Departmental Requirement:

Professor. BArch., MArch., MRCP, Kansas State University. Specializations: Project Management, Microcomputer Applications, Planning Analysis and Methods.

(785) 532-5961

cak@ksu.edu

Page 64 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

John Keller, PhD

Professor. BA, St. Benedicts College; MA, KSU; MS & PhD, Rutgers. Specializations: Rural Planning & Economic Development, Physical Planning & Practice, Land Use Regulation/Law, Transportation & Emergency Management.

FAICP

Robert Stokes, PhD

Adjunct Professor. BS, Antioch College; MS, Civil Engineering, Ohio State University; MCRP, Ohio State University; PhD, Texas A&M. Specializations: Transportation Planning.

(785) 532-5961

jwkplan@ksu.edu AICP

(785) 532-1595

drbobb@ksu.edu

John Wilhm Larry Lawhon, PhD


Associate Professor. BA, University of Oklahoma; MRCP, University of Nebraska; PhD, Texas A&M. Specializations: Planning Administration, Planning Principles, Housing and Development, Growth Management.

Adjunct Faculty. BS and MRCP, Kansas State University. Specializations: Real Estate Assessment.

Clyde Mitchell-Weaver, PhD

(785) 532-5961

lawhonll@ksu.edu AICP

Sheri Smith, PhD

Associate Professor. BA, George Washington University; MURP, University of Illinois at Champaign-Urbana; PhD, Texas A&M. Specializations: Quantitative Research Techniques, Planning Theory & Ethics, Infrastructure Planning & Development, Community Development.

Adjunct Associate Professor. BA Geography, University of Missouri; MA Geography, Kansas State University; MRCP, Kansas State University; PhD, UCLA. Specializations: Regional Development and Planning; Urban Systems and Third World Development.

(785) 532-5961

mithweav@ksu.edu

Vernon P. Deines, PhD

(785) 532-5961

kcsheri@ksu.edu APA

Ray Weisenburger

Emeritus Professor. BS, Architectural Engineering, KSU; MRP, KSU; PhD, University of Pittsburgh. Specializations: Rural Planning, Solid Waste Management, Planning Administration.

Professor. BArch and MRP, Cornell University. Specializations: Urban Design & Historic Preservation, Urban Visual Analysis, Housing & Land Development, Urban Development Issues.

(785) 532-5961

planone@ksu.edu

FYI
The department offers other degree programs, including a 5 year 150 credit hour Non Baccalaureate MRCP degree and a 36 credit hour on-line Master's Degree in Community Development. Contact the department for more information on these opportunities.

(785) 532-5961

rbw@ksu.edu

La Barbara Wigfall

Associate Professor. BArch, Howard University; MCRP, Harvard University. Specializations: Community Development and Historic Preservation.

(785) 532-5961

lbjw@ksu.edu

OTHER AFFILIATED FACULTY


Adjunct Faculty. BA and MS, Economics, Kansas State University; Post Graduate work, University of Minnesota. Specializations: Land Development & Finance.

Jack Crocker

John Hedeen

Adjunct Faculty. BA, Bethany College; MRCP, Kansas State University. Specializations: Real Estate Aquisition and Development.

Tim Keane, PhD

Adjunct Associate Professor. BSLA, Iowa State University; MLA, University of Michigan; PhD, University of Michigan. Specializations: Environmental Systems and Planning, Environmental Ethics.

(785) 532-5961

whisker@ksu.edu AICP

Stephanie Rolley

Adjunct Professor. BLA, Kansas State University; MCP, Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Specializations: Community Planning and Design.

(785) 532-5961

srolley@ksu.edu

Adjunct Emeritus Professor. BA, University of Kansas; MCP and PhD, Yale University. Specializations: Building and Environmental Health Systems.

OJ Selfridge

(785) 532-1120

ojs@ksu.edu ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 65

MASSACHUSETTS INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY


Department of Urban Studies and Planning
Room 7-337, 77 Massachusetts Avenue Cambridge, Massachusetts 02139 Phone (617) 253-9403 Fax (617) 253-2654 E-mail: duspinfo@mit.edu www.dusp.mit.edu Amy Glasmeier, Department Head (617) 253-1933 Sandra Wellford, Academic Administrator (617) 253-4409 - E-mail: wellford@mit.edu

BA/BS

MA/MS PAB

Ph.D.

ACSP Member: FULL

UNDERGRADUATE ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS


For University and Departmental Requirements: Check MIT Freshmen Admission

UNDERGRADUATE GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS


Hours of Core .......................................................................................... 60 Hours of Unrestricted Elective ........................................................... 60-73 Total Required Hours ............................................................................. 123 Thesis or Final Product ..................................................................Required

FINANCIAL AID INFORMATION

Assigned through MIT Undergraduate admission; not the Department.

MASTERS DEGREE
Master in City Planning
Year Initiated: 1935 PAB Accredited Degrees Granted through 8/31/09.........................................................2171 Degrees Granted from 9/1/08 to 8/31/09 ..................................................70

PROGRAM INFORMATION
UNDERGRADUATE DEADLINES, TUITION AND FEES
Admission Deadline .........................Apply through MIT Undergraduate Admission Financial Aid Deadline .......................................................................Same as above Tuition(In-State, Out-of-State and International): ................... $18,755 per semester Application Fee: .....................................................................................................$75 Additional Fees ...................................................$136/semester student activities fee

Admission Deadline for Masters program .................................................. January 3 Admission Deadline for Ph.D program ....................................................... January 3 Financial Aid Deadline for Masters program .............................................. January 3 Financial Aid Deadline for Ph.D Program .................................................. January 3 Tuition (In-State, Out-of-State and International) ................. $18,755 per semester Application Fee ......................................................................................................$75 Additional Fees: .................................. $136/semester student activities fee, optional health insurance for graduate students

GRADUATE DEADLINES, TUITION AND FEES

City Design and Development; Environmental Policy; Housing, Community and Economic Development; International Development. Cross-Cutting: Transportation; Urban Information Systems; Regional Planning.
MCP ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS
University Admission Policy: Minimum Undergraduate GPA: Minimum GRE: Minimum TOEFL Ranking in Undergraduate Class: Departmental Requirement: Bachelors degree from an accredited institution Required; no minimum 600 (Departmental Requirement) Not Required No Requirements

MCP Specializations

Annual Student Enrollment


Applied 08/09 09/10 301 431 1 7 107 136 Accepted 08/09 09/10 113 91 1 4 28 14 Enrolled 08/09 09/10 67 64 1 3 19 11

MCP GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

MCP MS PhD

Hours of Core ...........................................................................................17 Hours of Studio or Practice Related Courses .............................................4 Hours of Restricted Electives .....................................................................0 Hours of Unrestricted Electives ................................................................21 Thesis ..........................................................................................................8 Total Required Hours in Planning Program .............................................50

UNDERGRADUATE DEGREE
BS in Planning
Year Initiated: 1933 Degrees Granted through 8/31/09...........................................................382 Degrees Granted from 9/1/08 to 8/31/09 ....................................................6

MS in Planning

Year Initiated: 1985 Degrees Granted through 8/31/09.............................................................48 Degrees Granted from 9/1/08 to 8/31/09 ....................................................4

Urban and Environmental Policy and Planning; Regional Development and Public Policy; Urban Society, History, and Politics
Page 66 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

Undergraduate Specializations

City Design and Development; Environmental Policy; Housing, Community, and Economic Development; International Development. Cross-Cutting: Transportation; Urban Information Systems; Regional Planning.

Master of Science Specializations

MASTER of SCIENCE ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS


University Admission Policy: Intended for professionals with a number of years of distinguished practice; bachelors degree from an accredited institution and a DUSP faculty sponsor. Required; no minimum 600 (Departmental Requirement) Not Required No Requirements

DOCTORAL DEGREE
Ph.D. in Urban and Regional Planning/ Studies
Year initiated 1958 Degrees Granted through 8/31/2009......................................................383 Degrees Granted from 9/1/2008 to 8/31/2009 ...........................................7 Dissertations Completed from 9/1/2007 to 8/31/2008 Institutional Perspectives on Road Pricing: essays on implementation, response, and adaptation Constructing Community : class, privatization and social life in a Boston mixed income housing development The Relative Risk: parenting, poverty, and peers in the three city study of moving to opportunity Institutional arrangements and land reallocation during transition : a regional analysis of small farms in Romania Why some were so fast while others not: speed of entry as a new competitive asset in late-industrialization Reinventing VAT collection : industry vertical assessment, revenue increase, and public sector reliability Strategic Unionism: the political role of the Congress of South African Trade Unions (COSATU) in South Africa and what it means for Black workers Regional Catalytic Economic Impacts and Noise-Damage Costs of Aviation Growth Impacts of greenhouse gas mitigation policies on agricultural land Transfers and Path Choice in Urban Public Transport System Recovering the Wall: enclosure, ethics, and the American landscape To Be of Use: creative practice across the front lines of economic selfsufficiency programs

Minimum Undergraduate GPA: Minimum GRE: Minimum TOEFL Ranking in Undergraduate Class: Departmental Requirement:

MASTER OF SCIENCE GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

Hours of Core .............................................................................................0 Hours of Studio or Practice Related Courses .............................................0 Hours of Restricted Electives ...................................................................42 Hours of Unrestricted Electives ................................................................16 Thesis ......................................................................................................... 8 Total Required Hours in Planning Program ............................................ 66

FINANCIAL AID INFORMATION

Approximately 2/3 of the MCP class receives some form of tuition assistance. Of these, roughly half receive full-tuition awards for one or two years, some with additional RA stipends; others are typically offered halftuition grants. Students admitted without aid are also eligible to apply for funding in the second year of the program. All students can apply for departmentally funded jobs and off-campus internships (~$2,500/ semester). Aid is based on need and merit. We encourage all applicants to apply for aid regardless of nationality or race.

TOTAL MASTERS STUDENT COMPOSITION 2009-2010


US Citizens/Perm. residents Hispanics of any race White African-American Native American/ Pacific Islander Asian American Mixed Other Non-US Citizens/Non Perm. Residents Total Students 10 13 54 11 15 84 21 28 136 Male 4 21 1 2 3 Female 7 34 5 0 12 Total 11 55 6 2 15

First Fields of Study: City Design and Development, International Economic Development, Urban Information Systems, Public Policy and Politics, Urban History, Urban and Regional Economics, Urban Sociology Second Fields of Study: Environmental Planning and Natural Resource Management, Housing and Real Estate Development, Labor and Employment Policy, Neighborhood and Community Development, Negotiation and Dispute Resolution, Planning in Developing Countries, Regional Development, Transportation and Land Use

Doctoral Specializations

DOCTORAL ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS


University Admission Policy: Departmental Requirement: Minimum GRE:

If English is not the native language, TOEFL score of 600 (Departmental requirement) Masters degree is recommended 1200 and 5.0 in Analytical writing

*Do not double count Hispanics; Hispanics also appear in the racial categories below. ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 67

DOCTORAL GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

Hours of Core ...........................................................................................16 Hours of Studio or Practice Related Courses .............................................0 Hours of Restricted Electives .....................................................................0 Hours of Unrestricted Electives ..................................................................0 Total Required Hours in Program.....32 with Masters / 42 without Masters Thesis or Final Product......................3-part general exam: written proposal, written questions, and oral exam.

Associate Professor. MLA, University of Pennsylvania. Specializations: landscape and urbanization.

Alan Berger

(617) 253-6707

aberger@mit.edu

Associate Professor. Ph.D., UC-Berkeley (1995). Specializations: Landscape Architecture, Site Planning and Design, Design Standards, Urban Simulation.

Eran Ben-Joseph

FINANCIAL AID INFORMATION


Tuition Awards:

(617) 253-7305

ebj@mit.edu

Each incoming Ph.D class is awarded 7 full tuition +stipend for at least 3 years. Merit and Need

Xavier de Souza Briggs

Eligibility Criteria:

Associate Professor. Ph.D., Columbia (1996). Specializations: Housing, Race and Metropolitan Opportunity, Social Capital and Racial Segregation, Dynamics of Democratic Problem Solving.

(617) 253-7956

xbriggs@mit.edu

TOTAL DOCTORAL STUDENT COMPOSITION 2009-2010


US Citizens/Perm. residents Hispanics of any race White African-American Native American/Pacific Islander Asian American Mixed Other Non-US Citizens/Non Perm. Residents Total Students Male 1 8 3 0 2 0 0 27 41 Female 1 13 1 1 2 0 5 15 38 Total 2 21 4 1 4 0 5 42 79

JoAnn Carmin

Associate Professor. Ph.D., UNC-Chapel Hill. Specializations: Civil Society Participation in Environmental Governance, Environmental Movements and Organizations, Environmental Disaster and Emergencies, Central and Eastern Europe.

(617) 452-2697

jcarmin@mit.edu

Professor, Chancellor. Ph.D., MIT (1975). Specializations: Housing Policy, Community Development.

Phillip Clay

(617) 253-6164

plclay@mit.edu

Dayna Cunningham
(617) 452-1380

Executive Director, CoLab. JD, NYU; MBA, MIT (2004). Specializations: Community Development, Participation.

dayna@mit.edu

Professor. Ph.D., UCLA (1986). Specializations: Cities and National Development, Politics of Urban Policy, Policing and Public Security, Cities in Conflict.

Diane Davis

(617) 452-2804

dedavis@mit.edu

John de Monchaux

Professor Emeritus. MArch (Urban Design), Harvard (1963). Specializations: Urban Settlements, Design Review.

(617) 253-8299

demon@mit.edu

*Do not double count Hispanics; Hispanics also appear in the racial categories below.

Joseph Ferreira, Jr.

PLANNING FACULTY
Cherie Abbanat
Lecturer. MCP, MIT (1997). Specializations: Writing and Communication for Planners.

Professor. PhD., MIT (1971). Specializations: Urban Spatial Structure, Geographic Information Systems, Community Statistical Systems, Planning Support Systems.

(617) 253-7410

jf@mit.edu

Lynn Fisher

(617) 324-1570

abbanat@mit.edu

Associate Professor. Ph.D., Pennsylvania State University. Specializations: Real Estate, Property Rights, Housing Economics, Financial Contracting.

Professor. Ph.D., London School of Economics. Specializations: Economic and Industrial Development.

Alice Amsden

(617) 252-1685

lfisher@mit.edu

(617) 253-6254

amsden@mit.edu

Page 68 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

Assistant Professor, Ph.D., Harvard (2001). Specializations: Geographic Information Systems, Modeling Alternative Futures, Environmental Planning.

Michael Flaxman

(617) 258-0461

mflaxman@mit.edu

Associate Professor. Ph.D., MIT (1998). Specializations: Science and Environmental Politics, Collaborative Environmental Policy Making, Land Use, Natural Resources and Ecosystem Management.

Judith Layzer

(617) 253-5196

jlayzer@mit.edu

Robert Fogelson

Frank Levy
foge@mit.edu

Professor. Ph.D., Harvard (1964). Specializations: Urban and Suburban History.

Professor. Ph.D., Yale (1969). Specializations: Urban Economics, Computerization of Work, Labor Markets.

(617) 253-1671

(617) 253-2089

flevy@mit.edu

Dennis Frenchman

Professor. MArch AS, MCP, MIT (1976). Specializations: Urban Design, Advanced Media and Design of Public Space, Heritage and Cultural Development, Transformation of Former Industrial Areas.

Ceasar McDowell

Professor of the Practice. Ed.D., Harvard (1988). Specializations: Community Building, Cross-Boundary Leadership, Information Technology, Community Psychology.

(617) 253-8847

dennisf@mit.edu

(617) 253-7587

ceasar@mit.edu

David Geltner

Professor. Ph.D., MIT (1989). Specializations: Real Estate Finance, Real Estate Investment.

Harvey Michaels

Lecturer. MCP, MIT. Specializations: Energy Efficiency.

(617) 253-5131

dgeltner@mit.edu

(617) 253-2084

hgm@mit.edu

Amy K. Glasmeier

Professor and Department Head. PhD, UC Berkeley (1986). Specializations: Geography and Regional Economic Development; Poverty.

Professor. Ph.D., Harvard (1966). Specializations: Regional Economic Development, Energy/Environmental Analysis, Economic-Impact Analysis.

Karen R. Polenske

(617) 324-6565

amyglass@mit.edu AICP

(617) 253-6881

krp@mit.edu

Ezra Haber Glenn

Balakrishnan Rajagopal

Lecturer. MA, University of California at Davis (1996). Specializations: Community Development, Local Planning.

(617) 253-2024

eglenn@mit.edu

Associate Professor. SJD, Harvard (2000). Specializations: Human Rights, Property and Land Use Law, Displacement and Resettlement, Globalization.

(617) 258-7721

braj@mit.edu

Lorlene Hoyt

Associate Professor. Ph.D., University of Pennsylvania (2001). Specializations: Urban Revitalization, Business Improvement Districts, Public Participation GIS, Planning Education and Pedagogy.

(617) 452-2073

lorlene@mit.edu

Associate Professor of the Practice, Ph.D., University of Cambridge (2001). Specializations: Urban Design, Electronic Media and Design of Public Space, Human-Computer Interfaces.

Carlo Ratti

(617) 253-7926

ratti@mit.edu

Professor Emeritus. Ph.D., MIT (1967). Specializations: History of Housing Policy, Community Development, Community Networks, Social Services and Housing.

Langley Keyes

Martin Rein

Professor Emeritus. Ph.D., Brandeis (1961). Specializations: Comparative Social Welfare Policy, Social Security Systems.

(617) 253-1540

lkeyes@mit.edu

(617) 253-2047

mrein@mit.edu

Annette Kim

Assistant Professor. Ph.D., UC-Berkeley. Specializations: International Urban Development, Institutional Change, Spatial Analysis, Transition Economies.

Assistant Professor. PhD, MIT (2002). Specializations: Urban Design and Development; Urban Revitalization. Professor. Ph.D., UCLA (1984). Specializations: Development Planning, Informal Economy, Planning Theory.

Brent Ryan

(617) 324-6135

annette@mit.edu

Bish Sanyal

Eric Klopfer

Associate Professor. Ph.D., University of Wisconsin (1997). Specializations: Science Education, Teacher Training, Educational Technology, Biology.

(617) 253-3270

sanyal@mit.edu

Karl Seidman

(617) 253-2025

klopfer@mit.edu

Senior Lecturer. MPP, Harvard University. Specializations: Economic Development Planning, Dev. Finance, Neighborhood Commercial Revitalization.

(617) 253-3964

seidman@mit.edu

ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 69

Richard Sennett

Adjunct Professor of Sociology and Urban Studies. Ph.D., Harvard University (1969). Specializations: Evolution of Work, Development of Public Realm, Craftmanship and Culture, History of Urban Design.

Julian Beinart

Professor. M. Arch., MIT (1956); MCP, Yale (1958). Specializations: Urban Design, History and Theory of City Form.

(617) 253-7918

jbeinart@mit.edu

Lecturer. MCP, MIT (1998). Specializations: Urban Design, Cultural Tourism and Heritage Planning and Development, Growth Management Policies and Politics.

Susan Silberberg-Robinson

Visiting Professor. Ph.D., University of Paris (1967). Specializations: Information Technology and Society, Social Movements.

Manuel Castells

(617) 253-2027

scsilber@mit.edu

Tony Ciochetti

Anne Whiston Spirn

Professor. MLA, University of Pennsylvania (1974). Specializations: Urban Landscape Planning and Design, Landscape History and Theory, Landscape Photography.

Professor of the Practice. Ph.D., University of Wisconsin (1995). Specializations: Real Estate Finance, Real Estate Development.

(617) 253-3988

tc@mit.edu

(617) 452-2602

spirn@mit.edu

Lawrence Susskind
(617) 253-2026

Professor. Ph.D., MIT (1973). Specializations: Environmental Policy, Negotiation, Public Dispute Resolution.

AICP

Senior Lecturer. Ph.D., Boston University (1995). Specializations: Transportation Logistics.

Joseph Coughlin

(617) 253-4978

coughlin@mit.edu

susskind@mit.edu

Michael Dennis

Terry Szold

Adjunct Professor. MRP, University of Massachusetts-Amherst (1983). Specializations: Land Use Planning, Growth Management, Politics of Development.

Professor. B.Arch., University of Oregon (1962). Specializations: Architecture and Urban Design, Campus Design and Planning.

(617) 253-7650

mdennis@mit.edu AICP/FAICP

(617) 253-7419

tsszold@mit.edu

Ralph Gakenheimer

Judith Tendler

Professor. Ph.D., Columbia (1966). Specializations: Development Planning, Public-Sector Performance in Developing Countries, Rural Development, Poverty Reduction.

Professor. Ph.D., University of Pennsylvania (1964). Specializations: Transportation, Infrastructure, Metropolitan Planning in Developing Countries.

(617) 253-1932

rgaken@mit.edu

(617) 253-0249

tendler@mit.edu

Reinhard Goethert

Principal Research Associate. Dr.- Ing, Technische Hochschule (1985). Specializations: Urban Housing in Developing Countries, Urban Upgrading.

J. Phillip Thompson

(617) 253-2402

rkg@mit.edu

Associate Professor. Ph.D., CUNY (1983). Specializations: Urban Politics, Race Relations, Labor and Local Economic Development, Community Organization.

(617) 452-2813

jt71@mit.edu

Senior Lecturer Emeritus. MCP, Harvard (1962). Specializations: Technology and Urban Development.

Michael Joroff

(617) 253-1354

mljoroff@mit.edu

Professor. D.Phil, Oxford (1985). Specializations: Design Politics, Public Housing, Qualitative Methods, Disaster Recovery.

Lawrence J. Vale

Herman Karl

(617) 253-0561

ljvale@mit.edu

Co-Director, MIT-USGS Science Impact Collaborative (MUSIC). PhD, USC (1977). Specializations: Science and Public Policy.

(617) 324-0262

hkarl@mit.edu

Assistant Professor, Ph.D., MIT (2005). Specializations: Urban Transportation, Transportation and Environmental Sustainability.

P. Christopher Zegras
(617) 452-2433

Melvin King

czegras@mit.edu

Senior Lecturer Emeritus. M.ED., Boston Teachers College. Specializations: Community Development and Information Technology.

(617) 253-3287

mhking@mit.edu

OTHER AFFILIATED FACULTY


Nicholas Ashford
Professor. Ph.D., JD, University of Chicago. Specializations: Technology and Policy, Environmental Regulation, Environmental Law and Policy.

Tunney Lee

Professor Emeritus, Lecturer. B. Arch., University of Michigan (1954). Specializations: Urban Design, Chinatowns, Housing Density.

(617) 258-7275

tflee@mit.edu

(617) 253-1664

nashford@mit.edu

Richard Locke

Professor. Ph.D., MIT (1989). Specializations: Comparative Politics and Political Development, Industrial Relations, Political Economy.

(617) 253-4912

rlocke@mit.edu

Page 70 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

Lecturer. MBA, Columbia University. Specializations: Real Estate Finance.

Tod McGrath

William Wheaton

(617) 253-4373

Professor. Ph.D. University of Pennsylvania. Specializations: Urban Economics, Real Estate, Public Finance.

(617) 253-1723

wheaton@mit.edu

Professor. MA, University of Cambridge. Specializations: Design Theory, Computer-Aided Design, Electronic Media.

William J. Mitchell

Clarence Williams

(617) 452-3226

wjm@mit.edu

Adjunct Professor Emeritus. Ph.D., University of Connecticut. Specializations: Race Relations.

(617) 253-5446

cgwm@mit.edu

Paul Osterman

Professor. Ph.D., MIT (1976). Specializations: Labor Markets, Human Resources and Training. (617) 253-2667 osterman@mit.edu

Professor. Ph.D., MIT (1970). Specializations: Urban Transport, Public Transport Operation.

Nigel Wilson

(617) 253-5046

nhmw@mit.edu

Michael Piore

Professor. Ph.D., Harvard. Specializations: Political Economy, Economic Institutions and Growth Policy Analysis.

(617) 253-3377

mpiore@mit.edu

Principal Research Scientist. M. Arch., MIT (1975). Specializations: Urban Development, Boston Politics.

Thomas Piper

(617) 253-8950

piper@mit.edu

Peter Roth

FYI
CAN YOU MAKE A DIFFERENCE IN THE WORLD?
Can you design better cities? Can you help places grow sustainably? Can you help communities thrive? Can you help advance equitable world development?

Lecturer. M. Arch,, MS, MIT (1986). Specializations: Urban Development.

(617) 253-4373

Frederick Salvucci

Senior Lecturer, Senior Research Associate. SM, MIT (1962). Specializations: Urban Transportation Planning, Transit Management, Transportation Policy.

MIT IS MAKING A DIFFERENCE AND YOU CAN TOO


At the MIT Department of Urban Studies and Planning (DUSP), we are committed to positive social change. Our moral vision is translated into professional education in distinct ways: We believe in the abilities of urban and regional institutions to steadily improve the quality of life of citizens. We emphasize democratic decision-making involving both public and private actors, and acknowledge the necessity of government leadership to ensure greater social and economic equality. We foster a positive approach to technological innovation as a major force of social change. We trust that the built environment can meet the needs of diverse populations and serve as a source of meaning in their daily lives.

(617) 253-5378

salvucci@mit.edu

Adle Naud Santos


(617) 253-4402

Professor, Dean. M.Arch., MCP, University of Pennsylvania (1968). Specializations: Architecture and Urban Design, Housing.

ansantos@mit.edu

Susan Silbey

Professor. Ph.D., University of Chicago. Specializations: Law and Society.

(617) 253-6952

ssilbey@mit.edu

Joseph Sussman

Professor. Ph.D., MIT (1968). Specializations: Transportation Systems.

(617) 253-4430

sussman@mit.edu

Sam Bass Warner, Jr.


(617) 253-5115

Visiting Professor. Ph.D., Harvard (1959). Specializations: Urban History, Urban Environments.

sambass@mit.edu

Professor. Ph.D. University of Chicago (1983). Specializations: Water Resources, Landscape Architecture. (617) 253-1400 wescoat@mit.edu

James Wescoat, Jr.,

ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 71

McGILL UNIVERSITY
School of Urban Planning
815 Sherbrooke Street Montreal, Quebec, Canada H3A2K6 Phone (514) 398-4075 Fax (514) 398-8376 E-mail: admission.planning@mcgill.ca www.mcgill.ca/urbanplanning Dr. David Brown, School Director Phone (514) 398-4075 E-mail: david.brown@mcgill.ca

MA/MS CIP

ACSP Member:
CORRESPONDING

MASTERS GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

Credits of Core ..........................................................................................27 Credits of Studio or Practice Related Courses .........................................15 Credits of Restricted Electives .................................................................12 Credits of Unrestricted Electives ................................................................6 Other ................................................................................ 6 units Internship Total Required Credits in Planning Program............................................66 Thesis, Exams or final product .......................Supervised Research Project

TOTAL MASTERS STUDENT COMPOSITION 2008-2009


Origin Citiz. & perm. res.-Other/dont know Non-cit. & non-PR Total Male 25 0 25 Female 28 0 28 Total 53 0 53

PROGRAM INFORMATION
GRADUATE DEADLINES, TUITION AND FEES
Admission Deadline 2009-10 ...........................................................January 15, 2010 Financial Aid Deadline 2009-10 .......................................................January 15, 2010 In-State Tuition and Fee: ......................................................$3,682.36 Can. per year Out-of-State Tuition and Fees: ............................................ $7,215.16 Can. per year International Tuition and Fees: ...........................................$15,524.51 Can. per year Application Fee ...........................................................................................$100 Can. Additional Fees: ..........................................................................................$180 Can.

Annual Student Enrollment Applied


Masters 190 180

PLANNING FACULTY
Accepted Enrolled
61 39 25 27

07/08 08/09 07/08 08/09 07/08 08/09

Madhav Badami

Master of Urban Planning


Contact Person: Phone: E-mail

MASTERS DEGREE
David Brown, Director (514) 398-4075 david.brown@mcgill.ca

Assistant. B.Tech, MS, IIT, Madras; MEDes, Calgary; PhD, UBC. Specializations: Environmental Policy and Planning, Sustainable Urban Transport, International Planning, Environment and Development. (514) 398-3183 madhav.badami@mcgill.ca

Lisa Bornstein

Year Initiated: 1974 CIP Accredited Degrees Granted through 8/31/09...........................................................506 Degrees Granted from 9/1/08 to 8/31/09 ..................................................20

Assistant. BSc, UC Berkeley; MRP, Cornell; PhD, UC Berkeley. Specializations: International Planning, Economic Development, Environmental Policy and Planning, Institutions and Governance. (514) 398-4077 lisa.bornstein@mcgill.ca
Associate. BA, Bishops; MUP, McGill; PhD, Sheffield. Specializations: Environmental Governance, Planning in Developing Countries, GIS Applications in Planning, Environment and Behavior.

Physical Planning, Urban/Regional Development, Transportation Planning, Urban Design, International Development
MASTERS ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS
University Admission Policy: Minimum Undergraduate GPA: Minimum GRE: Minimum TOEFL Departmental Requirement: Must hold a Bachelors degree from an accredited institution. 3.0 Not Required iBT: 100 (with 23 for each component) Must hold a Bachelors degree from an accredited institution.

Masters Specializations

David Brown

(514) 398-4075

david.brown@mcgill.ca

Ahmed El-Geneidy

Assistant. BAA, MArch, Alexandria; PhD, Portland State University. Specializations: Land Use and Transportation Planning, Public Transit Planning and Operations, Travel Behaviour, GIS Applications.

(514) 398-8741

ahmed.elgeneidy@mcgill.ca

Page 72 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

Associate. B.Eng, Eindhoven; MSc, MCP, MIT; PhD, University of California, Berkeley. Specializations: Metropolitan Development, LandUse Regulation, Neighbourhood and Site Planning, History and Theory.

Raphael Fischler

FYI
Montreal is a cosmopolitan city with roots in both French and English culture. It has four universities and many colleges, a downtown that is active 24/7, attractive and safe neighborhoods, and plenty of recreational opportunities. It is an exceptional laboratory for urban studies and planning, and the School is well-integrated in the local planning world. Students, who have varied disciplinary and ethnic/cultural backgrounds participate in local planning through studio courses and individual initiatives. The School is also very active in international research and has extensive experience in China, India, Pakistan, Southern Africa, Nicaragua, Honduras, Costa Rica, Barbados, Belize, Trinidad and Tobago.

(514) 398-4076

raphael.fischler@mcgill.ca

Jane Glenn

Emeritus. BA, LLB, Queens; D. en droit, Strasbourg. Specializations: Land Use Planning Law, Agricultural Land Control, Land Tenure. (514) 398-6629 jane.glenn@mcgill.ca

Nik Luka

Assistant. BAA, Ryerson; MArch, Laval; PhD, Toronto. Specializations: Urban Design, Landscape Planning, Housing, Urban Form, Environment and Behavior, Public Space. (514) 398-5925 nik.luka@mcgill.ca

Jeanne M. Wolfe

Emeritus. BSc, London; MSc, Western Ontario; MA, McGill. Specializations: Planning History and Theory, Housing Policy and Housing Cooperatives. (514) 398-2255 jeanne.wolfe@mcgill.ca

OTHER AFFILIATED FACULTY


David Farley
Senior Adjunct Professor. BArch., McGill; MArch; Harvard; M City Planning, Harvard. Specialization: Urban Design. dfarle@po-box.mcgill.ca

Mario Polese

Senior Adjunct Professor. BA, New York; MA, PhD, Pennsylvania. Specializations: Urban and Regional Economics, Development and Spatial Structures. (514) 499-4070 mario_polese@ucs.inrs.ca

Ray Tomalty

Adjunct Professor. BA, MPA, Queens; PhD, Waterloo. Specializations: Growth Management, Housing, Local Finances, Environmental Planning and Policy. (514) 847-9259 ray.tomalty@mcgill.ca

ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 73

MIAMI UNIVERSITY
Urban and Regional Planning
216 Shideler Hall Oxford, Ohio 45056 Phone (513) 529-5010 Fax (513) 529-1948 E-mail: geography@muohio.edu www.muohio.edu/geography William H. Renwick, Department Chair Phone (513) 529-5010 E-mail: geography@muohio.edu

BA/BS

ACSP Member: FULL

PLANNING FACULTY
James M. Rubenstein
Professor. AB, University of Chicago (1970); MSC, The London School of Economics and Political Science (1971); PhD, Johns Hopkins University (1975) Specializations: Community Development, Demography, International Development and Planning, Land Use/Growth Management. www.muohio.edu/geography (513) 529-5025 rubensjm@muohio.edu

PROGRAM INFORMATION
UNDERGRADUATE DEADLINES, TUITION AND FEES
Admission Deadline 2008-09 ............................................................................Varies Financial Aid Deadline 2008-09 ........................................................................Varies In-State Tuition and Fees: ......................................................... $12,258 per semester Out-of-State Tuition and Fees: ............................................... $26,143 per semester Application Fee: .....................................................................................................$50 Additional Fee: ................................................................................................... None

Associate Professor. BS, Pennsylvania State (1992); MA, University of Arizona (1999); Ph.D., University of Arizona (2003). Specializations: Globalization, Regionalism, International Planning, Land Use Law (513) 529-9284 prythedl@muohio.edu

David Prytherch

OTHER AFFILIATED FACULTY


Bruce D'Arcus
Associate Professor. BA, University of California (1994); MA, University of Colorado (1997); PhD, Syracuse University (2001) Specializations: Public Space, Cultural Politics. http://www.users.muohio.edu/darcusb/ (513) 529-1521 darcusb@muohio.edu

UNDERGRADUATE DEGREE
BA in Urban and Regional Planning
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail James M. Rubenstein, Professor (513) 529-5025 rubensjm@muohio.edu

Marcia England

Assistant Professor. BA, University of Washington (1998); MA, University of Washington (2002); Ph.D., University of Kansas (2006). Specializations: Access to Public Space; the Politics of Representations; and the Socio-Spatial Regulation of Marginalized Persons (513) 529-5023 m.england@muohio.edu

Year Initiated: 1976 Degrees Granted through 8/31/09..........................................................287 Degrees Granted from 9/1/08 to 8/31/09 .................................................19

Jerry Green

Computers/GIS, Community Development International Development, Rural/Small Town Planning


UNDERGRADUATE ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS
Departmental Requirement: No Requirements Minimum GPA: No Requirements Minimum SAT or ACT Scores: No Requirements

Undergraduate Specializations

Associate Professor. BS, Kent State (1963); MRP, University of North Carolina (1967); PhD, University of North Carolina (1976) Specializations: Land Use Capability Analysis, Aerial Photo Interpretation, Map Interpretation. (513) 529-5017 greenje@muohio.edu

John Maingi

Associate Professor. BS, Moi University (1987); MS, University of Arizona (1992); PhD, University of Arizona (1998) Specializations: Remote Sensing, GIS, Natural Resource. (513) 529-5024 maingijk@muohio.edu

UNDERGRADUATE GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

Ian Yeboah

Hours of Core .......................................................................................... 12 Hours of Concentration Area ..................................................................... 0 Hours of Restricted Elective .................................................................... 28 Hours of Elective ....................................................................................... 0 Total Required Hours In Planning Program ............................................ 40 Total Required Hours to graduate from University ..................................... Thesis, Exams or Final Product ............................................... Not required

Professor. BA, University of Science & Technology (1982); MSc, University of Calgary (1988); Ph.D., University of Calgary (1994). Specializations: Globalization and Urbanization, Globalization and Population Movements, Global Development and Poverty http://www.users.muohio.edu.yeboahie (513) 529-5013 yeboahie@muohio.edu

FINANCIAL AID INFORMATION


Ohio Resident Scholarship Ohio Leader Scholarship

Page 74 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

MICHIGAN STATE UNIVERSITY


School of Planning Design & Construction Urban and Regional Planning Program
East Lansing, Michigan 48824-1030 Phone (517) 432-3393 Fax (517) 432-3772 E-mail: urp@msu.edu http://www.spdc.msu.edu Scott G. Witter, Director E-mail: witter@msu.edu

BA/BS PAB

MA/MS PAB

ACSP Member: FULL

Hours of Core/Studio Courses ................................................................. 30 Hours of Cognates/Guided Electives ....................................................... 21 Other ........................................................................................................ 69 Total Required Hours In Planning Program ............................................ 51 Total Required Hours to Graduate from University .............................. 120 Thesis or Final Product ............................................................ Not required Internship ............................................................................. Recommended

UNDERGRADUATE GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

FINANCIAL AID INFORMATION

5 Undergraduate scholarships, eligibility based on merit.

MASTERS DEGREE
Master of Urban and Regional Planning
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail Mark I. Wilson, Associate Director (517) 353-9056 pdcgrad@msu.edu

PROGRAM INFORMATION
UNDERGRADUATE DEADLINES, TUITION AND FEES
Admission Deadline 2009-10 .................................................................... October 15 Financial Aid Deadline 2009-10 ...............................................................February 15 In-State Tuition and Fees: .....................................................$5,608.00 per semester Out-of-State Tuition and Fees: ............................................ $13,273.00 per semester Application Fee: ..................................................................................................... $35 Additional Fees: ...................................................................................................None

Admission Deadline 2009-10 .......................................................June 15/October 15 Financial Aid Deadline 2009-10 ...................................................................March 15 In-State Tuition and Fees: ...................................................... $5,665.25 per semester Out-of-State Tuition and Fees: .............................................$11,170.25 per semester Application Fee: ....................................................................................................$50 Additional Fees: .................................................................................................. None

GRADUATE DEADLINES, TUITION AND FEES

Year Initiated: 1946 PAB Accredited Degrees Granted through 5/15/09...........................................................380 Degrees Granted from 9/1/07 to 5/15/09 ....................................................9

Land Use Planning Community & Economic Development


MASTERS ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS
University Admission Policy: Minimum Undergraduate GPA: Minimum GRE: Minimum TOEFL Ranking in Undergraduate Class: Departmental Requirement: Departmental Recommendation Bachelors Degree 3.0 recommended Required 92/93; 237 Not Required Bachelors Degree Basic Statistics

Masters Specializations

Annual Student Enrollment Applied


Undergraduate MURP MURP/JD

Accepted

Enrolled

07/08 08/09 07/08 08/09 07/08 08/09 N/A N/A N/A N/A 111 98 44 0 46 0 29 0 21 0 11 0 3 0

UNDERGRADUATE DEGREE
BS Urban and Regional Planning
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail Ms. Jonglim Han Yoo, Advisor (517) 353-9054 pdcugrad@msu.edu

MASTERS GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

Hours of Core/Studio Courses ..................................................................28 Hours of Concentrated Area .....................................................................12 Research Component ................................................................................ 8 Total Required Hours in Planning Program ............................................ 48 Exam,Thesis or Final Product: ............................. Plan A Thesis or Plan B Research Paper

FINANCIAL AID INFORMATION


5 scholarships/fellowships Possible assistantships Eligibility Criteria: Determined on merit.

Year Initiated:1946 PAB Accredited Degrees Granted through 5/15/09......................................................... 950 Degrees Granted from 9/1/07 to 5/15/09 ................................................ 52

UNDERGRADUATE ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS


Departmental Requirement: Suggested: Adv. english, composition, algebra, statistics & computer skills Minimum GPA: Depends on pool of applicants Minimum SAT or ACT Scores: Depends on pool of applicants

ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 75

JOINT MASTERS OF URBAN AND REGIONAL PLANNING AND JD


Contact Person: Phone: E-mail Mark I. Wilson, Associate Director (517) 353-9056 pdcgrad@msu.edu

PLANNING FACULTY
Kenneth E. Corey
Professor. PhD, University of Cincinnati; MCP, University of Cincinnati; MA, University of Cincinnati; BA, University of Cincinnati. Specializations: International Development, Digital Communities.

AICP

Year Initiated: 2004 Not Accredited Degrees Granted through 8/31/06...............................................................1 Degrees Granted from 9/1/08 to 8/31/09 ....................................................0

(517) 432-4750

corey@msu.edu

Peilei Fan

JOINT MASTERS ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS


University Admission Policy: Minimum Undergraduate GPA: Minimum GRE: Minimum TOEFL Ranking in Undergraduate Class: Departmental Requirement:

Bachelors degree 3.0 Recommended Required 92/93; 237 Not Required LSAT and undergraduate GPA are both considered; no minimum stated.

Assistant Professor. PhD, Massachusetts Institute of Technology; MCRP, Rutgers University; BS, Nanjing University, P.R. China; Specializations: High Tech Industrialization, Urbanization in Asia, Land Use, and Spatial Analysis

(517) 432-6517

fanpeile@msu.edu

Roger E. Hamlin

JOINT MASTERS GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

Professor. PhD, Syracuse University; MRP, Syracuse University; AB, Hamilton College. Specializations: Fiscal/Regional Planning, Economic Development, Real Estate Development.

AICP

(517) 353-8743

hamlin@msu.edu

Hours of Core/Studio Courses ..................................................................83 Hours of Restricted Electives ...................................................................27 Hours of Unrestricted Electives ..................................................................0 Research Component ................................................................................ 8 Total Required Hours in Planning Program ............................................48 Exam,Thesis or Final Product: ............................. Plan A Thesis or Plan B Research Paper.

Ren C. Hinojosa

Professor. PhD, University of Washington; MS, University of Washington; CE, Technical University of Oruro, Bolivia. Specializations: Research and Evaluation Methods, Transportation Planning, Regional Analysis, International Planning and Development.

(517) 353-3184

hinojosa@msu.edu

TOTAL MASTERS STUDENT COMPOSITION 2008-2009 US Citizens & Permanent Residents


Hispanics* Of any Race White African American Native American/ Pacific Islander Asian American Mixed Other / Dont know Non-US Citizens Non- Permanent Residents

Eva Kassens

PhD Massachusetts Institute of Technology; MS, Massachusetts Institute of Technology; Dipl.Ing., University of Karlsruhe (Germany). Specializations: Transportaiton Planning and Policy, Sustainable Citites and Regions

(517) 432-0704

Male 0 7 0 1 0 0 0 4 12

Female 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 5 6

Total 1 7 0 1 0 0 0 9 18

Zenia Z. Kotval

Associate Professor. PhD, University of Massachusetts, Amherst; MRP, University of MA-Amherst; BS, Academy of Architecture, India. Specializations: Local Economic Development, Industrial Development/ Redevelopment Policy.

AICP

(517) 353-9362

kotval@msu.edu

Sr. Specialist. PhD, University of Michigan; MS, Michigan State University; BS, Michigan State University. Specializations: Community and Economic Development, Public Policy Analysis, Neighborhood Development. http://www.msu.edu/unit.cua

Rex L. LaMore

(517) 353-9555

lamore@msu.edu

Patricia L. Machemer

Associate Professor. PhD, Michigan State University; MA, University of Michigan; MA, University of Michigan; BA, University of Michigan. Specializations: Growth Management, Land Use, Participatory Design Process.

(517) 353-9047

machemer@msu.edu

Total Students

*Do not double count Hispanics; Hispanics also appear in the racial categories below.

Page 76 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

Herbert P. Norman, Jr.

Specialist/Instructor. PhD, Michigan State University; MA, East Carolina University; BS, East Carolina University. Specializations: Land Use Planning, Land Management, Planning Process Theory, International Applications.

FYI
The MSU Planning Program, founded in 1946, has the oldest urban planning undergraduate degree program in the nation. Graduates of the Bachelors and Masters degree programs are scattered throughout the U.S., offering a large network of alumni and potential job contacts. Through Urban Planning Partnerships, which is the outreach unit located within the Program, students carry out real-world planning research for a range of small towns and cities. These cities include Detroit, Lansing, Flint, Grand Rapids, and Pontiac, Michigan. Good ties with area state government and local planning agencies lead to a number of excellent internship placements for students.

(517) 353-0677

normanh@msu.edu AICP

Eric J. Strauss

Professor. PhD, University of Wisconsin-Madison; JD, Northwestern University; BA, University of Wisconsin-Madison. Specializations: Urban and Rural Land Use Planning, Environmental Management, Planning Law.

(517) 353-8715

strausse@msu.edu

Mark I. Wilson

Associate Professor. PhD, University of Pennsylvania; AM, University of Pennsylvania; MA, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee; M.Com, University of Melbourne, Australia; BCom, University of Melbourne. Specializations: Urban and Regional Technology Planning, Economic Development, Non-Profit Organizations and Management http://www.mark-wilson.org

(517) 353-9056

wilsonmm@msu.edu

OTHER AFFILIATED FACULTY


Carl Goldschmidt
Professor Emeritus. PhD, University of Pittsburgh; MCP, University of California, Berkeley; BS, University of California, Berkeley;

FAICP

John E. Melcher

Specialist. MS, Michigan State University; BS, Michigan State University. Specializations: Community and Neighborhood Development, Economic Development.

(517) 353-9555

melcher@msu.edu

Professor. PhD, Educational Psychology, Michigan State University; MA, Psychology, Fordham University; BS, Psychology, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute. Specializations: Urban Residential Neighborhoods, Community Development, Urban School Reform. (517) 353-9144 schweit1@msu.edu

John Schweitzer

Igor Z. Vojnovic

Adjunct Associate Professor, Department of Geography, MSU; PhD Toronto University, M.Sc.Pl., Toronto University, B.A. York University, (Canada), Specializations: Metro Environments, Urban Form and Land Use, Local Governance, Urban Design, Urban and Environmental Geography

vojnovic@msu.edu

ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 77

MINNESOTA STATE UNIVERSITY, MANKATO


Urban and Regional Studies Institute
106 Morris Hall Mankato, Minnesota 56001 Phone (507) 389-1714 Fax (507) 389-6377 E-mail: ursi@mnsu.edu http://sbs.mnsu.edu/ursi/ Anthony Filipovitch, Department Chair (507) 389-5035 E-mail: tony@mnsu.edu

BS

MA

ACSP Member: FULL

UNDERGRADUATE ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS


Departmental Requirement: No Requirements Minimum GPA: Above 50% class standing Minimum SAT or ACT Scores: 21

UNDERGRADUATE GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

Hours of Core .......................................................................................... 18 Hours of Studio Courses ............................................................................ 0 Hours of Restricted Elective .................................................................... 15 Hours of Unrestricted Elective .................................................................. 0 Total Required Hours In Planning Program ............................................ 33 Total Required Hours to Graduate from University .............................. 128 Thesis or Final Product ............................................................ Not required

PROGRAM INFORMATION
UNDERGRADUATE DEADLINES, TUITION AND FEES
Admission Deadline ............................................................................ Priority April 1 Financial Aid Deadline ..................................................................Priority March 15 In-State Tuition and Fees: ................................................................... $252 per credit Out-of-State Tuition and Fees: .......................................................... $500 per credit Application Fee: ................................................................................................... $20 Additional Fees: .................................................................................................. None

MASTERS DEGREE
MA in Urban Studies
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail Anthony J. Filipovitch, Graduate Coordinator (507) 389-1714 tony@mnsu.edu

Admission Deadline .............................................................................Priority April 1 Financial Aid Deadline ................................................................... Priority March 15 In-State Tuition and Fees: ................................................................... $317 per credit Out-of-State Tuition and Fees: .......................................................... $500 per credit Application Fee: .....................................................................................................$40 Additional Fees: .................................................................................................. None

GRADUATE DEADLINES, TUITION AND FEES

Year Initiated: 1966 Degrees Granted through 8/31/08..........................................................422 Degrees Granted from 9/1/07 to 8/31/08 .................................................10

Annual Student Enrollment Applied


07/08 Undergraduate MA MAUP 10 23 10 20

Accepted Enrolled
07/08 07/08 08/09 49 6 20 46 9 25

Economic Development Local Government Management Certificate Planning Certificate


MASTERS ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS
University Admission Policy: Minimum Undergraduate GPA: Minimum GRE: Minimum TOEFL Ranking in Undergraduate Class: Departmental Requirement:

Masters Specializations

UNDERGRADUATE DEGREE
BA in Urban and Regional Studies
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail Anthony J. Filipovitch, Chair (507) 389-1714 tony@mnsu.edu

No Requirements 3.0 No Requirements 500 (173 computer) Not Required Urban Studies Undergrad or equivalent

MASTERS GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

Year Initiated:1968 Degrees Granted through 8/31/08.......................................................... 342 Degrees Granted from 9/1/07 to 8/31/08 ................................................. 11

Nonprofit Leadership Economic Development


Page 78 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

Specialization:

Hours of Core .............................................................................................9 Hours of Studio or Practice Related Courses .............................................0 Hours of Restricted Electives .....................................................................0 Hours of Unrestricted Electives ................................................................24 Internship .................................................................................................. 3 Total Required Hours in Planning Program ............................................36 Exam,Thesis or Final Product: .................... Written comprehensive exam; written studio project with public press conference

MA in Urban Planning
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail Anthony J. Filipovitch, Graduate Coordinator (507) 389-1714 tony@mnsu.edu

PLANNING FACULTY
Raymond Asomani-Boateng
Assistant Professor. PhD, University of Waterloo; MSc, Michigan State University; MA, University of Waterloo; BAA, Ryerson University. Specializations: Environmental Planning, GIS, Planning Process.

Year Initiated:1990 Degrees Granted through 8/31/08...........................................................103 Degrees Granted from 9/1/07 to 8/31/08 ..................................................14

MASTERS ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS


University Admission Policy: Minimum Undergraduate GPA: Minimum GRE: Minimum TOEFL Ranking in Undergraduate Class: Departmental Requirement:

(507) 389-5030 raymond.asomani-boateng@mnsu.edu

No Requirements 3.0 Not required 500 (173 computer) Not Required Urban studies undergraduate or equivalent

David Laverny-Rafter

Professor. PhD, University of Wisconsin-Madison; MCRP, Rutgers University; BA, Southern Illinois University. Specializations: Housing Policy, Transportation Planning, Program Evaluation, Strategic Planning.

AICP

(507) 389-1540

david.laverny-rafter@mnsu.edu

Beth Wielde Heidelberg

MASTERS GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

Hours of Core .............................................................................................6 Hours of Studio or Practice Related Courses .............................................3 Hours of Restricted Electives .....................................................................0 Hours of Unrestricted Electives ................................................................24 Internship .................................................................................................. 3 Total Required Hours in Planning Program ............................................36 Exam,Thesis or Final Product: ....................Written comprehensive exam; written studio report with public press conference.

Assistant Professor. DPA, Hamline University; MA, Minnesota State University, Mankato; BS, University of Minnesota. Specializations: Urban Aesthetic, Historic Preservation, Design. http://mavdisk.mnsu.edu/wieldb

(507) 389-1715

beth.wielde@mnsu.edu

Perry Wood

Professor. PhD, University of Nebraska; MA, Kansas State University; BS, Carroll College. Specializations: Zoning and Operational Planning, Economic Development, Downtown Revitalization.

(507) 389-6949

perry.wood@mnsu.edu

TOTAL MASTERS STUDENT COMPOSITION 2007-2008 US Citizens & Permanent Residents


Hispanics* Of any Race White African American Native American/ Pacific Islander Asian American Mixed Other / Dont know Non-US Citizens Non- Permanent Residents

OTHER AFFILIATED FACULTY


Anthony J. Filipovitch
Professor. PhD, Portland State University; MA, Duquesne University; BA, University of Michigan. Specializations: Nonprofit Leadership, Children in the City, Analytical Methods. http://krypton.mnsu.edu/~tony

Male 0 10 4 0 2 0 5 1 22

Female 0 19 0 0 0 0 0 0 19

Total 0 29 4 0 2 0 5 1

(507) 389-5035

tony@mnsu.edu

Janet Cherrington-Cucore

Associate Professor. PhD, University of Delaware; MS and BA, West Chester University. Specializations: Local Government Management, Urban Finance, Community Development. http://www.intech.mnsu.edu/cherrington

(507) 389-5031

janet.cherrington@mnsu.edu

Miriam Porter

Associate Professor. DPA, Hamline University; MA and BS, Mankato State University. Specializations: Urban Management, Human Resource Management, Civic Management.

(507) 389-5032

miriam.porter@mnsu.edu

Total Students

41

*Do not double count Hispanics; Hispanics also appear in the racial categories below. ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 79

MISSOURI STATE UNIVERSITY


Department of Geography, Geology and Planning
901South National Avenue Springfield, Missouri 65804 Phone (417) 836-5800 Fax (417) 836-6006 http://geosciences.missouristate.edu Tom Plymate, Department Head E-mail: tomplymate@missouristate.edu

BA/BS PAB

ACSP Member: FULL

UNDERGRADUATE GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS


Hours of Core .......................................................................................... 45 Hours of Studio Courses ............................................................................ 3 Hours of Restricted Elective .................................................................... 13 Hours of Elective ....................................................................................... 9 Total Required Hours In Planning Program ............................................ 70 Total Required Hours to Graduate from University .............................. 125 Thesis or Final Product ............................................................................No

PLANNING FACULTY
Professor. PhD, Rutgers University (1994) Specializations: Tourism Planning and Development, Planning Theory, Sustainable Development. http://geosciences.smsu.edu/Faculty/Ioannides/Default.htm

Dimitri Ioannides

PROGRAM INFORMATION
Admission Deadline 2008-09 .......................................................................... July 20 Financial Aid Deadline 2008-09 ...................................................................... July 20 In-State Tuition and Fees: ........................................................... $179 per credit hour Out-of-State Tuition and Fees: ................................................. $349 per credit hour Application Fee ......................................................................................................$35 Additional Fee......................................................................................................$274

UNDERGRADUATE DEADLINES, TUITION AND FEES

(417) 836-5318

dioannides@missouristate.edu

Rajinder Jutla

Associate Professor. PhD, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University (1995) Specializations: Urban Design, Planning History, Quantitative Methods. http://geosciences.smsu.edu/Faculty/Jutla/Default.htm

Annual Student Enrollment Applied


Undergraduate

(417) 836-5298

rajinderjutla@missouristate.edu AICP

Accepted

Enrolled
37 40

Diane May

04/05 05/06 04/05 05/06 04/07 05/08 N/A N/A N/A N/A

Assistant Professor. MS, Southern Illinois University (1974) Specializations: Comprehensive Planning, Citizen Participation, Planning History. http://geosciences.smsu.edu/Faculty/May/Default.htm

UNDERGRADUATE DEGREE
BS in Planning
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail: Paul Rollinson, Director (417) 836-5688 paulrollinson@missouristate.edu

(417) 836-6900

dianemay@missouristate.edu AICP

Paul Rollinson

Professor. PhD, University of Illinois-Urbana (1988) Specializations: Housing, Homelessness, Social Planning. http://www.faculty.smsu.edu/p/par695f/default.htm

(417) 836-5688

paulrollinson@missouristate.edu

Year Initiated: 1988 PAB Accredited Degrees Granted through 8/31/09........................................................... 117 Degrees Granted from 9/1/08 to 8/31/09 ....................................................9

OTHER AFFILIATED FACULTY


Neil Guion
Adjunct. JD, University of Virginia Law School. Specializations: Planning Law.

Community and Regional Planning Tourism Planning and Development


UNDERGRADUATE ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS
Departmental Requirement: No Requirements Minimum GPA: No Requirements Minimum SAT or ACT Scores: No Requirements

Specialization:

Bob Hosmer

Adjunct. MS, Missouri State University. Specializations: Transportation.

AICP

Frank Miller Xiaomin Qiu

Adjunct. MS, Kansas State University. Specializations: Growth Management, Transportation. Assistant Professor. Ph.D., Texas State University, San Marcos. Specializations: GIS

AICP

Page 80 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

MORGAN STATE UNIVERSITY


Department of City and Regional Planning School of Architecture of Planning
2201 Argonne Drive, Montebello D103 Baltimore, Maryland 21251 Phone (443) 885-3225 Fax (443) 885-8233 http://sap-morgan.com Siddhartha Sen, Chairperson Phone: (443) 885-1864 E-mail: siddhartha.sen@morgan.edu
University Admission Policy:

MA/MS PAB

ACSP Member: FULL

MASTERS ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS


Minimum Undergraduate GPA: Minimum GRE: Minimum TOEFL Ranking in Undergraduate Class: Departmental Requirement:

Bachelors degree from an accredited institution 3.0 (2.5/ for conditional) Not Required Required Not Required No Requirements

MASTERS GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

PROGRAM INFORMATION
Admission Deadline 2008-09 for Masters program ...............................................NA Financial Aid Deadline 2008-09 for Masters program..................February 1 for Fall .....................................................................................................October 1 for Spring In-State Tuition and Fees ...................................................................$372/credit hour Out-of-State Tuition and Fees............................................................$718/credit hour International Tuition and Fees ...........................................................$718/credit hour Application Fees ...................................................................................................... $0

Hours of Core ...........................................................................................30 Hours of Studio or Practice Related Courses .............................................6 Hours of Restricted Electives .....................................................................0 Hours of Unrestricted Electives ................................................................18 Thesis ..............................................................................................Optional Total Required Hours in Planning Program .............................................48

GRADUATE DEADLINES, TUITION AND FEES

FINANCIAL AID INFORMATION

Assistantships, Fellowships, Scholarships and Tuition awards are available Eligibility Criteria ................................................................... Competitive

TOTAL MASTERS STUDENT COMPOSITION 2008-2009 US Citizens & Permanent Residents


Hispanics* Of any Race White African American Native American/ Pacific Islander Asian American Mixed Other / Dont know Non-US Citizens Non- Permanent Residents

Annual Student Enrollment Applied


4/05/076/06/09

Accepted
4/05/076/06/09

Enrolled
4/05/076/06/09

Male 0 5 17 0 0 0 0 5 27

Female 1 1 13 0 1 0 0 3 19

Total 1 6 30 0 1 0 0 8 46

Masters

NA NA NA 24 25 25 46 46 46

MASTERS DEGREE
Master of City and Regional Planning
Contact: Phone: E-mail: Siddhartha Sen (443) 885-1846 siddhartha.sen@morgan.edu

Year Initiated: 1970.............................................................PAB Accredited Degrees Granted through 8/31/09...........................................................258 Degrees Granted from 9/1/08 to 8/31/09 ....................................................5

Generalist Option, Urban Design and Sustainability, Transportation and Infrastructure Planning, Community and Economic Development

Masters Specializations

Total Students

*Do not double count Hispanics; Hispanics also appear in the racial categories below.

ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 81

PLANNING FACULTY
Professor and Dean. B.A., Sociology University of Philippines, M.A, Urban and Regional Planning ,University of Philippines, Ph.D. Social Science-Urban Planning and Community Organization, Michigan State University. Specializations: International Planning, Community Participation, Urban Design and Physical Planning, Community-based Economic Development.

Ruth Connell
AICP

Specializations: Sustainability, Design Theory, Historic, Preservation

AIA

Mary Anne Alabanza Akers, Ph.D.

Diane Jones

Specializations: Environmental Justice, Community Design. Art Expression

ASLA

Richard E. Lloyd, Ph.D.

(443) 885-1867

MaryAnne.Akers@morgan.edu

Specializations: Urban Design, Housing and Community Development, Landscape/Site Design

Assistant Professor. B.A., State University of New York at Binghamton MUP, Hunter College of the City University of New York , Ph.D., City and Regional Planning, University of Pennsylvania. Specializations: Urban Design, Planning History and Theory, Community Planning and Development, Parks and Open Space Planning, Cultural Geography, Historic Preservation, Comparative International Development, and Sustainable Practices.

Daniel Campo, Ph.D.

Barabara Mobarak

Specializations: Community Planning and Design, Architectural History, Historic Preservation, Environmental Justice

Mahendra Parekh Glenn Smith Paul Voos

Specializations: Graphics, Urban and Residential Design

AIA ASLA ASLA

(443) 885 3514

daniel.campo@morgan.edu

Specializations: Urban Design and Landscape Morphology

Joyce Ann Pressley, Ph.D.

Assistant Professor: B.A. Economics and South Asian Regional Studies, University of Pennsylvania; M. A. City and Regional Planning, University of Pennsylvania; Ph.D. Regional Planning, University of Pennsylvania. Specializations: International Economic Development, Land Use, Infrastructure and Environmental Systems, and Rural Development.

Specializations: Human Settlement and Transitive Landscape

SCHOOL OF ENGINEERING
Specializations: Transportation Economics, Transportation Geography

Z. Andrew Farkas, Ph.D.

(443) 885-1860 joyce.pressley@morgan.edu

Professor and Chairperson. B. Arch, University of Kolkata; M.Arch., Rensselaer; MCP., Georgia Tech; Ph.D. Regional Planning, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. Specializations: International Development and Planning, Race and Ethnicity, Urban Design, Planning Theory and Practice, Transportation Planning and Policy.

Siddhartha Sen, Ph.D.

Monsoureh Jeihani, Ph.D.

pecializations: Transportation in Developing nations, Land Use Modeling

Young-Jae Lee, Ph.D.

Specializations: Transportation Planning, Transportation Modeling

(443) 885-1864

siddhartha.sen@morgan.edu

Anthony A. Saka, Ph.D.

Sidney Wong, Ph.D.

Assistant Professor. Bachelor of Social Sciences (Economics), University of Hong Kong, Master of Social Sciences in Urban Studies, University of Hong Kong, MS, Town Planning, University of Wales, U.K, Ph.D., City and Regional Planning, University of California Berkeley. Specializations: Planning Methods, Local Economic Development, Municipal Finance and Budgeting, Fiscal Impact Analysis, Community Development and Information Systems, Planning History.

Specializations: Transportation Palling and Policy, Transportation Modeling, Quantitative Methods

COLLEGE OF LIBERAL ARTS Linda Loubert, Ph.D.


Specializations: GIS, Methods, Municipal Finance.

(443) 885-3208

sidney.wong@morgan.edu

Herschelle Reed-Morris, JD.

FYI
The program is the oldest planning program at a Historically Black College/University (HBCU). It is the first HBCU program accredited by the Planning Accreditation Board. The program teaches practical professional applications using Baltimore region as a model. The program is offered in the evening to meet the need of working students. Work experience, motivation, interest, and maturity are also considered for the selection of non-degree students (i.e. those candidates who may not meet the criteria for conditional or unconditional admission). Applicants admitted as non-degree students may enroll in maximum of eight credits a semester for a maximum of five years and must maintain a cumulative GPA of 3.0. Non-degree students may apply for a degree program upon the completion of minimum 12 graduate credits with a cumulative GPA of 3.0.

Instructor: B.A., Morgan State College; J.D., Howard University. Specializations: Land Use Law

OTHER AFFILIATED FACULTY


SCHOOL OF ARCHITECTURE AND PLANNING
Specializations: Urban Design, Housing, Community Design and Planning

Paul Walker Clarke, AIA

Page 82 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

THE NEW SCHOOL


Milano the New School for Management and Urban Policy
Program in Urban Policy Analysis and Management 72 Fifth Avenue, New York, NY 10025 Phone: 212-229-5400 Fax: 212-229-5404 www.newschool.edu/milano Alex Schwartz, Chair Phone: (212)229-5400, ext. 1415 E-mail: Schwartz@Newschool.edu

MS, PhD.

ACSP Member: AFFILIATE

GRADUATE ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS


University Admission Policy: institution Minimum Undergraduate GPA: Minimum GRE: Minimum TOEFL:

Bachelors degree from an accredited 3.0 Not Required At least 600 (paper-based)/at least 100 (Internet based) Not Required No Requirements

Ranking in Undergraduate Class: Departmental Requirement:

GRADUATE GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

PROGRAM INFORMATION
GRADUATE DEADLINES, TUITION AND FEES
Admissions Deadline 2009-10 .... None (Rolling Admission, March 1 suggested for ........................................................................... Fall Semester, October 1 for Spring) Financial Aid Deadline 2009-10 .......... None (March 1 suggested for Fall Semester, .....................................................................................October 1 for Spring Semester In-State Tuition and Fees: (Masters ............................................. $1,202 per credit Out-of-State Tuition and Fees: (Masters ...................................... $1,202 per credit In-State Tuition and Fees: (PhD .................................................... $1,202 per credit Out-of-State Tuition and Fees: (PhD ............................................. $1,202 per credit Application Fee ......................................................................................................$50 Additional Fees ............................................ None (Optional health insurance plan)

Hours of Core .......................................................................................... 27 Hours of Studio or Practice Related Courses ............................................ 9 Hours of Restricted Electives .................................................................... 0 Hours of Unrestricted Electives ............................................................... 15 Total Required Hours in Planning Program ............................................ 42 Exam,Thesis or Final Product ...................................................... Required

PROGRAM SIZENUMBER OF STUDENTS REGISTERED IN FALL TERM


YEAR FULL-TIME PART-TIME TOTAL MINORITY FEMALE

Fall 2008 Fall 2007

83 58

46 44

129 102

68 55

88 63

Fall Student Enrollment: Masters Program Applied


Fall 2008 Fall 2007 146 157

Accepted
138 138

Enrolled
52 46

PLANNING FACULTY
Charles Allison
Lecturer. (MBA, Harvard University). Specializations: Finance, Environmental Sustainability, Alternmative Energy Sources.

GRADUATE DEGREE
Masters of Science in Urban Policy Analysis and Management
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail: Merida Escandon, Director of Admissions (212-229-5462 ext. 1108 milanoadmissions@newschool.edu

(212) 229-5400 x1617

allisonc@newschool.edu

Warren Balinsky

Associate Professor. (Ph.D., Case Western Reserve University), Specializations: Home Health Care and the Applications of Planning, Sevelopment, Marketing, and Research to Health Services Management and Policy.

Year Initiated: 1971 Degrees Granted through 8/31/06.......................................................... N/A Degrees Granted from 9/1/03 to 8/31/06 ............................................... N/A

(212) 229-5400 x1615

wbalinsk@newschool.edu

Advocacy, Economic and Workforce Development, Finance, Health Services Management and Policy Housing and Community Development, Public and Nonprofit Management, Policy Analysis, Social Policy.

Masters Specializations

Henry Cohen Professor. (Ph.D., Yale). Specializations: Poverty Policy, Economic Development, Urban Politics.

Peter Eisinger

(212) 229-5400 x1516

eisingep@newschool.edu

Alec Ian Gershberg

Associate Professor. (Ph.D., University of Pennsylvania). Specializations: Education Policy, International Development, Public Finance.

(212) 229-5400 x1412

gersh@newschool.edu

ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 83

Darrick Hamilton

Assistant Professor. (Ph.D., University of North Carolina). Specializations: Econometrics, Racial Disparities. Inequality.

(212) 229-5400 x1514

hamiltod@newschool.edu

David Howell

Professor. (Ph.D., New School for Social Research). Specializations: Labor Economics, Comparative Social Policy, Immigration.

(212) 229-5400 x1416

howell@newschool.edu

Rachel Meltzer

Visiting Assistant Professor. Specializations: Economic Development, Quantitative Methods, Housing.

(212) 229-5400

meltzerr@newschool.edu

M. Bryna Sanger

Professor. (Ph.D., Brandeis University). Specializations: Public Management, Performance Measures, Policy Analysis, Social Policy.

(212) 229-5400 x1411

sanger@newschool.edu

Alex Schwartz

Associate Professor and Chair Policy Programs. (Ph.D., Rutgers University). Specializations: Housing and Community Development.

(212) 229-5400, x1415

Schwartz@newschool.edu

Associate Professor and Dean. (Ph.D., University of California, Berkeley). Specializations: Microfinance, Community and Economic Development, Poverty, Social Policy.

Lisa J. Servon

(212) 229-5400 x1618

servonl@newschool.edu

Tatiana Wah

Assistant Professor. (Ph.D., Rutgers University). Specializations: Regional and Local Economic Development Planning, International Development, Immigration, Transnationalism.

(212) 229-5400 x1413

waht@newschool.edu

Page 84 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

NEW JERSEY INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY


College of Architecture and Design
University Heights Newark NJ 07102 http://architecture.njit.edu/ Frederick Little, Graduate Program & Admissions Coordinator (as of 11/1/99) Phone (973)-642-7576 Fax 973-596-3073 E-mail: little@adm.njit.edu

MA/MS PAB

ACSP Member:

Affiliate

MASTERS ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS


University Admission Policy: Minimum Undergraduate GPA: Minimum GRE: Minimum TOEFL Ranking in Undergraduate Class: Departmental Requirement:

Bachelors Degree 3.0 No Minimum 80 CPT Not Required Portfolio and three (3) letters of recommendation. Students not sufficiently experienced in design will be required to take a design bridge course prior to enrolling in studios.

MASTERS GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

PROGRAM INFORMATION
GRADUATE DEADLINE, TUITION AND FEES
Admission Deadline 2010-11 ..........................................................................1/15/10 Financial Aid Deadline 2010-11 ......................................................................1/15/10 In-State Tuition and Fees (2009-10) ..................................................$8,105/semester Out-of-State/International Tuition and Fees (2009-10) ...................$11,089/semester Application Fee: .....................................................................................................$75 International Student Fee: .....................................................................$316/semester Health Insurance Fee: ...........................................................................$278/semester

Hours of Core ...........................................................................................24 Hours of Studio or Practice Related Courses ...........................................12 Hours of Restricted Electives ................................................................N/A Hours of Unrestricted Electives ................................................................12 Thesis/Professional Project ....................................................................N/A Total Required Hours in Planning Program .............................................36 Exam, Thesis or Final Product: .............................................................N/A Varies: Annual appointments of about 3 Graduate Assistantships.

FINANCIAL AID INFORMATION

Annual Student Enrollment


Applied Accepted Enrolled 07/08 08/09 07/08 08/09 07/08 08/09 Masters Doctoral 16 32 20 31 10 14 12 13 5 8 5 5

TOTAL MASTERS STUDENT COMPOSITION 2008 - 2009


US Citizens & Permanent Residents Hispanics* Of any Race White African American Native American/ Pacific Islander Asian American Mixed Other / Dont know Non-US Citizens Non- Permanent Residents Total Students Male 1 6 2 0 2 0 0 1 12 Female 0 4 2 0 0 0 0 2 8 Total 1 10 4 0 2 0 0 3 20

MASTERS DEGREE
Master of Infrastructure Planning
Contact Person: Phone: Email: Year Initiated: 1996 Degrees Granted through 8/31/09.............................................................77 Degrees Granted from 9/1/08 to 8/31/09 ....................................................6

http://architecture.njit.edu/academics/graduate/mip-site/
Darius Sollohub, AIA, Director (973) 596-5574 sollohub@njit.edu

Design/Visualization, History/Theory, Transportation, Environmental Sustainability, Construction Management

Masters Specializations:

*Do not double count Hispanics; Hispanics also appear in the racial categories below. ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 85

DOCTORAL DEGREE
Doctoral Program in Urban Systems
http://architecture.njit.edu/academics/graduate/phd-urbansystems. php
Contact Person: Phone: Email: Year Initiated: 2001 Degrees Granted through 8/31/09...............................................................6 Degrees Granted from 9/1/08 to 8/31/09 ....................................................4 Karen Franck, PhD, Program Director (973) 596-3092 karen.a.franck@njit.edu

TOTAL DOCTORAL STUDENT COMPOSITION 2008 - 2009


US Citizens & Permanent Residents Hispanics* Of any Race White African American Native American/ Pacific Islander Male 1 2 2 1 1 0 1 4 12 Female 1 6 6 0 2 0 3 4 22 Total 2 8 8 1 3 0 4 8 34

Urban Health Systems, Urban Environment Studies, Urban Educational Policy


DOCTORAL ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS
University Admission Policy: Minimum Graduate GPA: Minimum GRE: Minimum TOEFL Ranking in Graduate Class: Departmental Requirement: Master Degree 3.5 No Minimum 80 CPT Not Required Written statement of purpose, three (3) letters of recommendation and official transcripts of all prior academic work. Interview optional at the discretion of the Director.

Doctoral Specializations:

Asian American Mixed Other / Dont know Non-US Citizens Non- Permanent Residents Total Students

*Do not double count Hispanics; Hispanics also appear in the racial categories below.

DOCTORAL GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

Hours of Core ...........................................................................................24 Hours of Studio or Practice Related Courses ........................................... 0 Hours of Restricted Electives ...................................................................12 Hours of Unrestricted Electives ................................................................12 Thesis/Professional Project .......................................................................24 Total Required Hours in Planning Program .............................................72 Exam, Thesis or Final Product: ................................................ Dissertation Varies: Limited number of full assistantships.

PLANNING FACULTY
Darius Sollohub
Associate Professor. M.Arch, Columbia University. Specializations: Infrastructure Planning, Sustainable Transportation, Community Planning, Urban Design. http://www.njit.edu/news/experts/sollohub.php

AIA

(973) 596-5574

sollohub@njit.edu

DOCTORAL FINANCIAL AID INFORMATION

Professor. PhD., City University of New York. Specializations: Urban Systems, Alternative Housing, Urban Public Space. http://www.njit.edu/news/experts/franck.php

Karen Franck

(973) 596-3092

karen.a.franck@njit.edu AIA

Assistant Professor. MAUD, Harvard University. Specializations: Urban Design, Infrastructure Planning, Visualizing Infrastructure, Community Planning, Contemporary Urbanism. http://www.njit.edu/news/experts/theodore.php

Georgeen Theodore

(973) 596-3095

georgeen.theodore@njit.edu AICP/PP

Thomas Dallessio

Adjunct Professor. MA and MCRP, Rutgers University. Specializations: Executive Director, Leadership New Jersey; Land Use Planning, Infrastructure Planning. http://www.leadershipnj.org/index.html

(609) 802-0880

tom@leadershipnj.org

Page 86 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

Adjunct Professor. MIP MS Environmental Policy, New Jersey Institute of Technology, MBA, City University of New York. Specializations: Infrastructure Planning, Public and Private Finance, Project Management, Building Economics, Sustainable Technologies, Renewable Energy

Robert Hutchinson

AICP

FYI
Joint or Concurrent Degree Programs: MIP(NJIT) and MCRP (Bloustein School, Rutgers)

(917) 518-0711

hutchinson@dwh advisors .com

Alex Marshall

Adjunct Professor. MS, Journalism, Columbia University. Specializations: Infrastructure, Public Policy, Historic Preservation, Urban Planning, Urban History, Political Economy. http://www.rpa.org/2007/10/alex-marshall.html

(212)-229-9392

alex@rpa.org

Nicolas Ronderos

Adjunct Professor. MS Urban Policy Analysis and Management, The New School University. Specializations: Geographical Information Systems, Form Based Zoning, Transit-Oriented Development http://www.rpa.org/2007/10/l-nicolas-ronderos.html#more

(212) 253-2727 Ext. 318

nicolas@rpa.org

OTHER AFFILIATED FACULTY


Steven Chien
Professor of Civil and Environmental Engineering. MS and PhD, University of Maryland. Specializations: Simulation Modeling, Transportation Systems, Urban Systems Engineering, Mass Transportation Systems, Traffic Safety. http://transportation.njit.edu/facultystaff/chien/index.htm

(973) 596-6083

i.jy.chien@njit.edu

Maurie Cohen

Associate Professor of Environmental Policy and Sustainability. PhD, University of Pennsylvania. Specializations: Sustainable Consumption, Sustainable Mobility, Sociotechnical Transition Management. http://chemistry.njit.edu/people/cohen.php

(973) 596-5281

mcohen@adm.njit.edu

Janice Daniel

Associate Professor, Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering. PhD, Texas A&M University. Specializations: Transportation Planning, Congestion Strategies, Urban Freight Movement. http://civil.njit.edu/people/daniel.php

(973) 642-4794

daniel@njit.edu

Rachel Liu

Associate Professor, Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering. PhD. University of South Florida. Specializations: Travel Behavior, Intermodal Transportation Planning, Network Simulations. http://civil.njit.edu/people/liu.php

(973) 596-5884

rongfang.liu@njit.edu

ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 87

NEW YORK UNIVERSITY


Urban Planning Program Robert F. Wagner Graduate School of Public Service
295 Lafayette Street, Second Floor New York, New York 10012-9604 Phone (212) 998-7400 Fax (212) 995-4165 http://www.nyu.edu/wagner Ingrid Gould Ellen, Department Chair E-mail: ingrid.ellen@nyu.edu

MA/MS PAB
University Admission Policy: Minimum Undergraduate GPA: Minimum GRE: Minimum TOEFL Departmental Requirement:

ACSP Member:

Full

MASTERS ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS

None. 3.0 Not Required. 250 (Computer-based), 600 (Paper-based), 100 (Internet-based). None.

MASTERS GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

PROGRAM INFORMATION
Admission Deadline 2009-10 ...............................Fall: June 1; Spring: November 1 Financial Aid Deadline 2009-10 ..........................Fall: January 7; Spring: October 1 In-State Tuition and Fees: ........................... $911/$58 per credit (Subject to change) Out-of-State Tuition and Fees...................... $911/$58 per credit (Subject to change) Application Fee: .....................................................................................................$80 Additional Fees: ...............................................Room/board: $17,355; Books: $800; ........................................................................................... Health Insurance: $1,388; .......................................................Transportation: $730; Personal Expenses: $4,315

Hours of Core ...........................................................................................36 Hours of Studio or Practice Related Courses .............................................0 Hours of Restricted Electives .....................................................................0 Hours of Unrestricted Electives ................................................................20 End Event ....................................................................................................4 Total Required Hours in Planning Program 60

GRADUATE DEADLINE, TUITION AND FEES

TOTAL MASTERS STUDENT COMPOSITION Fall 2008


US Citizens & Permanent Residents Hispanics* Of any Race White African American Native American/ Pacific Islander Asian American Mixed Other / Dont know Male 1 15 1 0 2 0 22 4 45 Female 3 20 2 0 3 0 29 6 63 Total 4 35 3 0 5 0 51 10 108

Annual Student Enrollment


Applied Accepted Enrolled 07/08 08/09 07/08 08/09 07/08 08/09 Masters 246 270 167 186 48 60

MASTERS DEGREE
Master of Urban Planning
Contact Person: Phone: Email: Year Initiated: 1960 Ingrid Ellen, Chair (212) 998-7533 ingrid.ellen@nyu.edu

PAB Accredited

Degrees Granted through 8/31/08.........................................................1199 Degrees Granted from 9/1/07 to 8/31/08 ..................................................55

Non-US Citizens Non- Permanent Residents Total Students

Environment, Infrastructure & Transportation Planning; Economic Development & Housing Policy; International Urban Planning

Masters Specializations:

*Do not double count Hispanics; Hispanics also appear in the racial categories below.

Page 88 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

PLANNING FACULTY
Hilary Ballon
Professor. BA, Princeton University (1977); Ph.D., Massachusetts Institute of Technology (1985). Specializations: History and Theory of Planning, Urban Design.

OTHER AFFILIATED FACULTY


Shlomo Angel
Adjunct Professor. B.Arch., University of California, Berkeley (1967); Ph.D., Berkeley (1972).

(212) 998-7400

hilary.ballon@nyu.edu

Kate J. Ascher

Ingrid Gould Ellen

Adjunct Associate Professor. BA, Brown University (1980); M.Sc. (1981) and Ph.D. (1986), London School of Economics.

Professor. BA (1987), MA (1991) and Ph.D. (1996), Harvard University. Specializations: Community Development, Economic Development Planning, Housing and Neighborhood Planning, Race/Ethnicity Planning, and Urban and Regional Economics.

Jan Blustein

(212) 998-7400

ingrid.ellen@nyu.edu

Professor. BA, Johns Hopkins University (1975); MA Oxon, Oxford University (1977); M.D., Yale University (1985); Ph.D. New York University (1993).

Zhan Guo

Rachelle J. Brunn

Assistant Professor. B. Arch., Tianjin University (1996); MA, Tsinghua University (1999); MCP (2003) and Ph.D. (2008), Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Specializations: Transportation, Infrastructure/Public Services, Environment.

Postdoctoral Fellow. BA, University of Delaware (2002); MA (2004) and Ph.D. (2008), University of Pennsylvania.

(212) 998-7400

zhan.guo@nyu.edu

Sewin Chan

Associate Professor. BA, University of Cambridge, United Kingdom (1990); Ph.D., Columbia University (1995).

Mitchell Moss

Professor. BA, Northwestern University (1969); MA, University of Washington (1970); Ph.D., University of Southern California (1975). Specializations: Economic Development, Urban Policy and Politics, and Technology and Regional Development.

Kate Collignon

Adjunct Assistant Professor. BA, Columbia University (1995); MPP/UP, Harvard University (2000).

(212) 998-7400

mitchell.moss@nyu.edu

Salo Coslovsky

Katherine ORegan

Assistant Professor. BPA, Fundao Getlio Vargas (1996); MIA, Tufts University (2002); Ph.D., Massachusetts Institute of Technology (2009).

Associate Professor. BS, University of Pennsylvania (1983); Ph.D., University of California at Berkeley (1990). Specializations: Economic Development Planning, Housing, Transportation, and Race and Ethnicity Planning.

Frank Fish

Adjunct Professor. BA, Boston College (1969); MSC, Pratt Institute (1972).

(212) 998-7400

katherine.oregan@nyu.edu

Professor. BA, Georgetown University (1978); MA, Rutgers University (1980); Ph.D., Massachusetts Institute of Technology (1988). Specializations: Public Finance and Management, Public Finance Reform, Urban/Regional Economics, International Economic Development.

Paul Smoke

John Fontillas

Adjunct Assistant Professor. BA, University of California, Berkeley (1987); MUP, New York University (1997).

Dall Forsythe Eric Galipo

Professor of Practice. BS (1967) and Ph.D. (1974), Columbia University.

(212) 998-7400

paul.smoke@nyu.edu

Rae Zimmerman

Adjunct Lecturer. BA and BS, North Carolina State University (1999); MUP, New York University (2006).

Professor. BA, University of California, Berkeley (1965); MCP, University of Pennsylvania (1969); Ph.D., Columbia University (1972). Specializations: Environmental Planning, Infrastructure/Public Services, Race/Ethnicity & Planning, and Transportation.

Sarah Gerecke

(212) 998-7400

rae.zimmerman@nyu.edu

Adjunct Assistant Professor. AB, Princeton University (1980); JD, Harvard University (1984).

John Gershman

Clinical Associate Professor. BA, Colgate University (1987); MA, University of California, Berkeley (1988).

Holly Haff

Adjunct Assistant Professor. BA, University of Hawaii (1970); MA, University of Oregon (1979).

ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 89

Kei Hayashi

Adjunct Assistant Professor. BA, Wesleyan (1987); MPA, Princeton University (1992).

Shanna Rose

Assistant Professor. BA, Swarthmore College (1997); Ph.D., Harvard University (2005).

Natasha Iskander

Assistant Professor. BA, Stanford University (1994); MCP (1999) and Ph.D., Massachusetts Institute for Technology (2006).

Elliot Sander Daniel Smith

Adjunct Associate Professor. BS, Georgetown University (1977).

Georges Jacquemart

Adjunct Professor. Diploma, Federal Polytechnic School of Lausanne, Switzerland (1972); MS, Stanford University (1973).

Assistant Professor. BA, University of Delaware (2002); MPA, University of Delaware (2004); Ph.D., University of Georgia (2007)

Roger Kropf

Steven Stainbrook

Professor. BA, Oberlin College (1968); MRP, Syracuse University (1973), PhD, Syracuse University (1976).

Adjunct Assistant Professor. B. Arch and BS, Ball State University (1995); M. Arch, Harvard University (1997).

Richard Landman

Ruth Ann Stewart

Adjunct Professor. BA (1973), ME (1974), MS (1975), State University of New York at Buffalo; MS, Rutgers University (1977); JD, New York Law School (1988).

Clinical Professor. BA, Wheaton College (1963); MS Columbia University (1965).

James Stuckey

Mark Levine

Adjunct Associate Professor. BA, Union College (1966); JD, New York University (1969).

Adjunct Associate Professor. BA (1975) and MA (1977, 2002), St. Johns University.

Winston Von Engel

Paul Light

Professor. BA, Macalester College (1975); MA (1976) and Ph.D. (1980), University of Michigan.

Adjunct Assistant Professor. B.Arch (1986) and MS (1988), Pratt Institute.

Philip Weinberg

Sarah Ludwig

Adjunct Assistant Professor. BA, Bryn Mawr College (1984); MUP, New York University (1989); JD, New York University (1992).

Adjunct Professor. AB, University of Pennsylvania (1955); JD, Columbia University (1958).

Claire Weisz

Joseph Magee

Assistant Professor. BA, University of Michigan (1996); Ph.D., Stanford University (2004).

Adjunct Assistant Professor. B.Arch, University of Toronto (1984); M.Arch, Yale University (1989).

Mark Willis

Zvia S. Naphtali

Adjunct Clinical Assistant Professor. BA (1965), MA (1977), and Ph.D. (1981), New York University.

Adjunct Professor. BA (1968) and Ph.D. (1979), Yale University; JD, Harvard University (1971).

David Winder

Amit Nigam

Assistant Professor. BA, Wesleyan University (1994); MA, Yale University (1997); Ph.D., Northwestern University (2006).

Adjunct Associate Professor. BA (1963), M.Ed. (1974), and Ph.D. (1979), University of Manchester.

Allen Zerkin

David Quart

Adjunct Assistant Professor. BS, University of Pennsylvania (1992); MUP, New York University (2003).

Adjunct Associate Professor. BA, Brandeis (1966); JD, Yale University (1972).

Joseph Reilly

Adjunct Associate Professor. BBA, Iona College (1981).

Carlos E. Restrepo

Adjunct Assistant Professor. BS, Lehigh University (1990); MS, University of Pennsylvania (1992); Ph.D., New York University (2006).

Leonardo Romeo

Adjunct Professor. Dott.Arch (Dottore in Architettura), University of Venice, Italy (1971); MSc.CE (Master of Civil Engineering), Columbia University (1982).

Page 90 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

NORTHERN ARIZONA UNIVERSITY


Department of Geography, Planning and Recreation
NAU Box 15016 Flagstaff, Arizona 86011-5016 Phone (928) 523-2650 Fax (928) 523-2275 geog@nau.edu

BA/BS

MA/MS

ACSP Member: AFFILIATE

Land Use Planning, Environmental Planning, GIS Applications in Planning, Indigenous/Native American Planning, Recreation and Tourism Planning
UNDERGRADUATE ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS
Departmental Requirement: None Minimum GPA: 3.0 GPA/Top 25% Minimum SAT or ACT Scores: ACT- 22 SAT -1040 Conditional admission below these numbers.

Specialization:

http://www.geog.nau.edu/ugrad_p.html Pamela Foti, Department Chair Phone: (928) 523-6196 E-mail: Pam.Foti@nau.edu

UNDERGRADUATE GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

PROGRAM INFORMATION
UNDERGRADUATE DEADLINES, TUITION AND FEES
Admission Deadline ........................................................................................... None Financial Aid Deadline ....................................................................................... None In-State Tuition and Fees: ........................................................... $2,188 per semester Out-of-State Tuition and Fees: .................................................. $6,658 per semester Application Fee: .................................................................................................... $25 Additional Fees: .................................................................................................. $170

FINANCIAL AID INFORMATION


Standard Federal Aid and Loan Programs.

Hours of Core .......................................................................................... 39 Hours of Studio Courses ............................................................................ 7 Hours of Restricted Elective ...................................................................... 9 Hours of Unrestricted Elective .................................................................. 8 Other: Emphasis area: .............................................................................. 14 Total Required Hours In Planning Program ............................................ 60 Total Required Hours to Graduate from University .............................. 120 Thesis or Final Product ............................................................ Not required Additional Requirement:............ minimum GPA of 3.0 in Planning classes minimum GPA of 2.5 overall

GRADUATE DEADLINES, TUITION AND FEES

Admission Deadline ..................................................................................February 15 Financial Aid Deadline ....................................................................................... None In-State Tuition and Fees: ........................................................... $2,282 per semester Out-of-State Tuition and Fees: ................................................... $6,606 per semester Application Fee: .....................................................................................................$85 Additional Fees: ...................................................................................................$100

MASTERS DEGREE
Master in Rural Geography with a Community Planning Emphasis (Campus-based program)
Contact Person: Phone: Email: Debbie Martin, Administrative Assistant (928) 523-2650 geog@nau.edu

Annual Student Enrollment Accepted


Undergraduate Masters 2/1 6/1 2/1 5/2

Enrolled
9/11 17/16 2/2 3/5

05/06 07/08 05/06 07/08

Year Initiated: 2002 Degrees Granted through 8/31/09.............................................................16

UNDERGRADUATE DEGREE
BS in Public Planning
Contact Person: Phone: Email: Debbie Martin, Administrative Assistant (928) 523-2650 geog@nau.edu

Land Use Planning, Community Development, Geographic Information Systems


MASTERS ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS
University Admission Policy: Minimum Undergraduate GPA: Minimum GRE: Minimum TOEFL Departmental Requirement:

Masters Specialization

Year Initiated:1979 Degrees Granted 1999 through 8/31/09 ................................................. 94

None. None. Departmental: 1000 Verbal/Math None. Combined Verbal & Math GRE of 1000; lower scores admitted with deficiencies.

ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 91

MASTERS GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

Hours of Core ...........................................................................................11 Hours of Studio or Practice Related Courses .............................................0 Hours of Restricted Electives ...................................................................12 Hours of Unrestricted Electives ..................................................................3 Other ................................................................................. Internship 4 hrs. Total Required Hours in Planning Program ............................................36 Exam,Thesis or Final Product: Thesis or Non-Thesis Major Paper is required - 6 hrs.

MASTERS ADMISSION REQUIREMENT

University Admission Policy ...............................................................None Minimum GPA ....................................................................................None Minimum GRE ...................................................................................None Minimum TOEFL ...............................................................................None Program Requirement:Minimum 5 years of professional work experience.

MASTERS GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

Master of Administration with a Community Planning Emphasis (Web-based program)


Contact Person: Phone: Email: Pamela Torbico, Program Coordinator 800-426-8315 (Distance Learning Center) Pamela.Torbico@nau.edu

Hours of Core ...........................................................................................12 Hours of Community Planning Emphasis ................................................15 Restrictive Electives ...................................................................................3 Unrestrictive Electives ................................................................................3 Other: Capstone Experience .......................................................................3 Total Required:..........................................................................................36 Final Product:..............................................................Capstone Experience

Year Initiated: 2006 Degrees Granted through 8/31/09...............................................................4

PLANNING FACULTY
Carolyn M. Daugherty
Professor. B.S., M.S., Ohio State University -Columbus; Ph.D., Arizona State University (1987). Specializations: Small Town and Rural Planning, Environmental Planning, Site Planning.

Planning Administration, Community Development

Masters Specialization

(928) 523-0984

Carolyn.Daugherty@nau.edu

R. Dawn Hawley TOTAL MASTERS STUDENT COMPOSITION US Citizens & Permanent Residents
Hispanics* Of any Race White African American Native American/ Pacific Islander Asian American Mixed Other / Dont know Non-US Citizens Non- Permanent Residents

Professor. B.A., Baylor University; M.A., University of NebraskaOmaha; Ph.D., Arizona State University (1994). Specializations: Land Use Planning, Public Participation, Economic Geography.

(928) 523-1251

D.Hawley@nau.edu

Ruihong (Ray) Huang Male 0 4 0 0 0 0 0 0 4 Female 0 7 0 0 0 0 0 0 7 Total 0 11 0 0 0 0 0 0

Assistant Professor. B.A., Hunan Normal University, China; M.S., Zhongshan University, China; Ph.D., University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee (2003). Specializations: Transportation Planning, GIS, Site Planning.

(928) 523-8219 Ruihong.Huang@nau.edu

Alan A. Lew

Professor. B.A., University of Hawaii-Hilo; M.A., M.U.P., Ph.D., University of Oregon (1986). Specializations: Urban Planning, Tourism Planning, GIS.

FAICP

(928) 523-6567

Alan.Lew@nau.edu

OTHER AFFILIATED FACULTY


Thomas W. Paradis
Associate Professor. B.S., Pennsylvania State University-University Park; M.A., Ph.D., University of Illinois--Urbana-Champaign (1997). Specializations: Historic Preservation, Urban Design.

Neil Gullickson

Adjunct Lecturer. B.A., B.S., Northern Arizona University. Specializations: Physical Planning, Planning and Design Review.

Total Students

11

*Do not double count Hispanics; Hispanics also appear in the racial categories below.

Page 92 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

William Ring

Adjunct Lecturer. J.D., University of Arizona. Specializations: Land Use Law.

James L. Sell

Visiting Assistant Professor (Ph.D., University of Arizona, 1983). Specializations: Cultural Geography, Environment/Behavior/Design, Landscape Perception and Planning, Citizen Participation, Environmental and Geographic Education, United States.

Tracy McMillan

Adjunct Lecturer. (Ph.D., University of California, Irvine, 2003). Specializations: Impact of Transportation, Urban Design and Land Use Planning and Policy on Public Health; Children's travels and Health; Schools and Communities.

FYI
Northern Arizona University is located in Flagstaff, Arizona, a city of approximately 60,000. At an Elevation of 7,000 feet, Flagstaff sits at the 12,000 foot San Francisco Peaks and is surrounded by the largest Ponderosa pine forest in the world. This four-season city is focal point for a region offering a wide range of recreational and cultural opportunities, all of which department classes and program take advantage of. A little over an hours drive will take you to one of the greatest wonders of the world-the Grand Canyon. Winter skiing and the red rock country of Sedona are a short drive from the city. The surrounding area is rich in Navajo, Hopi and other American Indian cultures. The Coconino National Forest surrounds Flagstaff and offers recreational activities from hiking and mountain biking to fishing and boating.

ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 93

OHIO STATE UNIVERSITY


City and Regional Planning Austin E. Knowlton School of Architecture
275 Woodruff Avenue Columbus, Ohio 43210 Phone (614) 292-1012 Fax (614) 292-7106

BS/MA/MS PAB

Ph.D.

ACSP Member: FULL

UNDERGRADUATE ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS


Departmental Requirement: Minimum GPA: Minimum SAT or ACT Scores:

Completion of high school or college transfer 2.0 1090/24

UNDERGRADUATE GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

http://knowlton.osu.edu Associate Professor Jennifer Evans-Cowley, Head Phone: (614) 292-5427 E-mail: cowley.11@osu.edu

Hours of Core ..........................................................................................45 Hours of CRP Electives ...........................................................................20 Hours of Studio ........................................................................................15 Hours of Restricted Electives ..................................................................20 Hours of Unrestricted Electives ...............................................................20 Total Required Hours in Planning Program ................... 191 quarter hours Thesis or Final Product ..........................................................Not Required

PROGRAM INFORMATION
Admission Deadline 2009-10 for Masters program ........ August 15, 2008/July 1 Int. Admission Deadline 2009-10 for Ph.D program............ August 15, 2008/July 1 Int. Admission Deadline 2009-10 for BS program ..................................................June 1 Financial Aid Deadline 2009-10 for Masters program.....................Early application ............................................................................................................... recommended Financial Aid Deadline 2009-10 for Ph.D Program .........................Early application ............................................................................................................... recommended Financial Aid Deadline 2009-10 for Bachelor's program ...............Early application ............................................................................................................... recommended In-State Tuition and Fees ................................................................$2,902 per quarter Out-of-State Tuition and Fees.........................................................$7,459 per quarter Application Fee .................................................................................... $40 ($50 Intl) Additional Fees: ..................................................................................................... Yes

MASTERS DEGREE
Master of City and Regional Planning
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail: Professor Jennifer Evans-Cowley, Graduate Program Admissions Coordinator (614) 292-5427 cowley.11@osu.edu

GRADUATE DEADLINES, TUITION AND FEES

Year Initiated: 1958 PAB Accredited Degrees Granted through 8/31/08.........................................................1385 Degrees Granted from 9/1/07 to 8/31/08 ..................................................46

Annual Student Enrollment Applied


Masters Doctoral 111 19 76 23

Accepted
86 9 61 7

Enrolled
47 5 46 5

07/08 08/09 07/08 08/09 07/08 08/09

Environmental Land Use Planning, Geographic Information Systems, Physical Planning & Design, Transportation Planning, Housing, Real Estate, & Neighborhood Planning, International Development Planning, Planning Policy & Process, Urban & Regional Economic Planning
MASTERS ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS
University Admission Policy: Minimum Undergraduate GPA: Minimum GRE: Minimum TOEFL Ranking in Undergraduate Class: Departmental Requirement:

Masters Specializations

UNDERGRADUATE DEGREE
Bachelor of Science City and Regional Planning
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail: Professor Jennifer Evans-Cowley, Graduate Program Admissions Coordinator (614) 292-5427 cowley.11@osu.edu

Bachelors degree from an accredited institution 3.0 Required if GPA below 3.0 600 (250)

Year Initiated: 2009 PAB Accredited Degrees Granted through 8/31/09...............................................................1 Degrees Granted from 9/1/08 to 8/31/09 ....................................................1

MASTERS GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

Hours of Core ...........................................................................................38 Hours of Studio or Practice Related Courses .............................................5 Hours of Restricted Electives .....................................................................0 Hours of Unrestricted Electives ................................................................47 Total Required Hours in Planning Program .............................................90 Exams or Written Requirements::............. Comprehensive Exam or Thesis

Page 94 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

FINANCIAL AID INFORMATION


Tuition Awards:

60 Internships 36 Tuition and Fee Waivers 3.0 GPA

DOCTORAL DEGREE
Ph.D. of City and Regional Planning
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail: Professor Phil Viton, PhD Program Admission Coordinator (614) 292-2119 viton.1@osu.edu

Eligibility Criteria:

JOINT DEGREES

o MA/MCRP - African American and African Studies o MA/MCRP - Environmental Science o MA/MCRP - Public Policy and Management o MPA/MCRP - Public Policy and Management o MLA/MCRP - Landscape Architecture o MS/MCRP - Civil Environmental Engineering and Geodetic Science - Specialization in Transportation o MSW/MCRP - Social Work o JD/MCRP - Law o MA/MCRP - Geography

Year Initiated: 1985 Degrees Granted through 8/31/08.............................................................58 Degrees Granted from 9/1/07 to 8/31/08 ....................................................5 Dissertations Granted from 9/1/2007 to 8/31/2008 1. Investigating Way-Finding using Virtual Environments 2. Reasoned Action Versus Planned Behavior in Bus Use 3. Water Resources Allocation and Conflict: The Case of the Euphrates and Tigris 4. Geography and the Cost of Network Infrastructure: The Case of Local Telephone Systems 5. Intergovernmental Collaboration in Post Katrina Mississippi

TOTAL MASTERS STUDENT COMPOSITION 2008-2009 US Citizens & Permanent Residents


Hispanics* Of any Race White African American Native American/ Pacific Islander Asian American Mixed Other / Dont know Non-US Citizens Non- Permanent Residents

Male 2 44 3 0 1 0 0 4 54

Female 1 30 5 0 1 0 4 6 47

Total 3 74 8 0 2 0 4 10

Urban & Economic Development, Environmental & Land Use Planning, Planning Management and Law, Energy & Telecommunications, Environmental Behavior and Urban Design, Negotiation
DOCTORAL ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS
University Admission Policy: ..............................................................None Departmental Requirement: .................................................................None Minimum GPA: ........................................................................................3.0 Minimum GRE: .............................................................................Required Minimum TOEFL: ........................................................................600 (250)

Doctoral Specializations

DOCTORAL GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

Hours of Core ...........................................................................................20 Hours of Studio or Practice Related Courses .............................................0 Hours of Restricted Electives .....................................................................0 Hours of Unrestricted Electives ..............................................................115 Total Required Hours in Program: 135 Thesis or Final Product: Dissertation

FINANCIAL AID INFORMATION


Tuition Awards:

Total Students

101

3 Internships 5 Graduate Associateships (All associate ships carry stipend for 20 hrs/week plus payment of tuition/fees. 3.0 GPA

Eligibility Criteria:

*Do not double count Hispanics; Hispanics also appear in the racial categories below.

ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 95

TOTAL DOCTORAL STUDENT COMPOSITION 2008-2009 US Citizens & Permanent Residents


Hispanics* Of any Race White African American Native American/ Pacific Islander Asian American Mixed Other / Dont know Non-US Citizens Non- Permanent Residents

Jennifer Evans-Cowley

Male 2 3 2 1 0 0 2 1

Female 1 3 2 2 0 0 2 2

Total 3 6 2 3 0 0 4 3

Assistant Professor. BS (1994), MUP (1996) and Ph.D., (2000), Texas A&M; MPA, University of North Texas (1997). Specializations: Planning Administration, Infrastructure, Planning Theory, Land Use. http://facweb.knowlton.ohio-state.edu/jevanscowley/crpinfo

(614) 292-8044

conroy.36@osu.edu

Professor. BA, SUNY-Buffalo (1970); MA (1972), MPhil. (1973) and Ph.D., (1977), Columbia University. Specializations: Environmental Planning, GIS, Computers, Environmental Modeling. http://facweb.knowlton.ohio-state.edu/sgordon/crpinfo

Steven I. Gordon

(614) 292-3372

gordon.1@osu.edu

Professor. MA, Ecole des Mines (1970); MSc (1973) and DSc (1976), Technion, Israel. Specializations: Energy, Communications, Urban Economics, Quantitative Methods. http://facweb.knowlton.ohio-state.edu/jguldmann/crpinfo

Jean-Michel Guldmann

(614) 292-2257

guldmann.1@osu.edu

Associate Professor. BA, Macalaster College (1974); MA (1976) and Ph.D., (1980), Ohio State University. Specializations: Housing, Quantitative, Planning and Geography, Population Studies. http://facweb.knowlton.ohio-state.edu/hmorrow/crpinfo

Hazel Morrow-Jones

(614) 292-1027

morrow-jones.1@osu.edu

Total Students

11

12

23

*Do not double count Hispanics; Hispanics also appear in the racial categories below.

Professor. BArch., Washington University (1969); MUP, New York University (1973); Ph.D., Pennsylvania State University (1979). Specializations: Environment and Behavior, Urban Design, Environmental Psychology, Physical Planning. http://facweb.knowlton.ohio-state.edu/jnasar/crpinfo

Jack L. Nasar

(614) 292-1457

nasar.1@osu.edu

PLANNING FACULTY
Assistant Professor. BA California State Northridge (1995), MPP, UCLA (1998), PhD. Specializations: International Development, Social Equity, Governance, Poverty.

Kenneth Pearlman

Charisma Acey

Professor Emeritus, Section Head. AB (1964) and MCP (1974), University of Pennsylvania ; JD, Columbia University (1967). Specializations: Planning Law, Planning Theory, Planning Administration, Land Use Policy. http://facweb.knowlton.ohio-state.edu/kpearlman/crpinfo

(614) 292-1012

(614) 292-5427

pearlman.1@osu.edu

Gulsah Akar

Visiting Assistant Professor. BS (2002), MS (2004) Middle East Technical, PhD (2009), University of Maryland. Specializations: Transportation, Energy, Public Health.

Phillip A. Viton

(614) 292-1012

Associate Professor. BA, Brown University (1972); Ph.D., University of California, Berkeley (1977). Specializations: Transportation, Urban Economics, Quantitative Methods, Urban Modeling. http://facweb.knowlton.ohio-state.edu/pviton/crpinfo

(614) 292-5427

viton.1@osu.edu

Assistant Professor. BS, University of Pennsylvania (1989); MS (1993) and MP (1993), University of Virginia; Ph.D., University of North Carolina (2000). Specializations: Sustainability, Negotiation and Conflict Management, Environmental Planning, Citizen Participation. http://facweb.knowlton.ohio-state.edu/mcconroy/crpinfo

Maria Manta Conroy

Burkhard von Rabenau

(614) 292-8044

conroy.36@osu.edu

Professor Emeritus. Dipl. Ing., Technische Hochschule Stuttgart, Germany (1968); MCP (1970) and Ph.D., (1973), University of California, Berkeley. Specializations: International Development, Urban Economics, Project Analysis, Quantitative Methods. http://facweb.knowlton.ohio-state.edu/bvonrabenau/crpinfo

(614) 292-8279

vonrabenau.1@osu.edu

Page 96 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

Clinical Professor: MA, south Dakota State University. Specialization: Downtown Development.

Kyle Ezell

Mark McCord

(614) 292-1012

Professor. BS, Purdue (1977); MS, Stanford (1978); Ph.D., MIT (1983). Specializations: Transportation.

(614) 292-2388

mccord.2@osu.edu

OTHER AFFILIATED FACULTY


Lecturer. BA, MLA, MCRP, Ohio State University. Specializations: Technology, GIS,

Vincent Papsidero

Lecturer: MCRP, The Ohio State University. Specialization: Planning Practice.

Charles Cartwright

(614) 292-1012

Nancy Rechie

(614) 292-1012

Lecturer. BA Ohio Dominica, MA Virginia. Specialization: Historic Preservation

Jeff Darbee

Lecturer. BA Lake Forest College. Specialization: Historic Preservation

Denis Rhoden

(614) 292-1012

Lecturer. BA SUNY Binghamton, MCRP Ohio State University. Specialization: Social Equity and Housing

Georgina Dodge

Lecturer. BA (1991), MA (1993) and Ph.D., University of California, Berkeley. Specializations: Race and Diversity.

(614) 292-1012

Lecturer. BArch Virginia, MCRP Ohio State University. Specialization: Urban Design

Laura Schinn

Lecturer. BS, Miami University (1994). Specializations: Comprehensive Planning.

Kimberly Gibson

Lecturer. BA, MCRP Ohio State University. Specialization: Urban Design

Jason Sudy

(614) 292-1012

Christine Godward Jackie Graham

FYI

BA, MCRP, Ohio State University. Specialization: Public Health

Lecturer. BS, University of South Florida (1987); M.Mgmt., Northwestern University (1993); MCRP, Ohio State University (2002). Specializations: Real Estate.

(614) 292-1012

Lecturer. BS, Ohio State University (1984); MUP, University of Virginia (1988). Specializations: Comprehensive Planning Regional Planning, International Development.

Jamie Greene

(614) 292-1012

Lecturer. BS, University of Illinois (1974). Specializations: Race and Diversity.

Samuel Gresham, Jr.

GRADUATE PLANNING CLASS AT THE OHIO STATE UNIVERSITY

Lecturer. BArch, MCRP University of North Carolina. Specializations: Urban Design

Chris Hermann

(614) 292-1012

James N. Upton

Associate Professor. BA (1971), MA, (1973) and Ph.D., (1976), Ohio State University. Specializations: Ethnicity, Urban Politics.

Beth Urban

(614) 292-1012

Lecturer. BA, MCRP Ohio State University. Specialization: Grant Writing

ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 97

PORTLAND STATE UNIVERSITY


Nohad A. Toulan School of Urban Studies and Planning
College of Urban and Public Affairs P.O. Box 751 - USP Portland, Oregon 97207-0751 Phone (503) 725-4045 Fax (503) 725-8770 E-mail: susp@pdx.edu http://www.pdx.edu/usp/ Connie P. Ozawa, Director E-mail: ozawac@pdx.edu

BA/BS PAB

MA/MS PAB PAB

Ph.D.

ACSP Member: FULL

Community Organization and Change, Housing and Economic Development, Communications and Community Development
UNDERGRADUATE ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS
Departmental Requirement: Intro courses: Sociology, Political Science, Microeconomics Minimum GPA: 3.0 Minimum SAT or ACT Scores: SAT 1000, ACT 21

Undergraduate Specializations

UNDERGRADUATE GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

PROGRAM INFORMATION
Admission Deadline ....................................Rolling, major declared by Mid-October Financial Aid Deadline ........................................................................................ N/A In-State Tuition and Fees (08/09): .............................. $2,049 per quarter (Full Time) Out-of-State Tuition and Fees: ................................... $6,279 per quarter (Full Time) Application Fee ...................................................................................................... $50 Additional Fees: ........................................................................................................ 0

UNDERGRADUATE DEADLINES, TUITION AND FEES

Hours of Core .......................................................................................... 12 Hours of Studio Courses ............................................................................ 6 Hours of Restricted Elective .................................................................... 20 Hours of Unrestricted Elective ................................................................ 16 Total Required Hours In Planning Program ............................................ 54 Total Required Hours to Graduate from University .............................. 180 Thesis or Final Product ............................................................ Not required

FINANCIAL AID INFORMATION

Internship opportunities and University financial aid available.

GRADUATE DEADLINES, TUITION AND FEES

Admission Deadline or Masters program ...................................................January 15 Admission Deadline for Ph.D program ......................................................January 15 Financial Aid Deadline for Masters program .............................................January 15 Financial Aid Deadline for Ph.D Program .................................................January 15 In-State Tuition and Fees (08/09): .............................. $3,754 per quarter (Full Time) Out-of-State Tuition and Fees: .................................. $5,629 per quarter (Full Time) Application Fee ..................................................................................................... $50 Additional Fees: ........................................................................................................ 0

MASTERS DEGREE
Master of Urban and Regional Planning
Contact Person: Coordinator Phone: E-mail: Tracy Braden, Student Services (503) 725-5477 tbraden@pdx.edu

For late tuition information, please consult www.pdx.edu

Annual Student Enrollment


Applied 2007 Accepted Enrolled 2008 2007 2008 2007 2008

Year Initiated: 1974 PAB Accredited Degrees Granted through 8/31/09...........................................................682 Degrees Granted from 9/1/08 to 8/31/09 ..................................................42

Undergraduate Masters

34 204

68 198

34 80

68 81

34 39

68 42

Community Development, Environmental, Land Use, Transportation, Regional Economic Development


MASTERS ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS
University Admission Policy: Minimum Undergraduate GPA: Minimum GRE: Minimum TOEFL Ranking in Undergraduate Class: Departmental Requirement:

Masters Specializations

UNDERGRADUATE DEGREE
BA/BS in Community Development
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail: Tracy Braden, Student Services Coordinator (503) 725-5477 tbraden@pdx.edu

Year initiated:1996 Degrees Granted through 8/31/09......................................................... 306 Degrees Granted from 9/1/08 to 8/31/09 ................................................56

Bachelors degree from an accredited institution 2.75 University, 3.0 Departmental Not Required 550 Not Required A complete application consistent with the requirements posted on the School web page. Recommended: Basic Statistics, Microeconomics.

Page 98 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

Hours of Core ...........................................................................................43 Hours of Studio or Practice Related Courses ...........................................10 Hours of Restricted Electives ............................................................. 12-15 Hours of Unrestricted Electives .......................................................... 14-17 Total Required Hours in Planning Program: ............................................72 Exam, Thesis or Final Product:......................Field Area Project (optional)

MASTERS GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

Planning, Community Development, Policy Analysis, Gerontology, Regional Economic Development, Transportation
DOCTORAL ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS
University Admission Policy: Minimum GRE: Minimum TOEFL: Minimum GPA: Departmental Requirement: No Requirements 1,000 Math/Verbal Combined 550 2.75 or 3.0 in 12 or more graduate credit No Requirements

Doctoral Specializations

FINANCIAL AID INFORMATION

Internship opportunities, Department awards, University financial aid.

TOTAL MASTERS STUDENT COMPOSITION 2008-2009


US Citizens & Permanent Residents Hispanics* Of any Race White African American Native American/ Pacific Islander Asian American Mixed Other / Dont know Non-US Citizens NonPermanent Residents Total Students Male 2 22 1 0 0 0 0 1 26 Female 0 59 0 0 1 0 0 2 62 Total 2 81 1 0 1 0 0 3 88

DOCTORAL GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

Hours of Core ...........................................................................................17 Hours of Studio or Practice Related Courses .............................................0 Hours of Restricted Electives ...................................................................39 Hours of Unrestricted Electives ................................................................16 Other ...........................................................................................................0 Total ..........................................................................................................72 Exams or Written Requirements: ........................... Dissertation: 27 credits minimum, 2 field area exams.

TOTAL DOCTORAL STUDENT COMPOSITION 2008-2009


US Citizens & Permanent Residents Hispanics* Of any Race White African American Native American/ Pacific Islander Asian American Mixed Other / Dont know Non-US Citizens NonPermanent Residents Total Students

Male 1 15 0 0 0 1 0 6 23

Female 0 23 0 0 0 0 0 4 27

Total 1 38 0 0 0 1 0 10 50

*Do not double count Hispanics; Hispanics also appear in the racial categories below.

DOCTORAL DEGREE
PhD in Urban Studies
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail: Tracy Braden, Student Services Coordinator (503) 725-5477 tbraden@pdx.edu

Year initiated 1969 Degrees Granted through 8/31/2009......................................................212 Degrees Granted from 9/1/2008 to 8/31/2009 ...........................................2 Dissertations Granted from 9/1/2008 to 8/31/2009 1. Oregons Initiative-Industrial Complex: Political Consultants, Technology, and Campaigns 2000-2008 2.Community, Conversation, and Conflict in an Online Political Blog: An Examination of Comment Rating Activity With the Daily KOS Pie Fight Diaries.

ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 99

PLANNING FACULTY
Carl Abbott
Professor. PhD, University of Chicago (1971) Specializations: Community Development, Historic Preservation, Housing and Neighborhood Planning, Metropolitan/Regional Planning, Planning History. http://web.pdx.edu/%7Ed3ca/

Connie P. Ozawa

Professor. MA, University of Hawaii (1978); PhD, Massachusetts Institute of Technology (1988) Specializations: Citizen Participation, Environmental Planning, Political Economy, Planning Theory, Negotiation and Conflict Management.

(503) 725-5126

ozawac@pdx.edu

(503) 725-5171

abbottc@pdx.edu

Anthony Rufolo

Professor. MCP, Harvard University (1973); PhD, University of California, Berkeley (1980) Specializations: Community Development, Planning History, Planning Practice, Planning Theory, Transportation. http://www.upa.pdx.edu/USP/people/faculty/adler/inex.html

Sy Adler

Professor. PhD, University of California, Los Angeles (1975) Specializations: Infrastructure/Public Services, Public Finance/Fiscal Planning, Transportation, Urban and Regional Economics.

(503) 725-4049

rufoloa@pdx.edu

Ethan P. Seltzer

(503) 725-5172

adlers@pdx.edu

Ellen M. Bassett

Assistant Professor. A.B. (History and Political Science) 1984, University of Michigan - Ann Arbor; M.S. (Urban and Regional Planning) 1987, University of Wisconsin-Madison; Ph.D. (Urban and Regional Planning), 2001, University of Wisconsin-Madison.

Professor. MRP (1979), PhD, University of Pennsylvania (1983) Specializations: Community Development Planning, Economic Development Planning, Environmental Planning, Land Use/Growth Management, Metropolitan/Regional Planning.

(503) 725-4045

seltzere@pdx.edu

Vivek Shandas

(503) 725-5174

bassette@pdx.edu

Assistant Professor. PhD, University of Washington (2005). Specializations: Environment, GIS, Community Planning, Land Use.

Assistant Professor. BA, The George Washington University (1999); PhD, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill (2006). Specializations: Housing, Affordable Housing Policy, Neighborhood Change, Participation, Planning, Neighborhood Planning.

Lisa K. Bates

(503) 725-5222

vshandas@pdx.edu

Nohan A. Toulan

(503) 725-8203

lkbates@pdx.edu

Dean Emeritus and Professor Emeritus. MCP, University of California, Berkeley (1959); PhD, University of Pennsylvania (1965) Specializations: Housing and Neighborhood Planning, International Development and Planning, Land Use/Growth Management, Metropolitan/Regional Planning, Physical Planning/Urban Design.

FAICP

Associate Professor. BS, UC Davis (1987); MA, UCLA (1989); PhD, UC, Berkeley (2001) Specializations: Transportation, Infrastructure/Public Services, Environmental Planning, Land Use/Growth Management. http:// web.pdx.edu/%7Ejdill/

Jennifer Dill

(503) 725-5143

toulann@pdx.edu

OTHER AFFILIATED FACULTY


Associate Professor. MCRP, Iowa State University (1988); PhD, University of North Carolina (1995) Specializations:Community Development, Political Economy, Politics and Governance, Social Policy/ Human Services.

(503) 725-5173

jdill@pdx.edu

Charles Heying

Michael Fogarty

Professor. PhD, University of Pittsburgh (1975) Specializations: Economic Development Planning.

(503) 725-8263

fogartym@pdx.edu

(503) 725-8416

heyingc@pdx.edu

Assistant Professor. MS, Carnegie Mellon University (1991); PhD, UC Berkeley (1996) Specializations: Community Development, Economic Development Planning, Gender Studies and Planning, Race/Ethnicity, Planning and Social Policy.

Karen Gibson

Barry Messer

Associate Professor. PhD, Portland State University (1994) Specializations: Citizen Participation, Community Development, Environmental Planning.

(503) 725-8265

gibsonk@pdx.edu

(503) 725-5159

messerb@pdx.edu

Assistant Professor. BS, Bowling Green University (1987); M.R.P. University of North Carolina (1992); Ph.D. Northwestern University (2004) Specializations: Transportation Planning, Advanced Travel Demand Modeling and Modeling Methods, Travel Demand Forecasting.

John Gliebe

William Macht

Adjunct Professor.JD, University of Virginia (1967) Specializations: Real Estate Development.

(503) 725-8296

macht@pdx.edu

Sheila Martin

Loren Lutzenhiser

Professor. MA, University of Montana (1976); PhD, UC Davis (1988) Specializations: Environmental Planning, Energy Planning, Community Development.

Associate Professor and Director of the Institute of Portland Metropolitan Studies. PhD, Iowa State University (1992) Specializations: Economic Development, Community Development, Regional Planning and Development.

(503) 725-8743

llutz@pdx.edu

Page 100 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

Professor. PhD, University of Iowa (1981) Specializations: Economic Development Planning, Energy Planning, Impact Assessment, Quantitative Methods and Real Estate Development.

James Strathman

Adjunct Professor. JD, Williamette University (1969) Specializations: Land Use/Growth Management, Planning Law.

Edward Sullivan

(503) 725-4069

strathmanj@pdx.edu

(503) 725-4045

esullivan@gsblaw.com

Gerald Sussman

Professor. PhD, University of Hawaii (1983) Specializations: Community Development, International Development and Planning, Political Economy, Politics and Governance.

(503) 725-5176

sussmang@pdx.edu

FYI
In addition to degrees described above, the Nohad A. Toulan School of Urban Studies and Planning, College of Urban Affairs also offers graduate certificates in Transportation, Real Estate Development, and, in cooperation with the Geography Department, GIS and in cooperation with the Architecture Department, Urban Design. These Certificates are available to all students both during and after the conclusion of their graduate studies.

ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 101

PRATT INSTITUTE
Graduate Center for Planning and the Environment
200 Willoughby Avenue Brooklyn, New York 11205 Phone (718) 399-4314 Fax (718) 399-4379 gradplan@pratt.edu http://www.pratt.edu/gcpe John Shapiro, AICP, Chair Lacey Tauber Phone (718) 399-4340 E-mail: ltauber@pratt.edu

MA/MS PAB
University Admission Policy:

ACSP Member: FULL


Bachelors degree from an accredited institution GPA: 3.0 No Requirements 575 (University), 600 (Department) Not Required Evidence of strong writing and/or visual communication skills; commitment to the profession of planning and to the core values of the program: equity, sustainability and public participation

MASTERS ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS


Minimum Undergraduate Minimum GRE: Minimum TOEFL: Ranking in Undergraduate Class: Departmental Requirement:

PROGRAM INFORMATION
Admission Deadline 2009-10 ................................................................................N/A Financial Aid Deadline 2009-10 ...........................................................April 15, 2009 In-State Tuition and Fees: ................................................................$1,134 per credit Out-of-State and International Tuition and Fees: ............................$1,134 per credit Application Fee: .................................................................................................... $50 Additional Fees ...............................................................................$695 per semester

GRADUATE DEADLINES, TUITION AND FEES

Hours of Core ..........................................................................................20 Hours of Studio or Practice Related Courses ..........................................10 Hours of Restricted Electives ..........15 credits required for specializations Hours of Unrestricted Electives ................................................................25 Other ..................................................................................... 5 Thesis/DPC Total Required Hours in Planning Program ............................................60 Exam,Thesis or Final Product: ................. Demonstration of Professional ...................................................................................Competence or Thesis

MASTERS GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

Master of Science in Historic Preservation


Contact Person: Phone: E-mail: Dr. Eric Allison, Coordinator (212) 647-7532 eallison@pratt.edu

Graduate Assistantships Eligibility Criteria: Graduate Scholarships Eligibility Criteria:

FINANCIAL AID

GPA=3.0 (average award) GPA=3.0 Full time Register

Annual Student Enrollment Applied


MCRP 71 93

Year Initiated: 2004 NCPE Accreditation 2006 Degrees Granted through 8/31/09.............................................................20 Degrees Granted from 9/1/08 to 8/31/09 ....................................................9

Accepted
57 61

Enrolled
18 24

Masters Specializations
Historic Preservation
MASTERS ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS
University Admission Policy: Minimum Undergraduate GPA: Minimum GRE: Minimum TOEFL: Ranking in Undergraduate Class: Departmental Requirement:

06/07 07/08 06/07 07/08 06/07 07/08

MASTERS DEGREE
Master of Science in City and Regional Planning
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail: John Shapiro, AICP, Chair (718) 399-4391 johnshapiro@pratt.edu

Bachelors degree from an accredited institution No Requirements No Requirements 575 (University), 600 (Department) Not Required Evidence of strong writing and analytical skills.

Year Initiated: 1959 PAB Accredited Degrees Granted through 8/31/09...........................................................546 Degrees Granted from 9/1/07 to 8/31/09 ..................................................31

MASTERS GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

Environmental Planning, Community Development, Historic Preservation, Physical Planning


Page 102 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

Masters Specializations

Hours of Core ..........................................................................................27 Hours of Studio or Practice Related Courses ............................................5 Hours of Restricted Electives ....................................................................3 Hours of Unrestricted Electives ..................................................................9 Total Required Hours in Program ............................................................44 Exam,Thesis or Final Product: ...........................................................None

Masters in Urban Environmental Systems Management


Contact Person: Phone: E-mail: Eva Hanhardt, Coordinator (718) 399-4314 ehanhard@pratt.edu

PLANNING FACULTY
Chair, Associate Professor. M.S.C.R.P., Pratt Institute. Specialization: Physical Planning & Land Use

John Shapiro

AICP

Year Initiated: Spring 2005 Degrees Granted through 8/31/09.............................................................52 Degrees Granted from 9/1/07 to 8/31/08 ....................................................5

(718) 399-4391

jshapiro@ppsaplanning.com

Eric Allison, Ph.D.

Environmental Systems Management


MASTERS ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS
University Admission Policy: Minimum Undergraduate Minimum GRE: Minimum TOEFL: Ranking in Undergraduate Class: Departmental Requirement: Bachelors degree from an accredited Institution GPA: 3.0 No Requirements 575 (University), 600 (Department) Not Required Evidence of strong analytical skills. Evidence of commitment to sustainability as a tool for confronting environmental quality & health issues.

Masters Specializations

Adjunct Associate Professor and Coordinator of Historic Preservation Program. Ph.D., Columbia University. Specialization: Historic Preservation

(212) 647-7532

eallison@pratt.edu

Adjunct Associate Professor and Coordinator of Environmental Systems Management Program. MUP, New York University. Specialization: Environmental Planning; Community Based Planning

Eva Hanhardt

(718) 399-4318

ehanhardt@mas.org

Ned Kaufman, Ph.D.


(212) 647-7532

Adjunct Associate Professor. Ph.D., Yale University. Specializations: Environmental Planning, Historic Preservation.

nkpreservation@verizon.net

MASTERS GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

Hours of Core ..........................................................................................20 Hours of Studio or Practice Related Courses ............................................5 Hours of Restricted Electives ....................................................................0 Hours of Unrestricted Electives ................................................................15 Total Required Hours in Program ............................................................40 Exam,Thesis or Final Product: ...........................................................None

Adjunct Assistant Professor. PhD, Cornell University. Specializations: Land Use Regulation and Growth Management; Planning Methods

Jonathan Martin, Ph.D.


(718) 399-4314

TOTAL MASTERS STUDENT COMPOSITION Fall 2008 US Citizens & Permanent Total Male Female Residents
Hispanics* Of any Race White African American Native American/ Pacific Islander Asian American Mixed Other / Dont know Non-US Citizens Non- Permanent Residents

Associate Professor. M.S.C.R.P Pratt Institute. Specialization: Urban History and Theory.

William Menking

(718) 399-4323

wmenking@pratt.edu

Ronald Shiffman FAICP, FAIA


(718) 399-4314

Professor. M.S.C.R.P. Pratt Institute, Specializations: Community Development, Sustainable Development, Physical Planning.

ronyvette@mac.com

1 15 0 0 1 0 0 0 17

3 30 7 0 4 0 2 1 47

4 45 7 0 5 0 2 1 64

Vicki Weiner

Adjunct Associate Professor. MS Historic Preservation, Columbia University. Specializations: Historic Preservation; Community Development

(718) 636-3486 ext 6464

vweiner@pratt.edu

Professor. Ph.D., University of California, Berkeley. Specializations: Community Development, Gender and Planning, Disaster Migration, Urban Land and Housing in Developing Countries.

Ayse Yonder, Ph.D.

(718) 399-4323

ayonder@pratt.edu

Total Students

*Do not double count Hispanics; Hispanics also appear in the racial categories below. ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 103

OTHER AFFILIATED FACULTY


VISITING PROFESSORS: CITY AND REGIONAL PLANNING
Visiting Associate Professor. Ph.D, UCLA. Specialization: Urban Economics

Frank Lang, R.A.

Visiting Assistant Professor. M.Arch, University of Pennsylvania, Specializations: Housing & Community Development; Housing Finance

(718) 399-4314

flang@pratt.edu

Moshe Adler, Ph.D.


(718) 399-4314

Visiting Assistant Professor. JD, Yale Law School. Specializations: Land Use and Planning Law

Anika Singh, J.D.

(718) 399-4314

anika.singh@gmail.com

ma820@columbia.edu

Visiting Associate Professor. I.L.B., Yale University. Specialization: Planning Law

Robert Alpern

Visiting Assistant Professor. MSCRP, Pratt Institute. Specialization: Environmental Planning

Ira Stern

(718) 399-4314

istern@pratt.edu

(718) 399-4314

bobalp140@aol.com

Samara Swanston, J.D.


(718) 399-4314

Jennifer Becker

Visiting Assistant Professor. MSCRP, Pratt Institute, Specialization: Economic Development and Sustainability

Visiting Assistant Professor. JD, St. John's University. Specializations: Environmental Law; Environmental Justice

fotlah@earthlink.net

Viren Brahmbhatt, R.A.

Visiting Assistant Professor. MS inArch and Urban Design, Pratt Institute, Specializations: Affordable Housing, Infrastructure Planning and Sustainable Design

Visiting Assistant Professor. M.Arch, Rice University. Specializations: Physical Planning, Community Development

Edward Perry Winston, R.A.


(718) 399-4314

ewinston@pratt.edu

(718) 399-4314

anarchitect@earthlink.net

Catherine Zidar

Visiting Assistant Professor. B.Arch, Pratt Institute. Specializations: Environmental Planning, Physical Planning, Urban Design

Joan Byron

Visiting Assistant Professor. MSCRP, Pratt Institute. Specializations: Environmental Planning, Ecological Infrastructure

(718) 399-4314

czidar@pratt.edu

(718) 636 3486 x6447

jbyron@pratt.edu

Rayna Huber Ehrlich


(718) 399-4314

Visiting Assistant Professor. B.Arch, Cornell University. Specializations: Physical Planning and Urban Design.

VISITING FACULTY: ENVIRONMENTAL SYSTEMS MANAGEMENT Chris Benedict, R.A.


(718) 399-4314
Visiting Assistant Professor. B.Arch, Cooper Union. Specializations: Green Buildings; Energy Planning

rerlich@pratt.edu

Roland Gebhardt

Visiting Assistant Professor. MFA, Art Academy of Hamburg Specialization: Graphic Design.

benedictra@aol.com

(718) 399-4314

roland@rolandgebhardtdesign.com

Michael Bobker

Visiting Assistant Professor. MSCRP, Pratt Institute, Specializations: Housing and Community Development; Housing Finance

Catherine Herman

Visiting Assistant Professor. M.S. Energy, New York Institute of Technology, Specializations: Energy Systems Management

(718) 399-4314

(718) 399-4314

cherman@pratt.edu

Carlton Brown

George Jacquemart, P.E.


(718) 399-4314

Visiting Associate Professor. MSUP, Stanford University. Specialization: Transportation planning.

Visiting Assistant Professor. B.Arch, Princeton. Specializations: Sustainable Development and Affordable Housing

(718) 399-4314

G-jacquemart@peapc.com

Visiting Associate Professor. MSCRP, Pratt Institute. Specializations: Housing and Real Estate; Community Development

Brad Lander

Visiting Assistant Professor. JD, Pace University. Specialization: Environmental Planning

Darryl Cabbagestalk, JD
(718) 399-4314

darrylcabbagestalk@comcast.net

(718) 636 3486 x6447

blander@pratt.edu

Damon Chaky, Ph.D


(718) 399-4314

Assistant Professor. PhD in Geology, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, Specialization: Geochemistry; Toxics and Hazardous Materials

dchaky@pratt.edu

Page 104 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

Carter Craft

Visiting Assistant Professor. M.U.P. New York University, Specialization: Waterfront Planning and Development

(718) 399-4314

Visiting Assistant Professor. MA, New York University, Specializations: Historic Preservation; Public History

Jane McNamara
(212) 647-7352

Ramon Cruz

Visiting Assistant Professor. M.U.P. Princeton University, Specializations: Ecological Cities

Theodore Prudon, Ph.D.

(718) 399-4314

Visiting Assistant Professor. Ph.D., Columbia University. Specializations: Historic Preservation; Building Technology

Stephanie Feldman
(718) 399-4314

(212) 647-7532

Visiting Assistant Professor. M.S., New Jersey Institute of Technology Specializations: Industrial Ecology; Pollution Prevention

Visiting Assistant Professor. MA, New York University, Specializations: Historic Preservation; Public History

Marcia Reaven

Tanushri Kumar

(212) 647-7532

mreaven@citylore.org

Visiting Associate Professor. M.U.P. Cornell University Specializations: Industrial Ecology and Green Manufacturing

Kevin Wolfe, R.A.

(718) 399-4314

Visiting Assistant Professor. M.Arch. Columbia University, Specializations: Historic Preservation; Adaptive Reuse Techniques

(212) 647-7532

Paul Mankiewicz, Ph.D.


(718) 399-4314

Visiting Associate Professor. PhD, City University of New York, Specializations: Environmental Planning, Water Quality Management

paul@gaiainstituteny.org

Gita Nandan

VVisiting Assistant Professor. M.Arch. U.C., Berkeley, Specialization: Green Architecture

(718) 399-4314

Visiting Assistant Professor. MSCRP, M.I.T., Specialization: Environmental Planning & Sustainable Development

Ariella Rosenberg Moran


(718) 399-4314

Gelvin Stevenson, Ph.D


(718) 399-4314

Visiting Assistant Professor. PhD, Washington University, Specialization: Environmental Economics

gelvin@optonline.net

Mathy Stanislaus, J.D.

Visiting Assistant Professor. JD, Chicago-Kent College of Law. Specialization: Environmental Planning

(718) 399-4314 mstanislaus@allegianceresources.com

Val Wahington, JD

Visiting Assistant Professor. JD, Albany Law School, Specialization: Environmental Law

(718) 399-4314

VISITING FACULTY: HISTORIC PRESERVATION Erika Avrami


Visiting Instructor. MS Columbia University; MSCRP Rutgers University. Specialization: Historic Preservation

(212) 647-7352

ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 105

RUTGERS, THE STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW JERSEY


Edward J. Bloustein School of Planning and Public Policy
33 Livingston Avenue, Suite 300 New Brunswick, New Jersey 08901-1987 Phone (732) 932-5475 ext. 542 Fax (732) 932-1771 http://www.policy.rutgers.edu Robert Burchell, Program Director E-mail:burchell@rutgers.edu

MA/MS PAB

Ph.D.

ACSP Member: FULL

MASTERS ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS


University Admission Policy: Minimum Undergraduate GPA: Minimum GRE:

Minimum TOEFL: Ranking in Undergraduate Class: Departmental Requirement:

Four year degree. 3.0 University, V-500/Q-600; Department, varies by year. 93/213/550 Not Required Four year degree, some experience welcomed, but not required.

MASTERS GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

PROGRAM INFORMATION
GRADUATE DEADLINE, TUITION AND FEES
Admission Deadline 2008-09 for Masters program..... ..................... June 1 Admission Deadline 2008-09 for Ph.D program............................... June 1 Financial Aid Deadline 2008-09 for Masters program............... January 15 Financial Aid Deadline 2008-09 for Ph.D p rogram ................. January 15 In-State Tuition and Fees ..............................................$6,720 per semester Out-of-State and International Tuition and Fees .......$10,128 per semester Application Fee .......................................................................................$65 Additional Fees: ...............................................................$880 per semester

Hours of Core ...........................................................................................18 Hours of Studio or Practice Related Courses .............................................6 Hours of Restricted Electives .....................................................................6 Hours of Unrestricted Electives ................................................................18 Total Required Hours in Planning Program .............................................48 Exams, Thesis, or Final Product: .............. Professional report requirement

Master of City and Regional Studies


Contact Person: Phone: E-mail: Stephen D. Weston (732) 932-5475 x 753 ejb@policy.rutgers.edu

Year Initiated: 1975 Degrees Granted through 8/31/09...........................................................114 Degrees Granted from 9/1/08 to 8/31/09 ....................................................5

Annual Student Enrollment


07/08 08/09 07/08 08/09 07/08 08/09 MCRP MCRS 164 9 182 13 102 6 119 6 42 6 55 6

Applied

Accepted

Enrolled

MASTERS DEGREE
Master of City and Regional Planning
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail: Stephen D. Weston (732) 932-5475 x753 ejb@policy.rutgers.edu

Environmental and Physical Planning, Regional Planning and International Development, Urban and Community Development, Housing and Real Estate, Transportation Policy and Planning
MASTERS ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS
University Admission Policy: Minimum Undergraduate GPA: Minimum GRE: Minimum TOEFL: Departmental Requirement:

Masters Specializations

Year Initiated: 1968 PAB Accredited Degrees Granted through 8/31/08.........................................................1359 Degrees Granted from 9/1/07 to 8/31/08 ..................................................34

Environmental and Physical Planning, Regional Planning and International Development, Urban and Community Development, Housing and Real Estate, Transportation Policy and Planning
Page 106 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

Masters Specializations

Four year degree. 3.0 University: V-500/Q-600; Department: varies by year. 93/213/550 Another advanced degree and/or international student with significant experience in field.

Hours of Core ...........................................................................................15 Hours of Studio or Practice Related Courses ........................................N/A Hours of Restricted Electives .....................................................................6 Hours of Unrestricted Electives ..................................................................9 Total Required Hours in Planning Program ............................................ 30 Exam, Thesis or Final Product: ........ Comprehensive Exam - oral/written

MASTERS GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

FINANCIAL AID INFORMATION

School Awards, Fellowships and Assistantships. Eligibility criteria: Merit and need-based aid, based upon admission Application. University Financial Aid Office: Grants and loans. Eligibility Criteria: Federal grant and loan criteria.

5. States, Housing and Innovation: the Role of State Housing Finance Agencies 6. Local Planning for Agriculture: A New Charge to the Planning Profession. 7. The Institute of Medicine's 2001 Report on Palliative Care as an Instrument of Innovation in Palliative Oncology

TOTAL MASTERS STUDENT COMPOSITION 2008-2009 US Citizens & Permanent Residents


Hispanics* Of any Race White African American Native American/ Pacific Islander Asian American Mixed Other / Dont know Non-US Citizens Non- Permanent Residents

Male 3 45 5 0 3 1 1 2

Female 0 31 6 1 2 2 0 8

Total 3 76 11 1 5 3 1 10

Housing and Community Development, Land Use and Transportation, Politics and Policy Analysis, Urban and Regional Economics, Science, Environmental and Health Policy, International Development
DOCTORAL ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS
University Admission Policy: Minimum Undergraduate GPA: Minimum GRE: Minimum TOEFL: Departmental Requirement:

Doctoral Specializations

Masters or other advanced degree. 3.0 University: V-500/Q-600; Department: varies by year. 93/213/550 Masters or other advanced degree.

DOCTORAL GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

Hours of Core ...........................................................................................15 Hours of Unrestricted Electives ................................................................33 Other .............................................................................. 24 research credits Total Required Hours in Program............................................................ 72 Exams, Thesis, or Final Product: .............. Qualifying Examination, Thesis Proposal, Dissertation and Defense
*Up to 24 credits can be transferred in from a prior graduate program - advance approval.

Total Students

60

50

110

*Do not double count Hispanics; Hispanics also appear in the racial categories below.

FINANCIAL AID INFORMATION

DOCTORAL DEGREE
Ph.D. in Planning and Public Policy
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail: Stephen D. Weston (732) 932-5475 x753 ejb@policy.rutgers.edu

School Awards: Fellowships and Assistantships. Eligibility Criteria: Merit and need-based aid, based upon admission application. University Financial Aid Office: Grants and loans. Eligibility Criteria: Federal grant and loan criteria.

Year initiated 1968 Degrees Granted through 8/31/2008......................................................139 Degrees Granted from 9/1/2008 to 8/31/2008 ...........................................4 Dissertations Granted from 9/1/2008 to 8/31/2008 1. Diability, substance abuse and public disability benefits. 2. Security and the Production of Privately Owned Public Space 3. A Practical Method for Developing Context-Sensistive Residential Parking Standard. 4. Disaster Damage Estimation Models: Data Needs versus Ground Reality

ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 107

TOTAL DOCTORAL STUDENT COMPOSITION 2008-2009 US Citizens & Permanent Residents


Hispanics* Of any Race White African American Native American/ Pacific Islander Asian American Mixed Other / Dont know Non-US Citizens Non- Permanent Residents

Professor. Ph.D., Rutgers University (1971). Specializations: Real Estate Analysis, Fiscal Impact Analysis, Housing, Land Use Planning Methods/ Theory. http://www.policy.rutgers.edu/faculty.html

Robert W. Burchell

Male 1 16 2 0 0 0 1 5

Female 1 19 5 0 1 0 1 7

Total 2 35 7 0 1 0 2 12

(732) 932-3133 ext. 542

burchell@rci.rutgers.edu

Assistant Professor. MDS (2002) Oxford University; Ph.D. (2008) Columbia University. Specializations: International Urban Development, Informal Settlements, Public Sector Accounting, Development Finance http://www.policy.rutgers.edu/faculty.html

Gabriella Y. Carolini

(732) 932-3822 ext. 731

carolini@rci.rutgers.edu

James DeFilippis

Associate Professor. MA (1996); Ph.D. (2000) Rutgers University. Specializations: Urban Political Economy, Housing, Community Development. http://www.policy.rutgers.edu/faculty.html

(732) 932-3822 ext. 734

jdefilip@rci.rutgers.edu

James W. Hughes

Professor and Dean. MCRP (1969); Ph.D. (1999) Rutgers University. Specializations: Housing & Real Estate Markets, Demographics, Analysis of Regional & State Economies http://www.policy.rutgers.edu/faculty.html

(732) 932-5475 ext. 756

jwhughes@rci.rutgers.edu

Total Students

25

34

59

*Do not double count Hispanics; Hispanics also appear in the racial categories below.

Associate Professor. MS, Rutgers University (1996); Ph.D., Princeton University (1999). Specializations: Demography, Poverty, Public and Child Welfare. http://www.policy.rutgers.edu/faculty.html (732) 932-4101 ext. 668

Radha Jaganathan

PLANNING FACULTY
Professor. MS, University of Dallas (1978); PhD., Cornell University (1982). Specializations: Global Restructuring, Regional Policies, Urban and Regional Economics. http://www.policy.rutgers.edu/faculty.html

radha@rci.rutgers.edu

Hooshang Amirahmadi

Michael L. Lahr

Associate Research Professor. MA (1978); Ph.D. (1992) University of Pennsylvania. Specializations: Economic Development, Urban and Regional Economics/Development, Public Finance. http://www.policy.rutgers.edu/faculty.html

(732) 932-3822 ext. 737

amirahma@rci.rutgers.edu

(732) 932-3133 ext. 546

lahr@rci.rutgers.edu

Clinton J. Andrews

Robert W. Lake

Professor. MS(1985); PhD., (1990) Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Specializations: Environmental Planning, Energy Policy, Planning Methods. http://www.policy.rutgers.edu/faculty.html

Professor. MA (1972); Ph.D. (1981) University of Chicago. Specializations: Community Development, Planning Theory, Race/ Ethnicity & Planning. http://www.policy.rutgers.edu/faculty.html

(732) 932-3822 ext. 721

cja1@rci.rutgers.edu

(732) 932-3133 ext. 521

rlake@rci.rutgers.edu

Richard K. Brail

David Listokin

Professor Emeritus. MCRP (1967); Ph.D., (1969) University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill. Specializations: Urban Transportation Planning, Computer/Information Technology, GIS, Urban Databases, Spatial Models. http://www.policy.rutgers.edu/faculty.html

Professor. MPA, Bernard Baruch College (1971); MCRP (1971); Ph.D. (1978) Rutgers University. Specializations: Housing, Fiscal Impacts, Historic Preservation. http://www.policy.rutgers.edu/faculty.html

(732) 932-3822 ext. 550

listokin@rci.rutgers.edu

(732) 932-3822 ext. 731

rbrail@rci.rutgers.edu

Anton E. Nelessen

Associate Professor. MS, Harvard University (1968). Specializations: Physical Planning, Urban Design, Neighborhood & C.B.D. Rehabilitation. http://www.policy.rutgers.edu/faculty.html

(732) 932-3822 ext. 726

nelessen@rci.rutgers.edu

Page 108 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

Kathe Newman

Assistant Professor. Ph.D., City University of New York (2001). Specializations: Urban Politics, Urban Revitalization, Community Development. http://www.policy.rutgers.edu/faculty.html

(732) 932-3822 ext. 556

knewman@rci.rutgers.edu

Professor and Associate Dean. MA and Ph.D., Columbia University (1969). Specializations: Urban Neighborhood Redevelopment, Brownfields, Environmental Health Policy. http://www.policy.rutgers.edu/faculty.html

Michael Greenberg

(732) 932-5475 ext. 673

mrg@rci.rutgers.edu

Robert B. Noland

Professor. MS (1986); Ph.D. (1992) UNiversity of Pennsylvania. Specializations: Transportaiton Planning, Environmental Policy, Quantitative Methods. http://policy.rutgers.edu/faculty

Briavel Holcomb

(732) 932-6812 ext. 606

rnoland@rci.rutgers.edu

Professor. MA and Ph.D., University of Colorado (1967, 1972). Specializations: Tourism, Urban Geography, Societal Impacts of the Internet. http://www.policy.rutgers.edu/faculty.html

(732) 932-4101 ext. 688

holcomb@rci.rutgers.edu

Frank J. Popper

Stuart Meck

Professor. MPA(1969); Ph.D. (1972) Harvard University. Specializations: Land Use/Growth Management, The American West, Regional and Environmental Policy. http://www.policy.rutgers.edu/faculty.html

Faculty Fellow, Center Director. MA, Ohio State, MBA, Wright State University (1971, 1981). Specializations: Comprehensive Planning, Land Use Law & Regulation, Affordable Housing http://www.policy.rutgers.edu/faculty.html

(732) 932-4101 ext. 689

fpopper@rci.rutgers.edu

(732) 932-3640, ext. 640 stumeck@rci.rutgers.edu


Faculty Fellow, Center Director. LL.B., Harvard University Law School (1967). Specializations: Transit Development, Transit System Planning, Transit System Access. http://www.policy.rutgers.edu/faculty.html

John R. Pucher

Martin E. Robins

Professor. Ph.D., Massachusetts Institute of Technology (1978). Specializations: Urban Transportation, Urban Economics, Public Sector Economics. http://www.policy.rutgers.edu/faculty.html

(732) 932-3822 ext. 722

pucher@rci.rutgers.edu

(732) 932-6812 ext. 697

merobins@rci.rutgers.edu

Julia Sass Rubin

Assistant Professor. M.B.A. (1990); A.M. (1997); Ph.D. (2002) Harvard University. Specializations: Community Economic Development, Development Finance, Nonprofit & Hybrid Organizational Forms. http://www.policy.rutgers.edu/faculty.html

Joseph J. Seneca

(732) 932-3133 ext. 546

lahr@rci.rutgers.edu

University Professor. MA and Ph.D., University of Pennsylvania. Specializations: Environmental Policy and Regulation, State and Local Economic Development and Finance, Government Regulation of Business. http://www.policy.rutgers.edu/faculty.html

Associate Professor. M.S. (1972) Stanford University; Ph.D. (1981) University of California, Berkeley. Specializations: Geographic Information Science, Urban Applications of GIS, Planning Methods. http://www.policy.rutgers.edu/faculty.html

Lyna Wiggins

(732) 932-5475 ext. 757

seneca@rci.rutgers.edu

Meredeth Turshen

(732) 932-3822 ext. 568

lyna@rci.rutgers.edu

Professor. MA, New York University (1961); Ph.D., University of Sussex (UK) (1975). Specializations: Gender and Development, International Health, Third World Social Policy. http://www.policy.rutgers.edu/faculty.html

(732) 932-4101 ext. 681

trushen@rci.rutgers.edu

OTHER AFFILIATED FACULTY


Frank Felder
Associate Research Professor. SM, PhD, Massachusetts Institute of Technology (1994, 2001) Specializations: Energy Planning & Policy, Restructured Electricity Markets, Reliability Analysis http://www.policy.rutgers.edu/faculty.html

Carl Van Horn

Professor. MA and Ph.D., The Ohio State University (1975, 1976). Specializations: Workforce Development, Policy Analysis and Evaluation, State Politics. http://www.policy.rutgers.edu/faculty.html

(732) 932-4100 ext. 714

vanhorn@rci.rutgers.edu

(732) 932-5680, ext. 670

ffelder@rci.rutgers.edu

University Professor. MA and Ph.D., University of Pennsylvania (1967, 1969). Specializations: International/Regional Economic Development, Urban Impact Analysis, Urban and Industrial Policy. http://www.policy.rutgers.edu/faculty.html

Norman Glickman

(732) 932-3133 ext. 570

glickman@rci.rutgers.edu

ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 109

RYERSON UNIVERSITY
School of Urban and Regional Planning
School of Urban & Regional Planning (SBB-400) 350 Victoria St., Toronto, Ontario M5B 2K3, Canada E-mail: grdadmit@ryerson.ca Phone: 416-979-5150 - Fax: 416-979-5153 www.ryerson.ca/graduate/urbandevelopment Dr. Mitch Kosny, School Director (Int.) Dr. Sandeep Agrawal, Graduate Program Director Email: sagrawal@ryerson.ca Phone: 416.979.5000, press 1, ext. 6767

MPL 1 and 2 year streams

ACSP Member: Full

MASTERS ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS


University Admission Policy for 2 year stream: Minimum Undergraduate GPA: Minimum GRE: Minimum TOEFL Departmental Requirement: 4 year honours Bachelors degree from a recognized University B in the last 2 years of the study. Not required 237 and 4.5 essay/580 and 4.5 TWE MPL Supplementary Admissions data form, Statement of Intent, Curriculum Vitae, 2 letters of recommendation and original transcripts from all undergraduate schools. 4 or 5 year accredited Bachelors Degree in Planning from a recognized University AND no less than two calendar years of professional planning experience. Students with a Bachelor's Degree (four- or fiveyear) in a related discipline who show evidence of significant professional experience in Planning will be accepted on a case by case basis. B in the last 2 years of the study. Not required 237 and 4.5 essay/580 and 4.5 TWE MPL Supplementary Admissions data form, Statement of Intent, Curriculum Vitae, 2 letters of recommendation and original transcripts from all undergraduate schools.

University Admission Policy for 1 year stream:

PROGRAM INFORMATION
GRADUATE DEADLINES, TUITION AND FEES
Admission Deadline 2009-10 ........................................................January 16, 2009 Financial Aid Deadline ......................................June 2009 for September 2009 start Domestic Tuition and Fees for 2 yr stream: ................... *$13,430.16 for the 5 terms Domestic Tuition and Fees for 1 yr stream: ............. N/A (Program starts Fall 2009) International Tuition and Fees for 2 yr stream: ............. *$26546.95 for the 5 terms International Tuition and Fees for 1 yr Stream: ...... N/A (Program Starts Fall 2009) Application fee:.............................................................................................. $100.00 Additional fees: ......................................................................................................... * *Fees are officially posted on the website at www.ryerson.ca/graduate/fees at the beginning of August for the coming academic year and they are subject to change. The fees listed above are for students who started in Fall 2008.

Minimum Undergraduate GPA: Minimum GRE: Minimum TOEFL: Departmental Requirement:

Annual Student Enrollment Applied


09/10 MPL (2 yr stream) MPL (1 yr stream) 139 15

Accepted
09/10 51 6

Enrolled
09/10 30 3 MASTERS GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS
2 Year Stream Number of Required courses ....................................................................10 Number of Elective Courses .......................................................................3 Studio or Practice Related Courses ...................................2 Studio courses ..............................................................(included in 10 Required Courses) Field Practicum ................................................ minimum 6 weeks required ......................................................... to complete (3rd term of the program) Final Product:............................................... Major Research Paper/Project ...........................................to be completed in the 5th term of the program 1 Year Stream Number of Required courses ......................................................................6 Number of Elective Courses .......................................................................2 Studio or Practice Related Courses .......... 2 Studio courses (included in 6 .........................................................................................Required Courses) Final Product:........................................... Major Research Paper/Project to ...............................................be completed in the 3rd term of the program

MASTERS DEGREE
Master of Planning in Urban Development
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail: Dr. Sandeep Agrawal, Program Director 416-979-5000 press 1 ext 6767 sagrawal@ryerson.ca Program Administrator 416-979-5000 ext 2099. urbandev@ryerson.ca

- OR-

Year Initiated: 2 year stream 2008; 1 year stream 2009

Multiculturalism, Environmental Planning, Urban Regeneration, Sustainable Urban Development


Page 110 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

Masters Specializations

FINANCIAL AID INFORMATION


Ryerson University Graduate Scholarship (RGS) $7000.00 scholarship for students with an A- average or higher Number of Scholarships depends on funding available Ryerson University Graduate Award Maximum amount $6500.00 per student Number of Award and amount of each depends on funding available

Assistant Professor. B.A.H. (Queen's, 1991), M.PL. (Queen's, 1994), Ph.D. (University of Toronto, 2000). Specializations: Urban Sustainability, Environmental Design, Environmental Planning, Urban Governance, Public Engagement and Progressive Pedagogy.

Pamela Robinson

MCIP, RPP

(416) 979-5000 ext. 6762 pamela.robinson@ryerson.ca MCIP, RPP

Joseph H. Springer

PLANNING FACULTY
Assoc. Prof., Interim Assoc. School Director, Graduate Program Director. B.Arch. (IIT-Roorkee, India, 1991), M.C.P. (Manitoba, 1994), Ph.D. (University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 2001). Specializations: Urban Design, Design Review, Ethnic Enclaves, Multiculturalism and Planning Policies, Immigration and Settlement.

Professor. B.A. (University of Western Ontario, 1971) M.C.R.P. (Rutgers, 1974/78) Ph.D. (University of Western Ontario, 1984) . Specializations: Homelessness and Social Housing, Policy Evaluation.

(416) 979-5000 ext. 6766

springer@ryerson.ca MCIP, RPP

Sandeep Kumar Agrawal

MCIP, RPP, AICP

Steven Webber

Assistant Professor. BA (Toronto) M.A.(U.C.L.A), Ph.D. (USC). Specializations: Land Use Policy, Growth Management Strategies, Affordable Housing, Financial Feasibility

(416) 979-5000 ext. 6772

swebber@ryerson.ca

(416) 979-5000 ext. 6767

sagrawal@ryerson.ca

Zhixi Cecilia Zhuang

Lawrence Altrows

Professor. B.Sc. (McGill, 1968) M.urb. (Montral, 1973). Specializations: Community Development Practices in Latin America, Tourism Development, International Development, Community Development

Assistant Professor. B.Arch (China), MUP (China), PhD (Waterloo). Specializations: Urban Design, Retailing, Revitalization and Urban Growth, Multicultural Planning, Immigration Settlement, Cross-cultural Studies.

(416) 979-5000 ext. 6806

(416) 979-5000 ext. 6765

laltrows@ryerson.ca MCIP, RPP

David Amborski

Professor. B.A. (Boston College, 1971) M.Sc. (Planning) (Toronto, 1974) M.A. (Economics) (Toronto, 1981). Specializations: Municipal Finance, Development Charges, Property Tax Reform in Ontario, Strategic Planning Practice in Ontario and Eastern Europe

AFFILIATED FACULTY
Professor Emeritae. B.A. (McGill, 1974) M.urb. (Montral, 1976) Ph.D. (British Columbia, 1981) . Specializations: The Public Realm, Multiculturalism in Planning, Gender and Planning

(416) 979-5000 ext. 6768

amborski@ryerson.ca MCIP, RPP

Beth Moore Milroy

FCIP, RPP

Professor. B.A. (Brock, 1973) M.E.S. (York, 1976) . Specializations: Land-use and Site Planning / Design, Professional Practice, Planning Ethics and Theory

Ronald Keeble

bmilroy@ryerson.ca MCIP, RPP, AICP

(416) 979-5000 ext.6771

rkeeble@ryerson.ca

James Mars

Mitchell Kosny

Interim School Director. B.A. (Idaho, 1972) M.R.C.P. (Oklahoma, 1974) Ph.D. (Waterloo, 1978). Specializations: Municipal Capacity-building, Policy, Strategic Planning, Social Planning

Professor Emeritus. A.B. (Brown, 1969) M.R.P. (Cornell, 1973) Ph.D. (Cornell, 1979). Specializations: Transportation Planning, Information Technology, Statistics, Survey Research; Planning Analysis, Regional Planning and policy

(416) 979-5000 ext. 6764

jmars@ryerson.ca

(416) 979-5000 ext.7314

mkosny@ryerson.ca MCIP, RPP

Eileen Costello

Associate Professor. B.A. Hons. (Toronto) M.Sc. Pl. (Toronto) Ph.D. Cand. (Waterloo), MCIP, RPP. Specializations:Urban/ex-urban Parklands, Urban Ecology, Landscape & Ecological Design, Landscape Urbanism; Edible Landscapes & Food Security, Biodiversity Conservation

Nina-Marie Lister

B.A. (Queen's, 1996), M.Sc. Pl. (Toronto, 1998), LLB (Toronto 2001). Specialization: Municipal and Land Use Planning Law.

ecostello@airdberlis.com

(416) 979-5000 ext 6769

nm.lister@ryerson.ca MCIP, RPP

Leo Longo

B.A. (Toronto, 1974), LLB(Queen's, 1977). Specialization: Development Law, Municipal Law.

Professor. Cross-appointed with School of Occupational and Public Health. B.A. (Toronto, 1970) M.E.S. (York, 1973) Ph.D. (Princeton, 1982). Specializations: Environmental Planning, Environmental Risk Assessment, Hazardous Facility Siting

Ronald Pushchak

llongo@airdberlis.com

Almos Thomas Tassonyi

(416) 979-5000 ext. 7049

pushchak@ryerson.ca

B.A. (Toronto, 1973), M.A.(Toronto, 1974), M.Sc. (London, 1995), PhD Candidate (Calgary). Specialization: Municipal Finance, Property Tax Legislation.

almos.tassonyi@ontario.ca

ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 111

Mohammad Qadeer

Adjunct Professor. M.S. (Greece, 1962), M.C.P (Rhode Island, 1966), PhD (Columbia, 1971). Specializations: Multiculturalism, Ethnic Enclave, Third World Planning, Rural Planning

FCIP, RPP

Mq35@hotmail.com

Murtaza Haider

Associate Professor. B.Sc. (Pakistan, 1992) M.A.Sc. (Toronto, 1999), PhD (Toronto, 2003). Specializations: Supply Chain/Logistics Management, Travel Demand Forecasting, Infrastructure Investment Analysis, and Land Development

(416) 979-5000 x 2480

murtaza.haider@ryerson.ca

Associate Professor. B.A. (Queens, 1987), M.C.S. (Calgary, 1996), PhD (York, 2001). Specializations: Environmental Justice, Urban Sustainability, Socio-spatial Theory, Applied Geographical Information Systems, and Ethno-racial and Immigrant Settlement Patterns.

Cheryl Teelucksingh

(416) 979-5000 Ext. 6213

teeluck@ryerson.ca

Page 112 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

SAINT LOUIS UNIVERSITY


Urban Planning and Real Estate Development
3550 Lindell Blvd., Tegeler Hall Suite 300W Saint Louis, Missouri 63103 Phone (314) 977-3934 Fax (314) 977-1616 www.slu.edu Robert A. Cropf E-mail: cropfra@slu.edu

MA/MS

ACSP Member: Full

MASTERS GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

Hours of Core ...........................................................................................24 Hours of Studio or Practice Related Courses .............................................9 Hours of Restricted Electives .....................................................................0 Hours of Unrestricted Electives ................................................................12 Other ...........................................................................................................0 Total Required Hours in Planning Program............................................. 45

TOTAL MASTERS STUDENT COMPOSITION 2008-2009 US Citizens & Permanent Residents


Hispanics* Of any Race White African American Native American/ Pacific Islander Asian American Mixed Other / Dont know Non-US Citizens Non- Permanent Residents

PROGRAM INFORMATION
GRADUATE DEADLINES, TUITION AND FEES
Admission Deadline 2009-10 ..................................................................May 1, 2009 Financial Aid Deadline 2009-10 .............February 1, 2009In-State Tuition and Fees: Out-of-State Tuition and Fees: .................................................................................... Application Fee ......................................................................................................$40 Additional Fees: .................................................................................................. None

Male 1 13 1 0 1 0 7 2

Female 2 4 5 0 0 0 0 1

Total 2 17 6 0 1 0 7 3

Annual Student Enrollment Applied


Masters 30 21

Accepted
21 8

Enrolled
15 6

07/08 08/09 07/08 08/09 07/08 08/09

MASTERS DEGREE
Master of Urban Planning and Real Estate Development
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail: Iris Hampton (314) 977-3934 hamptoi2@slu.edu

Total Students

25

11

36

Year Initiated: 1998 Degrees Granted through 8/31/09.............................................................32 Degrees Granted from 9/1/08 to 8/31/03 ....................................................7

*Do not double count Hispanics; Hispanics also appear in the racial categories below.

PLANNING FACULTY
Dr. Sarah Coffin
Assistant Professor. PhD, Georgia Institute of Technology. Specializations: Research in Brownfields, Affordable Housing, Community Development

Masters Specializations
Community Development Economic Development

(314) 977-3934

coffinsl@slu.edu

MASTERS ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS


University Admission Policy: Minimum Undergraduate GPA: Minimum GRE: Minimum TOEFL Departmental Requirement: No Requirements 3.0 None Specified None Specified Inferential Statistics

Dr. Scott Cummings

Professor. PhD, University of Connecticut. Specializations: Research in Public Policy Analysis, Evaluation, Urban Policy Development.

(314) 977-3934

sbcummo1@slu.edu

ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 113

Assistant Professor. PhD, UCLA. Specializations: Land Use, Transportation, Growth Management.

Dr. Mark Garnett

(314) 977-3934

guage of real estate transactions are important to both public sector and private sector professionals. UPRED works with and on issues that run the gamut of human settlement and sustainable development. The St. Louis region is our primary focus, but our search for ideas and solutions is national and global. The problems of urban decline and disinvestment are not unique to St. Louis. Similarly, problems caused by population growth on the urban fringe and changing employment locations are not just symptomatic of life in urban areas of the United States. The skills and competencies gained in the program are designed to develop local, regional, and global perspectives.

E. Allan Tomey

Instructor. AB, Northwestern University. Specializations: Research in Employment and Training.

(314) 977-3934

tomeya@slu.edu

OTHER AFFILIATED FACULTY


Dr. Robert Cropf
Associate Professor. PhD, New York University. Specializations: Research in Public Finance, Public Policy Analysis, Urban Policy Analysis.

Program Design

(314) 977-3934

cropfra@slu.edu

UPRED is a 45-credit hour program. Key elements are the studio/workshop courses, internship, and concentration. The workshop/studio courses are intended to develop your technological, teamwork, and leadership capacity in handling active planning problems. Building on the previous semester, each workshop/studio introduces a new problem to be resolved and new skills to be commanded. Building Specialization: The program offers each student the opportunity to enhance his or her interests by specializing in one of three areas of oncentration. The concentrations are: o Real Estate Development o Economic Development o Community Development

Dr. Mary Domahidy

Associate Professor/Chair. PhD, Saint Louis University. Specializations: Research in Public Policy Analysis, Urban Affairs, Organization Studies, Strategic Planning.

(314) 977-3934

domahimr@slu.edu

Dr. Gary Higgs

Assistant Professor. PhD, University of Illinois. Specializations: Research in Geographic Information Systems, Remote Sensing, Economic Geography.

(314) 977-3934

higgsgb@slu.edu

Professor. JD, Saint Louis University. Specializations: Land Use Regulation/Real Estate Transactions, Property, Contracts, Housing and Community Development.

Peter W. Salsich, Jr.

(314) 977-2770

salsichp@slu.edu

FYI
Master's Degree in Urban Planning and Real Estate Development
The mission of the program in Urban Planning and Real Estate Development is to provide a center for education, community dialogue and research to support urban growth, and revitalization in the St. Louis region and globally.

Why Include Real Estate?

Land and land transactions are fundamental aspects of development and revitalization. Whether you are working on neighborhood, infill-housing, or attracting a major industry to increase employment, land transactions are a critical aspect of "making the deal." A basic understanding of financial concepts, land use laws, and the lanPage 114 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

SAN DIEGO STATE UNIVERSITY


School of Public Affairs Master of City Planning Program
5500 Campanile Drive San Diego, California 92182-4505 Phone (619) 594-6224 Fax (619) 594-1165 http://spa.sdsu.edu/cityplanning.html Larry A. Herzog , Coordinator, MCP Program Phone: (619) 594-6964 Email: laherzog@mail.sdsu.edu
Minimum GPA: Minimum GRE: Minimum TOEFL:

MCP PAB
2.85 950 213+ computer

ACSP Member: Full

MASTERS ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS

Hours of Core ..................................................................................... 33-36 Hours of Studio or Practice Related Courses .............................................9 Hours of Restricted Electives .....................................................................9 Hours of Unrestricted Electives .............................................................. 3-6 Thesis ..........................................................................................................3 Total Required Hours in Planning Program .............................................48 Exams or Written Requirements: ..................................... Master Thesis or written comprehensive Exam

MASTERS GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

FINANCIAL AID INFORMATION

PROGRAM INFORMATION
Admission Deadline ..........................................................................................May 1 Financial Aid Deadline ..................................................................................... Varies In-State Tuition and Fees: .................................................................................. Varies Out-of-State and International Tuition and Fees:. ............................................ $2,919 Not to exceed $10, 170 for Fall/Spring semester Non-Resident Tuition Fees: ...................................................................$372 per unit Application Fee ...................................................................................................... $55 Additional Fees: .................................................................................................. None

GRADUATE DEADLINES, TUITION AND FEES

Research Assistantships (varies). Fowler Scholarships(varies) Eligibility Criteria: Strong academic and commitment to field of study.

TOTAL MASTERS STUDENT COMPOSITION 2008-2009 US Citizens & Permanent Residents


Hispanics* Of any Race White African American Native American/ Pacific Islander Asian American Mixed Other / Dont know Non-US Citizens Non- Permanent Residents

Annual Student Enrollment Applied


07 Masters 51 08 44

Male 5 18 0 2 2 0 2 1

Female 2 10 0 0 2 0 4 1

Total 7 28 0 2 4 0 6 2

Accepted Enrolled
07 39 08 34 07 21 08 20

MASTERS DEGREE
Master of City Planning
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail Lawrence A. Herzog (619) 594-6964 laherzog@mail.sdsu.edu

Year Initiated: 1968 Degrees Granted through 8/31/06...........................................................330 Degrees Granted from 9/1/07 to 8/31/08 ..................................................10

Public Policy, Community Development, Land Use/Growth Management, Individual Concentrations Available Through Advisors

Masters Specializations

Total Students

30

19

49

* Do not double count Hispanics; Hispanics also appear in the racial categories below.

ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 115

PLANNING FACULTY
Maurizio Antoninetti
Assistant Professor. BA, Polytechnic of Milan (1991); MCP San Diego State University (2000); Ph.D. UC Santa Barbara/San Diego State University (2008). Specializations: Urban Design, Universal Design, Quantitative and Mixed Methodologies, Phenomenology, Healthy Communities and Sustainable Neighborhood Design

Sherry Ryan

Associate Professor. BA., Princeton (1987); MS, University of California, Irvine (1992); Ph.D., University of California, Irvine (1997). Specializations: Geographic Information Systems, Transportation Planning, Planning Practice.

(619) 594-5037

sryan@mail.sdsu.edu

(619) 594-4099

mantonin@mail.sdsu.edu

OTHER AFFILIATED FACULTY


Michael McLaughlin
Instructor/Lecturer. BS., Northern Illinois University; MA, Northern Illinois University; MCRP, Ohio State University. Specializations: Regional Planning, Housing and Community Development, Planning Practice.

Roger Caves

Professor. BA., Old Dominion University (1975); MUS, Old Dominion University (1977); Ph.D., University of Delaware (1982). Specializations: Land Use/Growth Management, Politics and Governance, Community Development, International Planning and Development.

(619) 594-6972

rcaves@mail.sdsu.edu

(619) 594-5507

mikemcla43@aol.com

Louis M. Rea

Professor. BA., Colgate University (1970); MRP, Syracuse University (1973); Ph.D., Syracuse University (1975). Specializations: Quantitative Methods, Regional Economics, Transportation Planning.

Richard Parker

(619) 594-6083

lrea@mail.sdsu.edu

Instructor/Lecturer. BS., University of California, Berkeley; MCP, San Diego State University; MBA, University of California, Berkeley; Ph.D., Pacific Western University. Specializations: Quantitative Methods, Survey Research, Regional Economics

Lawrence Herzog

(619) 594-6084

parker3@mail.sdsu.edu

Professor. BA., SUNY, Albany (1973); MA, Syracuse University (1975); Ph.D., Syracuse University (1980). Specializations: Community Development, Environmental Planning, International Planning, Urban Design/physical Planning.

(619) 594-6964

laherzog@mail.sdsu.edu

HOUSING, SOCIAL, AND COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT PLANNING


Many planners practice in these overlapping areas. Housing planners help develop strategies to increase the supply of affordable housing and expand home ownership among low income or disadvantaged groups. These planners often try to create incentives and remove constraints on private home builders or work with public or non-profit organizations to build housing units for low income families or senior citizens. Many housing planners try to encourage mixed use developments which offer services and jobs close to where people live; others promote projects which provide housing opportunities for people from a mixture of income levels. Planners concerned with the social aspects of a community often combine their interest in housing with efforts to increase the overall quality of life in poor or minority neighborhoods. Many social and community planners work to improve multiple aspects of a targeted neighborhood, combining many substantive planning skills from economic development to urban design. For example, community and social planners may work to improve transit service in disadvantaged communities or develop job training programs for unemployed residents or provide better public health facilities in low income neighborhoods. These planners often work with land use and transportation planners.

Page 116 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

SAN JOS STATE UNIVERSITY


Department of Urban and Regional Planning
Minimum GRE: Minimum TOEFL Departmental Requirement:

MA/MS PAB

ACSP Member: Full

One Washington Square San Jos, California 95192-0185 Phone (408) 924-5882 Fax (408) 924-5872 E-mail: urbplan@email.sjsu.edu www.sjsu.edu/urbanplanning Dayana Salazar, Department Chair Phone (408) 924-5854 E-mail: dayana.salazar@sjsu.edu

GRE recommended but not required (Department) 550/213: University Personal statement, transcripts and three letters of recommendation.

Hours of Core ...........................................................................................18 Hours of Studio or Practice Related Courses .............................................9 Hours of Restricted Electives .....................................................................0 Hours of Unrestricted Electives ................................................................15 Other ......................................................................6 units Report or Thesis Total Required Hours in Planning Program .............................................48 Exam, Thesis or Final Product: ......................... Planning Report or Thesis for 6 units Note: 180 hours of professional work or internship experience required.

MASTERS GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

PROGRAM INFORMATION
Admission Deadline for Domestic Students....................... Fall: TBD, Spring: TBD Admission Deadline for International Students................. Fall: TBD, Spring: TBD Financial Aid Deadline 2009-10 .....................................................................March 2 In-State Tuition and Fees: ........................................... $2,995 per semester Full time. Out-of-State/International Tuition and Fees: ............. $7,459 per semester Full time. Application Fee ...................................................................................................... $55 Additional Fees: .................................................................................................. None

FINANCIAL AID INFORMATION

GRADUATE DEADLINES, TUITION AND FEES

Eight Graduate Research Assistantships per year ($1,000 to $9,000). Eligibility Criteria: Research Assistantship positions are projectdependent. Amount of stipend varies by hours. Two Departmental Awards ($500 to $1,200). Eligibility Criteria: Distinguished academic record and outstanding service to the department and the profession.

Annual Student Enrollment


Applied Accepted Enrolled 07/08 08/09 07/08 08/09 07/08 08/09 106 121 78 76 56 52

TOTAL MASTERS STUDENT COMPOSITION 2008-2009


US Citizens & Permanent Residents Hispanics* Of any Race White African American Native American/ Pacific Islander Asian American Mixed Other / Dont know Non-US Citizens NonPermanent Residents Total Students Male 6 54 2 0 10 0 3 5 80 Female 11 44 1 1 4 0 1 15 77 Total 17 98 3 1 14 0 4 20 157

Masters

MASTERS DEGREE
Master of Urban Planning
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail Hilary Nixon, Graduate Advisor (408) 924-5852 hilary.nixon@sjsu.edu

Year Initiated: 1970 PAB Accredited Degrees Granted through 8/31/09...........................................................666 Degrees Granted from 9/1/08 to 8/31/09 ..................................................30

Community Design and Development, Applications of Technology in Planning, Environmental Planning


MASTERS ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS
University Admission Policy: Minimum Undergraduate GPA: Bachelors degree from an accredited institution 2.5 (University), 3.0 recommended on last two years of undergraduate work (Department)

Masters Specializations

*Do not double count Hispanics; Hispanics also appear in the racial categories below. ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 117

PLANNING FACULTY
Associate Professor: BA (1993) Harvard University; M.Sc. (1994) London School of Economics and Political Science; Ph.D. (2002) University of California, Berkeley. Specializations: Transportation Planning and Finance, Planning History, and Communication Skills for Planners.

Rob L. Eastwood

Asha Weinstein Agrawal

Lecturer: BA (1995) Occidental College; MA (1998) Cal Poly San Luis Obispo. Specializations: Environmental Planning and Social Planning.

(408) 299-5792 rob.eastwood@pln.co.santa-clara.ca.us

Roxanne Ezzet-Lofstrom

(408) 924-5853

asha.weinstein.agrawal@sjsu.edu

Lecturer: BA (1988) University of California at San Diego; MA (1995) San Diego State University; Ph.D. (2002) University of California Irvine. Specializations: Policy Analysis.

(415) 333-1165

roxanne.ezzet@gmail.com

Professor: AICP, BS (1964) and MS (1966) University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee; Ph.D. (1974) Harvard University. Specializations: Geographic Information Systems, Quantitative Methods, Public Finance/ Fiscal Planning, and Computer Applications for Planning.

Earl G. Bossard

Richard Kos

Lecturer: AICP; BS (1989) Rutgers; MRP (1995) University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill. Specializations: Geographic Information Systems and Community Planning.

(408) 924-5860

bossard3@pacbell.net

(415) 227-0833

rickkos@mindspring.com

Shishir Mathur

Associate Professor: B.Arch. (1995) Regional Engineering College, Tiruchirappalli; MUP (1997) School of Planning and Architecture, New Delhi; Ph.D. (2003) University of Washington. Specializations: Housing, Growth Management, Public Finance, Strategic Planning and Management.

Lecturer: BA (1996) University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign; MUP (2002 ) State University of New York, Buffalo. Specializations: Environmental Planning.

Matthew Krupp

(408) 945-5182

matt.krupp@sanjoseca.gov

(408) 924-5875

shishir.mathur@sjsu.edu

Assistant Professor: BA (1993) University of Rochester; MA (1996) National University, San Diego; Ph.D. (2006) University of California, Irvine. Specializations: Environmental Planning and Policy, Industrial Ecology, Waste Management, and Applied Econometrics.

Hilary Nixon

Lecturer: AICP, BA (1978) Carleton College; MS (1984), MCP (1986), Ph.D. (1995) University of California Berkeley. Specializations: Transportation Planning.

Richard Lee

(925) 930-7100

dr.r.w.lee@pacbell.net

Reena Mathew

(408) 924-5852

hilary.nixon@sjsu.edu

Lecturer: BA (2001) Pitzer College; MCP (2003) University of California Berkeley. Specializations: Communication Skills for Planners.

Dayana M. Salazar

(408) 535-7844

Reena.Mathew@sanjoseca.gov

Professor: B.Arch. (1986) Javeriana University, Bogot; MCP (1990) University of Cincinnati. Specializations: Participatory Community Planning, Computer Aided Visualization, Urban Design, and Site Planning.

Gregory Newmark

(408) 924-5854

dayana.salazar@sjsu.edu

Lecturer: BA (1997) Yale University; MSc (2006) Techion Israel Institute of Technology; PhD (expected 2010) University of California, Berkeley. Specializations: Quantitative Methods, Transportation Planning, Planning History.

OTHER AFFILIATED FACULTY


Professor: BA (1966) Stanford University; Ph.D. (1972) University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Specializations: Political science, local and state politics, and urban studies.

(510) 282-8413

gnewmark@berkeley.edu

Terry L. Christensen

Dana A. Peak

Lecturer: BS (1989) University of California, Davis; MA (1995) Cornell University. Specializations: Historic Preservation.

(408) 299-5798

dana.peak@pln.co.santa-clara.ca.us

(408) 924-5565

terrychr@email.sjsu.edu

Laurel R. Prevetti

Courtney A. Damkroger

Lecturer: BA and BBA (1981) Southern Methodist University; MA (1986) and MCP (2000) University of California, Berkeley. Specializations: Historic Preservation.

Lecturer: BS (1981) and MS (1984) University of California, Berkeley. Specializations: Land Use Planning, Community Development, and Resource Management.

(408) 535-7901

laurel.prevetti@sanjoseca.gov

(408) 277-4576

cdamkroger@hotmail.com

John E. Davidson

Lecturer: BA (1986) University of Chicago; MUP (2002) San Jos State University. Specializations: Land Use Planning.

Lecturer: BA (1972) University of California, Santa Cruz; MCP (1974) University of Pennsylvania; MArch (1985) MIT. Specializations: Urban Design, Architecture, History.

Walter Rask

(408) 795-1878

walterrask@yahoo.com

(408) 535-7895

john.davidson@sanjoseca.gov

Page 118 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

Lecturer: BA (1980), MA (1983), MS (1990), and MCP (1991) University of California, Berkeley; Ph.D. (2006) University of California, Davis. Specializations: Transportation Planning, Institutional Integration, and Regional Governance.

Charles R. Rivasplata

FYI
San Jos State Universitys Department of Urban and Regional Planning is uniquely poised to educate future and current planning professionals and to generate innovative research to further the discipline. The university is located in downtown San Jos, the largest city in Northern California and the capital of Silicon Valley, one of the most rapidly changing and socially complex metropolitan areas of the nation. The department offers graduate study leading to the degree of Master of Urban Planning. The program trains skilled professionals who graduate with a strong education in general planning practice and theory, as well as specialized training in planning sub-fields. Graduates also become familiar with cutting-edge planning concepts and applications that are evolving locally in the Silicon Valley and larger Bay Area. The department takes advantage of its urban location by collaborating with local planning agencies and through hands-on work with community-based organizations. Faculty and students engage in public service projects designed to assist local communities in addressing topical planning issues, while also providing students with real-world professional experience. A special mission of the program is to provide planning education opportunities for a diverse student population, including working students who prefer to attend the program on a part-time basis.

(415) 897-6929

c_rivasplata@hotmail.com

Heidi Sokolowsky

Lecturer: BSc (1990), MSc (1996) University of Technology, Darmstadt, Germany; JD (1990) University of the Pacific. Specializations: Architecture and Urban Design.

(415) 864-2954

sokolowsky@earthlink.net

Keith A. Sugar

Lecturer: BA (1986) San Francisco State University; JD (1990) University of the Pacific. Specializations: Planning and Environmental Law.

(831) 336-9566

sugarangel@cruzio.com

David A. Vasquez

Lecturer: BA (1976) San Francisco State University; MA (1987) California State University, Chico; Ed.D. (1997) University of San Francisco. Specializations: Computer Graphics for Urban-Design Visualization and Sustainable urban Design.

(415) 722-7167

dvasquez@aol.com

John Weis

Lecturer: BS (1965) Boston College; MCP (1968) University of Rhode Island. Specializations: Community Development.

(408) 795-1894

john.weis@sbcglobal.net

ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 119

SAVANNAH STATE UNIVERSITY


Graduate Program in Urban Studies & Planning
Post Office Box 20385 Savannah, Georgia 31404 Phone: (912) 356-2966 Fax: (912) 353-3299 www.savannahstate.edu/gradstudies Department of Political Science, and Public Affairs Dr. Bernard Bongang, Department Chair Phone: (912) 356-2340 E-mail: bongang@savannahstate.edu

BA/BS PAB

MA/MS PAB

ACSP Member: FULL

Minimum Undergraduate GPA 2.6 on 4.0 scale Minimum GRE Current Scores if Applicable Minimum TOEFL Current Scores if Applicable Minimum MAT Current Scores if Applicable Departmental Requirements At least 3 letter of Recommendation, Current Resume, a one thousand word essay on one of the following: A current problem facing urban America; Purpose for attending graduate school for urban studies degree

MASTERS ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS

MASTERS GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

Hours of Core: .................................................................. 21 Credit Hours Hours of Electives: ............................................................. 9 Credit Hours Masters Thesis or Field Paper: .......................................... 6 Credit Hours

FINANCIAL AID INFORMATION

PROGRAM INFORMATION
GRADUATE DEADLINES, TUITION AND FEES
Admissions deadline Fall Semester May 15th International Students and Graduate Assistantship July 1st Regular Admissions Spring Semester October 1st - International Students and Graduate Assistantship November 17th - Regular Admissions

Phone: (912) 356-2253/2254 Fax: (912) 353-3150 Address: Savannah State University Office of Financial Aid P.O. Box 20523 Savannah, GA 31404 Email: finaid@savannahstate.edu

Housing, Community and Economic Development, Environmental Health, Public Affairs, and Land Use and Infrastructure Development, and Historic Preservation
ABOUT THE PROGRAM
The Master of Science in Urban Studies and Planning program introduces students to a variety of issues facing urban areas through a multi-disciplinary framework while building a firm theoretical and practical expertise in urban planning, urban politics, economic and community development, historic preservation, public management and urban fiscal. The Geographical Information System lab and engaged with faculty members who are respected scholars and leading practitioners in the field of urban studies. The classes are held in well-equipped classrooms in the Coastal Georgia Center. Small classes and a low student-faculty ratio ensure that the students receive a lot of individual attention from their instructors.

Masters Specializations

In-State Tuition and Fees: ..............................................$2009.00 (all fees included) Out-of-State Tuition and Fees: ......................................$7089.00 (all fees included) Application Fee: ...............................................................................................$25.00 Additional Fees: .................................. per credit hr $142 in-state, $565 out-of-state *fees include 12 credit hours and all regular student fees: Health, technology, and activities

Annual Student Enrollment


Applied 08/09 09/10 8 8 Accepted 08/09 09/10 7 7 Enrolled 08/09 09/10 7 7

Masters

MASTERS DEGREE
Master of Science in Urban Studies and Planning
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail: Dr. Deden Rukmana (912) 356-2983 rukmanad@savannahstate.edu

Year initiated:1999 Degrees Granted through 5/31/09.............................................................22 Degrees Granted from 4/31/08-5/31/09 ......................................................3

Page 120 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

TOTAL MASTERS STUDENT COMPOSITION 2008-2009


US Citizens & Permanent Residents Hispanic White African American Native American/Pacific Islander Asian American Mixed Non-US Citizen/NonPermanent Resident Total Students Male 0 1 6 0 0 0 0 7 Female 0 0 6 0 0 0 0 6 Total 0 1 12 0 0 0 0 13

Nicole Oretsky

Assistant Professor. H.BA, Trinity College, University of Toronto (1998); M.A., University of Toronto (2000); Ph.D., The New School for Management and Urban Policy (2007). Specializations: Community Development, Ethnographic Research Methods, Housing Policy, Housing Rights, and Urban Cross-Cultural Policy Evaluation

(912) 303-1886

orestskyn@savannahstate.edu

Coordinator of Graduate Program in Urban Studies and Planning Assistant Professor. BA, Bandung Institute of Technology (1994), MS, Bandung Institute of Technology (1997), MPDS, University of Southern California (2001), Ph.D., Florida State University (2006). Specialization: Economic and Community Development, Geographic Information System, International Development and Planning, Homelessness and Poverty and Quantitative Methods.

Deden Rukmana

(912) 356-2983

rukmanad@savannahstate.edu

AFFILIATED FACULTY
Bernard L. Bongang
Associate Professor & Department Chair. B.A. (1978, University of Yaound, Cameroon) Post-Graduate Diploma, (1987, Cameroon Radio & Television Training Center, Yaound Cameroon) M.S. (1993, Boston University) M.A. (1997, University of South Carolina, Columbia) PhD (2005, University of South Carolina, Columbia). Specializations: International Politics, Political Communication, US Foreign Policy, and North-South Relations

*Do not double count Hispanics; Hispanics also appear in the racial categories below.

(912) 356-2340

bongang@savannahstate.edu

PLANNING FACULTY
Nailah Brock
Assistant Professor. BA, Hampton University (1995); MPA, George Mason University (1997); PhD, Howard University (2006). Specializations: Welfare Policy, Public Budgeting, State and Local Government

Professor. BA, Tehran Business College (1974), BA, Avilla University (1981), MPA (1984) Southern Illinois University, Ph.D. (1990), Southern Illinois University. Specializations: Human Resource Management, Ethics, Organization theory, Alternative Dispute Resolution, Strategic Planning, Government and Politics of the Middle East.

Behrooz Kalantari

(912) 353-5265

kalantab@savannahstate.edu

(912) 303-4349

brockn@savannahstate.edu

Sylvester Murray

Professor. BA, Lincoln University Pennsylvania (1963), MGA, University of Pennsylvania (1967), MA, Eastern Michigan University (1976) . Specializations: State and Local Administration, Public Sector Ethics, Budget and Finance, Comparative Administration

Professor. BA, California Polytechnic State University, MA and MSPA, Florida State University, PhD Florida State University. Specialization: Urban Politics, Ethics, Public Policy, Human Resource Management and Leadership, and Organization Theory and Behavior.

Willie Johnson

(912) 351-6480

johnsonw@savannahstate.edu

(912) 303-1885

murraysy@savannahstate.edu

Shirley Geiger

Professor. BA. Howard University (1970), MPA. University of South Carolina (1978), PhD. University of South Carolina (1984). Specializations: Public Administration, Organization Theory, Community and Economic Development, Public Budgeting and Finance.

(912) 356-6944

geigers@savannahstate.edu

ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 121

STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT ALBANY


Department of Geography and Planning
AS-218, 1400 Washington Avenue Albany, New York 12222 Phone (518) 442-4636 Fax (518) 442-4742 E-mail: planners@albany.edu http://www.albany.edu/gp Christopher J. Smith, Department Chair Phone (518) 442-4779 E-mail:cjsmith@albany.edu

BA/BS PAB

MA/MS PAB PAB

ACSP Member: FULL


High School Diploma or Equivalent 90/100 Average 1100 Average Self-Selective

UNDERGRADUATE ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS


University Requirement: Minimum GPA: Minimum SAT or ACT Scores: Departmental Requirement:

UNDERGRADUATE GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

Hours of Core .......................................................................................... 18 Hours of Studio Courses ............................................................................ 0 Hours of Restricted Elective ...................................................................... 0 Hours of Unrestricted Elective .................................................................. 0 Other ........................................................................................................ 18 Total Required Hours In Planning Program ............................................ 36 Thesis or Final Product ............................................................ Not required

FINANCIAL AID INFORMATION

PROGRAM INFORMATION
Admission Deadline ...................................................................................... March 1 Financial Aid Deadline ............................................................................... March 15 In-State Tuition and Fees: ...................................................................$4,970 per year Out-of-State and International Tuition and Fees: .............................$12,870 per year Other: ....................................................................$979 Mandatory Health Insurance ....................................................................and SEVIS fee for International Students Application Fee: .....................................................................................................$40 Additional Fees: ..................................................................................$1,778 per year Admission Deadline 2008-09 for Masters program ........................................... None Financial Aid Deadline 2008-09 for Masters program................................ March 15 In-State Tuition and Fees: ...................................................................$8,370 per year Out-of-State Tuition and Fees: .........................................................$13,250 per year Other: .................................................................$1,778 Mandatory Health Insurance ....................................................................and SEVIS fee for International Students Application Fee ......................................................................................................$70 Additional Fees: ..................................................................................$1,173 per year

UNDERGRADUATE DEADLINES, TUITION AND FEES

56% of Incoming Freshmen Receive Financial Aid Eligibility Criteria: Need-Base Merit-Base Scholarships Eligibility Criteria: GPA Average 95/100 SAT Average 1341

MASTERS DEGREE
Master Regional Planning in Urban & Regional Planning
Contact Person: Catherine T. Lawson, Associate Professor and Director Phone: (518) 442-4775 E-mail: lawsonc@albany.edu Year Initiated: 1982 PAB Accredited Degrees Granted through 5/16/09...........................................................345 Degrees Granted from 8/25/08 to 5/16/09 ................................................27

GRADUATE DEADLINES, TUITION AND FEES

Annual Student Enrollment Applied


Undergraduate Masters 55 52 60 49

Accepted Enrolled
49 46 58 43 47 48 53 49

Environmental and Land-Use Planning; Housing, Local Economic Development and Community Planning; Transportation Planning; Urban and Regional Information Systems
MASTERS ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS
University Admission Policy: Minimum Undergraduate GPA: Minimum GRE: Minimum TOEFL Ranking in Undergraduate Class: Departmental Requirement: Bachelors degree from an accredited institution & GPA 2.5 2.5 (University)/ 3.0 (Department) Not Required 213 Not Required Good writing, graphic, computer and verbal skills.

Masters Specializations

07/08 08/09 07/08 08/09 07/08 08/09

UNDERGRADUATE DEGREE
BA in Interdisciplinary Major in Urban Studies and Planning
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail: Christopher J. Smith (518) 442-3249 cjsmith@albany.edu

MASTERS GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

Year initiated:1994 Degrees Granted through 6/30/09...........................................................185 Degrees Granted from 7/1/08 to 6/30/09 ..................................................18

Hours of Core ...........................................................................................27 Hours of Studio or Practice Related Courses .............................................4 Hours of Restricted Electives .....................................................................9 Hours of Unrestricted Electives ..................................................................8 Total Required Hours in Planning Program: ............................................48 Exam,Thesis or Final Product: ...................Research paper as part of core; Written and oral comprehensive exam

Page 122 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

FINANCIAL AID INFORMATION

2.5 Assistantship Lines; 1 Targeted Fellowship Lines; AITE Scholarships; Research, Assistantships, Plus Standard Student Loan Program. Eligibility Criteria: Strong academic record and suitability for TA or RA work, as related to specific assignments. AITE are transportation Scholarships awarded on basis of GPA and research project summary.

Catherine T. Lawson

Associate Professor. BA., Western Washington University (1988); MS., (1995); MURP (1997); Ph.D., (1998) Portland State University. Specializations: Transportation Planning, Quantitative Methods & Data Management, GIS, Freight.

(518) 442-4775

lawsonc@albany.edu

David A. Lewis

TOTAL MASTERS STUDENT COMPOSITION 2008-2009 US Citizens & Permanent Residents


Hispanics* Of any Race White African American Native American/ Pacific Islander Asian American Mixed Other / Dont know Non-US Citizens Non- Permanent Residents

Assistant Professor. BA, (1989); MCRP., (1997); Ph.D., (2003) Rutgers University. Specializations: Regional Planning and Regional Science, Brownfield Redevelopment, Local and Regional Economic Development, Globalization and Economic Restructuring.

(518) 442-4595

dalewis@albany.edu

Corianne P. Scally Male 1 28 1 0 1 0 1 1 32 Female 0 17 3 1 1 0 0 5 18 Total 1 45 4 1 2 0 1 6 60

Assistant Professor. BA Florida State Univeristy, (1998); M.S.P. Florida State University (2000); Ph.D. Rutgers University, (2007). Specializations: Housing, Community Development, Urban, Qualitative Methods. (518) 591-8561 cscally@albany.edu

OTHER AFFILIATED FACULTY


Youqin Huang
Assistant Professor. BA, (1992); MA., (1995) Peking University; MA., (1997); Ph.D., (2001) University of California, Los Angeles. Specializations: Migration Studies, Gender Studies, Population Geography, Quantitative Methods.

(518) 442-4792

yhuang@albany.edu

James E. Mower

Associate Professor. BA. (1977) SUNY at Geneseo; MA. (1981) Indiana University; Ph.D., (1989) University at Buffalo - SUNY. Specializations: GIS, Automated Cartography.

(518) 442-4779

jmower@albany.edu

Total Students

John S. Pipkin

*Do not double count Hispanics; Hispanics also appear in the racial categories below.

PLANNING FACULTY
Ray Bromley
Professor. BA.(1969); MA. (1973), Ph.D., (1975) Cambridge University. Specializations: History of Ideas in Planning and Development, Community Development and Neighborhood Planning, Housing Policy, International Development.

Distinguished Service Professor. BA, (1968); MA., (1970) University of Sheffield; MS., (1970); Ph.D., (1974) Northwestern University. Specializations: Urban Design, Quantitative Methods, Built Environment, Urban Geography.

(518) 442-4777

j.pipkin@albany.edu

AICP

Professor and Department Chair. BSc, London School of Economics (1968); AA Diploma, Architecture Association (1970); MA (1971), PhD (1974) University of Michigan. Specializations: Urban Geography, East Asian Studies, Social Problems, Urbanization and Migration.

Christopher J. Smith

(518) 442-4766

r.bromley@albany.edu AICP

(518) 442-3249

cjsmith@albany.edu AICP

Gene Bunnell

Associate Professor. BA, Wesleyan University (1966); MCRP., Harvard University (1969); MPH, Michigan (1970); P.hD., London School of Economics (1993). Specializations: Land-Use Planning and Growth Management, Case Studies of Planning Effectiveness, Infrastructure Finance and Privatization, Story-Telling in Planning.

Adjunct Faculty. BA., SUNY at Plattsburgh (1979); MRP., University of Massachusetts at Amherst (1983). Specializations: Environmental Planning, Land-Use Planning, Trails and Greenways.

John J. Behan

(518) 583-4335

jbehan@behanplanning.com

(518) 442-4469

gbunnell@albany.edu

ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 123

Paul M. Bray

Adjunct Faculty. BA, Boston University (1965); JD., Columbia University (1968). Specializations: Parks, Preservation and Heritage Planning, Land-Use Law, Environmental Law.

(518) 472-1772

pmbray@aol.com

Adjunct Faculty. B.Arch, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute (1985); MA,Empire State College, SUNY (1994). Specializations: Bicycle and Pedestrian Transportation Planning, Health and Recreation, Trails and Greenways.

Jeffrey S. Olson

Adjunct Faculty. BS University of Massachusetts (1992); MS Ohio University (1998); ABD University of Alaska. Specializations: Martian Geology, Impact Cratering, Planetary Science, Remote Sensing, GIS

Fred Calef III

(518) 442-4778

trails2k@aol.com

Erica L. Powers, Esq.

(518) 442-3912

fcalef@albany.edu

Adjunct Faculty. BA Cum Laude, Harvard College (1965); JD, Boston University (1971); LL.M. Boston Univeristy School of Law (1976). Specializations: Planning Law and Environmental Law.

Todd M. Fabozzi

Adjunct Faculty. BA, SUNY College at Potsdam (1985); MRP., University at Albany - SUNY (1994) . Specializations: GIS, Growth Management, New Urbanism.

(518) 588-0743

FabozziTM@aol.com AICP

Adjunct Faculty. AB, Albright College (1982); MLA., SUNY College of Environmental Science and Forestry (1994). Specializations: Site Planning, Community Planning, Waterfront Planning.

James E. Reppert

AICP

(518) 442-4770

jreppert@albany.edu

Rocco Ferraro

Adjunct Faculty. BA., Rutgers University (1973); MCRP, Ohio State University (1975). Specializations: Land-Use Planning, Applied Demography, Regional Planning, Growth Management.

(518) 453-0850

rocky@cdrpc.org

Professor & Associate Dean, Albany Law School. BA, University at Albany-SUNY; JD., Albany Law School. Specializations: Land-Use Law, Environmental Law, Planning Ethics.

Patricia E. Salkin

(518) 445-2351

psalk@albanylaw.edu AICP

Christopher J. OConnor
(518) 442-4770

Adjunct Faculty. BA., (1996); MA., (2002); University at Albany, SUNY. Specializations: GIS, Water Resources.

S. Thyagarajan

co7450@albany.edu

Adjunct Faculty. BA., University of Bombay (1959); MCRP, Ohio State University (1963). Specializations: Comprehensive Planning, Site Planning, Urban Design, Growth Management.

Kathleen O'Connor, P.E.

(518) 442-4770

thyag@energyanswers.com

Adjunct Faculty. BA University of Michigan, (1987); BSE University of Michigan (1994); MS (1996) University of California. Specializations: Environmental Planning, Water Resources.

WHAT DO PLANNERS DO?


In their jobs, some planners have responsibility for specific geographic areas such as individual neighborhoods in a city or region; within those areas they may provide assistance on a variety of substantive issues from land use to transportation. Other planners have substantive responsibilities such as housing or environmental planningand provide assistance in their specific specialization to many communities within a city or region. Some planners work on projects which will be undertaken within a year or two while others focus their efforts on projects many years in the future. Today, planners may move back and forth between jobs in the public, non-profit, and private sectors over the course of their career. They may also work for different levels of governments at different times. And they may change their specialities or their focus long after they leave school in response to on-thejob experiences or the opportunity for new challenges. While you may think of planning as an urban activity, it actually occurs in communities of all sizes. Many planners work in small cities, in rural areas, and for Indian Nations. Others work in suburban neighborhoods at the periphery of large regions while still others have jobs in the dense core of major metropolitan areas.

Page 124 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

TEMPLE UNIVERSITY
Department of Community and Regional Planning School of Environmental Design
580 Meetinghouse Road, Ambler, PA 19002 Phone (267) 468-8300 Fax 267-468-8315 http://www.temple.edu/ambler/crp/index.htm Dr. Deborah Howe, FAICP, Chair E-mail: dhowe@temple.edu Phone: 267-468-8301
Minimum GPA Class Rank: SAT: ACT: Honors:

ACSP Member: FULL

UNDERGRADUATE ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS


B average, 3.0 Top 40% Critical Reading range 500-600, Math range 500-600 22-24, need Writing portion Automatic consideration, 1300+ SAT, 3.8 GPA, top 10%

UNDERGRADUATE GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

Hours of Core .......................................................................................... 24 Hours of Studio .......................................................................................... 3 Hours of Internship .................................................................................... 3 Hours of Planning Elective ........................................................................ 9 Final Project ............................................................................................... 3 Total Required Hours in Planning Program ........................................... 42 Total Credits to Graduate ....................................................................... 124

PROGRAM INFORMATION
Admission Deadline Fall Semester ............................................................. March 1 Admission Deadline Spring Semester ....................................................November 1 Financial Aid Deadline 2008-09 .................................................................. March 1 In-state Tuition .................................. $5,587 plus fees (12-17 credits) per semester Out of State Tuition ........................ $10,227 plus fees (12-17 credits) per semester Application fee ......................................................................................................$50

Financial Aid Deadline: Merit Scholarships: Scholarship criteria:

FINANCIAL AID INFORMATION

March 1st Automatic consideration with application, 1150 SAT, 3.5 GPA, top 20% of class.

UNDERGRADUATE DEADLINES, TUITION AND FEES:

MASTERS DEGREE
Master of Science in Community and Regional Planning
Contact Phone Email Department Administrator 267-468-8300 crplanning@temple.edu

GRADUATE DEADLINES, TUITION AND FEES

Admission Deadline rolling admission for 2008-09 ................................until July 1 Financial Aid Deadline 2008-09 .................................................................. March 1 In-state Tuition ................................................................... $590 plus fees per credit Out of State Tuition ........................................................... $861 plus fees per credit Application Fee .........................................................................$60 online, $65 paper

Year Initiated 2002 Degrees Granted through 8/31/09.............................................................76 Degrees Granted from 9/01/08-8/31/09 ....................................................14

Applied
Undergraduate Graduate

Accepted

06/07 07/08 08/09 06/07 07/08 08/09 23 14 15 21 9 13 39 30 37 33 21 26

Masters Concentrations (transcripted)


Sustainable Community Planning Transportation Planning

MASTERS ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS


Bachelors degree from an accredited institution Minimum Undergraduate GPA: 3.0 Minimum GRE Required if undergrad GPA is < 3.25 Minimum TOEFL 550 paper, 213 computer, or 79 Internet IELTS Test 6.5 Ranking in Undergraduate Class: Not required Departmental Requirements: None Hours of Core .......................................................................................... 21 Hours of Studio or Practice Related Credits ............................................. 6 Hours of Restricted Electives (if pursuing concentration) ...................... 12 Hours of Unrestricted Electives ............................................................ 6-18 Thesis (optional) ........................................................................................ 6 Total Hours............................................................................................... 45 University Admission Policy:

UNDERGRADUATE DEGREE
BS in Community and Regional Planning
Contact Email Admissions office (267) 468-8100 ambler@temple.edu

Year Initiated 2002 Degrees granted through 8/31/09 .............................................................44 Degrees granted from 9/01/08 to 8/31/09.................................................14

MASTERS GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 125

TOTAL MASTERS STUDENT COMPOSITION 2008-2009 US Citizens & Permanent Residents


Hispanics* Of any Race White African American Native American/ Pacific Islander Asian American Mixed Other / Dont know Non-US Citizens Non- Permanent Residents

Lynn Mandarano

Assistant Professor. BS Cornell University (1984), MBA Iona College (1991), PhD University of Pennsylvania (2004). Specializations: Collaborative Planning Negotiations, Sustainable Communities

Male 0 25 1 0 0 0 2 0 28

Female 1 27 0 0 1 0 2 1 31

Total 1 52 1 0 1 0 4 1

(267) 468-8304

lynn.mandarano@temple.edu AICP

Research Associate Professor. BS Massachusetts Institute of Technology (1963), MS Massachusetts Institute of Technology (1966 ), MRP University of Pennsylvania (1973), Specializations: Environmental Planning, Regional Planning, Sustainability Practices

M. Richard Nalbandian

(267) 468-8302

richard.nalbandian@temple.edu

AFFILLATED FACULTY
Michael Carroll
Associate Transportation Planner, Dowling Associates. BS (1991) Cornell, MS (1993) and MCP (1996) University of California, Berkeley. Specializations: Traffic Modeling and Transportation Planning

Secretary, Pennsylvania Department of General Services. BA (1983) and MBA (1992) Lehigh University. Specializations: Strategic Planning, Emergency Management, Administration.

James P. Creedon

Total Students

59

Jeffrey P. Doshna

*Do not double count Hispanics; Hispanics also appear in the racial categories below.

Consultant. BA John Hopkins (1966), MCRP Rutgers (2002). Specializations: Economic Development, Planning Methods, GIS Applications

PLANNING FACULTY
Professor, BS SUNY College of Environmental Science & Forestry (1974), MS University of Michigan (1977), PhD University of Michigan (1982), Specializations: Community Development, Land Use Planning, Housing, Sustainable Development

Deborah Howe

FAICP

Director of Planning Services/Corporate Vice President, Waetzman Planning Group, Inc. BS (1971) Pennsylvania State University, MURP (1972) University of Pittsburgh. Specializations: Land Use, Planning Administration and Management.

Charles Guttenplan

AICP

(267) 468-8301

dhowe@temple.edu AICP

William Cohen

Associate Professor of Practice. BA University of Delaware (1965), MA University of Delaware (1976), MCP University of Pennsylvania (1999), AM University of Pennsylvania (2002), PhD University of Pennsylvania (2003), Specializations: Ecological Planning, Environmental Design

Professor Emeritus, University of Pennsylvania. BA Yale University (1953), JD Harvard University (1959), MCP University of Pennsylvania (1966). Specializations: Law of Planning and Urban Development, Smart Growth Programs, Environmental Law, and Historical, Political, and Legal Aspects of Brownfield Remediation

John C. Keene

Md Mahbubur R. Meenar

(267) 468-8303

william.cohen@temple.edu

Jeffrey Featherstone

Assistant Director, GIS Operations & Research, Center for Sustainable Communities. BArch (1997) Bangladesh University of Engineering and Technology, MUP SUNY at Buffalo (2002). Specialization: GIS and Environmental Modeling, Sustainable Practices

Research Professor and Director, Center for Sustainable Communities. BA University of Minnesota (1971), MA Rider University (1989), PhD Temple University (1999). Specializations: Public Policy, Sustainable Development

(267) 468-8311

jeffrey.featherstone@temple.edu

Director, Center for Geospatial Information Services, Pennsylvania State University. BS (1975) Bloomsburg University, MS (1980) Pennsylvania State University. Specializations: GIS Administration, Operation and Development.

Brady Stroh

Bradley Flamm

Assistant Professor. BA University of California, Berkeley (1984), MRP Cornell University (1992), PhD University of California, Berkeley (2006). Specializations: Transportation, Energy, Environment

(267) 468-8305

bradley.flamm@temple.edu

Assistant Director, Center for Sustainable Communities. BS Temple University (2001), MS Temple University (2004). Specializations: Sustainability Practices, Emergency Management

Susan Spinella

Page 126 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

Partner, McKenna Walker PC. BA (1980) LaSalle University, JD and MPA (1983) Syracuse University. Specializations: Environmental Law, Program and Project Management.

Joanne Walker

Ernest D. Weiler

Consultant, RetiredRohm and Haas Company Director. BS (1959) and PhD (1966) U. of Nebraska, MBA (1974) Temple University. Specializations: Sustainable Business Practices.

ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 127

TEXAS A&M UNIVERSITY


Department of Landscape Architecture & Urban Planning
Langford Architecture Building TAMU, College Station, Texas 77843-3137 Phone (979) 845-1019 Fax (979) 862-1784 http://archweb.tamu.edu/laup Dr. Forster Ndubisi, Department Head E-mail: fndubisi@archmail.tamu.edu

MA/MS PAB

Ph.D.

ACSP Member: FULL

MASTERS ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS


University Admission Policy: Minimum Undergraduate GPA: Minimum GRE:

Minimum TOEFL Ranking in Undergraduate Class: Departmental Requirement:

None Specified 3.0 GRE is Requiered, No Minimum Score for Admission 600 Not Required None Specified

MASTERS GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

PROGRAM INFORMATION
GRADUATE DEADLINE, TUITION AND FEES
Admission Deadline 2009/10 for Master program ........................................ March 1 Admission Deadline 2009/10 for Ph.D. program .......................................... March 1 Financial Aid Deadline 2009/10 for Master program ..................................January 1 Financial Aid Deadline 2009/10 for Ph.D. program ................................December 1 In-State Tuition and Fees (9 credit hours ........................................ $1,919.16 + fees Out-of-State Tuition and Fees (9 credit hours) ............................... $4,448.25 + fees Application Fees ................................................................ $50 US, $75 International Additional Fees ................................................... $800, Field trip and laboratory fees

Hours of Core ...........................................................................................18 Hours of Studio or Practice Related Courses .............................................6 Hours of Restricted Electives .....................................................................0 Hours of Unrestricted Electives ................................................................24 Other ............................................................................................................. Total Required Hours in Planning Program .............................................48 Exams or Written Requirements............Final oral examination required. Professional option requires a three hour professional paper. Research option requires a six hour thesis.

FINANCIAL AID INFORMATION

Scholarships, Fellowships, and Graduate Assistantships Eligibility varies with each type of assistance.

Annual Student Enrollment


Applied Accepted Enrolled 07/08 08/09 07/08 08/09 07/08 08/09 59 58 45 21 44 63 28 33 20 10 44 54

TOTAL MASTERS STUDENT COMPOSITION Fall. 2008


US Citizen & Permanent Residents Hispanics* Of an Race White African American Native American / Pacific Islander Asian American Mixed Other / Don't know

Masters Doctoral

Male 1 5 0 0 0 0 1 22 29

Female 0 3 1 0 1 0 0 9 14

Total 1 8 1 0 1 0 1 31 43

MASTERS DEGREE
Master of Urban Planning
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail: Elise Bright (979) 862-2730 ebright@tamu.edu

Year Initiated: 1968 PAB Accredited Degrees granted through 5/31/09 ...........................................................521 Degrees granted from 8/31/06 to 05/31/09...............................................34

Health and Human Services Planning, Housing, Community and Economic Development, Land Use and Environmental Planning, Transportation Planning and Design, Design Your Own

Masters Specializations

Non-US Citizens NonPermanent Resident Total Students

*Do not double count Hispanics; Hispanics also appear in the racial categories below. Page 128 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

DOCTORAL DEGREE
Ph.D. in Urban and Regional Sciences
Contact Person:
Phone: E-mail:

Dr. George Rogers


(979) 845-7284 grogers@tamu.edu

Sustainable Development Health Systems Planning & Policy Transportation Planning Urban & Community Development Environmental Hazard Management
DOCTORAL ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS
University Admission Policy: Departmental Requirement: Minimum GRE: Minimum TOEFL: Minimum GPA: None Specified Subject to Program Admissions Committee GRE is Required, No Minimum Score for Admission 600 3.0

Doctoral Specializations

Year initiated 1980 Degrees Granted through 9/1/2009........................................................187 Degrees Granted from 9/1/2006 to 8/31/2009 .........................................14 Dissertations Granted from 9/1/2006 to 8/31/2009 1. A Comparative Study of Single Family and Multifamily Housing Recovery Following 1992 Hurricane Andrew in Miami-Dade County, Florida 2. Section 404 Permitting in Coastal Texas from 1996-2003: Patterns and Effects on Streamflow 3. Variations in Disaster Aid Acquisitions among Ethnic Groups in a Rural Community 4. Modeling Household Adoption of Earthquake Hazard Adjustments: A Longitudinal Panel Study Of Southern California and Western Washington Residents 5. Modeling Single Family Housing Recovery after Hurricane Andrew in Florida Miami-Dade County 6. Section 404 Permitting in Coastal Texas from 1996-2003: Patterns and Effects on Streamflow 7. Health Disparity and the Built Environment: Spatial Disparity and Environmental Correlates of Health Status, Obesity, and Health Disparity 8. Urban growth pattern and sustainable development: A comparative study of municipalities in the Seoul Metropolitan Region 9. The Effects of Neighborhood Environments in Physical Activity for Older African American Women in Texas 10. Web-based GIS and Public Participation: An aid to widening female participation in revitalizing outdoor recreational facilities in Saudi Arabia-A case study in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia 11. A Study of Use Pattern, User Satisfaction and Willingness-to-pay of Off-Leash Dog Parks: Post Occupation Evaluations of Four Dog Parks in Texas and Florida 12. Pedestrian-Oriented Design and Sense of Community: A Comparative Study 13. The Relationship Between Ecological Landscape Structure and Neighborhood Satisfaction 14. Health Disparity and the Built Environment: Spatial Disparity and Environmental Correlates of Health Status, Obesity, and Health Disparity 15. Building Healthy Cities: The Role of Core Visionaries in a Community Visioning Process-The Brazos 2020 Vision Initiative 16. Transportation Barriers to Healthcare: Assessing the Texas Medicaid Program 17. Healthy Transportation - Healthy Communities: Developing Objective Measures of Built-Environment Using GIS and Testing Significance of Pedestrian Variables on Walking to Transit 18. The correlational and causal investigation into land use-transportation relationships: Evidence from the Dallas-Fort Worth metropolitan area. 19. The Effectiveness of Jobs-Housing Balance as a Strategy for Reducing Traffic Congestion: A Study of Metropolitan Bangkok

DOCTORAL GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

Hours of Core ...........................................................................................29 Hours of Studio or Practice Related Courses .............................................0 Hours of Restricted Electives ...................................................................15 Hours of Unrestricted Electives ................................................................20 Total Required Hours in Program............................................................ 64 Exams or Written Requirements: Dissertation is required, must defend dissertation during final semester. Final comprehensive examination is required.

TOTAL DOCTORAL STUDENT COMPOSITION Fall 2008


US Citizen & Permanent Residents Hispanics* Of an Race White African American Native American / Pacific Islander Asian American Mixed Other / Don't know Non-US Citizens NonPermanent Resident Total Students Male 1 11 2 1 2 0 1 5 23 Female 2 10 0 0 1 0 0 4 17 Total 3 21 2 1 3 0 1 9 40

*Do not double count Hispanics; Hispanics also appear in the racial categories below. ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 129

PLANNING FACULTY
Associate Professor. University of Michigan (1969); MS, Boston University (1972); PhD, University of Michigan(1985). Specializations: Social Policy Planning, Research Methods, Health & Human Services Planning.

Sherry Bame

Professor and Department Head. BS, University of Ibadan (1977); MLA, University of Guelph (1982) ; PhD, University of Waterloo (1987). Specializations: Growth Management, Ecological Design and Planning, Community Design.

Forster Ndubisi

(979) 845-1019

fndubisi@archmail.tamu.edu

(979) 845-1047

sbame@archone.tamu.edu

Michael C. Neuman

Samuel Brody

Associate Professor. BA, Bowdoin College (1992); MS, Bowdoin College (1996); PhD, University of North Carolina (2001). Specializations: Ecosystem Management, Collaborative Planning.

Associate Professor. BS (1977); MCP (1986) University of Pennsylvania; PhD (1996) University of California, Berkeley Specializations: Citizen Participation, Sustainable Urbanism, Infrastructure/Public Services, Land Use/Growth Management.

(979) 345-7062

neuman@taz.tamu.edu

(979) 458-4623

sbrody@archone.tamu.edu

Walter G. Peacock

Professor. BA, Arizona State (1972); MCP, Harvard (1975); PhD, Texas A&M University (1980). Specializations: Environmental Design, City Planning.

Elise Bright

Professor. BA, Columbus College (1978); MA, University of Georgia (1982); PhD, University of Georgia (1986) Specializations: Sustainability, Natural Disaster Management, Quantitative Methods, Community Impact Assessment.

(979) 845-3161

ebright@archone.tamu.edu

(979) 845-7853

peacock@archone.tamu.edu

Eric Dumbaugh

Assistant Professor; BA, Florida State University (1996); MS, Georgia Institute of Technology (2002); PhD, Georgia Institute of Technology (2005).

Professor. BS, Oregon State University (1975); MA, University of Waterloo (1976); PhD, University of Pittsburgh (1983) Specializations: Environmental Planning, Impact Assessment, Natural Resources Planning, Quantitative Methods.

George O. Rogers

(979) 862-4320

edumbaugh@archone.tamu.edu

(979) 845-7284

rogers@archone.tamu.edu AICP

Assistant Professor. BA, Catholic University of Peru (1981); MA, University of Texas at Austin (1988); PhD, University of Texas at Austin (2001) Specializations: Planning in Developing Countries, Economic Development.

Cecilia Giusti

Andrew Seidel

Professor. BArch, Pratt Institute (1972); MCP, Harvard University (1974); PhD, University of Michigan (1980) Specializations: Citizen Participation, Community Development, Computer Applications, Demographics.

(979) 458-4304

cgiusti@archone.tamu.edu

(979) 845-6584

a-seidel@tamu.edu

Associate Professor and Executive Coordinator. BA, Tsinghua University (1983); MLA, Pennsylvania State University (1992); MFA, University of Pennsylvania (1995); PhD, University of Pennsylvania (1995) Specializations: Community Design, Urban Design, and Landscape Architecture.

Chang-Shan Huang

Donald A. Sweeney

Associate Professor. BA (1967); MArch (1968); DED (1972) Texas A&M University Specializations: Healthy Communities Planning, Citizen Participation, Health Policy.

(979) 845-7888

dsweeney@archone.tamu.edu

(979) 845-7873

cshuang@archone.tamu.edu

Chanam Lee

Assistant Professor. BLA, Kyungpook National University (1996); MLA, Texas A&M University (1999); PhD, University of Washington (2004). Specializations: Active Living.

Assistant Professor. BS, Texas A&M University (1993); MUP, Texas A&M University (1997); PhD, University of North Carolina (2004). Specializations: Sustainability and Housing and Community Development.

Shannon Van Zandt

(979) 845-7056

clee@archone.tamu.edu

James W. Varni

Michael K. Lindell

Professor. BA, University of Colorado (1969); PhD, University of Colorado (1975) Specializations: Environmental Hazard Mitigation, Emergency Management, Research Methods.

Professor: Ph.D. (Psychology), University of California-Los Angeles, 1976; Postdoctoral Fellow, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, 1977; M.A. (Psychology), University of California-Los Angeles, 1974; B.A. (Psychology), University of California-Santa Barbara, 1972.

(979) 862-1095

jvarni@archmail.tamu.edu

(979) 862-3969

mlindell@archone.tamu.edu

Ming-Han Li

Zhifang Wang

Assistant Professor: Ph.D. (Urban and Regional Science), Texas A&M University, 2002; M.L.A., Texas A&M University, 1998; M.S. (Civil Engineering), The University of Texas-Austin, 1995; B.S. (Agriculture Engineering), The National Taiwan University, 1990.

Assistant Professor: Ph.D. (Landscape Architecture), University of Michigan, 2008; M.L.A., University of Michigan, 2008; M.S. (Landscape Planning), Beijing University, 2001; B.S. (Urban Planning), Beijing University, 1998.

(979) 458-4121

zhifangw@neo.tamu.edu

(979) 845-7571

minghan@tamu.edu

Page 130 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

BM, Beijing (Peking) University (2002), BS Beijing (Peking) University (2002), MUP University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (2004), PhD University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (2008). Specializations: Urban Economic Development, Disaster Management, Public Finance.

Yu Xiao

OTHER AFFILIATED FACULTY


Visiting Assistant Professor. BS (1979); MS (1982); PhD (1987), Texas A&M University Specializations: Transportation Planning, Traffic Modeling.

Timothy Lomax

(979) 845-9960

t-lomax@ttimail.tamu.edu

Dennis Perkinson

Visiting Assistant Professor. BA, University of South Florida (1974); MS, Northwestern University (1977); PhD, Texas A&M University (1997) Specializations: Transportation Planning, Transit.

(979) 862-4936

d-perkinson@rrimail.tamu.edu

Carla Prater

Visiting Assistant Professor. BA, Pepperdine University (1975); MUP, Texas A&M University (1993); PhD, Texas A&M University (1999) Specializations: Hazard Reduction and Recovery.

(979) 862-3970

carla@archone.tamu.edu

David L. Pugh

Visiting Associate Professor, Associate Professor Emeritus: J.D., University of Missouri, 1975; Master of Regional & City Planning, University of Oklahoma, 1970; B.F.A., The University of Oklahoma, 1966.

(979) 845-1019

dpugh@tamu.edu

Katherine Turnbull
(979) 845-6005

Lecturer; BS, University of Minnesota (1975); MS, University of Wisconsin (1976); PhD, Texas A&M University (1993).

k-turnbull@tamu.edu

Assistant Research Scientist. BA, University of Texas (1977); MS, Stephen F. Austin University (1981); PhD, Texas A&M University (1992) Specializations: Geographic Information Systems, Computer Applications.

Douglas F. Wunneburger

ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 131

TEXAS SOUTHERN UNIVERSITY


Urban Planning and Environmental Policy
3100 Cleburne St. Houston, Texas 77004 Phone (713) 313-6842 Fax (713) 313-7447 http://www.tsu.edu/pages/1286.asp Qisheng Pan, Interim Chair Phone: (713) 313-7221 E-mail: PAN_QS@tsu.edu

MA/MS

Ph.D.

ACSP Member: FULL

MASTERS ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS


University Admission Policy: Minimum Undergraduate GPA:

Minimum GRE: Minimum TOEFL: Ranking in Undergraduate Class: Departmental Requirement:

Four year degree. 2.5 (University) 3.0 (Department) Required 213 Not Required 3 or More for Analytical Writing or Take an English Writing Class

MASTERS GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

PROGRAM INFORMATION
GRADUATE DEADLINE, TUITION AND FEES
Admission Deadline 2007-08 for Masters program ........................................ July 30 Admission Deadline 2007-08 for Ph.D program............................................June 30 Financial Aid Deadline 2007-08 for Masters program.................................... July 30 Financial Aid Deadline 2007-08 for Ph.D Program ........................................June 30 In-State Tuition and Fees .............................................................$5,948 per semester Out-of-State/International Tuition and Fees ..............................$13,268 per semester Application Fee ......................................................................................................$50 Additional Fees: .................................................................................................. None

Hours of Core ...........................................................................................24 Hours of Studio or Practice Related Courses .............................................6 Hours of Restricted Electives ...................................................................12 Hours of Unrestricted Electives ..................................................................6 Other ............................................................................................................. Total Required Hours in Planning Program .............................................48 Exams, Thesis, or Final Product: ..................Comprehensive Examination and Internship or Thesis for 6 Credit Hours

Assistantships, Fellowships available Eligibility Criterion: Academic Skills

FINANCIAL AID INFORMATION

Annual Student Enrollment Applied


Masters Doctoral 10 5 8 9

TOTAL MASTERS STUDENT COMPOSITION Fall 2007 Accepted Enrolled


8 4 8 9 8 4 8 9 U.S. Citizens & Permanent Residents Hispanics of Any Race White African American Native American/ Pacific Islander Asian American Mixed Other/Dont Know Non-US Citizens Non-Permanent Residents Total Students Male 0 0 11 0 1 0 0 1 13 Female 0 1 7 0 1 0 1 2 12 Total 0 1 18 0 2 0 1 3 25

05/06 06/07 05/06 06/07 05/06 06/07

Master in Urban Planning and Environmental Policy / Dual Degree in Law and Urban Planning and Environmental Policy
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail: Lalita Sen and Qisheng Pan Admission Committee (713) 313-6842 Sen_LX@tsu.edu PAN_QS@tsu.edu

MASTERS DEGREE

Year Initiated: 2003 Degrees Granted through 8/31/08.............................................................13 Degrees Granted from 9/1/07 to 8/31/08 ....................................................5

Land Use and Transportation, Housing and Community Development, Environmental Policy

Masters Specializations

*Do not double count Hispanics; Hispanics also appear in the racial categories below. Page 132 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

DOCTORAL DEGREE
Ph.D. in Urban Planning and Environmental Policy
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail: Laita Sen, Professor (713) 313-7448 sen_lx@tsu.edu

TOTAL DOCTORAL STUDENT COMPOSITION Fall 2007


U.S. Citizens & Permanent Residents Hispanics of Any Race White African American Native American/ Pacific Islander Asian American Mixed Other/Dont Know Non-US Citizens Non-Permanent Residents Total Students Male 2 1 12 0 0 0 0 0 15 Female 0 0 13 0 0 0 0 0 13 Total 2 1 25 0 0 0 0 0 28

Year initiated 2002 Degrees Granted through 8/31/2008.......................................................... 7 Degrees Granted from 9/1/2007 to 8/31/2008 ........................................... 2 Dissertations Granted from 9/1/2002 to 8/31/2003 ...................................7

Transportation Housing and Community Development Environmental Policy and Planning DOCTORAL ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS
University Admission Policy: Minimum Undergraduate GPA: Minimum GRE: Minimum TOEFL: Departmental Requirement: Masters or other advanced degree. 2.8 Required 213 No Requirements

Doctoral Specializations

DOCTORAL GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

Hours of Core ...........................................................................................21 Hours of Studio or Practice Related Courses .............................................0 Hours of Restricted Electives ...................................................................12 Hours of Unrestricted Electives ..................................................................9 Other (Dissertation) ..................................................................................12 Total Required Hours in Program............................................................ 54 Exams, Thesis, or Final Product: ..................Comprehensive Examination

*Do not double count Hispanics; Hispanics also appear in the racial categories below.

PLANNING FACULTY
Olurominiyi Ibitayo
Associate Professor. MS., Colorado State University; Ph.D, Arizona State University. Specializations: Risk Management, Neighborhood Analysis and Development, Environmental Planning.

FINANCIAL AID INFORMATION


Assistantships, Fellowships available Eligibility Criterion: Academic Skills

(713) 313-7398

ibitayo_oo@tsu.edu

Qisheng Pan

Associate Professor. MS. and Ph.D, University of Southern California. Specializations: Geographic Information Systems, Transportation, Land Use Planning, Economic Impact Analysis.

(713) 313-7221

pan_qs@tsu.edu

Lalita Sen

Professor. MS. and Ph.D, Northwestern University. Specializations: Transportation, Housing, Accessibility.

(713) 313-7448

sen_lx@tsu.edu

Laura Solitare

Assistant Professor. MS. and Ph.D, Rutgers University. Specializations: Community Development, Environmental Justice, Brownfields.

AICP

(713) 313-7772

solitarelg@tsu.edu AICP

Associate Professor. MUP, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, Ph.D., Texas A&M. Specializations: Community Development, Sustainability.

Sheri Smith

smithsh@tsu.edu

ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 133

OTHER AFFILIATED FACULTY


Lei Yu
Associate Professor. MS., Nagoya Institute of Technology; Ph.D, Queens University. Specializations: Transportation Engineering and Design, Highway Design, Traffic Controls.

Associate Professor. Ph.D, Houston. Specializations: Transportation Planning, Mass Transit, Mobility Issues.

Carol Lewis

FYI

Page 134 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

TUFTS UNIVERSITY
Department of Urban and Environmental Policy and Planning
Medford, Massachusetts 02155 Phone (617) 627-3394 Fax (617) 627-3377 E-mail: ann.urosevich@tufts.edu http://ase.tufts.edu/uep Julian Agyeman, Department Chair E-mail: julian.agyeman@tufts.edu

MA/MS PAB

ACSP Member: Full

MASTERS ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS


University Admission Policy: Minimum Undergraduate GPA: Minimum GRE: Minimum TOEFL: Departmental Requirement:

None Specified None Specified Required no minimum specified Required 550 PBT, 213 CBT, 79-80 IBT None Specified

MASTERS GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

PROGRAM INFORMATION
GRADUATE DEADLINE, TUITION AND FEES
Admission deadline 2009-10 for MA program ..........................................January 15 Admission deadline 2009-10 for MPP program .............................................April 30 Financial Aid Deadline 2009-10 for MA program ............................................May 1 Financial Aid Deadline 2009-10 for MPP program .......................................... July 1 In-State Tuition and Fees (MA program): ....................... $28,572 per academic year Out-of-State Tuition and Fees (MA program): .................$28,572 per academic year In-State Tuition and Fees (MPP program):..................................................... $38,096 Out-of-State Tuition and Fees (MPP program): ............................................. $38,096 Application Fee: ..................................................................................................... $70 Additional Fees: .............................. Mandatory Health Services Fee-$632, Graduate .............................................................................................. Student Council Fee-$40

Hours of Core .............................................................................................5 Hours of Studio or Practice Related Courses .............................................0 Hours of Restricted Electives .....................................................................0 Hours of Unrestricted Electives ..................................................................7 Other ...........................................................................................................2 Total Required Hours in Planning Program .............................................14 Exams or Written Requirements: ...................................................... Thesis

Master of Public Policy


Contact Person: Phone: E-mail: Julian Agyeman (617) 627-3394 julian.agyeman@tufts.edu

Year Initiated: 2002 Degrees Granted through 5/31/09.............................................................53 Degrees Granted from 9/1/08 to 8/31/09 ....................................................8

Annual Student Enrollment


Applied Accepted Enrolled 07/08 08/09 07/08 08/09 07/08 08/09 152 152 127 122 44 45 16 14 15 10 13 10

Masters Specializations
Urban and Social Policy Environmental Policy

Masters Masters

MASTERS ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS


University Admission Policy: Minimum Undergraduate GPA: Minimum GRE: Minimum TOEFL: Departmental Requirement:

MASTERS DEGREE
Master of Arts in Urban and Environmental Policy and Planning
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail: Julian Agyeman (617) 627-3394 julian.agyeman@tufts.edu

None Specified None Specified Not Required Required 550 PBT, 213 CBT, 79-80 IBT 7 years of relevant professional experience

MASTERS GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

Year Initiated: 1973 PAB Accredited Degrees Granted through 5/31/09...........................................................846 Degrees Granted from 9/1/08 to 8/31/09 ..................................................22

Hours of Core .............................................................................................3 Hours of Studio or Practice Related Courses .............................................0 Hours of Restricted Electives .....................................................................4 Hours of Unrestricted Electives ..................................................................2 Other ...........................................................................................................0 Total Required Hours in Planning Program ..............................................9 Exams or Written Requirements: ....................................................... None

Urban and Social Policy and Planning Environmental Policy and Planning
ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 135

Masters Specializations

TOTAL MASTERS STUDENT COMPOSITION 2008-2009


US Citizens & Permanent Residents Hispanics of any Race White African American Native American/ Pacific Islander Asian American Mixed Other/Dont know Non-US Citizens Non-Permanent Residents Total Students 4 42

Justin Hollander

Assistant Professor. PhD, Rutgers University; MRP, University of Massachusetts at Amherst. Specialization: Urban Planning

AICP

(617) 627-3394

justin.hollander@tufts.edu

Male 3 32 2 0 1 0

Female 3 53 10 0 0 0 0 1 67

Total 6 85 12 0 1 0 0 5 109

James Jennings

Professor. PhD, MA, Columbia University; BA, Hunter College. Specializations: Urban and Neighborhood Politics, Social Welfare, Community Development.

(617) 627-3394

james.jennings@tufts.edu

Sheldon Krimsky

Professor. PhD, MA, Boston University; MS, Purdue University. Specializations: Environmental Policy and Ethics. www.tufts. edu/~skrimsky

(617) 627-3394

sheldon.krimsky@tufts.edu

Penn S. Loh

Professor of the Practice. MS, University of California, Berkeley. Specialization: Environmental Justice.

(617) 627-3394

pennloh@comcast.net

Barbara Parmenter
(617) 627-3394

Lecturer. PhD, University of Texas at Austin. Specializations: Geographic Information Systems

barbara.parmenter@tufts.edu

Ann Rappaport

Lecturer. PhD, Tufts University; MS, MIT Specialization: Environmental Science and Management.

*Do not double count Hispanics; Hispanics also appear in the racial categories below.

(617) 627-3394

ann.rappaport@tufts.edu AICP

PLANNING FACULTY
Julian Agyeman
Professor. PhD, University of London UK; MA, Middlesex University UK Specializations: Sustainable Communities, Environmental Justice, Environmental Education. www.tufts.edu/~jagyem01

Robert Russell

Lecturer. JD, Harvard Law School. Specializations: Environmental Law.

(617) 627-3394

rustynet@comcast.net AICP

(617) 627-3394

julian.agyeman@tufts.edu

Lecturer. JD, Suffolk Law School; MRP, Cornell University Specializations: Land Use Planning, Local Government Law, Natural Resources Policy.

Jon Witten

Rachel G. Bratt

(617) 627-3394

jon@daleyandwitten.com

Professor. PhD, MIT. Specializations: Housing and Community Development. www.tufts.edu/~rbratt

(617) 627-3394

rachel.bratt@tufts.edu

OTHER AFFILIATED FACULTY


Margaret Barringer
Lecturer. MCP, University of Rhode Island Specializations: Economic Development.

Mary E. Davis

AICP

Assistant Professor. PhD, University of Florida. Specializations: Environmental Health.

(617) 627-3394

mary.davis@tufts.edu

(617) 627-3394

pegsquare@aol.com

Laurie Goldman

Lecturer. PhD, MIT; MS, Israel Institute of Technology. Specializations: Housing, Community Development.

Lecturer. MEd., Harvard University. Specialization: Philanthropy and Fundraising.

Patricia Bonner-DuVal

(617) 627-3394

laurie.goldman@tufts.edu

Robert Burdick

Lecturer. JD, Boston University Law School. Specialization: Negotiation and Conflict Resolution.

(617) 627-3394

rburdick@gbls.org

Page 136 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

Alix Cantave

Lecturer. PhD, University of Massachusetts; MS, Pratt Institute. Specializations: Community Economic Development, Real Estate Development and Finance.

FYI
The Tufts University Department of Urban and Environmental Policy and Planning (UEP) offers two graduate programs in public policy and planning: a master of arts (M.A.) degree in urban and environmental policy and planning which is accredited by the Planning Accreditation Board and a master of public policy (M.P.P.) degree. Both degrees equip public-spirited individuals for rewarding careers in government, nonprofit organizations, citizen advocacy groups, and the private sector. UEP students focus on public problems in the broad areas of urban and social policy and planning, or environmental policy and planning, as well as on issues linking these various concerns. UEPs goal is the education of a new generation of leaders, "practical visionaries" who will contribute to the development of more just and sustainable communities. A key step toward this is making our institutions more responsive to child, adult and ultimately community wellbeing by helping them understand, empathize with and respond to the social, economic and environmental needs of individuals and communities. UEP has a flexible MA and MPP curriculum built around a set of six core values: An appreciation of the inextricable linkages between social, economic and environmental issues and the ability to make policy and planning recommendations accordingly; An appreciation of the role of values in policy formation and planning and the ethical/social responsibility of policy and planning professionals to act accordingly; An appreciation of the deeply embedded nature of gender, age, race, class, dis/ability, culture and sexual orientation in all aspects of public policy and planning; An appreciation of the centrality of spatial, social and environmental justice to all aspects of public policy and planning; An appreciation of the need to understand the role of individual and community rights and responsibilities in public policy and planning; An appreciation of the need to move society toward the development of sustainable communities where there is a high quality of human life; delivered in a just and equitable manner while respecting the limits of supporting ecosystems.

(617) 627-3394

alixcantave@aol.com

Mark Chase

Lecturer. MA, Tufts University. Specialization: Transportation Planning.

Christine Cousineau

Lecturer. MArch, MIT; MCP, MIT Specialization: Urban Planning

AICP

(617) 627-3394 christine.cousineau@tufts.edu

Louise Dunlap

Lecturer. PhD, University of California at Berkeley; MA, University of California at Berkeley. Specializations: Writing.

(617) 627-3394

changewrite@earthlink.net

Scott Horsley

Lecturer. MA, University of Rhode Island. Specializations: Land Use Planning, Water Resources Policy.

(617) 627-3394

shorsley@cape.com

Francine Jacobs

Associate Professor. Ed.D., Harvard University; MEd, Harvard University. Specializations: Child and Family Policy, Program Evaluation.

(617) 627-3394

francine.jacobs@tufts.edu

Karen Kelley

Lecturer. MBA, Boston University. Specializations: Financial Analysis and Management.

(617) 627-3394

kkelley@cedac.org

Ingar Palmlund

Lecturer. PhD, Clark University; MPA, Lund University, Sweden. Specialization: International Environmental Policy.

(617) 627-3394

ipalmlund@aol.com

Alan Jay Rom

Lecturer. JD, Cleveland State University. Specialization: Legal Frameworks of Social Policy.

Roberta Rubin

Lecturer. JD, Harvard Law School. Specialization: Housing.

Marjorie Erickson Warfield

Lecturer. Specialization: Child and Family Policy, Statistics.

ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 137

UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO THE STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK


116 Hayes Hall, 3435 Main Street Buffalo, New York 14214-3087 Phone (716) 829-2133 x109 Fax (716) 829-3256 E-mail: planning@buffalo.edu www.ap.buffalo.edu/planning Niraj Verma, Chair E-mail: nverma3@buffalo.edu

MUP PAB

ACSP Member: Full

Urban and Regional Planning

Hours of Core ...........................................................................................18 Hours of Studio or Practice Related Courses ....................................... 6-12 Hours of Unrestricted Electives .......................................................... 21-24 Other ...........................................................................................................0 Total Required Hours in Planning Program ............................................ 52 Exams or Written Requirements: ................. Thesis or Professional Project

MASTERS GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

TOTAL MASTERS STUDENT COMPOSITION 2009-2010 US Citizens & Permanent Residents


Hispanics* Of any Race White African American Native American/ Pacific Islander Asian American Mixed Other / Dont know Non-US Citizens Non- Permanent Residents

PROGRAM INFORMATION
Fall Admission Deadline 2009-10 ..................................... Rolling; March 1 priority Fall Financial Aid Deadline 2009-10 ................................ Rolling; March 1 priority Spring Admission Deadline 2009-10 ............................. Rolling; October 31 priority Spring Financial Aid Deadline 2009-10 ........................ Rolling; October 31 priority In-State Tuition and Fees: .................................................................. $9545 per year Out-of-State Tuition and Fees.......................................................... $14,915 per year Application Fee .............................................................................................. $50/$70 Additional Fees .......................................................................................................... 0

GRADUATE DEADLINE, TUITION AND FEES

Male 1 39 4 0 0 0 3 7 54

Female 1 22 8 1 0 0 4 15 50

Total 2 61 12 1 0 0 7 22

Annual Student Enrollment Applied


Masters 143 143

Accepted
102 92

Enrolled
54 45

08/09 09/10 08/09 09/10 08/09 09/10

Master of Urban Planning

MASTERS DEGREE

Contact Person: Niraj Verma Phone: (716) 829-2133 x 109 E-mail: nverma3@buffalo.edu Year Initiated: 1980 PAB Accredited Degrees Granted through 8/31/08...........................................................624 Degrees Granted from 9/1/07 to 8/31/08 ..................................................44

Total Students

104

Community Development & Urban Management, Economic and International Development, Environmental & Land Use Planning, GIS and Spatial Modeling, Urban Design and Physical Planning, Generalist Options

Masters Specializations

*Do not double count Hispanics; Hispanics also appear in the racial categories below.

PLANNING FACULTY
Professor. BS, Imperial College (London); DPhil, University of Sussex. Specializations: GIS and Planning Technologies, Futures and Forecasting, Regional and Island Development, Tourism and Recreation Planning.

H.D. Samuel Cole

MUP/JD, MUP/Master of Architecture


University Admission Policy: Minimum Undergraduate GPA: Minimum GRE: Minimum TOEFL Departmental Requirement:

Dual Degrees

MASTERS ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS

(716) 829-2133 x203

samcole@buffalo.edu

www.grad.buffalo.edu 3.0 Not Required 550/213/79 Essay, resume, three letters of recommendation, official transcripts.

Associate Professor. BS, Clarkson; MUP, University at Buffalo; PhD, UCLA. Specializations: Transportation Planning and Policy, Planning History, Transportation, Land Use and Urban Form, Urban Design.

Daniel B. Hess

(716) 829-2133 x202

dbhess@buffalo.edu

Page 138 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

Kathryn A. Foster

Associate Professor. Currently serving full-time as Director of Regional Institute. BA, Johns Hopkins; MCP, UC Berkeley; PhD, Princeton. Specializations: Regional Planning and Policy, Political Economy, Metropolitan Governance Systems, Urban Studies.

Henry Louis Taylor, Jr.

Professor. BS, Tennessee A&I State; MS, University of Tennessee; MA, University at Buffalo; PhD, University at Buffalo. Specializations: Race, Class and Gender, Urban History, Urban Management, Community Development, Health and the Built Environment.

(716) 829-3777

kafoster@buffalo.edu

(716) 829-2133 x212

htaylor@buffalo.edu

Visiting Assistant Professor. BFA, MFA, California Institute of the Arts; PhD, University of Southern California. Specializations: Community Design and Development, Urban Morphology, Ethics of Urban Design

Ferdinand Lewis

Niraj Verma

(716) 829-2133 x234

fslewis@buffalo.edu AICP

Professor and Chair. BS, Birla Institute of Technology, India; M.Infrastructure Planning, University of Stuttgart, Germany; PhD, Berkeley. Specializations: Planning Theory, Design Theory, Infrastructure Planning, Role of Institutions, International Planning, Management, Ethics.

G. William Page

(716) 829-2133 x109

nverma3@buffalo.edu

Professor. BA, Princeton; MCRP, Rutgers; PhD, Rutgers. Specializations: Environmental Planning, Policy, and Management, GIS Applications, Quantitative Methods, Water Policy.

Li Yin

(716) 829-2133 x208

gpage@buffalo.edu

JiYoung Park

Assistant Professor. BS, Yunnan Polytechnic; MS, Asian Institute of Technology; PhD, University of Colorado, Denver. Specializations: GIS and Planning Technologies, Environmental Impact Analysis, Urban and Regional Growth Modeling.

Assistant Professor. BA, MA Seoul National University, Ph.D., University of Southern California. Specializations: Analytical, Quantitative and Research Methods, Emergency Preparedness and Disaster Mitigation

(716) 829-2133 x229

liyin@buffalo.edu

(716) 829-2133 x209

jp292@buffalo.edu

Alfred D. Price

OTHER AFFILIATED FACULTY


James J. Allen
Adjunct Assistant Professor. MUP, University at Buffalo. Specializations: Economic Development Planning, Strategic Planning.

Associate Professor. BA, Princeton; MArch/MUP, Princeton. Specializations: Housing Planning and Policy, Community Development, Real Estate Finance, Brownfield Redevelopment.

(716) 829-2133 x213

adprice@buffalo.edu

(716) 829-2133 x222

jjallen@buffalo.edu

Samina Raja

Associate Professor. BSc, Jamia Millia University (New Delhi); MP1, School of Architecture and Planning (New Delhi); PhD, University of Wisconsin, Madison. Specializations: International Development, Fiscal Impacts of Growth, Quantitative Methods, Community Food Security.

Adjunct Assistant Professor. MA, University at Buffalo. Specializations: Governance and Management, Local Government Politics.

Carl Calabrese

(716) 829-2133 x222

cc63@buffalo.edu

(716) 829-2133 x225

sraja@buffalo.edu

Thomas DeSantis

Robert G. Shibley

Professor. M.Arch., Catholic University. Specializations: Urban Design, Placemaking, Downtown Redevelopment, Waterfront Planning, Architectural Design.

Adjunct Assistant Professor. BA, University at Buffalo; MUP, University at Buffalo. Specializations: Community Development and Revitalization.

Hiroaki Hata

(716) 829-2133 x218

rshibley@buffalo.edu

Robert M. Silverman

Associate Professor, Department of Architecture. MArch, Harvard University and Washington University. Specializations: Urban Design, Architecture.

Associate Professor. BS, Arizona State; MPA, Arizona State; PhD, University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee. Specializations: Citizen Participation and Community Organizing, Community Development, Public Finance, Research Methods.

(716) 829-2133 x312

hata@buffalo.edu

Lindy Korn

(716) 829-2133 x227

rms35@buffalo.edu

Adjunct Assistant Professor. JD, Ohio Northern University. Specializations: Negotiations and Conflict Resolution, Diversity Planning.

Ernest Sternberg

(716) 829-2133 x222

lkorn@buffalo.edu

Professor. BA, Empire State College; MS, Cornell; PhD, Cornell. Specializations: Economic Development, Planning Theory, Disaster and Domestic Security, Physical Planning.

William Murray

(716) 829-2133 x224

ezs@buffalo.edu

Adjunct Assistant Professor. JD, University of Detroit. Specializations: Planning Law, Real Estate Development.

(716) 829-2133 x222

wmmurray@buffalo.edu

ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 139

UNIVERSITY OF AKRON
Department of Geography and Planning
Akron, Ohio 44325-5005 Phone (330) 972-7620 Fax (330) 972-6080 geoplan@uakron.edu www.uakron.edu/geography/ Charles Monroe, Interim Department Chair Phone: (330) 972-8033 E-mail: monroe@uakron.edu

BA/BS

MA/MS

ACSP Member: FULL

UNDERGRADUATE ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS


Departmental Requirement: No Requirements Minimum GPA: No Requirements Minimum SAT or ACT Scores: No Requirements

UNDERGRADUATE GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

Hours of Core .......................................................................................... 14 Hours of Studio Courses ............................................................................ 0 Hours of Restricted Elective .................................................................... 21 Hours of Unrestricted Elective ................................................................ 12 Total Required Hours In Planning Program ............................................ 47 Total Required Hours to Graduate from University .............................. 128 Thesis Exams or Final Product ................................................ Not required

PROGRAM INFORMATION
Admission Deadline 2010-2011 ......................................................................... Open Financial Aid Deadline 2010-2011 ..................................................................... Open In-State Tuition and Fees: ........................................................... $350 per credit hour Out-of-State Tuition and Fees: ................................................... $658 per credit hour Application Fee: .....................................................................................................$30 Additional Fees: ............................................................................ $36 per credit hour

FINANCIAL AID INFORMATION


University Scholarships and Grants Federal Student Aid Program

UNDERGRADUATE DEADLINES, TUITION AND FEES

MASTERS DEGREE
MA in Geography/Urban Planning
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail: Linda Barrett (330) 972-6120 barrett@uakron.edu

Admission Deadline 2010-2011 ......................................................................... Open Financial Aid Deadline 2010-2011 ..................................................................... Open In-State Tuition and Fees: ........................................................... $398 per credit hour Out-of-State Tuition and Fees: ................................................... $658 per credit hour Application Fee: ....................................................................... $30/ $40 International Additional Fees: ............................................................................ $36 per credit hour

GRADUATE DEADLINE, TUITION AND FEES

Year Initiated: 1992 Degrees Granted through 8/31/09.............................................................94 Degrees Granted from 9/1/08 to 8/31/09 ....................................................4

Annual Student Enrollment Applied


Undergraduate MA/MS

Accepted Enrolled

06/07 07/08 06/07 07/08 06/07 07/08


Undergraduates do not apply directly to the Planning Program

Urban and Regional Planning, Geographic Information Sciences, Cartography

Masters Specializations

20

22

17

19

34

39 MASTERS ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS


University Admission Policy: Minimum Undergraduate GPA: Minimum GRE: Minimum TOEFL Ranking in Undergraduate Class: Departmental Requirement: No Requirements 2.75 GRE Recommended 550 Paper, 213 CBT, 79 IBT Not Required BA/BS in planning, geography, or related fields.

UNDERGRADUATE DEGREE
BA in Geography - Planning Track
Contact Person: Deborah King

Phone: E-mail:

(330) 972-2394 dpking@uakron.edu

Year Initiated:2000 Degrees Granted through 8/31/09........................................................... 15 Degrees Granted from 9/1/08 to 8/31/09 .................................................. 3

MASTERS GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

Undergraduate Specializations
Urban and Regional Planning Geographic Information Sciences

Hours of Core ...........................................................................................30 Hours of Studio or Practice Related Courses .............................................0 Hours of Electives.....................................................................................15 Internship .................................................................................................. 3 Total Required Hours in Planning Program ............................................48 Exam,Thesis or Final Product: .................................. Thesis option - 30-36 hours of coursework, 9-15 hours thesis research

Page 140 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

MS in Geography/Geographic Information Sciences


Contact Person: Linda Barrett Phone: (330) 972-6120 E-mail: barrett@uakron.edu Year Initiated:1968, revised 2004 Degrees Granted through 8/31/09.............................................................98 Degrees Granted from 9/1/08 to 8/31/09 ....................................................9

PLANNING FACULTY
David Benjamin
Assistant Lecturer. J.D., Case Western Reserve University School of Law. Specializations: Land Use Planning Law, Local Government Law.

(330) 972-7620

dbenjamin@justice.com

Geographic Information Systems, Cartography, Mapping, Remote Sensing, Geographic Techniques


MASTERS ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS
University Admission Policy: Minimum Undergraduate GPA: Minimum GRE: Minimum TOEFL Ranking in Undergraduate Class: Departmental Requirement: No Requirements 2.75 GRE Recommended 550 Paper, 213 CBT, 79 IBT Not Required BA/BS in planning, geography, or related fields.

Masters Specializations

Planning Director, City of Cuyahoga Falls, Assistant Lecturer. M.P.A. California State University Long Beach (1981). Specializations: Land Use Planning Methods, Zoning, Community Development

Fred Guerra

(330) 972-7620

guerrafr@cityofcf.com

Joseph Hadley

Director - Northeast Ohio Four County Regional Planning and Development Organization -- NEFCO. Lecturer. MA, University of Akron (1979). Specializations: Regional Planning, Remote Sensing.

(330) 972-2490

jhadley@uakron.edu

Loren Siebert

MASTERS GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

Hours of Core ...........................................................................................27 Hours of Studio or Practice Related Courses .............................................0 Hours of Electives.....................................................................................18 Other ......................................................................................................... 0 Total Required Hours in Planning Program ............................................45 Exam,Thesis or Final Product: Thesis option - 30 hours of coursework, 15 hours thesis research.

Associate Professor. PhD, University of Washington (1997). Specializations: Land Use Planning, Remote Sensing, Geographic Information Systems, Japan, History of Urban Design and Planning.

(330) 972-7769

siebert@uakron.edu

Patrice Theken

TOTAL MASTERS STUDENT COMPOSITION 2008-2009


US Citizens & Permanent Residents Hispanics of any race* White African American Native American/Pacific Islander Asian American Mixed Other/Don't Know Male 3 19 0 0 0 1 1 Female 2 6 1 0 2 0 0 Total 5 25 1 0 2 1 1

Director Medina County Planning and Assistant Lecturer. MA, University of Akron (2000). Specializations: Regional Planning, Cultural Geography. (330) 972-2490 ptheken@medinaco.org

OTHER AFFILIATED FACULTY


Linda Barrett
Associate Professor. PhD, Michigan State University (1995). Specializations: Soils, Biogeography, Geographic Information Systems.

(330) 972-6120

barrett@uakron.edu

Manager, Geographic Information Science Research. PhD, Kent State University (2008). Specializations: GIS Programming and Customization, Spatial Analysis.

Kevin Butler

(330) 972-7621

butler@uakron.edu

Meera Chatterjee

Visiting Assistant Professor. PhD, Delhi University (1999). Specializations: Physical Geography, Economic Geography, Asia

(330) 972-8309

meera@uakron.edu

Non-US Citizens/NonPermanent Residents Total Students

Shanon Donnelly

7 28

3 12

10 40

Visiting Assistant Professor. PhD, Indiana University (2009). Specializations: Land Use and Land Cover Change, Geographic Information Systems.

(330) 972-8037

sd51@uakron.edu

*Do not double count Hispanics; Hispanics also appear in the racial categories below. ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 141

Professor. PhD, Durham (UK) (1983). Specializations: Political Geography, Middle East.

Ghazi Walid Falah

(330) 972-8831

falah@uakron.edu

Deborah King

Instructor. MA, University of Georgia (1977). Specializations: Maps and Map Reading, Cartography.

(330) 972-2394

dpking@uakron.edu

Charles Monroe

Professor, Associate Dean of College of Arts and Sciences, and Interim Chair of Department Geography and Planning. PhD, Pennsylvania State University (1974). Specializations: Quantitative Methods, Transportation, Economic Geography.

(330) 972-8033

monroe@uakron.edu

Jon Moore

Assistant Professor. PhD. Geography: The Ohio State University (2003). Specializations: Economic Development, Urban Governance.

(330) 972-6757

jmoore1@uakron.edu

Page 142 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

UNIVERSITY OF ARIZONA
Planning Graduate Program
P.O. Box 210075 Tucson, Arizona 85721-0075 Phone (520) 621-1004 Fax (520) 626-6448 planning@u.arizona.edu www.planning.arizona.edu/ Dr. Laura Huntoon, Program Coordinator Phone (520) 626-1151 E-mail: huntoon@u.arizona.edu

MA/MS PAB

ACSP Member: Full

MASTERS GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

Hours of Core ...........................................................................................19 Hours of Studio or Practice Related Courses .............................................7 Hours of Restricted Electives .....................................................................0 Hours of Unrestricted Electives ................................................................15 Other .........................................................................................................12 Total Required Hours in Planning Program .............................................49 Exams or Written Requirements: .........Optional Thesis or Masters Report

TOTAL MASTERS STUDENT COMPOSITION 2008-2009 US Citizens & Permanent Residents


Hispanics* Of any Race White African American Native American/ Pacific Islander Asian American Mixed Other / Dont know

Male 4 17 2 0 0 0 0 1 24

Female 3 10 0 2 1 0 0 0 16

Total 7 27 2 2 1 0 0 1

PROGRAM INFORMATION
GRADUATE DEADLINES, TUITION AND FEES
Admission Deadline: Domestic Students ......................... Feb 1, Apr 1, June 1 (Fall) Nov 1 (Spring) Financial Aid Deadline 2009-10 .................................................................February 1 In-State Tuition and Fees: ........................................................... $3,823 per semester Out-of-State Tuition and Fees: .............................................$11,278.56 per semester Application Fee ......................................................................................................$65 Additional Fees: .................................................Professional Fees, $1,400 Full time, $700 part time per semester

Annual Student Enrollment Applied


Masters 31 32

Accepted
26 26

Enrolled
18 11

07/08 08/09 07/08 08/09 07/08 08/09

Non-US Citizens Non- Permanent Residents

MASTERS DEGREE
Master of Planning
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail Debi Romero (520) 621-1004 dab@email.arizona.edu

Total Students

40

*Do not double count Hispanics; Hispanics also appear in the racial categories below.

PLANNING FACULTY
Jason Alexander Hayter
Visiting Assistant Professor in the School of Landscape Architecture and Planning at the University of Arizona. He holds a Bachelor of Arts (Honors) in History and Government from The University of Texas at Austin, a Master of Community and Regional Planning from the University of Oregon, and is currently a doctoral candidate in the Department of City and Regional Planning at the University of California, Berkeley. His areas of research interest include urban design, environmental planning, cultural landscape studies, and local governance with a special focus on the physical, functional, and cultural interactions between the built and natural environment.

Year Initiated: 1961 PAB Accredited Degrees Granted through 5/20/09...........................................................495 Degrees Granted from 8/31/08 to 5/31/09 ................................................22

MASTERS ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS


University Admission Policy: Minimum Undergraduate GPA: Minimum GRE: Minimum TOEFL Departmental Requirement:

$65 Application Fee 3.0 University; 3.1 Department 1200 with 3 or better 550 University; 573 Department 3 units of undergraduate statistics.

ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 143

Associate Professor. Harvard AB, University of Pennsylvania, MA, Ph.D., (1991). Specializations: International Development and Planning, Comparative International Perspectives, Migration, Quantitative Methods, Social Equity.

Laura Huntoon

AICP

Associate Professor. University of New Mexico, BA and MPA and Ph.D. (1971) University of Michigan. Specializations: Environmental Planning, Impact Assessment, Natural Resource Planning, Political Economy.

Michael Bradley

(520) 621-3865

mdb@hwr.arizona.edu

(520) 626-1151

huntoon@email.arizona.edu

Frank Cassidy

Iris Patten

Visiting Assistant Professor; Master of Urban and Regional Planning, 2007, University of Florida, Ph.D. in Urban and Regional Planning, 2010, University of Florida. Specializes in land use analysis and scenario modeling, geographic information systems, land use conflict, and international planning. Current research includes understanding the connection between land use and economic growth, the impacts to growth and land use suitability after regional and local events (i.e. transit and changes in growth policy) occur, and how innovative industries affect land use suitability and future growth patterns. Research has been funded by the US Environmental Protection Agency, state and regional agencies and organizations. Member of the planning professional associations (American Planning Association and Florida Planning Association) and academic planning associations (American Collegiate Schools of Planning ACSP).

Professional/Adjunct. University of Arizona, BA and JD (1982) Specializations: Land Use Law.

(520) 682-3401

fcassidy@marana.com

Arlan Colton FAICP Professional/Director, Pima County Planning and Zoning. University of Arizona, MS (1977). Specializations: Land Use/ Growth Management, Planning Process, Land Use Law and Policy. (520) 740-6800 Sharon Megdal
Director, Water Resources Research Center. Professor and Specialist, Department of Agricultural and Resource Economics. MA and PhD, Princeton University, A.B., Douglass College of Rutgers University. State and regional water policy and management.

(520) 621-1004

(520) 792-9591 ext.21

smegdal@cals.arizona.edu

Gary Pivo

Professor. University of California, Irvine, BA; MRP, Cornell University; Ph.D., University of California, Berkeley (1987). Specializations: Infrastructure/Public Services, Land Use/Growth Management, Metropolitan Planning, Regional Planning.

William Patrick O'Brien

(520) 621-9597

gpivo@email.arizona.edu

Intermountain Regional Desert Southwest Ecosystem Study Unit of the National Park Service; PhD., 1994 University of Colorado, Boulder. Specializations: Cultural Resource Conservation, Historic Preservation Planning, and Historic Research.

Sandra Rosenbloom

(520) 621-9922

obrienw@email.arizona.edu

Professor. University of California, Los Angeles, AB, MPA, and Ph.D. Specializations: Transportation Planning, Gender and Aging Issues, Infrastructure Finance.

Emily Nottingham

(520) 626-2821

rosenblo@email.arizona.edu ASLA, FCELA, APA

Ronald Stoltz

School of Landscape Architecture and Planning, The University of Arizona. Ron Stoltz is Professor and Director of the School of Landscape Architecture and Planning and is the Associate Dean of the College of Architecture and Landscape Architecture at the University of Arizona. Ron is a member of the LAAB Roster of Visiting Evaluators and has chaired many accreditation visits throughout the United States. He is the recipient of numerous national and international teaching and educational leadership awards including being a 3M Canada Teaching Fellow, a Fellow of the Council of Educators in Landscape Architecture and the 2008-2009 Outstanding Arizona Landscape Architect.

Ph.D., Mass Communications, Indiana University 1978. Specializations: Housing and Community Development; Planning, Funding, Development and Operation of Housing, Human Services and Community Development Programs; Collaborative, Self-sustaining Community Initiatives; Public Housing Authorities, Development of for-sale and Rental Housing, Mixed-income and Mixed-use Communities.

Community Planner, Tumamoc: People & Habitats. University of Arizona, MS (2005). Specializations: Regional Planning, Conservation & Natural Resources, Community Outreach & Food Systems Planning.

Pamela J. Pelletier

Charles Corky Poster

(520) 626-7730

rstoltz@u.arizona.edu

Professor. Harvard College BA and MArch (1973) Harvard Graduate School of Design. Specializations: Citizen Participation, Housing and Neighborhood, Community Development, Urban Design.

AICP

(520) 621-1722

cposter@email.arizona.edu

OTHER AFFILIATED FACULTY


Professional/Deputy Director. Pima County Natural Resources, Parks and Recreation. University of Alabama School of Law, JD. University of Arizona, Ph.D. Specializations: Conservation, Natural Resources, Sustainability, Parks and Recreation. Her outstanding work leading the Pima County Sonoran Desert Conservation Plan has been recognized by the American Planning Association and the Ahwahnee Award in Regional Initiatives.

Maeveen Behan JD

Rebecca Ruopp

Professional/Affiliate. BA, Franconia College; M.A., Tufts University . Specializations: Environmental Planning, Commercial and Residential Infill, and Public Participation.

Rebecca.Ruopp@tucsonaz.gov

(520) 877-6000

Page 144 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

Jack Siry

Masters in Urban Planning, University of Arizona, 1974. Specializations: Community Development, Economic Development, Housing, Municipal Housing Trust Fund, Human Services, Planning Process and Administration, Long Range Strategic Planning, Redevelopment and Neighborhood Planning, Rezoning and Code Revision. Professor/Adjunct. BS and MA, California State University - Haywood; Ph.D., University of California at Santa Barbara. Specializations: Biogeography; Fire, Remote Sensing; Computer Cartography, GIS.

Stephen R. Yool

FYI
The Planning Graduate Program at the University of Arizona offers a Master of Science in Planning intended for students interested in careers creating healthy, equitable, and livable communities. This two year program offers concentrations in Environmental/Healthy Cities, International/Borderlands, and Land Use and Community Development. In addition to chosen area of concentration, students participate in an engaging core curriculum designed around the many social, political, economic, and cultural factors currently influencing the built environment. With a third of the coursework dedicated to electives, students have the flexibility to create a program tailored to their individual interests. The School of Landscape Architecture and Planning is committed to advancing sustainable design and planning for arid regions. Applied research projects, headed by faculty members, play a vital role in Arizona while our academic research has an international, national and local impact. Many student outreach projects have won awards from the Arizona Planning Association and the American Institute of Certified Planners. Projects, mentors, and the required internships allow students to step confidently into the profession. The Planning Graduate Program addresses the issues of growth experienced in the Southwestern United States, including expanding rural residential land use. Because of the Program's unique location, students get hands-on experience in border and tribal planning issues and the environmental problems associated with dry climates and urban sprawl. The Planning Graduate Program has a number of Returning Peace Corps Fellows who are able to continue their work with under-privileged neighborhoods, communities and non-profit organizations around Tucson and southeastern Arizona.

ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 145

UNIVERSITY OF BRITISH COLUMBIA


School of Community & Regional Planning
Lasserre Building, 6333 Memorial Road, Room 433 Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada, V6T 1Z2 Phone: (604) 822-3276 Fax: (604) 822-3787 Email: phdscarp@interchange.ubc.ca www.scarp.ubc.ca Dr. Penelope Gurstein, Director Phone: (604) 822-6065 Email: gurstein@interchange.ubc.ca
University Admission Policy:

MA/MS PAB

ACSP Member: Full

MASTERS ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS


Minimum Undergraduate GPA: Minimum GRE: Minimum TOEFL: IBT: Departmental Requirement:

Must hold at least a 4-year Bachelors degree from an accredited institution. 76% or B+ Average Not Required 100 (no component test less than 26) Must hold at least a 4-year Bachelors degree from an accredited institution.

MASTERS GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

Credits of Core Coursework: ...................................................................12 Credits of Restricted Electives: ...............................................................12 Thesis, Exams, or Final Project Credits: Supervised Research Project ...............................................................(6), or Thesis .............................................................................................(12) Total Required Credits in Planning Program: .........................................60

PROGRAM INFORMATION
GRADUATE DEADLINES, TUITION AND FEES
Admission Deadline 2010-2011: ....................................................December 1, 2010 Domestic Student Tuition: ............................................................................ $4017.94 International Student Tuition: ...................................................................... $7200.00 Domestic Student Application Fee: ...................................................................... $90 International Student Application Fee: ............................................................... $150

TOTAL MASTERS STUDENT COMPOSITION 2008-2009


Ethnic Descent Canadian (Including Permanent Residents African/Black Chinese European/White Filipino Japanese Latin America Middle East/North African/ Arab South Asian Southeast Asian Foreign (including US Citizens) Total Male Female Total

Annual Student Enrollment Applied


Masters 171 174

Admitted
60 47

Enrolled
34 34

08/09 09/10 08/09 09/10 08/09 09/10

Master of Arts (Planning) Master of Science (Planning)


Contact Person: Phone: E-mail

MASTERS DEGREE

1 0 18 1 0 1 2 1 0 11 35

1 2 30 0 1 0 0 2 2 15 53

2 2 48 1 1 1 2 3 2 26 88

Patti Toporowski (604) 822-4422 ptop@interchange.ubc.ca

Year Initiated: 1953 PAB Accredited Degrees Granted through 8/31/09.........................................................1110 Degrees Granted from 9/1/08 to 8/31/09..................................................21

Masters Specializations
Comparative Development Planning Community Development and Social Planning Disaster and Risk Management Planning Ecological and Natural Resources Planning Urban Design and Transportation Planning Urban Development Planning

DOCTORAL DEGREE
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail Sherli Mah (604) 822-3276 phdscarp@interchange.ubc.ca

Year Initiated: 1968 PAB Accredited Degrees Granted through 8/31/09.............................................................55 Degrees Granted from 9/1/08 to 8/31/09 ....................................................1

Page 146 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

DOCTORAL ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS


University Admission Policy: Minimum GRE: Minimum TOEFL: IBT: Departmental Requirement:

Must hold a Masters degree from an accredited institution. Strongly Recommended 600 Must hold a Masters degree from an accredited institution.

Associate Professor & Chair, Masters Program. M.A. (M.I.T.), M.Arch, M.C.P., Ph.D. (U.C. Berkeley). Specializations: International Development Comparative Urbanization.

Michael Leaf

(604) 822-6213

leaf@interchange.ubc.ca

PLANNING FACULTY
Leonora Angeles
Associate Professor. B.A., M.A. (Philippines) Ph.D. (Queen's). Specializations: International and Community Development

Professor & Associate Director. B.A. (Minnesota), M.A. (SFU), Ph.D. (Carnegie Mellon). Specializations: Decision Analysis, Environmental Policy and Resource Management.

Timothy McDaniels

(604) 822-9288

timmcd@interchange.ubc.ca

(604) 822-9312

angeles@interchange.ubc.ca

Larry Beasley

Distinguished Practice Professor. C.M., B.A. (Geography and Political Science), M.A. (Planning), Hon. L.L.D. (Simon Fraser U.), F.C.I.P. Specializations: City Planning, Urban Design, Heritage Conservation.

Professor. B.Sc., Ph.D. (University of Toronto), F.R.S.C. Specializations: Ecological Systems, Ecological Economics, Human Ecology, Policy for Sustainable Development.

William Rees

(604) 822-2937

wrees@interchange.ubc.ca

(604) 687-5108

larrybeasley@shaw.ca

Professor Emeritus. B.A. (Geography, U. of Toronto), M.A. (Sociology, U. of Alberta). Specializations: Social Policy, Community and Regional Development.

Peter Boothroyd

Professor & Chair of PhD Program. BA (Hons), University of Adelaide (1970). PhD, Australian National University (1974), MFA (screenwriting) University of California at Los Angeles (1989). Specializations: Urban Planning and Social Policy.

Leonie Sandercock

(604) 822-0225

leonies@interchange.ubc.ca

(604) 822-4155

peterb@interchange.ubc.ca

Stephanie E. Chang

Maged Senbel

Associate Professor. B.S.E. (Princeton), M.S. (Cornell), Ph.D. (Cornell). Canada Research Chair in Disaster Management and Urban Sustainability. Specializations: Disaster and Risk Management

Assistant Professor. B.Arch. (University of Oregon), M.Arch. (McGill University), M.Sc. (Planning), Ph.D. (Planning) (U.B.C.). Specializations: Urban Design.

(604) 822-9158

senbel@interchange.ubc.ca

(604) 827-5054

sechang@interchange.ubc.ca

Anthony H.J. Dorcey

Mark Stevens

Professor. M.A. (Economic Science) (Aberdeen), M.Sc. (Regional Planning) (Wisconsin), F.C.I.P. Specializations: Water Resources Management, Natural Resources Policy, Dispute Resolution, Governance.

Assistant Professor. B.A. (University of Oregon), MCRP, (Planning, University of Oregon), PhD, (Planning, University of North Carolina). Specializations: Environmental & Land Use Planning.

(604) 822-5725

dorcey@interchange.ubc.ca

(604) 822-1602

xstevens@interchange.ubc.ca

Associate Professor. B.L.Arch., M.Sc., PhD. (Washington). J. Armand Bombardier Chair in Sustainable Transportation. Specializations: Transportation Infrastructure.

Lawrence Frank

OTHER AFFILIATED FACULTY


Bill Buholzer
Adjunct Professor. Specializations: Land Use Law.

(604) 822-5387

dfrank@interchange.ubc.ca

wbulholzer@gmail.com

John Friedmann

Honorary Professor. Specializations: Planning Theory, International Development.

Joyce Drohan

Adjunct Professor. Specializations: Urban Design

(604) 822-0107

jrpf@interchange.ubc.ca

jdrohan@jamescheng.com

Professor and Director. B.A. (York), B.Arch. (U.B.C.), M.Arch., Ph.D. (U.C. Berkeley). Specializations: Social Development, Community-based Research.

Penelope Gurstein

Margaret Eberle

Adjunct Professor. Specializations: Affordable Housing.

m_eberle@telus.net

(604) 822-6065

gurstein@interchange.ubc.ca

Nathan Edelson

Tom Hutton

Adjunct Professor. Specializations: Community Economic Development.

Professor, Associate Director of SCARP for CHS. B.A. (Geography, U.B.C.), D.Phil. (Geography, Oxford University). Specializations: Metropolitan Structural Change, Pacific Rim Urban Development, Inner City Change and Planning Innovation.

njedelson@shaw.ca

Jonathan Frantz

Adjunct Professor. Specializations: Multimedia.

(604) 822-4818

thutton@interchange.ubc.ca

jon@eartothegroundplanning.com

ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 147

Michael Gordon

Adjunct Professor. Specializations: Housing.

michael_gordon@city.vancouver.bc.ca

FYI
The School of Community and Regional Planning is located at the naturally scenic UBC campus in beautiful Vancouver, British Columbia. SCARP's mission is to advance the transition to sustainability through excellence in integrated policy and planning research, professional education and community service. The School of Community and Regional Planning at UBC was the first dedicated planning school in Canada. With more than five decades of experience in graduate planning education and research, SCARP pioneered the integrated approach to planning for development. The Canadian Institute of Planners and the American Institute of Certified Planners has long recognized our Masters and Ph.D. degrees. As one of the largest graduate planning programs in Canada, SCARP has the equivalent of 15 full-time faculty, 100 students enrolled, and a teaching program characterized at once by diversity and integration. Fortunately, we are also small enough that students and faculty are able to enjoy regular one-on-one contact.

Bill Gushue

Adjunct Professor. Specializations: Geographical Information Systems.

bgushue@cbainc.bc.ca

Scot Hein

Adjunct Professor. Specializations: Urban Design

scot.hein@vancouver.ca

Ann McAfee

Adjunct Professor. Specializations: Strategic Planning.

amcafee@shaw.ca

Norma-Jean McLaren

Adjunct Professor. Specializations: Social Planning Policy.

njmclaren@shaw.ca

Adjunct Professor. Specializations: Urban Food Systems Policy & Planning.

Wendy Mendes

wendy.mendes@utoronto.ca

Jon O'Riordan

Adjunct Professor. Specializations: Sustainable Resource Management.

joriorda@shaw.ca

William Trousdale

Adjunct Professor. Specializations: Community Economic Development.

william@ecoplan.ca

Adjunct Professor. Specializations: Economic Impact and Evaluation for Planning.

Eric Vance

ecvance@shaw.ca

Jay Wollenberg

Adjunct Professor. Specializations: Real Property Development.

jay@coriolis.ca

Adjunct Professor. Specializations: Public Law in the Context of Land Use Control.

Raymond Young

reyoung@shaw.ca

Page 148 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA BERKELEY


Department of City and Regional Planning
228 Wurster Hall, #1850 Berkeley, California 94720-1850 Phone (510) 642-3256 Fax (510) 642-1641 http://www.dcrp.ced.berkeley.edu Karen Christensen, Department Chair Phone: (510) 642-3256 E-mail: dcrpchair@berkeley.edu

BA/BS PAB

MA/MS PAB PAB

Ph.D.

ACSP Member: FULL

UNDERGRADUATE ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS


History/Social Science (2 yrs); English (4 yrs); Math (3 yrs); Laboratory Science (2 yrs); Language other than English (2 yrs); Visual and Performing Arts (1 yr); College Prep Electives (1 yr). Minimum GPA: CA resident: 3.0 GPA; non-resident, 3.4 GPA. Minimum SAT or ACT Scores: Must be taken as well as three SAT II Subject Tests. Departmental/University Requirement:

UNDERGRADUATE GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

PROGRAM INFORMATION
Admission deadline: ....................................................................November 20, 2009 Financial Aid Deadline: ....................................................................... March 2, 2010 In-state Tuition and Fees: ............................................................................$4,874.25 Out-of-State Tuition and Fees: ..................................................................$16,208.75 Application Fee: .....................................................................$60, $70 (International)

UNDERGRADUATE DEADLINES, TUITION AND FEES

Hours of Core .......................................................................................... 20 CED Requirement .................................................................................... 47 Major Requirement ........................................................................... 9 to 12 External Breadth Requirement ......................................................... 9 to 12 General Electives ..........................................................................32 to 35+ Total Required Hours In Planning Program ................................... 120-126 Total Required Hours to Graduate from University ....................... 120-130 Thesis or Final Product ............................................................ Not required

FINANCIAL AID INFORMATION


Very Limited; for continuing students only.

Admissions Deadline: ................................................................... December 7, 2009 Financial Aid Deadline: ................................................................ December 7, 2009 In-state Tuition and Fees: ...........................................................................$5,616.25 Out of State Tuition and Fees: ..................................................................$13,134.25 Application Fee: ......U.S./ Domestic Applicants: $70 / International Applicants: $90

GRADUATE DEADLINES, TUITION AND FEES

MASTERS DEGREE
Master of City Planning
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail Student Affairs Officer (510) 643-9440 dcrpgrad@berkeley.edu

Annual Student Enrollment Applied Accepted


Undergraduate Masters Doctoral 100 297 62 118 400 76 19 76 10 16 66 14

Enrolled
13 42 5 9 40 13

Year Initiated: 1948 PAB Accredited Degrees Granted through Sp 2009 .......................................................1935 Degrees Granted from 9/1/08 to 8/31/08 ..................................................48

08/09 09/10 08/09 09/10 08/09 09/10

UNDERGRADUATE DEGREE
BA in Urban Studies
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail Pat Ramirez (510) 642-1633 pramirez@berkeley.edu

Transportation Policy and Planning Housing, Community, and Economic Development Land Use Planning Environmental Planning & Policy Urban Design International & Comparative Planning Geographical Information Systems (GIS) Metropolitan/ Regional Planning

Masters Specializations

Year initiated: 2002 Degrees Granted through 8/31/06..............................................................85 Degrees Granted from 9/1/05 to 8/31/06................................................NA

Undergraduate Specializations
Urban Studies and Planning, Environmental Design

ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 149

MASTERS ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS


University Admission Policy:

Bachelors degree from an accredited university. Minimum Undergraduate GPA: 3.0 Minimum GRE: No minimum score requirement Minimum TOEFL 570 (paper), 230 (CBT), 68 (iBT). Ranking in Undergraduate Class: Not Required Departmental Requirement: Bachelors degree from an accredited university. Coursework in microeconomics and statistics preferred but not required; planning-related work experience preferred but not required.

DOCTORAL DEGREE
Planning
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail Student Affairs Officer (510) 643-9440 dcrpgrad@berkeley.edu

Year initiated 1968 Degrees Granted through 8/31/2009......................................................208 Degrees Granted from 9/1/2008 to 8/30/2006 ...........................................6 Dissertations Granted from 9/1/2002 to 8/31/2008 1. Computers and the Promise of Development 2. Deliberate Improvisation: The Governance of Highway Franchises in Santiago, Chile 1990-2005 3. The Dark Side of Silicon Valley: Analyzing the Effectiveness of Water Quality Regulation In the Context of the Semi-conductor Industry 4. Costs of Suburbanization: Comparative Effects of Peri-Urban Residential Relocation on Household Welfare Measures in Shanghai 5. Latino Perspectives and Community Environment: Encouraging Physical Activity for Better Health 6. Towards a Living Wage in the New Economy: The Politics and Economics of Building Labor Market Institutions at the Urban Scale

Hours of Core ...........................................................................................18 Hours of Studio or Practice Related Courses ......................................... 4-5 Hours of Restricted Electives ............................................................. 10-17 Hours of Unrestricted Electives ............................................................ 6-17 Hours for final project ......3-6Total Required Hours in Planning Program: 48 minimum Exam,Thesis or Final Product ...................... Students may choose to write professional report, client report, or thesis

MASTERS GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

TOTAL MASTERS STUDENT COMPOSITION 2009-2010 US Citizens & Permanent Residents


Hispanics* Of any Race White African American Native American/ Pacific Islander Asian American Mixed Other / Dont know Non-US Citizens Non- Permanent Residents

Male 2 28 0 0 1 4 3 6 44

Female 2 37 2 2 7 6 7 7 63

Total 4 65 2 2 18 10 10 13 107

Transportation, Community Development, Regional Economic Development, Housing, International Planning, Urban Design, Environmental Planning, Land Use, Infrastructure DOCTORAL ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS
University Admission Policy: Minimum GPA: Minimum GRE: Minimum TOEFL: Departmental Requirement:

Doctoral Specializations

None. 3.0 No minimum score required. 570 (paper); 230 (CBT); 68 (IBT) Prefers Masters degree in planning or planning-related field.

DOCTORAL GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

Total Students

*Do not double count Hispanics; Hispanics also appear in the racial categories below.

Hours of Core .............................................................................................0 Hours of Studio or Practice Related Courses .............................................0 Hours of Restricted Electives .....................................................................0 Hours of Unrestricted Electives ..................................................................0 Other ...........................................................................................................0 Total Hours .......................48 units and 2 years of full-time student status Exam, Thesis, or Final Product: .............. Planning Theory (2 courses) and Methods (3-4 courses) to be determined by the demands of dissertation research. Student must also complete Inside and Outside field examinations, an oral qualifying exam, and filing of dissertation. Indicators of academic progress include satisfactory completion of exams and annual review.

FINANCIAL AID INFORMATION

Top Ph.D. applicants are nominated for Multi-Year University Fellowships and departmental awards.

Page 150 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

Approximately, 10 Graduate Student Instructors, 25% time, paying virtually all in-state fees plus health insurance. Research positions at 25% time carry the same remission as that for GSIs. Availability of positions depends on faculty grants. Many students also hold internships off campus. Eligibility Criteria: Students apply directly to instructor for positions when they are announced. Requires 3.0 GPA and no more than 2 incompletes.

Robert Cervero

Professor. AB, University of Noth Carolina (1973); MS, Georgia Institute of Technology; Ph.D., UCLA (1980). Specializations: Computer Applications, Infrastructure/Public Services, International Development and Planning. http://www-dcrp.ced.berkeley.edu/Cervero/

(510) 642-1695

robertc@berkeley.edu

Karen Chapple

TOTAL DOCTORAL STUDENT COMPOSITION 2009-2010 US Citizens & Permanent Residents


Hispanics* Of any Race White African American Native American/ Pacific Islander Asian American Mixed Other / Dont know Non-US Citizens Non- Permanent Residents

Associate Professor. BA, Columbia University (1989); MSCRP, Pratt Institute (1994); Ph.D., UC Berkeley (2000). Specializations: Local Economic Development, Poverty, Metropolitan Planning. http://socrates. berkeley.edu/~profkdc/Index.htm

(510) 642-1868

chapple@berkeley.edu

Male 5 14 0 0 4 0 1 10 34

Female 2 9 0 0 2 2 2 4 21

Total 7 21 0 0 6 2 3 14

Assistant Professor. BA, University of California, Berkeley (1991); Master in Public Policy, Harvard University (1997); Ph.D., UCLA (2005). Specializations: Transportation, Land Use, Economic Development, Smart Growth.

Daniel G. Chatman

dgc@berkeley.edu

Karen Christensen

Associate Professor. BA, Ratcliffe College (1966); MCP (1977) and Ph.D. (1980), University of California, Berkeley. Specializations: Citizen Participation, Community Development, Housing and Neighborhood Planning. www.dcrp.ced.berkeley.edu

(510) 642-3111

kchriste@berkeley.edu

Jason Corburn

Associate Professor. MCP and Ph.D., Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Specializations: Environmental Policy & Planning; Environmental Health; Urban Environmental Justice; Social & Spatial Epidemiology; Health Impact Assessment; Science & Technology Studies; Social Theory; Environmental Dispute Resolution.

Michael Dear

Total Students

55

Professor. Ph.D., University of Pennsylvania. Specializations: Urban Geography, Housing and Neighborhood Planning, Social Policy, Political Economy and Planning Theory.

m.dear@berkeley.edu

*Do not double count Hispanics; Hispanics also appear in the racial categories below.

PLANNING FACULTY
Professor. M.S., MIT (1981); Ph.D., University of California, Berkeley (1988). Specializations: Historic Preservation, Housing and Neighborhood Planning, International Development and Planning. www.dcrp.ced.berkeley.edu

Elizabeth Deakin

Nezar AlSayyad

Professor. B.S. and M.S., Massachusetts Institute of Technology; J.D., Boston College. Specializations: Environmental Planning, Land Use/ Growth Management, Metropolitan/Regional Planning, Natural Resource Planning, Planning Law. www.dcrp.ced.berkeley.edu

(510) 642-47497

edeakin@berkeley.edu

(510) 642-4852

nezar@berkeley.edu

David Dowall

Peter Bosselmann

Professor. M.Arch., UCLA (1976); Diploma in Architecture, Karlsruhe University, Germany (1973). Specializations: Citizen Participation, Computer Applications, Environmental Planning, Environmental Psychology. www.dcrp.ced.berkeley.edu

Professor. B.S., University of Maryland (1971); MURP (1974) and Ph.D. (1975), University of Colorado. Specializations: Economic Development Planning, Housing and Neighborhood Planning, Infrastructure/Public Services, International Development and Planning, Metropolitan/Regional Planning.

(510) 642-6579

dowall@berkeley.edu

(510) 642-6579

pbossel@berkeley.edu

ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 151

Malo Andr Hutson

Assistant Professor. MCP, University of California, Berkeley; Ph.D. Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Specializations: Urban Policy and Politics; The role of public/private institutions in influencing urban development

Jennifer Wolch

Professor. Ph.D., Princeton University (1978). Specializations: Citizen Participation, Environmental Planning, Gender Studies and Planning, Infrastructure/Public Services.

m.hutson@berkeley.edu

wolch@berkeley.edu

Judith Innes

Professor. BA, Radcliffe College (1963); Ph.D., Massachusetts Institute of Technology (1973). Specializations: Citizen Participation, Community Development, Environmental Planning, Land Use/Growth Management, Negotiation and Conflict Management. www.dcrp.ced.berkeley.edu

OTHER AFFILIATED FACULTY


Arthur Blaustein
Adjunct Professor. MA, Columbia University (1962). Specializations: Community Development, Economic Development PLanning, Citizen Participation/Community Organization. www.dcrp.ced.berkeley.edu

(510) 642-3256

jinnes@berkeley.edu

Associate Professor. BA, MLA/MCP and Ph.D., University of California, Berkeley (1999). Specializations: Urban Design Theory, History of Urban Design and Urban Form, Public Space Design, and Environmental Behavior Research, Street Design. http://www-dcrp.ced.berkeley.edu/Faculty/Macdonald/

Elizabeth Macdonald

(510) 642-3256

Fred Etzel

(510) 643-3765

emacdon@berkeley.edu

Adjunct Associate Professor. BA, Colgate University (1968); MCP, UC Berkeley, J.D., Hastings College of Law (1978). (510) 642-3256 fetzel@landuseprof.com

AICP

John Radke

Associate Professor. BA (1975) and MA (1977), Wilfred Laurier; Ph.D., University of British Columbia (1983). Specializations: Computer Applications, Environmental Planning, Geographic Information Systems, Natural Resource Planning, Quantitative Methods. http://geography.berkeley.edu/people history/faculty/j_radke.html

Michael Smith-Heimer

Professor Adjunct. Ph.D., University of California, Berkeley. Specializations: Real Estate Development, Urban and Regional Economics, Housing and Neighborhood Development. www.dcrp.ced.berkeley.edu

(510) 643-5995

ratt@berkeley.edu

(510) 642-3256

mash2@ix.netcom.com

Ananya Roy

Professor. BA, Mills College (1992); MCP (1994) and Ph.D. (1999), University of California, Berkeley. http://www-dcrp.ced.berkeley.edu/facbios/Roy/ananya_roy_pagePR.htm

FYI
Concurrent Masters Degrees with the Following Departments are Offered: o International and Area Studies to list of Concurrent Masters Degrees. o Architecture o Landscape Architecture and Environmental Planning o Civil Engineering o Public Health o Law

(510) 642-4938

ananya@berkeley.edu

AnnaLee Saxenian

Professor. BA, Williams College (1976); MCP, UC Berkeley (1980); Ph.D., Massachusetts Institute of Technology (1989). Specializations: Economic Development Planning, International Development and Planning, Metropolitan/Regional Planning, Political Economy, Regional Economics. www.dcro.ced.berkeley.edu

(510) 642-3256

anno@ischool.berkeley.edu FAICP

Professor. BA (1962) and B.Arch. (1964), University if Minnesota; MCP (1967) and Ph.D. (1970), MIT. Specializations: Environmental Planning, Environmental Psychology, Historic Preservation, Landscape/Site Design, Physical Planning/Urban Design, Planning Practice. www.dcrp.ced.berkeley.edu

Michael Southworth

(480) 965-7167

msouthw@berkeley.edu

Paul Waddell

Professor. M.S. (1981) and Ph.D. (1989), University of Texas, Dallas. Specializations: Urban Economics, Economic Geography, Land Use, Transportation, Urban Simulation Modeling.

waddell@berkeley.edu

Page 152 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA IRVINE


Department of Planning, Policy, and Design
202 Social Ecology I Irvine, California 92697-7075 Phone (949) 824-0563 Fax (949) 824-8566 ppd@uci.edu http://socialecology.uci.edu/ppd David Feldman, Department Chair Phone (949) 824-4384 E-mail: David.Feldman@uci.edu

BA/BS PAB

MA/MS PAB PAB

Ph.D.

ACSP Member: FULL

Housing and Community Development, Transportation, Environmental Planning, Urban Security, Economic Development, Land Use/Growth Management, Public Management, Urban Design, Health Promotion
MASTERS ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS
University Admission Policy: Minimum Undergraduate GPA: Minimum GRE: Minimum TOEFL Ranking in Undergraduate Class: Departmental Requirement:

Areas of Study

PROGRAM INFORMATION
Admission Deadline 2009-10 .......................................................... January 15, 2010 Financial Aid Deadline 2009-10 ...................................................... January 15, 2010 In-State Tuition and Fees: .............................................................. $3,133 per quarter Out-of-State Tuition and Fees: ................................................... $10,690 per quarter Application Fee ......................................................................................................$40 Additional Fees: .................................................................................................. None

UNDERGRADUATE DEADLINES, TUITION AND FEES

Must hold Bachelors degree from an accredited institution 3.0 Verbal plus quantitative greater than 1100 recommended Only required for non-native English speakers ((550 for paper-based test, and 213 for the computer-based test). Not Required Three letters of recommendation, statement of purpose, transcripts.

Admission Deadline 2009-10 for Masters program .........................January 15, 2010 Admission Deadline 2009-10 for Ph.D program.............................January 15, 2010 Financial Aid Deadline 2009-10 for Masters program.....................January 15, 2010 Financial Aid Deadline 2009-10 for Ph.D Program .........................January 15, 2010 In-State Tuition and Fees: ........................................................ $3,168.50 per quarter Out-of-State Tuition and Fees: ................................................ $8,180.50 per quarter Application Fee ......................................................................................................$70 Additional Fees: ......................Graduate Student Health Insurance: $732 per quarter

GRADUATE DEADLINES, TUITION AND FEES

MASTERS GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

Annual Student Enrollment


Applied Accepted Enrolled 08/09 09/10 08/09 09/10 08/09 09/10

Hours of Core ...........................................................................................32 Hours of Studio or Practice Related Courses .............................................8 Hours of Restricted Electives .....................................................................0 Hours of Unrestricted Electives ................................................................32 Total Required Hours in Planning Program .............................................72 Exam, Thesis or Final Product: Required Professional Report Analysis of a community planning process or project done in a manner that shows professional judgement and competence.

FINANCIAL AID INFORMATION


Internship:

Masters Doctoral

106 54

174 65

92 15

133 8

34 10

50 5

Department provides assistance in placing students in internships.

Grants and Loans:

MASTERS DEGREE
Master of Urban and Regional Planning
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail Janet Gallagher (949) 824-9849 or (949) 824-0563 ppd@uci.edu
Teaching/Research Assistantships:

Ten to 12 fee fellowships pay from one to three quarters of fees, with some offers paying from one to two quarters of out-of-state tuition and fees. Awards based on merit. Approximately $1,450 per month, with payment of in-state fees and health insurance. Out of state tuition paid by some research assistantships. Availability varies. Contact Department, Awards based on merit.

Year Initiated: 1992 PAB Accredited Degrees Granted through 8/31/09...........................................................270 Degrees Granted from 9/1/08 to 8/31/09 ..................................................37

ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 153

TOTAL MASTERS STUDENT COMPOSITION 2008-2009 US Citizens & Permanent Residents


Hispanics* Of any Race White African American Native American/ Pacific Islander Asian American Mixed Other / Dont know Non-US Citizens Non- Permanent Residents

DOCTORAL ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS


University Admission Policy: Minimum GRE: Departmental Requirement:

Male 5 15 1 0 9 0 0 2 31

Female 4 21 1 0 10 0 0 4 40

Total 9 36 2 0 19 0 0 6 71

Minimum 3.0 GPA. 1100 minimum recommended. Minimum 3.0 GPA. Three letters of recommendation, statement of purpose, transcripts.

DOCTORAL GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

Hours of Core ...........................................................................................24 Hours of Studio or Practice Related Courses .............................................0 Hours of Restricted Electives ...................................................................24 Hours of Unrestricted Electives ................................................................24 Other ...........................................................................................................0 Exam, Thesis or Final Product Comprehensive exams on methods and topical area of specialization in second year.

FINANCIAL AID INFORMATION


Internship: Grants and Loans:

Department provides assistance in placing students in internships. Ten to 12 fee fellowships pay from one to three quarters of fees, with some offers paying three quarters of out-of-state tuition and stipend. Portions of awards renewable for total of four years. Awards based on merit.

Total Students

Teaching/Research Assistantships:

*Do not double count Hispanics; Hispanics also appear in the racial categories below.

Approximately $1,450 per month, with payment of in-state fees and health insurance. Out of state tuition paid by some research assistantships. Awards based on merit.

DOCTORAL DEGREE
Planning, Policy, and Design (formerly Urban & Regional Planning)
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail Janet Gallagher (949) 824-9849 or (949) 824-0563 ppd@uci.edu

TOTAL DOCTORAL STUDENT COMPOSITION 2008-2009 US Citizens & Permanent Residents


Hispanics* Of any Race White African American Native American/ Pacific Islander Asian American Mixed Other / Dont know Non-US Citizens Non- Permanent Residents

Male 0 7 0 0 3 0 0 5

Female 1 15 0 0 1 0 0 4

Total 1 22 0 0 4 0 0 9

Year initiated 1997 Degrees Granted through 8/31/2009........................................................29 Degrees Granted from 9/1/2008 to 8/31/2009 ...........................................3 Recent Dissertations 1. Walking and Urban Form: Modeling and Testing Parental Decisions about Childrens Travel. 2. Exploring Elements of Religious Organizations that Affect Participation and Success in Obtaining Funding from Faith-based Initiatives. 3. Blighted Partnerships: Unsustainable Redevelopment Practices. 4. Metropolitan Quality of Life: The Roles of Labor Markets, Land Markets, and Amenities. 5. Inscribing at the Crossroads of Culture and Crime: Graffiti in Place and on Property in Urban Los Angeles. 6. Transdisciplinary Scientific Collaboration: An Exploration of the Research Process.

Doctoral Specializations Urban and Community Development, Environmental Policy, Design Behavior Research, Health Promotion and Policy
Page 154 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

Total Students

15

21

36

*Do not double count Hispanics; Hispanics also appear in the racial categories below.

PLANNING FACULTY
Victoria Basolo
Associate Professor. Ph.D., University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill. Specializations: Housing and Community Development, Local Economic Development/Redevelopment, Regionalism and Environmental Policy. http://www.seweb.uci.edu/faculty/basolo/

AICP

Professor and Chair: Ph.D., University of Missouri. Specializations: Water Resources Management and Policy, Global Environmental Change, Ethics and the Environment, Adaptive Management and Sustainable Development http://socialecology.uci.edu/faculty/feldmand

David L. Feldman

(949) 824-4384

feldmand@uci.edu

(949) 824-3521

basolo@uci.edu

Victoria Beard

Associate Professor. Ph.D., University of British Columbia. Specializations: Planning in Developing Countries, Community-based Planning, Poverty Reduction, Planning Theory and Population Studies. http://www.seweb.uci.edu/faculty/beard/ (949) 824-6484 vbeard@uci.edu

Professor. Ph.D., Stanford University. Specializations: Organization Theory, Organizational Change, Public Management, Qualitative Research Methods. http://www.seweb.uci.edu/faculty/feldman/

Martha Feldman

(949) 824-4252

feldmanm@uci.edu

Ajay Garde

Professor. Ph.D., Princeton University. Specializations: Transportation Planning, Economic Development, Urban Economics. http://www.seweb. uci.edu/faculty/boarnet/

Marlon Boarnet

Assistant Professor. Ph.D., University of Southern California. Specializations: Urban Design, Urban Form, Sustainable Growth, Physical Planning.

(949) 824-9087

agarde@uci.edu

(949) 824-7695

mgboarne@uci.edu AICP

Helen Ingram

Scott Bollens

Professor. Ph.D., University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Specializations: Urban Ethnic Relations, Growth Policy, Metropolitan Governance, Intergovernmental Planning. http://www.seweb.uci.edu/faculty/bollens/

Professor Emerita. Ph.D., Columbia University. Specializations: Public Policy, Water Resources and Environment, U.S.-Mexico Relations, American Politics. http://www.seweb.uci.edu/faculty/ingram/

(949) 824-1434

hingram@uci.edu

(949) 824-7696

bollens@uci.edu

Douglas Houston

Tim-Allen Bruckner

Assistant Professor. Ph.D., University of California, Los Angeles. Specializations: Transportation, Air Quality, Urban Inequality, Environmental Equity, Spatial Analysis.

Assistant Professor. Ph.D. University of California, Irvine. Specializations: Economic Downturns and Health, Perinatal Epidemiology, Biodemography, Mental Health Policy

(949) 824-0563

houston@uci.edu

(949) 824-0563

tbruck@uci.edu

Raul Lejano

Senior Lecturer (tenured) and Vice Chair. Ph.D., University of California, Berkeley. Specializations: Social Demography, Public Health, Demographic Methods in Planning. http://www.seweb.uci.edu/faculty/ chew/

Kenneth Chew

Associate Professor. Ph.D., D.Env., University of California, Los Angeles. Specializations: Environmental Justice, Risk Assessment, Sustainability Planning. http://www.seweb.uci.edu/faculty/lejano/

(949) 824-9825

lejano@uci.edu

Richard Matthew

(949) 924-6990

chew@uci.edu

Kristen Day

Professor. Ph.D., University if Wisconsin, Milwaukee. Specializations: Urban Design and Behavior, Diversity and Environments, Physical Activity and the Built Environment. http://www.seweb.uci.edu/faculty/ day/

Associate Professor. Ph.D., Princeton University. Specializations: Environmental Change, Conflict and Security, Sustainable Development, Global Governance, Urban Security. http:// www.seweb.uci.edu/faculty/matthew/

(949) 824-4852

rmatthew@uci.edu

Sanjoy Mazumdar

(949) 824-5880

kday@uci.edu

Professor. Ph.D., J.D., University of Michigan. Specializations: Land use and Environmental Law, International Organizations, Conflict Resolution. http://www.seweb.uci.edu/faculty/dimento/

Joseph DiMento

Professor. M.Arch., A.S., M.C.P., Ph.D., MIT. Specializations: Environmental Design, Social and Cultural Aspects of Planning, Ethnic Communities, Qualitative Research Methods. http://www.seweb.uci.edu/ faculty/mazumdar/

(949) 824-5046

mazumdar@uci.edu

(949) 824-5102

jfdiment@uci.edu

Daniel Stokols

Professor. Ph.D., University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Specializations: Health Impacts of Environmental Stressors, Environmental Design and Social Behavior, Health Promotion and Planning. http://www.seweb.uci.edu/faculty/stokols/

(949) 824-5294

dstokols@uci.edu

ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 155

Luis Suarez-Villa

Professor. Ph.D., Cornell University. Specializations: Innovation and Technology, Economic and Social Development, Regional Analysis. http://www.seweb.uci.edu/faculty/suarez-villa/

Kenneth Small

(949) 824-6323

lsuarez@uci.edu

Professor Emeritus. Ph.D., University of California, Berkeley. Specializations: Transportation Economics, Urban Economics, Energy and Infrastructure.

Rodolfo Torres

David Smith

Professor. Ph.D., Claremont Graduate School. Specializations: Critical Urbanism, Class Structures, Studies in Racism and Inequalities, Poverty and Social Policy. http://www.seweb.uci.edu/faculty/torres/

Professor. Ph.D., University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Specializations: International Development, Political Economy, Urban and Regional Development.

(949) 824-7680

rodolfo@uci.edu

OTHER AFFILIATED FACULTY


Sarah Catz
Lecturer. J.D., Santa Clara University School of Law. Specializations: Transportation Policy, Infrastructure Policy, Transportation and Land Use.

Joseph Devoy

Lecturer. BS and ME, California State University, Long Beach Specializations: Geographic Information Systems, Computer Applications, Physical Planning.

Randal Jackson

Lecturer. B.L.A., Utah State University. Specializations: Physical Planning, Land Use Planning, Urban Design.

Michael McNally

Associate Professor. Ph.D., University of California, Irvine. Specializations: Transportation Planning, Computer Applications, Travel Demand Models.

Professor. Ph.D., Boston University. Specializations: Social Movements, Public Policy, Social Justice.

David Meyer

Mark Petracca

Associate Professor. Ph.D., University of Chicago. Specializations: Public Policy, Political Institutions, Interest Groups.

Senior Lecturer with Security of Employment, Emerita. Ph.D., Claremont Graduate School. Specializations: Politics and Governance, Public Management, Strategic Planning and Real Estate.

Judith Rosener

Lecturer. MA, University of California, Los Angeles. Specializations: Planning Practice, Growth Management, Strategic Planning.

Michael Ruane

Jean-Daniel Saphores

Associate Professor. Ph.D. Cornell University. Specializations: Environmental and Natural Resource Economics and Policy, Environmental Planning, Infrastructure Planning.

Page 156 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA LOS ANGELES


3250 School of Public Affairs Building Los Angeles, California 90095-1656 Phone (310) 825-4025 Fax (310) 206-5566 http://www.spa.ucla.edu/dup Brian D. Taylor, Department Chair (310) 903-3228 E-mail: btaylor@ucla.edu

MA/MS PAB

Ph.D.

ACSP Member: FULL

School of Public Affairs

MASTERS ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS


University Admission Policy: Minimum Undergraduate GPA: Minimum GRE: Minimum TOEFL Ranking in Undergraduate Class: Departmental Requirement:

None. 3.0 University None. 600/250/100 None. College Algebra, Microeconomics.

MASTERS GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

PROGRAM INFORMATION
GRADUATE DEADLINE, TUITION AND FEES
Admission Deadline 2009-10 for Masters program .........................January 15, 2010 Admission Deadline 2009-10 for Ph.D program.........................December 15, 2009 Financial Aid Deadline for Masters program ...............................December 15, 2009 Financial Aid Deadline for Ph.D Program ...................................December 15, 2009 In-State Tuition and Fees ............................................................. $10,656.50 per year Out-of-State Tuition and Fees...................................................... $25,692.50 per year Application Fee ......................................................................................................$60 Additional Fees: .................................................................................................. None

Hours of Core ...........................................................................................20 Hours of Studio or Practice Related Courses ...........................................20 Hours of Restricted Electives .....................................................................0 Hours of Unrestricted Electives ................................................................24 Capstone Project .........................................................................................8 Total Required Hours in Planning Program .............................................72 Exams or Written Requirements:..........Thesis or Comprehensive Exam Option (individual applied research project; or comprehensive (group) project, or 2-week exam)

FINANCIAL AID INFORMATION

5-6 major 2-year fellowships offered per year. Some departmental fellowships . Some non-resident tuition waivers; some transportation fellowships. Some teaching and research assistantships (number varies each year). These provide fee remissions (approx. 2/3 of reg. fees) under certain conditions. (Check with Department).

Annual Student Enrollment Applied


Masters Doctoral 266 49 357 52

Accepted
140 11 164 14

Enrolled
62 6 77 7

TOTAL MASTERS STUDENT COMPOSITION 2008-2009 US Citizens & Permanent Residents


Hispanics* Of any Race White African American Native American/ Pacific Islander Asian American Mixed Other / Dont know Non-US Citizens Non- Permanent Residents

08/09 09/10 08/09 09/10 08/09 09/10

Male 13 24 2 0 7 0 5 3 54

Female 15 21 3 2 7 0 13 4 70

Total 28 45 5 2 14 0 18 7

MASTERS DEGREE
Master of Arts in Urban Planning
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail: Jennifer Crowe (310) 825-8957 jcrowe@spa.ucla.edu

Year Initiated: 1969 PAB Accredited Degrees Granted through 8/31/09.........................................................1846 Degrees Granted from 9/1/06 to 8/31/09 ................................................116

Design and Development, Environmental Analysis and Policy, Regional and International Development, Transportation Policy and Planning, Community Development and Housing

Masters Specializations

Total Students

124

*Do not double count Hispanics; Hispanics also appear in the racial categories below. ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 157

DOCTORAL DEGREE
Ph.D. in Urban Planning
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail: Jennifer Crowe (310) 825-8957 jcrowe@spa.ucla.edu

TOTAL DOCTORAL STUDENT COMPOSITION 2008-2009 US Citizens & Permanent Residents


Hispanics* Of any Race White African American Native American/ Pacific Islander Asian American Mixed Other / Dont know Non-US Citizens Non- Permanent Residents

Male 2 13 1 0 1 0 0 6

Female 1 7 1 1 3 0 0 3

Total 3 20 2 1 4 0 0 9

Year Initiated 1970 Degrees Granted through 8/31/2009......................................................177 Degrees Granted from 9/1/2007 to 8/31/2009 .........................................12 Dissertations Granted from 9/1/2007 to 8/31/2009 1. Diesel Truck Impact Zones in Southern California: Localized Implications of Goods Movement Container Traffic. 2. International Technology Gaps in the Age of Globalization. 3. Exploring the Localization of Transportation Planning: Essays on Research and Policy Implications from Shifting Goals in Transportation Planning. 4. Heterogeneity and Collective Action: Evidence from Massachusetts. 5. The Politics of Counting Carbon: Lessons from the California Climate Action Registry. 6. Fashioning a Greener Shade of Clean: Integrating Pollution Prevention Into Public Policy -- The Case of Professional Wet Cleaning. 7. Institutional Issues in the Adoption of Smart Card Systems Among U.S. Transit Agencies for Fare Collection.

Community Development, Critical Studies of Cities and Regions, Culture and Ethnicity, Economic Development, the Environment, Gender and Planning, Housing, International Housing and Development, Regional Political Economy, Transportation, Urban Design
DOCTORAL ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS
University Admission Policy: Departmental Requirement: Minimum GRE: Minimum TOEFL: None. Masters degree in relevant field. None. 600/250/100

Doctoral Specializations

Total Students

23

16

39

*Do not double count Hispanics; Hispanics also appear in the racial categories below.

PLANNING FACULTY
Associate Professor. BA, UC Berkeley (1982); MA (1990) and Ph.D. (1995), UCLA. Specializations: Urban Poverty and Low Wage Labor Markets, Social Policy and Planning, Social Economic Inequality, Gender and Planning.
http://www.sppsr.ucla.edu/dept.cfm?d=up&s=faculty&f=faculty1.cfm&id=18

Evelyn Blumenberg

(310) 903-3305

eblumenb@ucla.edu

DOCTORAL GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

Randall Crane

Hours of Required Courses.......................................................................24 Hours of Methods Courses .......................................................................12 Hours of Restricted Electives .....................................................................0 Hours of Outside Field .............................................................................12 Total Required Hours in Program............................................................ 48 Exam, Thesis or Final Product:......Must pass written and oral major field exams, three courses in outside field, three courses in research methods and Oral Qualifying Exam for advancement to Candidacy.

Professor. BA, UC Santa Barbara (1974); MCRP, Ohio State University (1979); Ph.D., MIT (1987). Specializations: Urban Development, Environmental Policy, Housing, Governance.

http://www.sppsr.ucla.edu/dept.cfm?d=up&s=faculty&f=faculty1.cfm&id=44

(310) 951-3576

crane@ucla.edu

Leobardo Estrada

Associate Professor. BA, Baylor University (1966); MS (1968) and Ph.D. (1970), Florida State University. Specializations: Social Planning, Survey Research, Planning for Multiple Public, Geographic Information Systems.
http://www.sppsr.ucla.edu/dept.cfm?d=up&s=faculty&f=faculty1.cfm&id=290

FINANCIAL AID INFORMATION

(310) 825-6574

leobard@ucla.edu

3-4 major 4-year fellowships offered per year. Some departmental fellowships. Some non-resident tuition waivers; some transportation fellowships. Some teaching and research assistantships (number varies each year). These provide fee remissions (approx. 2/3 of reg. fees) under certain conditions. (Check with Department).

Page 158 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

Professor. BS, University of Chicago (1972); MA (1976) and Ph.D. (1982), UC Berkeley. Specializations: Environmental Planning and Politics, Women in Development, International Development and Planning, Natural Resource Planning and Rural Development.

Susanna Hecht

http://www.sppsr.ucla.edu/dept.cfm?d=up&s=faculty&f=faculty1.cfm&id=101

(310) 779-5654

sbhecht@ucla.edu

Distinguished Professor. BA, Hunter College (1961); MA, University of Wisconsin (1961); Ph.D., Syracuse University (1967). Specializations: Critical Urban and Regional Studies, Spatial and Planning Theory, Comparative Regional Restructuring in Industrial Societies, Political Economy.

Edward Soja

http://www.sppsr.ucla.edu/dept.cfm?d=up&s=faculty&f=faculty1.cfm&id=251

Professor. BS, Pennsylvania State University (1961); MS (1965) and Ph.D. (1980), Columbia University. Specialization: Housing Policy, Community Development, Gender Studies and Planning, Alternative Planning & Design for Grassroots Empowerment.

Jacqueline Leavitt

(310) 825-4335

esoja@ucla.edu

Michael Storper

http://www.sppsr.ucla.edu/dept.cfm?d=up&s=faculty&f=faculty1.cfm&id=154

(310) 825-4380

jleavitt@ucla.edu

Professor. BA (1975), MA (1979) and Ph.D. (1982), UC Berkeley. Specializations: International Development and Planning, Urban and Regional Economics, Political Economy, Trade and Location Patterns and Labor Markets.

http://www.sppsr.ucla.edu/dept.cfm?d=up&s=faculty&f=faculty1.cfm&id=257

Professor. BA, Pomona College (1966); MS (1971) and Ph.D. (1978), UCLA. Specializations: Quantitative Methods, Computer Applications in Architecture, Urban Design & Urban Planning, Computer Visualization of Urban Environments, Geographic Information Systems.

Robin Liggett

(310) 825-2718

storper@ucla.edu

Lois Takahashi

http://www.sppsr.ucla.edu/dept.cfm?d=up&s=faculty&f=faculty1.cfm&id=162

(310) 825-6294

rliggett@ucla.edu

Professor. MS, Carnegie Mellon University (1987); Ph.D., USC (1992). Specializations: Social Service Delivery Focusing on HIV/AIDS and Homelessness, Locational Conflict, Collaboration Among Community Based Organizations, Planning History and Theory.

http://www.sppsr.ucla.edu/dept.cfm?d=up&s=faculty&f=faculty1.cfm&id=325

Professor. M.Arch (1984), MPL (1985) and Ph.D. (1988), University of Southern California. Specializations: Physical Planning, Urban Design, Planning History, Public Environment of the City, Privatization of Public Space, Safety and Security in Inner City Areas and Bus Stop Crime.

Anastasia Loukaitou-Sideris

(310) 429-8641

takahash@spa.ucla.edu

Brian Taylor

http://www.sppsr.ucla.edu/dept.cfm?d=up&s=faculty&f=faculty1.cfm&id=165

(310) 206-9679

sideris@ucla.edu

cfm?d=up&s=faculty&f=faculty1.cfm&id=260

Professor. BA, UCLA (1983); MCP (1987) and MS (1987), UC Berkeley; Ph.D., UCLA (1992). Specializations: Transportation Policy, Planning and Finance, Transportation and Urban Form, Planning for Special Populations. http://www.sppsr.ucla.edu/dept.

Associate Professor. Master of Urban Design, University of Hong Kong (1992); M.Arch., University of Texas (1995); Ph.D., MIT (2000). Specializations: Housing and Land Development, Urban & Neighborhood Revitalization, Development Strategies for Low Income Communities, Physical Planning and Urban Design.

Vinit Mukhija

(310) 903-3228

btaylor@ucla.edu

Chris Tilly

http://www.sppsr.ucla.edu/dept.cfm?d=up&s=faculty&f=faculty1.cfm&id=355

(310) 794-4478

mukhija@ucla.edu

Professor. MUP, University of Washington (1977), Ph.D. UC Berkeley (1983). Specializations: Economic Development Planning, Race/ Ethnicity and Planning, Urban Labor Markets, Immigrants in the Urban Economy.

Paul Ong

Professor. BA, Harvard College (1976); Ph.D., MIT (1989). Specializations: Work and labor markets, poverty and inequality, community and regional development, social ovements. His research focuses on the US and Mexico, with some broader comparative work. Also Director, Institute for Research on Labor and Employment. http://www.sppsr.ucla.edu/dept.cfm?d=up&s=faculty&f=faculty1. cfm&id=515

tilly@ucla.edu

http://www.sppsr.ucla.edu/dept.cfm?d=up&s=faculty&f=faculty1.cfm&id=355

(310) 206-2193

pmong@ucla.edu

Professor. BE (1961), BA (1962), MA (1965) and Ph.D. (1968), Yale University. Specializations: Public Finance & Fiscal Planning, Transportation and Land Use, Parking, Neighborhood Planning.

Donald Shoup

FAICP

Assistant Professor. Ph.D., Harvard (2008). Specializations: Environmental policy; urban economics; transportation policy; Chinese urbanization. http://www.sppsr.ucla.edu/dept.cfm?d=up&s=faculty&f=faculty1. cfm&id=514

Rui Wang

(310) 367-3738

ruiwang@ucla.edu

http://www.sppsr.ucla.edu/dept.cfm?d=up&s=faculty&f=faculty1.cfm&id=250

(310) 825-5705

shoup@ucla.edu

ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 159

OTHER AFFILIATED FACULTY


Eric Avila
Associate Professor of Chicana/o Studies. BA, UC Berkeley (1990); MA, UC Berkeley (1992); Ph.D., UC Berkeley (1997). Specializations: The Culture of Cities; Comparative U.S. Urban History; 20th-century Urbanism; History of Los Angeles; Racial Identity and Racialization; Urban Latino/Chicano Culture; The Uses and Meanings of the Urban Built Environment. http://www.chavez.ucla.edu/avila.htm

Neal Richman

Lecturer. BA, UC Santa Cruz (1977); MA, UCLA (1981); Ph.D., University of Aalborg (1992). Specializations: Planning Education and Professional Practice, Real Estate Development & Finance, Nonprofit Development & Management, Housing Policy.

http://www.sppsr.ucla.edu/dept.cfm?d=up&s=faculty&f=faculty1.cfm&id=228

(310) 825-0577

nrichman@ucla.edu

Michael Stoll

(310) 825-9106

eavila@ucla.edu

Professor. BS, UC Berkeley (1988); MCP (1990) and Ph.D. (1995), MIT. Specializations: Interplay of Race Ethnicity, Urban Poverty and Labor Markets, Urban Economic Development Strategies.

Lecturer. BA, UCLA (1971); MA, Claremont School of Theology (1974); Ph.D., UCLA (1988). Specializations: History of Development Planning and Theory, Regional Economic Development Policies, Non-Governmental Organizations, Rural Development and Social Policy.
http://www.sppsr.ucla.edu/dept.cfm?d=up&s=faculty&f=faculty1.cfm&id=39

Stephen Commins

http://www.sppsr.ucla.edu/dept.cfm?d=up&s=faculty&f=faculty1.cfm&id=255

(310) 206-4774

mstoll@ucla.edu

Abel Valenzuela

(310) 422-5997

scommins@worldbank.org

Professor. BA, UC Berkeley (1986); MCP (1968) and Ph.D. (1993), MIT. Specializations: International Migration, Immigrants in the Urban Economy, Urban Poverty, Race, Ethnicity and Social Inequality.

Dana Cuff

http://www.sppsr.ucla.edu/dept.cfm?d=up&s=faculty&f=faculty1.cfm&id=265

(310) 206-8224

abel@ucla.edu

Professor. BA, UC Santa Cruz; Ph.D., UC Berkeley (1982). Specializations: Physical Planning/Urban Design, Social & Cultural Bases of Design, Low Income Housing & Neighborhoods, Critical Urban Studies.
http://www.sppsr.ucla.edu/dept.cfm?d=up&s=faculty&f=faculty1.cfm&id=45

Goetz Wolff

(310) 206-5517

dcuff@ucla.edu

Carol Goldstein

Lecturer. AB, Occidental College (1965; MA, Yale University. (1968); ABD, UCLA. Specializations: Regional Economic Development, Industrial Restructuring and Labor Market Dynamics; Southern California Regional Economy, Industrial, Spatial and Labor Analysis, Industry Cluster/Sectoral Analysis.
http://www.sppsr.ucla.edu/dept.cfm?d=up&s=faculty&f=faculty1.cfm&id=279

Lecturer. BA, Northwestern University (1972). Specializations: Physical Planning, Urban Design and Planning Practice, Cultural Policy, Planning, Funding & Facility Development, Public Art.
http://www.sppsr.ucla.edu/dept.cfm?d=up&s=faculty&f=faculty1.cfm&id=89

(310) 369-0900

gwolff@ucla.edu

Min Zhou

(310) 825-4896

cgold@ucla.edu

Lecturer. BA (1975), MA (1977), UCLA. Specializations: Community Economic Development, Popular Education and Public Policy, Cooperatives, Financial Institutions and Markets.

Gilda Haas

http://www.sppsr.ucla.edu/dept.cfm?d=up&s=faculty&f=faculty1.cfm&id=342

Professor of Sociology. BA, Zhongshan (Sun Yat-Sen) University, China (1982); MA, SUNY-Albany (1985); Ph.d., SUNY-Albany (1989). Specializations: Immigrant Neighborhoods in Los Angeles: Chinatown, Koreatown, and Pico Union; Intra-Asian Migration: Diverse Patterns of Human Movements and the Role of the State; Race and Ethnicity; The Community; Urban Sociology http://www.soc.ucla.edu/people/faculty?lid=250&display_one=1

(213) 745-9961

gildahaas@saje.net

(310) 825-3532

mzhou@soc.ucla.edu

Gary Orfield

Professor of Education. BA, University of Minnesota (1963); MA, University of Chicago (1965); Ph.d., University of Chicago (1968). Specializations: Educational policy as it relates to the challenges of urban schools; civil rights; urban policy and minority opportunity. Co-director and Founder, The Civil Rights Project, the nation's leading research center on issues of civil rights and racial inequality.

FYI

(310) 267-4877

orfield@gseis.ucla.edu

Adjunct Associate Professor. BA, (1974), MA (1979) UC Davis; Ph.D., UCLA (1985). Specializations: Environmentalism, Land Use in Cities and Urban Regions, Economic Health, Distributional Impacts of Natural Amenities or Degradation, Implementation Strategies for Sustainability.

Stephanie Pincetl

(310) 825-2434

spincetl@ioe.ucla.edu

JUBILANT PH.D. GRADUATES AFTER COMMENCEMENT


Page 160 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

UNIVERSITY OF CINCINNATI
School of Planning, College of Design, Architecture, Art and Planning
P.O. Box 210016 Cincinnati, Ohio 45221-0016 Phone (513) 556-4943 Fax (513) 556-1274 E-mail: ucplanning@uc.edu http://daap.uc.edu/planning Christopher Auffrey, Interim School Director Phone (513) 556-0579 E-mail: chris.auffrey@uc.edu

BS BUP MCP Ph.D. PAB PABPAB PAB

ACSP Member: FULL

Certificate in Historic Preservation, Certificate in Geographic Information Systems


UNDERGRADUATE ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS
Departmental Requirement: Minimum GPA: College Prep Program. University, variable; Department, top 30%. Minimum SAT or ACT Scores: ACT- University, variable; Department, 21. SAT- University, variable; Department, 980

Undergraduate Specializations

UNDERGRADUATE GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

PROGRAM INFORMATION
Admission Deadline 2008-2009 ......................................................................Rolling Financial Aid Deadline 2008-2009 .................................................. February 1, 2009 In-State Tuition and Fees: ..................................... $4,241 per quarter ($12,723/year) Out-of-State Tuition and Fees: ............................ $7,685 per quarter ($23,055/year) Application Fee ......................................................................................................$40 Additional Fees: ................................................................................................. None

UNDERGRADUATE DEADLINES, TUITION AND FEES

Hours of Core .......................................................................................... 90 Hours of Studio Courses .......................................................................... 30 Hours of Restricted Elective .................................................................... 69 Hours of Unrestricted Elective .................................................................. 0 Other (Thesis) ...........................................................................................11 Total Required Hours In Planning Program .......................................... 200 Total Required Hours to Graduate from University .............................. 200 Thesis or Final Product ...................................................... Thesis Required

Bachelor of Science in Urban Studies


Contact Person: Phone: E-mail Christopher Auffrey (513) 556-0579 chris.auffrey@uc.edu

Admission Deadline 2009-10 for Masters program ........................................ Rolling Admission Deadline 2009-10 for Ph.D program............................................ Rolling Financial Aid Deadline 2009-10 for Masters program.....................February 1, 2010 Financial Aid Deadline 2009-10 for Ph.D Program .........................February 1, 2010 In-State Tuition and Fees: .................................... $4,037 per quarter ($12,111/year) Out-of-State Tuition and Fees: ..............................$7,315 per quarter ($21,945/year) Application Fee: ..................................................................................................... $40 Additional Fees: ...................................................................................................None

GRADUATE DEADLINES, TUITION AND FEES

Year initiated:1961 Not PAB Accredited Degrees Granted through 6/30/09......................................................... 223

Annual Student Enrollment


Applied Accepted Enrolled 07/08 08/09 07/08 08/09 07/08 08/09

Student chooses from over 20 options or develops own.


UNDERGRADUATE ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS
Departmental Requirement: Minimum GPA: College Prep Program. University, variable; Department, top 40%. Minimum SAT or ACT Scores: ACT- University, variable; Department, 20. SAT- University, variable; Department, 940

Undergraduate Specializations

Undergraduate Masters Doctoral

99 113 23

124 95 28

44 108 6

54 64 3

21 39 5

50 33 3

UNDERGRADUATE DEGREE
Bachelor of Urban Planning
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail Christopher Auffrey (513) 556-0579 chris.auffrey@uc.edu

UNDERGRADUATE GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

Year Initiated:1961 PAB Accredited Degrees Granted through 6/30/09......................................................... 830

Hours of Core .......................................................................................... 45 Hours of Concentration............................................................................ 30 Hours of Restricted Elective .................................................................... 78 Hours of Unrestricted Elective ................................................................ 27 Other (Thesis) ............................................................................................ 6 Total Required Hours In Planning Program .......................................... 186 Total Required Hours to Graduate from University .............................. 186 Thesis or Final Product ...................................................... Thesis Required

ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 161

FINANCIAL AID INFORMATION

University merit scholarships and several departmental minority scholarships. Eligibility based on GPA, SAT/ACT score, exam, interview and financial need.

TOTAL MASTERS STUDENT COMPOSITION 2008-2009 US Citizens & Permanent Residents


Hispanics* Of any Race White African American Native American/ Pacific Islander Asian American Mixed Other / Dont know Non-US Citizens Non- Permanent Residents

MASTERS DEGREE
Master of Community Planning
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail Christopher Auffrey (513) 556-0579 chris.auffrey@uc.edu

Male 0 26 5 0 1 0 0 4

Female 0 26 5 0 1 0 0 9

Total 0 52 10 0 2 0 0 13

Year Initiated: 1963 PAB Accredited Degrees Granted through 8/31/06...........................................................776 Degrees Granted from 9/1/02 to 8/31/06 ..................................................69

Urban Design Physical Planning Environmental Planning Economic Development International Development Certificate in Historic Preservation Certificate in Geographic Information Systems Peace Corps Programs: Masters International Program Peace Corps/Fellows USA
MASTERS ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS
University Admission Policy: Minimum Undergraduate GPA: Minimum GRE: Minimum TOEFL Variable. University, variable; Department, 3.0 University, variable; Department, variable. University, 520; Department, 560.

Masters Specializations

Total Students

36

41

77

*Do not double count Hispanics; Hispanics also appear in the racial categories below.

DOCTORAL DEGREE
Regional Development Planning
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail Christopher Auffrey (513) 556-0579 chris.auffrey@uc.edu

MASTERS GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

Year initiated 2002 Degrees Granted through 8/31/2009..........................................................2 Degrees Granted from 9/1/2003 to 8/31/2008 ...........................................0

Hours of Core ...........................................................................................33 Hours of Studio or Practice Related Courses .............................................5 Hours of Restricted Electives ...................................................................20 Hours of Unrestricted Electives ................................................................21 Other .........................................................................................................11 Total Required Hours in Planning Program .............................................90 Exam,Thesis or Final Product: ......................................................... Thesis NOTE: Paid summer Internship is required.

FINANCIAL AID INFORMATION

Metropolitan Development Planning, Regional/National Development Planning, Regional Development, Planning & Management in Developing Countries.

Doctoral Specializations

Ten full MCP assistantships, and 35-40 full and partial tuition scholarships and internships. Eligibility based on merit.

Page 162 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

DOCTORAL ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS


University Admission Policy: Minimum GPA: Minimum TOEFL: Minimum GRE: Departmental Requirement:

Variable. University, variable; Department, 3.4 University, 520; Department, 600. University, variable; Department, above the median. Masters in Planning or related field, calculus, stats, economics, natural science, environmental science.

PLANNING FACULTY
Mahyar Arefi
Associate Professor. MUD, MArch, Tehran; Ph.D., USC. Specializations: Urban Design, Community Development.

(513) 556-0212

mahyar.arefi@uc.edu

Associate Professor. Ph.D., Michigan. Specializations: Healthy Urban Planning, Environmental Justice, Sustainable Development.

Christopher Auffrey
(513) 556-0579

DOCTORAL GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

chris.auffrey@uc.edu FAICP

Hours of Core ...........................................................................................20 Hours of Research.....................................................................................45 Hours of Major Field ................................................................................20 Hours of Minor Field ................................................................................12 Other .........................................................................................................38 Total Required Hours in Program...........................................................135 Exam,Thesis or Final Product: ...............................First year screening, comprehensive exam, admission to candidacy, dissertation.

Jay Chatterjee

Professor. MRP, North Carolina; MArch, Urban Design, Harvard. Specializations: Urban Design, Regional Planning, Transportation and Land Use.

(513) 556-1204

jay.chatterjee@uc.edu AICP

Carla Chifos

Associate Professor. MCP, Cincinnati; Ph.D., Cornell. Specializations: Sustainable Development, Urban Environment, International Development.

FINANCIAL AID INFORMATION

(513) 293-8195

carla.chifos@uc.edu Eur Ing, SIA, AICP

10 full doctoral assistantships. Eligibility based on merit.

David J. Edelman

TOTAL DOCTORAL STUDENT COMPOSITION 2008-2009 US Citizens & Permanent Residents


Hispanics* Of any Race White African American Native American/ Pacific Islander Asian American Mixed Other / Dont know Non-US Citizens Non- Permanent Residents

Professor. MRP, Ph.D., Cornell. Specializations: Urban Environmental Management, Energy Policy Planning, Development Planning and Management.

(513) 556-2378

david.edelman@uc.edu

Male 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 5 6

Female 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 3 5

Total 0 2 1 0 0 0 0 8

Professor. Ph.D., Michigan. Specializations: Urban Theory, Political Economy, Public Policy, Planning and Politics.

Charles E. Ellison

(513) 556-0210

charles.ellison@uc.edu

Esther Erkins

Visiting Assistant Professor. MS, Buffalo; EdD, Cincinnati. Specializations: Community Development, Ethical Issues, Community Partnerships.

Jan Marie Fritz

Professor. Ph.D., American. Specializations: Community Development, Environmental Justice, Mediation and Facilitation of Organizational and Public Policy Disputes.

CCS

(513) 556-0208

jan.fritz@uc.edu

Associate Professor. MRP, Ph.D., Cornell. Specializations: Urban and Regional Theory, International Development, Women in International Development, Planning Techniques.

Johanna W. Looye

(513) 556-0216

johanna.looye@uc.edu AICP

Michael C. Romanos 11

Total Students

Professor. MSc, Florida State; Ph.D., Cornell. Specializations: Economic Development Planning, Sustainable Development, Urban and Regional Spatial Structure, International Planning.

*Do not double count Hispanics; Hispanics also appear in the racial categories below.

(513) 293-8156

michael.romanos@uc.edu

ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 163

Francis Penrose Russell


(513)556-3283

Assistant Professor. MArch, Harvard University. Specializations: Urban Design.

AIA

russelfp@ucemail.uc.edu AICP, ASLA

Adjunct Instructor. BSLA, Ohio State; MCP, Cincinnati. Specializations: Historic Preservation, Landscape Architecture.

Frederick Lutt

RLA

Associate Professor. BUP, Cincinnati, MLA, Harvard. Specializations: Urban Design, Physical Planning, Community Development.

Menelaos Triantafillou
(513) 556-4212

Adjunct Instructor. BUP, MCP, Cincinnati. Specializations: Community Planning, Service Learning, GIS Applications.

Beth Nagy

menelaos.triantafillou@uc.edu FAICP

David P. Varady

Adjunct Professor. MCP, Cincinnati. Specializations: Transportation Planning, Transportation Engineering

John Niehaus

PE

Professor. MCP, Ph.D., Pennsylvania. Specializations: Housing, Residential Mobility, Community Development.

Gary Powell
AICP

(513) 405-3602

david.varady@uc.edu

Adjunct Assistant Professor. JD, Cincinnati. Specializations: Planning Law and Administration

Xinhao Wang

Professor. MCP, Rhode Island; Ph.D., Pennsylvania. Specializations: Environmental Planning, GIS, Modeling.

K.D. Rex

Adjunct Instructor. MA, Iowa. Specializations: GIS, Geography

(513) 556-0497

xinhao.wang@uc.edu

Rainer vom Hofe

Associate Professor. MS, Ph.D., Cornell. Specializations: Regional Analysis, Economic Development, Quantitative Methods, Urban and Regional Economics.

Adjunct Instructor. BUP, Cincinnati. Specializations: Land Development, Real Estate, Urban Design

Paul Schirmer

(513) 556-3835

rainer.vomhofe@uc.edu

Adjunct Instructor. MCP, Cincinnati. Specializations: Land Use, Planning Practice

Jennifer Walke

Assistant Professor. MS, Ph.D., Illinois. Specializations: Participatory Planning Processes, Land Use Planning, Culutral Diversity.

Marisa Zapata

Margaret Wuerstle

marisa.zapata@uc.edu

Adjunct Instructor. BS, Worchester Polytechnic; MCP, Cincinnati. Specializations: Land Use, Planning Practice

OTHER AFFILIATED FACULTY


Eileen Crisanti
Adjunct Assistant Professor. MCP, Cincinnati. Specializations: Professional Practice in Planning

Nancy Cutler

Adjunct Instructor. MCP, Cincinnati; JD, Northern Kentucky. Specializations: Planning Law, Land Use Law

Terry Grundy

Adjunct Associate Professor. MA, Athenaeum. Specializations: Urban Lobbying, Government Relations, Community Development.

Beth Honadle

Professor of Political Science and Affiliated Professor of Planning. PhD, Syracuse (Maxwell School). Specializations: Public Policy Analysis, Economic Development, Local Government and Capacity Building. beth.honadle@uc.edu

Amy Lind

Mary Ellen Heintz Associate Professor of Women's Studies and Affiliated Associate Professor of Planning. Ph.D., Cornell. Specializations: Gender and Development, Gender and Planning, Gender and Globalization

amy.lind@uc.edu

Page 164 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

UNIVERSITY OF COLORADO DENVER


College of Architecture and Planning
Denver, Colorado 80217 Phone (303) 556-3382 Fax (303) 556-3687 E-mail: pam.erickson@ucdenver.edu http://www.cudenver.edu/Academics/Colleges/ ArchitecturePlanning Thomas A. Clark, Chairperson Phone (303) 556-3296 E-mail: tom.clark@ucdenver.edu

B.Envd PAB

MURP PAB PAB

Ph.D.

ACSP Member: FULL

UNDERGRADUATE ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS


Departmental Requirement: Minimum GPA: H.S. Diploma or GED and two essays. University Mean: 3.60 Departmental Mean, 3.63 Minimum SAT or ACT Scores: University Mean, 1203/26.5 Departmental Mean, 1181/26.3

UNDERGRADUATE GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

Hours of Core .......................................................................................... 52 Hours of Studio Courses ......................................................................... 26 Hours of Restricted Electives ................................................................. 24 Hours of Unrestricted Elective ............................................................... 18 Total Required Hours In Planning Program ......................................... 102 Total Required Hours to Graduate from University .............................. 120 Thesis or Final Product ........................................................... Not required

FINANCIAL AID INFORMATION

PROGRAM INFORMATION
Admission Deadline ................................................................................ February 15 Financial Aid Deadline ................................................................................... April 1 In-State Tuition ........................................................................... $3,223 per semester Out-of-State Tuition ................................................................. $13,350 per semester Application Fee: ....................................................................................................$70

Various Scholarships. Eligibility Criteria: Competitive GPA/portfolio/recommendations.

UNDERGRADUATE DEADLINES, TUITION AND FEES

MASTERS DEGREE
Master of Urban and Regional Planning
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail Pam Erickson (303) 556-3387 pam.erickson@ucdenver.edu

Application Deadline for Masters Program (Fall) ....................................February 15 Application Deadline for Ph.D Program ....................................................February 1 Financial Aid Deadline for Masters Program ................................................March 1 Financial Aid Deadline for Ph.D Program ....................................................March 1 In-State Tuition (If enrolled for 15 credits) ................................ $4,298 per semester Out-of-State Tuition (If enrolled for 15 credits)........................$10,134 per semester Matriculation Fee: ......................................................................$115 (One-time Fee) Application Fee ...................................................................................................... $50 International Student Application Fee: ................................................................. $75 Additional International Student Fees: ..........................................$100 per semester

GRADUATE DEADLINES, TUITION AND FEES

Year Initiated:1971 PAB Accredited Degrees Granted through 5/2008 .......................................................... 958 Degrees Granted from 9/2007 to 8/2008 .............................................. 38

Annual Student Enrollment


Applied Accepted Enrolled 07/08 08/09 07/08 08/09 07/08 08/09

Undergraduate Masters Doctoral

458 88 30

512 99 19

394 79 6

436 80 8

235 39 6

221 39 6

Land Use and Environmental Planning Economic and Community Development Planning Urban Place Making and Design In addition, Masters students may establish their own unique specializations with an advisors approval.
MASTERS ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS
University Admission Policy: Minimum Undergraduate Minimum GRE: Minimum TOEFL Departmental Requirement: None. GPA: 3.0 Department, Yes, if GPA under 3.0 University, 500; Department, 550. Undergraduate Degree.

Masters Specializations

UNDERGRADUATE DEGREE
Bachelor of Environmental Design (B.Envd)
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail Peg Gordon (303) 492-2804 peggy.gordon@colorado.edu

MASTERS GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

Year Initiated:1970 B.Envd Degrees Granted, 1991-2008: Architecture Track ..............................................................................1,784 Design Studies Track .............................................................................367 Planning Track .......................................................................................239

Hours of Core ...........................................................................................27 Hours of Studio or Practice Related Courses ..........................................12 Hours of Restricted Concentration Electives ...........................................15 Unrestricted Electives .................................................................................9 Total Required Hours in MURP Program ...............................................51 Note: Masters Thesis may be undertaken in lieu of second studio (6 credits).

ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 165

FINANCIAL AID INFORMATION

Tuition aid and scholarships are awarded annually. Students also will find significant opportunity for paid internships and a limited number of paid research opportunities.

TOTAL MASTERS STUDENT COMPOSITION Fall 2008 US Citizens & Permanent Residents
Hispanics* Of any Race White African American Native American/ Pacific Islander Asian American Mixed Other / Dont know Non-US Citizens Non- Permanent Residents

Male 2 48 0 0 1 0 7 7

Female 0 39 1 0 1 0 6 2

Total 2 87 1 0 2 0 13 9

o A Procedure to Align the Built Environment with Ecosystem Integrity. o Mixed-Income Housing, Discourse and Debate. o Issues of Time and Place: Sustaining a Locally Based Aesthetic at the University of Colorado at Boulder 1917-2003. o Examining Community-based Collaboration in the Context of Western Public Lands and Nature Resources Management. o Building Rural Learning Regions: Innovations in the Food Production Industry o Intra-City Differentials in Urban Poverty and Slums in Nairobi, Kenya: Measurements, Determinants, Consequences, and Implications. o Power, Identity, and the Rise of Modern Architecture: From Siam to Thailand. o Bottom-Up Metropolitan Planning in Kolkata: Rhetoric vs. Reality. o America Connecting: Internet Utilization as a Predictor of Community Participation and Social Capital. o The Political Economy of Urban Public Space: A Case Study of Denver. o Influence of Current Transportation Decision Processes on Modal Outcomes: Three Colorado Case Studies.. o The Emergence and Development of the Second Home in Colorado, 1880-1940.

Sustainable and Healthy Environments History of Architecture, Landscape, and Urbanism


DOCTORAL ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS
University Admission Policy: GRE: Minimum TOEFL: Minimum GPA: Strongly Encouraged 550: University , 575: Departmental 3.0 University; Undergraduate GPA 3.0; Graduate GPA 3.5 Departmental Requirement: Twelve hours of upper level undergraduate coursework in Architecture/Planning; 12 hours upper level undergraduate course work in Social/Behavioral Science or Environmental/ Natural Science or Engineering or Humanities. A minimum of 3 hours of undergraduate or graduate coursework in one of the following: Statistics, Mathematics, Foreign Language, or Computer Applications.

Doctoral Specializations

Total Students
*Dual degree students not included.

65

49

114**

DOCTORAL DEGREE
Design and Planning Program
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail Michael Harper (303) 556-6042 Michael.T.Harper@ucdenver.edu

DOCTORAL GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

Hours of Core .........................................................................................12 Specialization ...........................................................................................12 Minor .....................................................................................................12 Electives ...................................................................................................10 Dissertation ..............................................................................................30 TOTAL CREDITS ....................................................................................76 Exams or Written Requirements: Preliminary Examination, Comprehensive Examination, and Dissertation.

Year initiated 1997 Degrees Granted through 5/2008 .............................................................23 Degrees Granted from 9/2007 to 8/2008 ...................................................3 Recent Doctoral Dissertations o The Application of Dramatic Theory in Design Narrative: A Paradigm for Interactive Education o Historic Preservation of Urban Landscape: (With special emphasis on the Arab world). o Vulnerability to Natural Hazards: Communities at Wildfire Hazard in the Wildland Urban Interface in the Western United States. o Historic Preservation, Cultural Landscapes, and Water Resources. o Historic Preservation and Urban Redevelopment in the People's Republic of China.

FINANCIAL AID INFORMATION

20 Tuition grants, 13 fellowships. Department participates in the NSFIGERT collaborative program in Sustainable Infrastructure at the University of Colorado Denver. Eligibility Criteria: Active student status; Competitive.

Page 166 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

TOTAL DOCTORAL STUDENT COMPOSITION Fall 2008 US Citizens & Permanent Residents
Hispanics* Of any Race White African American Native American/ Pacific Islander Asian American Mixed Other / Dont know Non-US Citizens Non- Permanent Residents

Associate Professor. BA, Wesleyan (1986); MS, Yale University (1990); PhD, University of California, Berkley (2004). Specializations: Environmental Planning, Communicative Planning and Regional Planning Frameworks.

Bruce Goldstein

Male 1 8 1 0 0 0 0 7 17

Female 1 11 0 0 1 0 1 1 15

Total 2 19 1 0 1 0 1 8

(303) 556-3382

bruce.goldstein@ucdenver.edu

Spenser Havlick (Emeritus)

Professor Emeritus. Specializations: Natural Hazards, Growth Management.

Associate Professor and Director, Ph.D. Program. BSE Northwestern University, Evanston, IL (1993); MSCE. University of Washington, Seattle, WA (2000) ; MRP University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC (1995); PhD University.of Washington, Seattle, WA (2001). Specializations: Land Use and Transportation (including walking and cycling), Planning for Healthy Communities.

Kevin Krizek

(303) 556-3282

kevin.krizek@ucdenver.edu

Professor and Associate Dean of Academic Affairs. BA, Eastern Kentucky University (1965); MA, University of Cincinnati (1967); PhD, Ohio State University (1970). Specializations: Spatial Analysis, Mathematical and Quantitative Analysis, Spatial Perception, Urban Transportation Planning, Land Use Planning.

Yuk Lee

(303) 556-4232

yuk.lee@ucdenver.edu

Total Students

32

Raymond McCall

*Do not double count Hispanics; Hispanics also appear in the racial categories below.

Associate Professor. BS, University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee (1969); MS, Illinois Institute of Technology (1975); PhD, University of California, Berkeley (1978). Specializations: Urban Design, ComputerAided Design, and Electronic Networking.

PLANNING FACULTY
Professor. AB, Brown University (1966); MA (1969) and PhD (1975), University of Iowa. Specializations: Urban and Regional Economic Development, Growth Management, Regional Policy Development, International Planning, Planning Implementation, and Quantitative Methods.

(303) 492-7042

Mccall@colorado.edu

Thomas Clark, Chairperson

Professor Adjunct. BA, Drake University, MPA University of Pittsburgh, Graduate School of Public and International Affairs, JD University of Denver. Specializations: Land Use and Environmental Law.

Gilbert McNeish

Brian Muller

(303) 556-3296

tom.clark@ucdenver.edu

Ernesto Arias (Emeritus) John Barbour

Professor Emeritus. Decision Support Systems.

Associate Professor. BA, Yale University (1979); MA, University of Texas, Austin (1986); PhD, University of California, Berkeley (2000). Specializations: Land Use Modeling, Geographic Information Systems, Agricultural & Open Space Land Preservation, Regional Economic Development.

(303) 556-5967

brian.muller@ucdenver.edu

Instructor. BENVD University of Colorado; MURP and MArch, University of Colorado Denver. Specializations: Historic Heritage Districts; Historic Preservation; Urban Anthropology; Social Connectivity.

Jeremy Nmeth

(303) 492-8010

john.barbour@colorado.edu

Professor. BA. Psychology, Hunter College of New York (1972); MA Education and Child Development, Bryn Mawr College (1979); PhD Environmental Psychology, CUNY (1984). Specializations: Children and Cities; Children and Nature; and Children's Participation in Community Development.

Louise Chawla

Assistant Professor and Director, Master of Urban Design Program. BA, UC Berkeley (2000), MS Building and Urban Design, University College London, PhD Rutgers University (2007). Specializations: Urban Design and Public Policy, Urban Public Spaces, Urban Security Planning. (303) 556-3688 jeremy.nemeth@ucdenver.edu

Korkut Onaran

Assistant Professor Adjunct. BArch and MArch, Middle East Technical University, Ankara; PhD, University of Wisconsin, Madison. Specializations: Urban Design, Design Review, Legal Aesthetics.

(303) 492- 5228

louise.chawla@colorado.edu

ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 167

Peter Park

Associate Professor, and Manager, Department of Community Development and Planning, City of Denver. BS, Arizona State University, MArch, MUP, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee. Specializations: Urban Design Economics and Planning, Comprehensive Planning, Formbased Code, and Planning Administration.

Cindy Brown

Lecturer. BA Political Science & International Affairs, University of Colorado at Boulder, Planner, City of Boulder Housing Partners. Specializations: Housing Policy and Practices, Community Housing Practices, Real World Planning.

(303) 556-3479

park-cu@comcast.net

Dale Case

Thomas Ragonetti

Professor Adjunct. AB and MRP, Cornell University; JD, Harvard University. Specializations: Landscape & Site Design, Planning Practice.

Lecturer. AIC, BA Public Administration concentration in Urban Affairs and Administration, Miami University, Oxford Ohio, MUPDD Master of Planning, Design and Development, Maxine Goodman Levin College of Urban Affairs, Cleveland State University, Chief Planner, Boulder County Specializations: Public Policy and Planning, Comprehensive Planning.

Professor. B.Arch, Middle East Technical Institute (1971); MS Arch (1972) and PhD (1977), Pennsylvania State University. Specializations: Urban Design, Design Review, Planning Theory & Methods, Research Methodology, Environmental Aesthetics, and International Planning.

Fahriye Sancar

Jim Charlier

Lecturer. BS, Iowa State University, MS Iowa State University. Specializations: Urban Transportation Planning

(303) 492-7497

sancar@colorado.edu

Raymond Studer, Jr. (Emeritus)

Professor Emeritus. Specializations: Planning Methods, Planning Design and Management Systems.

Lecturer. AA, State University of New York; BS, Colorado State University; MPA, University of Colorado, Denver; MURP, University of Colorado Denver. Specialization: Natural Resources Planning and Management.

Robert Finch

Will Toor

Michael Harper

Professor Adjunct, and Former Chair, Denver Regional COG, and Former Mayor, City of Boulder. BS, Carnegie-Mellon University; MS, University of Chicago; PhD, University of Chicago. Specializations: Environmental Planning, Transportation Planning, and Metropolitan Planning.

Senior Instructor. BS, Colorado School of Mines; MS, University of Tulsa; PhD, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute. Specializations: Project Management, Decisions Modeling, Operations Research.

Emmett Haywood

Willem Van Vliet

Professor, and Director, Center for Research and Design: Children, Youth and Environments. Doctorandus, Amsterdam (1976); PhD, University of Toronto (1989). Specializations: Housing, Environment & Behavior, Children and Youth, Neighborhood Planning, International Development and Planning.

Lecturer. BA, Kansas State University; MRCP, University of Oklahoma. Specializations: Housing and Neighborhood Planning, and Race/ Ethnicity and Planning.

Kenneth Hoagland

(303) 492-5015

willem@colorado.edu

Lecturer. BA, Doane College; MRP, University of Massachusetts. Specializations: Public Finance and Fiscal Planning, Real Estate Development.

Senior Instructor and Associate Chair. BS (Education), University of Wisconsin, Whitewater; MA (Applied Geography), Southwest Texas State University; MA (Psychology), City University of New York; PhD (Environmental Psychology), City University of New York. Specializations: Community Development, Participation and Environmental Psychology.

Pamela Wridt

Ellen Ittelson

Lecturer. BA, University of Wisconsin-Madison; MA, University of New Mexico. Specializations: Comprehensive Planning and Downtown Revitalization.

(303) 556-3472

pamela.wridt@ucdenver.edu

Lecturer. MURP, University of Colorado Denver. Specializations: Physical Planning, Urban Economics, and Real Estate Market Analysis.

Edward Kamp

OTHER AFFILIATED FACULTY


Gideon Berger
Lecturer. B.A. Communications. American University, MCP University of Pennsylvania. Specializations: Transit Oriented Development/ Infill, Community Development, Economic Development, and Communications, Living Streets.

Kevin Puccio

Lecturer. BS, University of Florida; MURP, University of Colorado Denver; M. Urban Design, University of Colorado Denver. Specializations: New urbanism, Project Management.

Ken Schroeppel

Graham Billingsley

Lecturer. Past President, American Institute of Certified Planners, and former Director, Boulder County Land Use Department. BA Planning, University of Cincinnatti, ACIP, Land Use Manager, Boulder County. Specializations: Progressive Land Use Policy.

Lecturer. BS, Ferris State University; MURP, University of Colorado Denver. Specializations: Urban Renewal andBlight Studies, Downtown Planning, Urban Redevelopment & Revitalization, Transit-Oriented Development.

James Spensley

Lecturer. JD George Washington University. Specializations: Transportation Law and Environmental Consulting.

Page 168 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

Daniel Strammiello

Lecturer. BA, Trinity College; MA, George Washington University. Specializations: Real Estate Development.

James van Hemert

Lecturer, President, Colorado Chapter of the APA, and Executive Director, Rocky Mountain Land Use Institute, Strum College of Law, University of Denver. BA, Calvin College, MA (Regional Planning) University of Waterloo, MA Social Science, Azusa Pacific University. Specializations: Land Use Planning, Community Health Planning.

FYI
The University of Colorado is a three-campus system with four locations: the University of Colorado Denvers downtown Denver campus and Anschutz Medical Campus in Aurora, plus UC Boulder and UC Colorado Springs. More than 55,000 undergraduate and graduate students currently pursue studies on these UC campuses. The UC System is ranked sixth among public institutions in federal research expenditures by the National Science Foundation ($661 million overall in FY08). Of this well over half is generated at the University of Colorado Denver. Academic prestige is evidenced in the Systems four Nobel laureates, seven MacArthur Fellows, 18 alumni astronauts and 19 Rhodes Scholars. For more information about all three CU campuses, visit www.cu.edu. The College of Architecture and Planning, one of the largest in North America, accommodates upwards of 1500 students, served by nearly 45 full-time faculty members and a substantial number of honorarium faculty affiliates. The BEnvd Degree offers emphases in architecture, planning and design studies, and is offered on the Boulder campus. BEnvd (Planning) graduates achieve advanced standing in our graduate MURP Program. Graduate professional Masters Programs offered by the College on the Downtown Denver Campus in addition to the MURP, include the MArch, MLA, and MUD. Master of Historic Preservation is pending as of 6/10/09. The MURP Degree, moreover, can be paired with all the other Masters Programs offered by the College, and formal Dual Degree relationships also exist with Public Affairs (MURP/MPA), Business (MURP/MBA), and Law (MURP/ JD), and Public Health (MURP/MPH, pending as of 6/10/09). The Ph.D. Program in Design and Planning draws from the extensive strengths of the UC System, and a Certificate Program in Historic Preservation is available, involving all departments. Opportunities for multi-disciplinary work abound and a remarkable number of diverse environmental settings reside close at hand, offering a rich mix of practice contexts. The College's four Centers afford additional opportunities for qualified students: Center for Sustainable Urbanism; Children, Youth and Environments: Center for Research and Design; Center for Preservation Research; and the Colorado Center for Community Development. During 2005-7 the Department of Planning and Design faculty published five books, 33 refereed articles and 25 book chapters while editing three major scholarly ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 169 journals: Progress in Planning (Elsevier), Children, Youth and Environments (online), and Journal of Transport and Land Use (online). With colleagues in three campus units its members were central in the campus securing an NSF IGERT grant for doctoral study in Sustainable Infrastructure for $3.2 million. the Department of Planning and Design has entered an MOU with the Seoul Metropolitan Government to train its senior planning staff. The college maintains strong international ties including those with a women's School of Architecture in Saudi Arabia (Dar Al-Hekman College), Tongji University (China), the UN Habitat Programs in Nairobi, Kenya and others. The NSF IGERT(PhD) program in Sustainable Infrastructure partners with researchers in Mumbai, India. Applications to the MURP are at an all-time high for Fall 2009. An entering class of 80 is anticipated. Applications originate from throughout the U.S., and from many other nations.

UNIVERSITY OF DELAWARE
School of Urban Affairs and Public Policy
184 Graham Hall Newark, Delaware 19716 Phone (302) 831-1687 Fax (302) 831-3296 www.udel.edu/suapp Maria P. Aristigueta, Director E-mail: suapp@udel.edu

MA/MS

Ph.D.

ACSP Member: FULL

MASTERS ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS


University Admission Policy: Minimum Undergraduate GPA: Minimum GRE: Minimum TOEFL Ranking in Undergraduate Class: Departmental Requirement:

Bachelors degree from an accredited institution 3.0 1000 (M+V) 213 Not Required No Requirements

MASTERS GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

PROGRAM INFORMATION
GRADUATE DEADLINES, TUITION AND FEES
Admission Deadline 2009-10 for Masters program .......................................... July 1 Admission Deadline 2009-10 for Ph.D program.............................................. July 1 Financial Aid Deadline 2009-10 for Masters program...............................February 1 Financial Aid Deadline 2009-10 for Ph.D Program ...................................February 1 Tuition ........................................................................................ $11,120 per semester International Tuition .................................................................. $11,120 per semester Application Fee ......................................................................................................$60 Additional Fees .............................................................................. $356 per semester

Hours of Core ...........................................................................................12 Hours of Studio or Practice Related Courses .............................................0 Hours of Restricted Electives ...................................................................15 Hours of Unrestricted Electives ..................................................................6 Other ...........................................................................................................3 Total Required Hours in Planning Program .............................................36 Exams or Written Requirements .................................................................3

FINANCIAL AID INFORMATION


Tuition awards: Eligibility criteria:

Each student is considered for financial assistance. Merit

TOTAL MASTERS STUDENT COMPOSITION 2008-2009 US Citizens & Permanent Residents


Hispanics* Of any Race White African American Native American/ Pacific Islander Asian American Mixed Other / Dont know Non-US Citizens Non- Permanent Residents

Annual Student Enrollment Applied


MA in UAPP PhD in UAPP 140 61 85 42

Accepted
24 8 25 8

Enrolled
24 8 23 8

07/08 08/09 07/08 08/09 07/08 08/09

Male 0 10 2 0 1 0 0 1

Female 1 29 5 0 2 0 1 0

Total 1 39 7 0 3 0 1 1

MASTERS DEGREE
Master of Arts in Urban Affairs and Public Policy
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail: Danilo Yanich, Ph.D., Program Director (302) 831-1710 dyanich@udel.edu

Year Initiated: 1971 Degrees Granted through 8/31/08...........................................................283 Degrees Granted from 9/1/07 to 8/31/08 ..................................................16

Urban and Regional Planning; Historic Preservation; Energy; Environment & Equity; Community Development and Nonprofit Leadership

Masters Specializations

Total Students

14

38

52

*Do not double count Hispanics; Hispanics also appear in the racial categories below.

Page 170 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

DOCTORAL DEGREE
Ph.D. in Urban Affairs and Public Policy
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail: Danilo Yanich, Ph.D., Program Director (302) 831-1710 dyanich@udel.edu

TOTAL DOCTORAL STUDENT COMPOSITION 2008-2009 US Citizens & Permanent Residents


Hispanics* Of any Race White African American Native American/ Pacific Islander Asian American Mixed Other / Dont know Non-US Citizens Non- Permanent Residents

Male 0 9 4 0 5 0 1 8

Female 0 9 7 0 7 0 0 8

Total 0 18 11 0 12 0 1 16

Year initiated 1971 Degrees Granted through 8/31/2008......................................................123 Degrees Granted from 9/1/2007 to 8/31/2008 ...........................................5 Dissertations Granted from 9/1/07 to 8/31/08 1. An Exploratory Study of School Climate and Student Behavior in Thirteen Delaware Public Elementary Schools 2. A Poverty of Information: Public Health and the Local Television News 3. Stress and Farming-An Unsustainable Relationship 4. Intergenerational Human Service Delivery in the Formal Care Industry: A Case Study 5. The Catholic Church and Urban Revitalization: A Case Study of the Office for Community Development of the Archdiocese of Philadelphia

Governance, Planning and Management, Social and Urban Policy, Technology, Environment and Society
DOCTORAL ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS
University Admission Policy: Minimum Undergraduate GPA: Minimum GRE: Minimum TOEFL Departmental Requirement:

Doctoral Specializations

Total Students

27

31

58

Masters degree from an accredited institution 3.5 in previous Masters work 1100 213 No Requirements

*Do not double count Hispanics; Hispanics also appear in the racial categories below.

PLANNING FACULTY
David L. Ames
Professor. Ph.D., Clark. Specializations: Historic Preservation, Urban Geography, Urban and Regional Planning.

FAICP/AICP

DOCTORAL GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

Hours of Core ...........................................................................................15 Hours of Studio or Practice Related Courses .............................................0 Hours of Restricted Electives ...................................................................18 Hours of Unrestricted Electives ..................................................................0 Other ...........................................................................................................9 Total Required Hours in Program............................................................ 42 Thesis or Final Product: .............................................. Dissertation required

(302) 831-1050

davames@udel.edu

Steven Peuquet

Associate Professor. Ph.D., University of Pennsylvania (1995). Specializations: Community Development, Housing and Neighborhood Planning.

(302) 831-1689

speuquet@udel.edu

FINANCIAL AID INFORMATION


Tuition awards:

Each student is considered for financial assistance. Merit

Professor. Ph.D., UCLA (1964). Specializations: Urban and Regional Government, Telecommunications & Information, Urban Planning and Development, Cultural Theory.

Robert Warren

(302) 831-1686

rwarren@udel.edu

Eligibility criteria:

Margaret Wilder

Professor. Ph.D., University of Michigan (1983). Specializations: Community Development Policy and Organizations, Economic Development Policy & Planning, Housing Problems and Policy, Race, Gender and Economic Mobility.

(302) 831-6294

mwilder@udel.edu

ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 171

OTHER AFFILIATED FACULTY


John Byrne
Professor. Ph.D., University of Delaware. Specializations: Energy Planning, Environmental Planning, Political Economy.

Edward Ratledge

Associate Professor. MA, University of Delaware. Specializations: Computer Applications.

(302) 831-1684

ratledge@udel.edu

(302) 831-8405

jbbyrne@udel.edu

Rebecca Sheppard

Karen Curtis

Assistant Professor. PhD, University of Delaware. Specializations: Historic Preservation Planning, Landscape/Site Design.

Associate Professor. Ph.D., Temple (1984). Specializations: Community Development, Economic Development Planning, Social Policy/Human Services.

(302) 831-3625

rjshep@udel.edu

(302) 831-6854

kacurtis@udel.edu

Young-Doo Wang

Professor. Ph.D., University of Delaware (1980). Specializations: Energy Planning, Environmental Planning.

Kathryn Denhardt

(302) 831-1706

youngdoo@udel.edu

Professor. Ph.D., University of Kansas. Specializations: Collaborative Decision Making and Conflict Resolution, Politics and Governance, Human Resources Management, Ethics in Public Service.

(302) 831-3264

kgden@udel.edu AICP

Associate Professor. Ph.D.. Specializations: Quantitative Methods, Social Policy/Human Services.

Danilo Yanich

(302) 831-1710

dyanich@udel.edu

Adjunct Professor. MA, New York University. Specializations: Land Use/ Growth Management, Planning Practice.

David Hugg

FYI

Raheemah Jabbar-Bey
(302) 831-8564

Assistant Professor. MA, University of New Hampshire. Specializations: Economic Development Planning.

jabbarra@udel.edu

Janet Johnson

Associate Professor. Ph.D., Cornell University (1979). Specializations: Environmental Policy, State and Local Government, Research Methods.

Jonathan Justice

Associate Professor. Ph.D., Rutgers. Specializations: Urban Policy and Administration, Financial Management.

(302) 831-1682

justice@udel.edu

Jerome Lewis

Associate Professor. Ph.D., New York University. Specializations: Land Use/Growth Management, Politics and Governance.

(302) 831-1709

jlewis@udel.edu

Instructor. M.Ed., West Chester University. Specializations: Land Use Planning, Growth Management, Infrastructure/Community Facilities, Natural Resources Protection.

Edward ODonnell

(302) 831-4928

troutbum@udel.edu

David Racca

Instructor. MA, University of Delaware. Specializations: Computer Applications, GIS.

(302) 831-1698

dracca@udel.edu

Jeffrey Raffel

Messick P. Professor of Public Administration. Ph.D., Massachusetts Institute of Technology (1972). Specializations: Urban Management, Educational Planning, Policy Analysis.

Page 172 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

UNIVERSITY OF FLORIDA
Department of Urban and Regional Planning

MA/MS PAB

Ph.D.

ACSP Member: FULL

MASTERS ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS


University Admission Policy: Minimum Undergraduate GPA: Minimum GRE: Minimum TOEFL Ranking in Undergraduate Class: Departmental Requirement:

College of Design, Construction and Planning Room 431 Architecture Building P.O. Box 115706, Gainesville, Florida 32611-5706 Phone (352) 392-0997 Fax (352) 392-3308 http//:www.dcp.ufl.edu/urp Zhong-Ren Peng, Ph.D., Department Chair Email: zpeng@dcp.ufl.edu

Bachelors degree from an accredited institution 3.00 1000 (verbal minimum 320) 213/550/80 Not Required Letter of intent, 3 letters of recommendation, transcript(s)

MASTERS GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

Hours of Core ..................................................................................... 25-28 Hours of Studio or Practice Related Courses .............................................6 Hours of Restricted Electives .....................................................................9 Hours of Unrestricted Electives ................................................................12 Total Required Hours in Planning Program .............................................52 Exams or Written Requirements ........................................................ Thesis

PROGRAM INFORMATION
Admission Deadline 2008-09 for Masters program .................N/A Early application ............................................................................................................... recommended Admission Deadline 2008-09 for Ph.D program.....................................February 1st Financial Aid Deadline 2008-09 for Masters program.............N/A Early application ............................................................................................................... recommended Financial Aid Deadline 2008-09 for Ph.D program ................................February 1st In-State Tuition and Fees ........................................................ $3,288 (9) credit hours Out-of-State Tuition and Fees................................................. $9,351 (9) credit hours Application Fee ...................................................................................................... $30 Additional Fees ...................................................................................................varies

GRADUATE DEADLINES, TUITION AND FEES

FINANCIAL AID INFORMATION


Tuition awards: Eligibility criteria:

Research Assistantships and Stipends. Graduate Student at University of Florida.

TOTAL MASTERS STUDENT COMPOSITION 2008-2009 US Citizens & Permanent Residents


Hispanics* Of any Race White African American Native American/ Pacific Islander Asian American Mixed Other / Dont know Non-US Citizens Non- Permanent Residents

Annual Student Enrollment Applied


Masters Doctoral* 73 38 78 -

Accepted
52 21 62 -

Enrolled
25 9 29 -

07/08 08/09 07/08 08/09 07/08 08/09

Male 6 26 3 1 0 0 0 3

Female 3 32 1 0 0 0 0 4

Total 9 58 4 1 0 0 0 7

*College of Design, Construction, and Planning

MASTERS DEGREE
Urban and Regional Planning
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail: Dr. Richard Schneider, Professor and Graduate Coordinator (352) 392-0997 ext 430 rschnei@ufl.edu

Year Initiated: 1975 PAB Accredited Degrees Granted through 8/31/09...........................................................500 Degrees Granted from 9/1/08 to 8/31/09 ..................................................14

DEPARTMENT: Growth Management and Transportation; Housing and Community Development; Information Technology for Planning; International Planning; Urban Design COLLEGE: Certificate in Historic Preservation, Sustainable Development UNIVERSITY: University Concentration in Geographic Information Sciences

Masters Specializations

Total Students

39

40

79

*Do not double count Hispanics; Hispanics also appear in the racial categories below.

ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 173

DOCTORAL DEGREE
Ph.D. in Design, Construction and Planning with a concentration in Urban and Regional Design
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail: Andrew Wehle, Doctoral Coordinator (352) 392-4826 ext 301 wehleaj@ufl.edu

TOTAL DOCTORAL STUDENT COMPOSITION 2008-2009 US Citizens & Permanent Residents


Hispanics* Of any Race White African American Native American/ Pacific Islander Asian American Mixed Other / Dont know Non-US Citizens Non- Permanent Residents

Male 9 (0) 5 (2) 0 0 0 0 0 14 (3)

Female 1 (1) 6 (1) 1 0 0 0 0 6 (3)

Total 1 11 0 0 0 0 0 20

Year initiated 1988 ............................................................ DCP ........... URP Degrees Granted through 8/31/2007..................................... 51 .................9 Degrees Granted from 9/1/2005 to 8/31/06 ............................ 5 .................1 Dissertations Granted from 8/31/06 to 8/31/09 .................... 10 .................3

Urban and Regional Planning, Building Construction, Architecture, Interior Design, Landscape, Architecture
DOCTORAL ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS
Minimum Undergraduate GPA: Minimum GRE: Minimum TOEFL Departmental Requirement:

Doctoral Specializations

3.0 1000 213/550/80 Statement of Intent and 3 letters of recommendation.

Total Students
Hours of Core ...........................................................................................10 Hours of Studio or Practice Related Courses ........................................N/A Hours of Restricted Electives ................................................................N/A Hours of Unrestricted Electives .............................................................N/A Other .........................................................................................................50 Total Required Hours in Program...................60+30 from Masters degree Thesis or Final Product ........................Written and Oral Qualifying Exams Dissertation Required

DOCTORAL GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

19 (5)

13 (5)

32 (10)

*Do not double count Hispanics; Hispanics also appear in the racial categories below.
URP students in parenthesis

PLANNING FACULTY
Ilir Bejleri
Associate Professor, BArch (1987), Ph.D. (1994), University of Tirana, Albania. Specializations: Urban Design, Urban Simulation, Information Technology for Planning. www.dcp.ufl.edu/urp

FINANCIAL AID INFORMATION


Tuition awards: Eligibility criteria:

Research Assistantships and Stipends. Graduate Student at University of Florida.

(352) 392-0997

ilir@ufl.edu

Andres Blanco

Assistant Professor. B.A. (1999), M.S. (2005), Universidad de los Andes, Bogota`, Colombia. Ph.D. Candidate, Cornell University. Specializations: Urban Economics, Local Economics Development, Urban Public Finance. www.dcp.ufl.edu/urp

(352) 392-0997

agblanco@ufl.edu

Assistant Professor, BCE (1994) Georgia Tech; Master (2000) University of Oregon; Ph.D (2009) Georgia Tech. Specializations: Ecosystem management, regional sustainability, Collaborative planning and policy making, alternative dispute resolution, water resources and aquatic/coastal ecosystems, children and youth participation in planning. www.dcp.ufl.edu/urp

Kathryn Frank

(352) 392-0997

Kathryn.frank@gatech.edu

Page 174 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

Dawn Jourdan

Assistant Professor. BS (1996), Bradley University; J.D./MUP (2000), University of Kansas; Ph.D. (2004), Florida State University Specializations: Planning Law, Housing Law, Growth Management Law. www.dcp.ufl.edu/urp

Paul Zwick (Associate Dean)

(352) 392-0997

dawnjourdan@dcp.ufl.edu AICP

Professor. BS (1979), Florida Technological University; MAURP (1981), Ph.D. (1985), University of Florida. Specializations: Planning Information and Analysis, Land Use Analysis and Modeling and Environmental Planning. www.dcp.ufl.edu/urp

Kristin Larsen

(352) 392-0997

pdzwick@ufl.edu

Associate Professor. BS (1986), MAURP (1990), University of Florida, Ph.D. (2001), Cornell. Specializations: Planning History, Housing, Historic Preservation. www.dcp.ufl.edu/urp

OTHER AFFILIATED FACULTY


John Alexander
Emeritus Professor

(352) 392-0997

klarsen@ufl.edu AICP

Stanley Latimer

Assistant In: BS (1976), University of Georgia; MAURP (1982), MS (1983), University of Florida. Specializations: Information Technology for Planning, Global Positioning Systems www.dcp.ufl.edu/urp

Claude Boles

(352) 392-0997

latimer@geoplan.ufl.edu AICP

Director, Center for Building Better Communities. BCE (1966), Auburn University; MCP (1969, MS (1969), Georgia Institute of Technology. Specializations: Planning Administration, Growth Management, and Comprehensive Planning www.dcp.ufl.edu/urp

FAICP

Joseli Macedo

(352) 392-0997

gboles@ufl.edu

Assistant Professor. BA (1985), Universidade Federal de Parana; MCP (1992) University of Cincinnati; Ph.D (2000) University of Florida. Specializations: Urban Design, International Planning. www.dcp.ufl.edu/urp

(352) 392-0997

joseli@ufl.edu

Zhong-Ren Peng (Chair)

Emeritus Professor. BA (1965), MA (1967), University of Miami, Florida; Ph.D. (1970), University of Illinois. Specializations: Impact Fees, Land Economics www.dcp.ufl.edu/urp

James Nicholas

Professor. BS (1983), Central China Normal University; MS (1986), Graduate School of the University of Science and Technology of China; MS (1994), Ph.D. (1994), Portland State University. Specializations: Transportation, Information Technology for Planning, International Planning. www.dcp.ufl.edu/urp

jcnicholas@msn.com

Earl Starnes

Emeritus Professor. BA, Architecture; MA, Planning; Ph.D., Planning. Specializations: State Planning www.dcp.ufl.edu/urp

FAICP

(352) 392-0997

zpeng@dcp.ufl.edu AICP

estarnes@ufl.edu

Richard Schneider

Orjan Wetterqvist

Professor. BA (1968), MA (1973), CURP (1975), and Ph.D. (1981), University of Florida. Specializations: Crime Prevention Through Environmental Design, Conflict Resolution. www.dcp.ufl.edu/urp

Emeritus Professor. MA, Architecture (1958), Royal Institute of Technology. Specializations: City Design, Architecture, City Planning in Salubrious Conjunction, Theoretically and in Practice

AICP

(352) 392-0997

rschnei@ufl.edu FAICP

Christopher Silver (Dean)

Professor. BA (1973) St. Lawrence University, MA (1975) and Ph.D. (1981) University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; MURP (1979) Virginia Commonwealth University. Specializations: History of Urban and Regional Planning, International Development Planning, Community Development, Comparative International Perspective, Urban History. www.dcp.ufl.edu

FYI
RESEARCH CENTERS AND INSTITUTES
Preservation Institute of Nantucket - PIN (College of DCP) Geographic Facilities Information Center - GeoPlan Center (URP) Center for Building Better Communities (URP) Center for Health and the Built Environment (URP) Center for Tropical Architecture TROPARC (College of DCP) Paris Research Center (UF) Shimberg Center for Housing Studies

(352) 392-4836

silver2@dcp.ufl.edu

Ruth Steiner

Associate Professor. BA (1979), Lawrence University; MBA (1982), University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee; MCP (1988), Ph.D. (1996), University of California, Berkeley. Specializations: Growth Management, Transportation, Environmental Impact Assessment, Health and the Built Environment. www.dcp.ufl.edu/urp

(352) 392-0997

rsteiner@ufl.edu ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 175

UNIVERSITY OF HAWAII
Urban and Regional Planning
2424 Maile Way, Saunders107 Honolulu, Hawaii 96822 Phone (808) 956-7381 Fax (808) 956-6870 http://www.durp.hawaii.edu Dolores Foley, Department Chair Phone: (808) 956-2780 E-mail: dolores@hawaii.edu

MA/MS PAB

Ph.D.

ACSP Member: FULL

MASTERS ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS


University Admission Policy: Minimum Undergraduate GPA: Minimum GRE: Minimum TOEFL Ranking in Undergraduate Class: Departmental Requirement:

Bachelors degree from an accredited institution 3.0 1100 500/173 University/ 550 Department Not Required

MASTERS GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

PROGRAM INFORMATION
GRADUATE DEADLINES, TUITION AND FEES
Admission Deadline 2009-10 for Masters program .............................March 1, 2010 Admission Deadline 2009-10 for Ph.D program.................................March 1, 2010 Financial Aid Deadline 2009-10 for Masters program.........................April 15, 2010 Financial Aid Deadline 2009-10 for Ph.D Program .............................April 15, 2010 In-State Tuition and Fees 2009-10 ............................................$3,348 per semester* Out-of-State Tuition and Fees....................................................$8,082 per semester* Application Fee ......................................................................................................$60 Additional Fees ......................................................................... $209.70 per semester *Based on 9 credits

Hours of Core .............................................................................................9 Hours of Studio or Practice Related Courses .............................................6 Hours of Restricted Electives .....................................................................6 Hours of Unrestricted Electives ................................................................21 Total Required Hours in Planning Program .............................................42 Thesis Exam or Final Product ..........Thesis or area of concentration paper

FINANCIAL AID INFORMATION


Tuition awards:

Tuition Waiver (12) East West Center Scholarship, etc. Academic achievement

Eligibility criteria:

Annual Student Enrollment Applied


Masters Doctoral 52 10 49 9

TOTAL MASTERS STUDENT COMPOSITION 2008-2009 US Citizens & Permanent Residents


Hispanics* Of any Race White African American Native American/ Pacific Islander Asian American Mixed Other / Dont know Non-US Citizens Non- Permanent Residents

Accepted
35 7 41 4

Enrolled
25 3 17 2

07/08 08/09 07/08 08/09 07/08 08/09

Male 0 11 0 0 3 0 3 17 34

Female 0 7 0 1 6 0 1 10 25

Total 0 18 0 1 9 0 4 27

MASTERS DEGREE
Master of Urban and Regional Planning
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail: Dolores Foley, Chair (808) 956-2780 dolores@hawaii.edu

Year Initiated: 1973 PAB Accredited Degrees Granted through 12/31/08.........................................................368 Degrees Granted from 9/1/07 to 8/31/08 ..................................................25

Community Planning and Social Policy, Development Planning in Asia and the Pacific, Environmental Planning and Natural Resource Management, Land Use, Transportation and Infrastructure Planning

Masters Specializations

Total Students

59

*Do not double count Hispanics; Hispanics also appear in the racial categories below.

Page 176 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

DOCTORAL DEGREE
Ph.D. in Urban and Regional Planning
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail: Dolores Foley, Chair (808) 956-2780 dolores@hawaii.edu

TOTAL DOCTORAL STUDENT COMPOSITION 2008-2009 US Citizens & Permanent Residents


Hispanics* Of any Race White African American Native American/ Pacific Islander Asian American Mixed Other / Dont know Non-US Citizens Non- Permanent Residents

Male 0 5 0 0 1 1 0 8

Female 0 6 0 2 0 0 0 6

Total 0 11 0 2 1 1 0 14

Year Initiated 2002 Degrees Granted through 8/31/2008..........................................................3 Degrees Granted from 9/1/2007 to 8/31/2008 ...........................................3 Dissertations Granted from 9/1/2002 to 8/31/2008 ...................................3

Community Planning and Social Policy, Development Planning in Asia and the Pacific, Environmental Planning and Natural Resource Management, Land Use, Transportation and Infrastructure Planning

Doctoral Specializations

DOCTORAL ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS


University Admission Policy: Departmental Requirement: Minimum GRE:

If English is not the native language, TOEFL score of 500/173 University 600/250 Department 3.5 GPA 1100

Total Students

15

14

29

*Do not double count Hispanics; Hispanics also appear in the racial categories below.

PLANNING FACULTY
DOCTORAL GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS
Hours of Core .............................................................................................6 Hours of Studio or Practice Related Courses .............................................0 Hours of Restricted Electives .....................................................................3 Hours of Unrestricted Electives ..................................................................6 Total Required Hours in Program............................................................ 15 Thesis or Final Product Comprehensive written exam on Planning Theory; Planning Methods plus Dissertation Defense. Professor. BA, UCLA (1976); MA, Hawaii (1968); Ph.D., UCLA (1982). Specializations: Asia Pacific Urbanization, Regional and Rural Development in Asia, Urban Environmental Management, Globalization and Local Development.

Michael Douglass

(808) 956-6866

michaeld@hawaii.edu AICP

Peter Flachsbart

FINANCIAL AID INFORMATION


Tuition Awards:

Associate Professor. BSCE, Washington (1966); MS (1968) and Ph.D. (1971), Northwestern. Specializations: Planning Methods and Models, Environmental Planning, Land Use Planning, Energy Policy & Urban Transportation Planning.

Tuition Waiver (12) East West Center Scholarship, etc. Academic achievement

(808) 956-8684

flachsbarp001@hawaii.rr.edu

Dolores Foley

Eligibility Criteria:

Associate Professor. BA, Pennsylvania State (1967); MPA, Cal State (1981); Ph.D., USC (1989). Specializations: Community Planning, Social Policy, Citizen Participation, Community Development.

(808) 956-2780

dolores@hawaii.edu

Karl Kim

Professor and Chair. AB, Brown (1979); Ph.D., MIT (1987). Specializations: Planning Theory, Planning Methods, Transportation and Infrastructure Planning, Tourism Planning.

(808) 956-6865

karlk@hawaii.edu

ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 177

Assistant Professor. B.Arch, School of Planning and Architecture, New Delhi, India (1996); MLA, Pennsylvania State University (2000); ABD, UCLA. Specializations: Urban Development, Basic Environmental Services and Governance in South Asia, Design and Planning of the Built Environment.

Priyam Das

Linda Cox

Specialist. BS, HITAHR (1976); MS, Montana (1978); Ph.D., Texas A&M (1982). Specializations: Agricultural and Resource Economics.

(808) 956-7602

lcox@hawaii.edu

(808) 956-5367

priyam@hawaii.edu

Jonathan D. Gross

Reg Kwok

Professor of Geography. BA (1982), Oxford; PhD (1990), Kentucky. Specialization: Urbanization, Cultural Geography, Urban Environmental Management.

Professor. MS, Polytechnic London (1963). Specializations: Development in Asia, Urbanization in China, Spatial Development and Urban Design.

(808) 956-7375

jgross@hawaii.edu

(808) 956-6867

rkwok@hawaii.edu

Kem Lowry

Associate Professor, Matsunaga Institute for Peace. BA (1966), Coe College; MA (1982), PhD (1995), Hawaii. Specialization: Congressional War Powers, Humanitarian Intervention, and Terrorism.

Brien Hallett

Professor. BA, Washburn (1964); MA (1973) and Ph.D. (1976), Hawaii. Specializations: Evaluation Research, Coastal Zone Management, Alternative Dispute Resolution.

(808) 956-4236

bhallett@hawaii.edu

(808) 956-6868

lowry@hawaii.edu

Bruce Houghton

Professor. DottArch., Polytechnical Milano (1966); MUP, Washington (1969). Specializations: Comparative Urbanism, Settlement and Community Planning, Environmental and Land Use Planning, Pacific Islands Planning.

Luciano Minerbi

AICP

Macdonald Professor of Volcanology. BSc, University of Auckland (1971); Ph.D., University of Otago, Dunedin (New Zealand) (1977). Specializations: Quantifying the processes involved in explosive volcanic eruptions and understanding the patterns of behavior of erupting volcanoes.

(808) 956-2561

bhought@soest.hawaii.edu

(808) 956-6869

luciano@hawaii.edu

James Spencer

Assistant Professor. BA, Amherst College (1990); MEM, Yale University (1995); Ph.D., UCLA (2002). Specializations: Political Economy and Regional Development, Urban Labor Markets, Environmental Management, Community Development.

Associate Professor. BA, Florida International College (1971); JD, Mississippi (1981); LLM, Washington (1985). Specializations: Environmental Law, Ocean Law, Legal Writing.

Casey Jarman

(808) 956-5569

jarman@hawaii.edu

(808) 956-8928

jhs@hawaii.edu

Karen Umemoto

Associate Professor. BS, San Francisco State (1983); MA, UCLA (1989); Ph.D., MIT (1998). Specializations: Community Planning, CommunityBased Development, Social Policy Planning, Race and Ethnic Relations.

Assistant Landscape Specialist in Tropical Plant and Soil Sciences in CTAHR. BS (1992), MLA U of Arizona; MS (2000), Iowa State; PhD (2003) Washington State. Specialization: Environment-Behavior and Environmental Psychology.

Andrew Kaufman

(808) 956-7383

kumemoto@hawaii.edu

(808) 956-7958

kaufmana@hawaii.edu

Nancy Lewis

OTHER AFFILIATED FACULTY


Denise Antolini
Associate Professor of Law and Director of Environmental Law Program. AB (1982), Princeton; MPP (1985), JD (1986), UC Berkeley. Specializations: Environmental Law and Policy.

Professor of Geography. AB (1968), MA (1974), MA (1976), PhD (1981), UC Berkeley. Specialization: Geography and Health and Disease, Marine Resource Utilization and Management, and Women in Development.

(808) 944-7245

nlewis@hawaii.edu

Mary Grace McDonald

(808) 956-6238

antolini@hawaii.edu

Kudo Professor. BA, De Paul (1965); JD, Michigan (1968); LLM, Nottingham (2069). Specializations: Land Use Management and Control, Intergovernmental Relations.

David Callies

Associate Professor of Geography. BA (1981), Oberlin; MA (1985), PhD (1990), UC Berkeley. Specialization: Agricultural Change, Social Theory and Political Geography.

(808) 956-7016

mcdonald@hawaii.edu

Davianna P. McGregor

(808) 956-6550

dcallies@hawaii.edu

William Chapman

Professor. BA, University of Virginia (1971); MS, Columbia University (1978); Ph.D., Oxford (1982). Specializations: Historic Preservation.

Associate Professor of Ethnic Studies. Bed (1972), BA (1973), 5-Yr Certificate (1973), MA (1979), PhD (1990), Hawaii. Specialization: Land Use and Management Related to Indigenous Communities, Indigenous Rights, Cultural Resource Mapping, Natural Resource Management, and Cultural Impact Studies.

(808) 956-8826

wchapman@hawaii.edu

(808) 956-7068

davianna@hawaii.edu

Page 178 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

Lawrence Nitz

Professor. BA, Michigan (1963); MA (1965) and Ph.D. (1969), Michigan State. Specializations: Public Policy, Political Economics.

(808) 956-8665

lnitz@hawaii.edu

Deane Neubauer

Emeritus Executive Director of Globalization Research Networks. BA (1962), UC Riverside; MA (1965), PhD (1966), Yale. Specialization: Political Analysis, Policy Discourse, Alternative Economic Development and Political Economic in Hawaii.

(808) 944-7599

deanen@hawaii.edu

Norman H. Okamura

Specialist in SSRI. BA (1974), Loyola Marymount; MA (1975), PhD (1980), Hawaii. Specialization: Environmental Planning, Land Use Information, Zone Management and Information Systems

(808) 956-2909

norman@tipg.net

Professor. BE, Youngstown State (1969); MS (1971) and Ph.D. (1974), Carnegie-Mellon. Specializations: Transportation Engineering and Design.

C.S. Papacostas

(808) 956-6538

csp@hawaii.edu

Krisna Suryanata

Associate Professor. Sarjana Soil Science, Indonesia (1978); MA, Hawaii (1985); Ph.D., UC Berkeley (1994). Specializations: Political Ecology, Agro-Food Systems, Rural Development, Community-Based Resource Management.

(808) 956-7384

krisnawa@hawaii.edu

Brian Szuster

Associate Professor of Geography. BS (1986), U of Alberta; MA (1992), Simon Fraser U; PhD (2001), U of Victoria. Specialization: Coastal Land Conservation and the Impact of Human Development Activities.

(808) 956-7345

szuster@hawaii.edu

Associate Professor of Area Health Education. BA (1983), Harvard; MD (1987), Illinois, MPH (1996), Hawaii. Specialization: Disaster Management and Humanitarian Assistance

Seiji Yamada

(808) 692-1069

seiji@hawaii.edu

Raymond Yeh

Dean, Arch. BSj (1965), BArch. (1967), Oregon; MArch., Minnesota (1969). Specializations: Architectural and Urban Design.

(808) 956-3469

yeh@hawaii.edu

ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 179

UNIVERSITY OF IDAHO
Graduate Program in Bioregional Planning & Community Design
PO Box 442481 Moscow, Idaho 83844-2481 Phone (208) 885-7448 Fax (208) 885-9428 www.bioregionalplanning.uidaho.edu Steven J. Hollenhorst, Program Director Phone (208) 885-5472 E-mail: stevenh@uidaho.edu

MA/MS

ACSP Member: FULL

MASTERS ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS


University Admission Policy:

Minimum Undergraduate GPA: Minimum GRE: Minimum TOEFL: Ranking in Undergraduate Class: Other University Requirements:

Departmental Requirement:

PROGRAM INFORMATION
Admission Deadline for Masters program ..........Up to August 1st for Fall Semester Up to September 1st for Spring Semester, Up to May 1st for Summer Term Admission Deadline for Ph.D program ............................................................... N/A Financial Aid Deadline for Masters program ..........................................February 1st Financial Aid Deadline for Ph.D Program .......................................................... N/A In-State Tuition and Fees ............................................................ $3,278 per semester Out-of-State Tuition and Fees..................................................... $8,318 per semester Application Fee ............................................. $55 for domestic, $60 for international

GRADUATE DEADLINES, TUITION AND FEES

Bachelors degree from a College or University accredited by a regional accrediting association. 3.0 GRE Required, No minimum stated 525 Departmental Requirement Not Required Resume/Curriculum Vitae, three letters of recommendation, official copies of all college transcripts, and a detailed written statement of academic and career goals/ objectives. Area of Emphasis Selection Form (available at http://www. students.uidaho.edu/default. aspx?pid=24732)

MASTERS GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

Annual Student Enrollment


Applied 08/09 09/10 14 16 Accepted 08/09 09/10 14 10 Enrolled 08/09 09/10 14 9

Hours of Core .......................................................................................... 15 Hours of Studio or Practice Related Courses ............................................ 8 Hours of Restricted Electives .................................................................. 15 Hours of Specialization Electives .............................................................. 9 Thesis ......................................................................................................... 0 Total Required Hours in Planning Program ............................................ 47 Exams or Written Requirements .........Project thesis with oral presentation

Tuition Awards: Eligibility Criteria:

FINANCIAL AID INFORMATION

Research Assistantships Available Academic

Masters

Total Students Enrolled for 2009-2010: 18

TOTAL MASTERS STUDENT COMPOSITION 2008-2009


U.S. Citizens & Permanent Residents Hispanics of Any Race White African American Native American/ Pacific Islander Asian American Mixed Other/Dont Know Non-US Citizens Non-Permanent Residents Total Students Male 0 7 0 0 0 0 0 0 7 Female 0 5 0 0 0 0 0 1 6 Total 0 12 0 0 0 0 0 1 13

MASTERS DEGREE
Master of Bioregional Planning and Community Design
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail: Steven J. Hollenhorst, Program Director (208) 885-5472 stevenh@uidaho.edu

Year Initiated: 2008 In process of satisfying accreditation requirements Degrees Granted through 8/31/09............................................................. 1 Degrees Granted from 9/1/08 to 8/31/09 .................................................. 5 Total Graduates to date ............................................................................. 6

Regional Planning and Multi-jurisdictional Governance,Community and Bioregional Design, Community and Economic Development, Transportation and Sustainable Infrastructure, GIS and Spatial Analysis.
Students may also respond to emerging trends by defining their own specialization in consultation with both their major professor and the faculty who specialize in the area of interest.

Masters Specializations

*Do not double count Hispanics; Hispanics also appear in the racial categories below.

Page 180 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

PLANNING FACULTY
Gary Austin
Associate Professor Department of Landscape Architecture. B.A. California State University (1977), M.L.A. California State Polytechnic University (1981). Specializations: Landscape Architectural History, Urban Design, Landscape Architecture Construction. http://www.webpages.uidaho.edu/~gaustin/

Lorie Higgins

Assistant Professor Department of Agricultural Economics and Rural Sociology. B.A. University of Montana (1989), M.A. Washington State University (1993), Ph.D. Washington State University (2001). Specializations: Rural Communities and Natural Resource Decision Making. http://www.cals.uidaho.edu/aers/p_fac_higgins.htm

(208) 885-9717

higgins@uidaho.edu

(208) 885-7117

gaustin@uidaho.edu

Steven J. Hollenhorst, Ph.D.

Rula Awwad-Rafferty, Ph. D.

Associate Professor Department of Landscape Architecture. B.S. Architecture Yarmouk University, Irbid, Jordan (1985), M.A. Architecture University of Idaho (1990), Ph.D. Washington State University (1995). Specializations: Environment and behavior interaction; Factors affecting quality of life in the built environment: physical, cultural, social, and psychological; Culture and resettlement: resettlement of cultural groups, elderly, health care applications, and military; Adaptive reuse applications and community building; Sense of place: place attachment and identity; conflict and place, security and place attachment; Vernacular architecture; Interdisciplinary design education; Experiential approaches to understanding the physical and metaphorical parameters of interior spaces; Studio applications. http://www.bioregionalplanning.uidaho.edu/people.aspx

Professor of Protected Area Policy, Adjunct Professor of Environmental Science. B.S. University of Oregon (1982), M.S. University of Oregon (1983), Ph.D., Ohio State University (1987). Specializations: Protected Area Policy http://www.cnrhome.uidaho.edu/default.aspx?pid=70568

(208) 885- 5472

stevenh@uidaho.edu

Mark Hoversten

Professor, Dean College of Art and Architecture. B.L.A. University of Minnesota (1976), B.F.A. University of Minnesota (1980), M.A. University of New Mexico (1981), M.F.A. University of Iowa (1983), Ph.D. Candidate, Lincoln University. Specializations: Site Design, Land Planning and Public Policy. http://www.bioregionalplanning.uidaho.edu/people.aspx

(208) 885-6832

rulaa@uidaho.edu

(208) 885-5423

hoverstm@uidaho.edu PE

Assistant Professor of Child, Family, and Consumer Studies. B.S. University of Minnesota (1986), M.S. University of Idaho (1995), Ph.D. University of Idaho (2005). Specializations: Family Resource Management, Work-Life Issues, Housing, Retail and Commercial Property Management. www.agls.uidaho.edu/fcs/students/FL.htm

Nancy Deringer, Ph. D.

Michael Kyte, Ph.D.

Professor of Transportation Engineering. B.S. UCLA (1970), M.S.C.E. University of California, Berkeley (1972), Ph.D. University of Iowa (1986). Specialization: Traffic Operations, Highway Capacity, Video Based Traffic Detection, Transportation Engineering Education and Training. http://www.webs1.uidaho.edu/mkyte/

(208) 885-7264

deringer@uidaho.edu

(208) 885-6002

mkyte@uidaho.edu

Raymond Dezzani, Ph. D.

Tamara Laninga, Ph.D.

Assistant Professor Department of Geography. B.A. University of California, Berkeley (1981), M.S. California State University (1984), Ph. D. University of California, Riverside (1996). Specializations: Spatial statistics (Markov random field models, local stochastic estimation, Markov transition). Stochastic diffusion processes, GIS, global and regional economic inequality measurement and world systems theory, geographic trade models, spatial models in landscape genetics, and wildfire propagation models. http://www.scihome.uidaho.edu/default.aspx?pid=114197

Assistant Professor of Sustainable Land Use Planning, Department of Conservation Social Sciences. B.S. Western Washington University (1994), M.A. University of Colorado, Boulder (2000), Interdisciplinary Certificate in Environmental Policy, University of Colorado, Boulder (2001), Ph.D. University of Colorado, Denver (2005). Specializations: Community-based collaborative planning, federal land management planning processes, and sustainable land use planning. http://www.cnrhome.uidaho.edu/default.aspx?pid=106439

(208) 885-7117

laninga@uidaho.edu

(208) 885-7360

dezzani@uidaho.edu ASLA

Jerrold A. Long, Ph.D.

Stephen R. Drown

Professor of Landscape Architecture, Adjunct Professor of Architecture and Environmental Science. B.S. Philadelphia College of Art (1970), M.L.A., State University of New York (1974). Specializations: Design Theory, Design Development, Graphics, Professional Practice. http://www.caa.uidaho.edu/larch/

Associate Professor of Law. B.S. Utah State University, J.D. University of Colorado School of Law, Ph.D. University of Wisconsin-Madison. Specializations: Natural Resources Law, Property. http://www.uidaho.edu/law/jerrolda,-d-,long.aspx

(208) 885-7988

jlong@uidaho.edu PTP

(208) 885-7448

srdrown@uidaho.edu

Michael Lowry, Ph.D.

Tim Frazier, Ph.D.

Assistant Professor Department of Geography. B.A. University of Tennessee (2002), M.S. Pennsylvania State University (2005), Ph.D. Pennsylvania State University (2009). Specializations: Coastal Hazards, Climate Change, Hazard Mitigation, Resilience Enhancement through Planning, GIS.

Assistant Professor Department of Civil Engineering. B.S. Brigham Young University (2002), M.S. Brigham Young University (2004), Ph.D., University of Washington (2008). Specialization: Land use and transportation planning, travel demand management, traffic calming and street design, bicycle and pedestrian planning, project evaluation and finance, public participation. http://www.uiweb.uidaho.edu/engr/cedept/lowry/lowry.html

(208) 885-6238

tfrazier@uidaho.edu

(208) 885-0139

mlowry@uidaho.edu

ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 181

Assistant Professor and IURDC Director. B.Arch. University of Oregon (1976), M. Arch. Yale University (1981). Specializations: Practicing architect with McKibben + Cooper Architects/Urban Design, Boise. Architectural and urban design, master planning, community design/ revitalization, regenerative design/sustainable development, and renovation/adaptive reuse of historic structures as well as urban research and outreach projects serving Idaho through the Idaho Urban Research and Design Center (IURDC). http://www.uidaho.edu/caa/arch/sherrymckibben.aspx

Sherry McKibben

LEED AP

Manoj Shrestha, Ph.D.

Assistant Professor Political Science and Bureau for Public Policy Research. M.A. Tribhuvan University (1986); M.Sc., University of Bradford, UK (1991); Ph.D., Florida State University (2008). Specializations: Local government, public policy, water governance, collaborative management and policy, intergovernmental relations. http://www.class.uidaho.edu/pols/faculty/Shrestha.htm

(208) 885-0530

mks@uidaho.edu

(208) 364-4540

sherrym@uidaho.edu

Philip Watson, Ph.D.

Wendy McClure

Professor Department of Architecture and Interior Design. B.A. University of Pennsylvania (1974), M.Arch. University of Washington (1977). Specializations: Architect and town planner. Architectural design, community revitalization, designing for sustainability, and adaptive use of historic structures. Studio teaching emphasis on outreach in the community context in association with the College of Art and Architecture's Rural Planning and Design Center and in collaboration with Landscape Architecture. http://www.bioregionalplanning.uidaho.edu/people.aspx

Assistant Professor Agricultural Economics & Rural Sociology. B.S. Taylor University (1998), M.Ag. Colorado State University (2003), Ph.D. Colorado State University (2006). Specializations: Bioregional Planning, Fishery Management, Community Economics, Regional Economics, Natural Resources, Specialty Agriculture, Economic Development, Rural Innovations. http://www.cals.uidaho.edu/AERS/p_fac_watson.htm

(208) 885-6934

pwatson@uidaho.edu

Patrick Wilson, Ph.D.

(208) 885-6473

wmcclure@uidaho.edu

David Paul, Ph.D.

Assistant Professor Department of Physical Education, Recreation and Dance. B.P.E Purdue University (1993), M.A. East Tennessee State University (1995), Ph.D. Ohio State University (1999). Specializations: Investigating the relationships between physical activity, food intake, and chronic disease; Studying the relationship between the built environment and obesity in children and adults; Developing methodologies to improve the measurement of physical activity and food intake. http://www.bioregionalplanning.uidaho.edu/people.aspx

Associate Professor Department of Conservation Social Sciences, Adjunct Assistant Professor of Environmental Science. B.A.Ed. (1987), M.A. Western Washington (1990), Ph.D. University of Alberta (1996). Specializations: Natural resource policy and politics, and comparative public policy; politics of species conservation, tribal government management of natural resources, and water policy and politics. http://www.cnrhome.uidaho.edu/default.aspx?pid=85875

(208) 885-7911

pwilson@uidaho.edu

FYI
Bioregional Planning and Community Program Mission The mission of the Bioregional Planning and Community Design program is to prepare future public leaders, create and disseminate new knowledge, and assist communities and organizations in planning for sustainable development, sustainable efficient conservation planning and management, and sustainable human quality-of-life within and across bioregions. The programs faculty, staff, and students work with communities, through Learning and Practice Collaboratives (LPCs), create community-based plans, programs and policies that sustain and enhance their culture, resource base, built environment and economic vitality. Geographic Focus Program graduates fill an important niche in the Intermountain West and have skills that enable them to be effective planners in other parts of the world. The initial focus of the program is on Idaho, but with the expectation that it will be expanded over time to include opportunities nationally and internationally. Interdisciplinary The Bioregional Planning and Community Design program is distinguished from other planning programs around North America in two ways: (1) it represents a university-wide, interdisciplinary approach that fully integrates education and research with community engagement; and (2) it supports, promotes and advances bioregional thought and process. Undergraduate requirements Many undergraduate degrees prepare students well for this graduate program. All entering students should have previously completed a statistics course and undergraduate course work in social sciences (economics, anthropology, sociology, etc.) and ecology or complete these in addition to the degree requirements. Students with significant pre-existing course

(208) 885-7921

dpaul@uidaho.edu

Sandra Pinel, Ph.D.

Assistant Professor Department of Conservation Social Sciences. B.A. Brandeis University (1974), M.S. University of Wisconsin, Madison (1979), Ph.D. University of Wisconsin, Madison (2007). Specializations: Local and regional land use planning, indigenous and community culture in planning theory and methods; cultural landscapes, multi-jurisdictional governance; limits to participatory and collaborative planning; conflict management; community economic development; epistemologies in planning cultural resource management; ethnographic research methods, social impact and contextualized case study research. http://www.cnrhome.uidaho.edu/default.aspx?pid=106200

(785) 885-7792

spinel@uidaho.edu

Nick Sanyal, PhD.

Associate Professor Department of Conservation Social Science. B.Sc. St. Edmunds College, University of Gauhati, Shillong, India (1970), M.S. Texas A&M University (1975), M.S. University of Idaho (1984), Ph.D. University of Idaho (1991). Specializations: Directing scholarship on and learning about the wildlands, working landscapes, communities and institutions necessary for the use, enjoyment, planning and conservation of natural resources; conservation planning; human dimensions of planning and management; qualitative and quantitative research methods and survey methodologies; public opinion measurement; and community-based Service Learning. http://www.cnrhome.uidaho.edu/default.aspx?pid=70543#sanyal

(208) 885-7528

nsanyal@uidaho.edu

Page 182 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

work or professional planning practice may request credit for this prior work. The program offers the following: Master of Science in Bioregional Planning and Community Design: Includes specializations in land use planning; environmental planning; economic development planning; transportation planning; public land planning; and housing, social and community development planning. Graduate certificate: Designed for those who want to incorporate sustainable planning principles and concepts into a related professional discipline, such as transportation engineering, environmental and natural resource management, architecture, landscape architecture, and public administration. Student Chapter American Planning Association (SPPUD) Students for Place-Based Planning & Urban Design (SPPUD) strives to promote place-based planning and community design as a means of empowering citizens, strengthening communities, preserving natural resources, promoting social justice, and accommodating societys needs in a sustainable manner.

FYI

ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 183

UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS AT CHICAGO


Department of Urban Planning And Policy
412 South Peoria Street, 215 CUPPAH Chicago, Illinois 60607-7068 Phone (312) 996-5240 Fax (312) 413-2314 E-mail: upp@uic.edu http://www.uic.edu/cuppa/upp/ Kazuya Kawamura, Head Phone (312) 413-1269 E-mail: kazuya@uic.edu

MA/MS PAB

Ph.D.

ACSP Member: FULL

MASTERS ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS


University Admission Policy: Minimum Undergraduate GPA: Minimum GRE: Minimum TOEFL Ranking in Undergraduate Class: Departmental Requirement:

Bachelors degree from accredited institution 3.0 for final 60 semester hours No Requirements 550 (University) Not Required 3 letters of recommendation, personal statement and writing sample GRE and resume for Assistantship

MASTERS GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

PROGRAM INFORMATION
Admission Deadline 2008-09 ............................................................ March 15, 2008 Financial Aid Deadline 2008-09 .................................................... ... January 1, 2008 In-State Tuition and Fees: ........................................................ .. $8,301 per semester Out-of-State/ international Tuition and Fees ........................... $14,300 per semester Application Fee: .......................................................$50 domestic, $60 international Additional Fees: ..................................................................................................$481

GRADUATE DEADLINES, TUITION AND FEES

Hours of Core ...........................................................................................20 Hours of Specialization.............................................................................12 Hours of Electives................................................................................. 8-20 Professional Practice Experience ................................................................4 Other (Masters Project or Thesis) ......................................................... 4-16 Total Required Hours in Planning Program ............................................60 Exam,Thesis or Final Product: ............................Masters Project or Thesis

FINANCIAL AID INFORMATION

Admission Deadline 2008-09.............................................................January 1, 2008 Financial Aid Deadline 2008-09 ........................................................ January 1, 2008 In-State Tuition and Fees: ........................................................ .. $8,301 per semester Out-of-State/ international Tuition and Fees ........................... $14,300 per semester Application Fee: .......................................................$50 domestic, $60 international Additional Fees: ..................................................................................................$481

DOCTORAL DEADLINES, TUITION AND FEES

Fellowships; Assistantships; Tuition and Fee Waivers. Eligibility Criteria: All based on academic merit. Federal Loans. Eligibility Criteria: Based on financial need.

TOTAL MASTERS STUDENT COMPOSITION 2008-2009


US Citizens & Permanent Residents Hispanics* Of any Race White African American Native American/ Pacific Islander Asian American Mixed Other / Dont know Non-US Citizens Non- Permanent Residents Total Students Male 5 71 4 0 0 4 0 8 1 93 Female 17 52 18 0 0 3 0 5 2 97 Total 22 123 22 0 0 7 0 13 3 190

Annual Student Enrollment


Applied Accepted Enrolled 07/08 08/09 07/08 08/09 07/08 08/09 245 232 192 168 73 76 45 45 12 12 5 5

Masters Doctoral

MASTERS DEGREE
Masters of Urban Planning and Policy
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail: Kazuya Kawamura, Department Head and Associate Professor (312) 413-1269 kazuya@uic.edu

Year Initiated: 1973 PAB Accredited Degrees Granted through 8/31/09.........................................................1277 Degrees Granted from 9/1/08 to 8/31/09 ..................................................67

Community Development, Economic Development, Globalization and International Planning, Physical Planning, Urban Transportation, Faculty Approved Specialty
Page 184 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

Masters Specializations

*Do not double count Hispanics; Hispanics also appear in the racial categories below.

DOCTORAL DEGREE
Urban Planning and Policy
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail: Kazuya Kawamura, Department Head and Associate Professor (312) 413-1269 kazuya@uic.edu

TOTAL DOCTORAL STUDENT COMPOSITION 2008-2009


(Includes students still pursuing PhD in Policy Analysis)

US Citizens & Permanent Residents Hispanics* Of any Race White African American Native American/ Pacific Islander Asian American Mixed Other / Dont know Non-US Citizens Non- Permanent Residents Total Students

Male 0 4 4 0 0 0 0 2 4 14

Female 1 7 5 0 0 1 0 0 8 22

Total 1 11 9 0 0 1 0 2 12 36

Year initiated: 2003 Previous Ph.D. degree in Policy Analysis with specialization in Planning was initiated in 1975 and terminated in 2003. Degrees Granted through 8/31/2009.......................................................... 5 Degrees Granted from 9/1/08 to 8/31/09 ................................................... 1

Physical Planning, Urban Transportation, Community Development, Economic Development, Global and International Planning, Faculty Approved Specialty
DOCTORAL ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS

Doctoral Specializations

University Requirement: Minimum Undergraduate GPA: Minimum GRE: Minimum TOEFL Departmental Requirement:

GRE can be substituted with GMAT 3.0 for last 60 semester hours General Required 600 (University) Masters in Urban Planning, Public Policy or related field; 3 Letters of recommendation, statement of research interests, writing sample and resume, electronic submission; up to 32 hours transferred from Masters work to Ph.D on approval of Director of Graduate Studies

*Do not double count Hispanics; Hispanics also appear in the racial categories below.

PLANNING FACULTY
Kheir Al-Kodmany
Associate Professor, Director of Graduate Studies, Co-Director, Urban Data Visualization Laboratory. B.Arch., University of Damascus (1986); MA (1989) and Ph.D. (1995), University of Illinois at UrbanaChampaign. Specializations: Computer Applications, Geographic Information Systems, Physical Planning/Urban Design, Quantitative Methods. http://www.uic.edu/cuppa/upp/faculty/al_kodmany.html

DOCTORAL GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

Hours of Core ...........................................................................................16 Specialization ............................................................................................28 Advanced Standing ...................................................................................32 Dissertation ...............................................................................................20 Total Required Hours in Planning Program .............................................96 Exams or Written Requirements: Academic Progress: Written examination; Oral exam may be required at the discretion of the committee. Write and successfully defend dissertation.

(312) 413-3884

kheir@uic.edu

Fellowships; Assistantships; Tuition and Fee Waivers. Eligibility Criteria: All based on academic merit. Federal Loans. Eligibility Criteria: Based on financial need.

FINANCIAL AID INFORMATION

Assistant Professor. BA, University of Winnepeg (1990); MUP, McGill University (1993); Ph.D., Rutgers University (2005). Specializations: Financial Restructuring and Central City Markets, Neighborhood Development and Change, Affordable Housing Development and Preservation; Comparative Urban Policy; Normative Ethical Theory in Policy. http://www.uic.edu/cuppa/upp/faculty/ashton.html

Philip Ashton

(312) 413-7599

pashton@uic.edu

John Betancur

Associate Professor. BA, Universidad Pontificia Bolivaniana, Colombia (1971); Sociologist, Universidad San Buenaventura, Colombia (1974); MUPP (1977) and Ph.D. (1986), University of Illinois at Chicago. Specializations: Community Development, International Development, Race/Ethnicity & Planning & Social Policy/Human Services. http://www.uic.edu/cuppa/upp/faculty/betancur.html

(312) 996-2125

betancur@uic.edu

ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 185

Joshua Drucker

Assistant Professor. BA, University of Michigan (1998); MRP (2000) and Ph.D. (2008), University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Specializations: Economic Development Planning, Regional Development, Quantitative Methods, Science and Technology Policy. http://www.uic.edu/cuppa/upp/faculty/drucker.html

David Perry

(312) 413-7597

jdruck@uic.edu

Professor, Director of Great Cities Institute. BS, St. John Fisher College (1964); MPA (1966) and Ph.D. (1971), Syracuse University; MS (1981) and Ph.D. (1983), Carnegie Mellon University. Specializations: Urban Political Economy, Spatial Theory and Urban Planning, Public Infrastructure, Public Administration and Regional Change. http://www.uic.edu/cuppa/upp/faculty/perry.html

(312) 996-8700

dperry@uic.edu

Associate Professor, DGS. BA (1968) and MA (1972), North Carolina University; Ph.D., Northwestern University. Specializations: Citizen Participation, Community Development, Race/Ethnicity & Planning. http://www.uic.edu/cuppa/upp/faculty/gills.html

Douglas Gills

(312) 996-2174

dgills@uic.edu

Associate Professor and Co-Director, Voorhees Center. BFA (1985) and MUP (1990), University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign; Ph.D., Cleveland State University (1998). Specializations: Community Development, Housing and Neighborhood Planning. http://www.uic.edu/cuppa/upp/faculty/smith.html

Janet Smith

Charles Hoch

(312) 996-5083

janets@uic.edu

Professor. BA, University of San Diego (1970); MCP, San Diego State University (1975); Ph.D., University of California at Los Angeles. Specializations: Housing and Neighborhood Planning, Land Use/Growth Management, Physical Planning/Urban Design, Planning Practice & Theory. http://www.uic.edu/cuppa/upp/faculty/hoch.html

Piyushimita Thakuriah

Associate Professor. BA (1987) and MA (1989), University of Delhi, India; MUPP (1991) and Ph.D. (1994) University of Illinois at Chicago. Specializations: Quantitative Methods, Transportation. http://www.uic.edu/cuppa/upp/faculty/thakuriah.html

(312) 996-2156

chashoch@uic.edu

(312) 355-0447

vonu-pt@uic.edu

Associate Professor. BA, Wayne State University (1969); JD, Wayne State Law School (1973); LLM, Depaul School of Law (1984). Specializations: Environmental Planning, Land Use/Growth Management, Physical Planning/Urban Design, Planning Law. http://www.uic.edu/cuppa/upp/faculty/jaffe.html

Martin Jaffe

Associate Professor and Director, Center of Urban Economic Development. BA, Macalester College (1986); MUPP (1989) and Ph.D. (2000), University of Illinois at Chicago. Specializations: Economic Development, Labor Markets. http://www.uic.edu/cuppa/upp/faculty/theodore.html

Nik Theodore

(312) 996-2178

mjaffe@uic.edu

(312) 355-1340

theodore@uic.edu

Kazuya Kawamura

Sanjeev Vidyarthi

Head and Associate Professor. BS, North Carolina State University (1988); MS (1989) and Ph.D. (1999), University of California, Berkeley. Specializations: Quantitative Methods and Transportation. http://www.uic.edu/cuppa/upp/faculty/kawamura.html

(312) 413-1269

kazuya@uic.edu

Assistant Professor. BArch, University of Bombay, India (1991), March, Catholic University Leuven (2003), MUP, University of Michigan (2005), PhD, University of Michigan (2008). Specializations: Physical and Land Use Planning, Globalization and Transfer of Planning Ideas, Urban Design and Place Making. http://www.uic.edu/cuppa/upp/faculty/vidyarthi.html

Professor. Laurea in Political Science, Catholic University, Milan (1967); Certificate, American Studies, John Hopkins (1968); MUPP, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (1970); Ph.D., University of Michigan (1977). Specializations: Citizen Participation, Community Development, International Development, Planning. http://www.uic.edu/cuppa/upp/faculty/nanetti.html

Raffaella Nanetti

(312) 355-0447

svidy@uic.edu

Rachel Weber

(312) 996-2175

rnanetti@uic.edu

Associate Professor. BA, Brown University (1989); MRP (1995) and Ph.D. (1998), Cornell University. Specializations: Economic Development Planning, Planning Theory, Public Finance and Fiscal Planning. http://www.uic.edu/cuppa/upp/faculty/weber.html

(312) 355-0307

rachelw@uic.edu

Brenda Parker

Assistant Professor. BA (1994), Michigan State University; MS (2002) and PhD (2008), University of Wisconsin, Madison. Specializations: Urban policy, urban governance, race, gender, qualitative methods, program, community activism http://www.uic.edu/cuppa/upp/faculty/parker.html

Curtis Winkle

(312) 996-2167

bkparker@uic.edu

Associate Professor. BA, Indiana State University (1978); MCRP (1980) and Ph.D. (1986), Rutgers University. Specializations: Community Development, Gender Studies and Planning, Social Policy/Human Services. http://www.uic.edu/cuppa/upp/faculty/winkle.html

(312) 996-2155

cwinkle@uic.edu

Page 186 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

Moira Zellner

Assistant Professor: BS, Cientro de Altos Estudios en Ciencias Exactas, Argentina (1995); MUP, University of Michigan (2000); PhD, University of Michigan (2005). Specializations: The complexity of human-environment interactions and their effects on the sustainability of natural resources; effects of public policy and individual decision-making, and their impacts on land-use/cover change and ecological processes. http://www.uic.edu/cuppa/upp/faculty/zellner.html

Adjunct Assistant Professor: BA, Southern Illinois University (1974); MSW, University of Illinois at Chicago (1976); PhD, Indiana University (1986). Specializations: Community development, Social enterprise, Family-based policy and planning, Capacity building http://www.uic.edu/cuppa/upp/faculty/faculty.html

Richard Kordesh

kordesh@uic.edu

(312) 996-2149

mzellner@uic.edu
FAICP

Ting Wei Zhang

Professor. BA (1968) and MA (1981), Tongji University; Ph.D. University of Illinois at Chicago (1992). Specializations: Geographic Information Systems, International Development and Planning, Physical Planning/ Urban Design. http://www.uic.edu/cuppa/upp/faculty/zhang.html

Adjunct Lecturer: BA, University of Illinois at Chicago (2000); MUPP, University of Illinois at Chicago (2005). Specializations: Retail strip redevelopment and design, Community economic development http://www.uic.edu/cuppa/upp/faculty/faculty.html

T. Abraham Lentner

tlentn1@uic.edu

(312) 355-0303

tzhang@uic.edu

Vincent Michael

OTHER AFFILIATED FACULTY


Sarah Barr
Adjunct Lecturer: BA, DePaul University (2001); MUPP, University of Illinois at Chicago (2008). Specialization: Geographic information systems, Geospatial analysis and visualization. http://www.uic.edu/cuppa/upp/faculty/faculty.html

Adjunct Assistant Professor: BA, MA, University of Chicago (1982); PhD, University of Illinois at Chicago (2007). Specialization: Historic Preservation http://www.uic.edu/cuppa/upp/faculty/faculty.html

vmicha1@uic.edu

sbarr3@uic.edu

Visiting Senior Fellow: Principal Planner, Chicago Metropolitan Agency for Planning. Specialization: Public Participation http://www.uic.edu/cuppa/upp/faculty/faculty.html

Hubert Morgan

Charles Daas

hmorgan@cmap.illinois.gov

Adjunct Lecturer: BA, University of Michigan (1989); MUPP, University of Illinois at Chicago (1999). Specializations: Community development, Mutual housing http://www.uic.edu/cuppa/upp/faculty/faculty.html

cdaas@uic.edu

Adjunct Lecturer: BA, St. Marys University of Minnesota (1969); MUPP, University of Illinois at Chicago (1975). Specializations: Municipal services planning, Local government management. http://www.uic.edu/cuppa/upp/faculty/faculty.html

Robert Nelis

Co-Director, Urban Data Visualization Laboratory; Adjunct Lecturer: BSBA, Northwestern University (1970); MA, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (1972). Specializations: Geographic information systems, Information services, Demography, Economic development. http://www.uic.edu/cuppa/udv/people.htm

William A. (Max) Dieber

rlnelis@uic.edu

Erica Pascal

(312) 413-8435

maxdbr@uic.edu

Adjunct Lecturer: BA, Boston University (1972); JD, Northwestern University (1976). Specializations: Affordable housing finance and funding, Housing law http://www.uic.edu/cuppa/upp/faculty/faculty.html

epascal@uic.edu

Joseph DiJohn

Adjunct Lecturer: BA, Marquette University (1965); MBA, DePaul University (1968). Specializations: Public transit planning and operations, Freight analysis, Congestion management and pricing, Public/ private partnerships http://www.uic.edu/cuppa/upp/faculty/faculty.html

Monica Luecking Richart

Adjunct Lecturer: BS, DePaul University (2001); MLA, University of Texas, Austin (2007). Specializations: Geospatial analysis and visualization http://www.uic.edu/cuppa/upp/faculty/faculty.html

joedi@uic.edu

luecking@uic.edu

Eugene Goldfarb

Adjunct Lecturer: BA, State University of New York at Stony Brook; MUP, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign; JD, DePaul University. Specializations: Sustainable development, Brownfield redevelopment http://www.uic.edu/cuppa/upp/faculty/faculty.html

GIS Coordinator, Urban Data Visualization Lab. Specialization: Geographic Information Systems http://www.uic.edu/cuppa/udv/people.htm

Nina Savar

(312) 413-9612

egoldf1@uic.edu

Stephen Schlickman

Adjunct Lecturer: BA, Georgetown University (1975); JD, DePaul University (1979). Specializations: Public infrastructure policy, finance, and advocacy http://www.uic.edu/cuppa/upp/faculty/faculty.html

schlickmans@rtachicago.org

ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 187

Adjunct Lecturer: BA, Grinnell College (1993); MS, University of Maine (1997). Specializations: Economics, statistics, water resource economics http://www.uic.edu/cuppa/upp/faculty/faculty.html

Margaret Schneemann

FYI

mschne9@uic.edu

Thomas Smith

Adjunct Lecturer: BA, University of Michigan (1975); MURP, Michigan State University (1980), MS, Illinois Institute of Technology (1996). Specializations: Land use planning, Zoning policy analysis, Form-based codes, Development policy, Project management http://www.uic.edu/cuppa/upp/faculty/faculty.html

tpsmith101@aol.com

James Van Der Kloot

Adjunct Lecturer: BS, Michigan State University (1979); BS, Michigan State University (1980). Specializations: Sustainable development http://www.uic.edu/cuppa/upp/faculty/faculty.html

jvkloot@uic.edu

Tyson Warner

Adjunct Lecturer: BA, Wheaton College (1988); MUPP, University of Illinois at Chicago (1995). Specializations: Public participation http://www.uic.edu/cuppa/upp/faculty/faculty.html

twarner@cmap.illinois.gov

A VIEW OF CHICAGO FROM THE CAMPUS OF UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS AT CHICAGO

Ferhat Zerin

Adjunct Lecturer: BArch, Bangladesh University of Engineering Technology (1989); MArch, University of Illinois at Chicago (1996). Specializations: Urban design, Master planning, Mixed-use development, Transit-oriented development. http://www.uic.edu/cuppa/upp/faculty/faculty.html

fzerin@ginkgoplanning.com

Page 188 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS AT URBANA-CHAMPAIGN


Department of Urban and Regional Planning
111 Temple Buell Hall, 611 Taft Drive Champaign, Illinois 61820 Phone (217) 333-3890 Fax (217) 244-1717 www.urban.illinois.edu Edward Feser, Department Head Phone (217) 333-3890 E-mail:feser@illinois.edu

BA/BS PAB PAB

MA/MS PAB PAB

Ph.D.

ACSP Member: FULL


None 3.0/top 20% of class ACT 24-28

UNDERGRADUATE ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS


Departmental Requirement: Minimum GPA: Minimum SAT or ACT Scores:

UNDERGRADUATE GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

Hours of Core .......................................................................................... 22 Hours of Studio Courses ............................................................................ 6 Hours of Restricted Elective .................................................................... 27 Hours of Unrestricted Elective ........................................................... 21-25 Hours of General Education ............................................................... 40-44 Total Required Hours In Planning Program .......................................... 120 Thesis or Final Product ............................................................ Not required

PROGRAM INFORMATION
Admission Deadline 2010-2011 ....................................................... January 2, 2010 Financial Aid Deadline 2010-2011 ................................................... March 15, 2010 In-State Tuition and Fees: ........................................................... $6,954 per semester Out-of-State Tuition and Fees: ................................................. $14,025 per semester Application Fee ..................................................................................... $40/$50 (Int.) Additional Fees: .......................................................................................................$0

FINANCIAL AID INFORMATION

Work Study, Project Grants, Internships, Scholarships, Loans

UNDERGRADUATE DEADLINES, TUITION AND FEES

MASTERS DEGREE
Master of Urban Planning
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail: Stacy Harwood, Associate Professor MUP Program Coordinator Peggy Zachary, Admissions Assistant (217) 333-3890 sharwood@illinois.edu or pzachary@illinois.edu

GRADUATE DEADLINES, TUITION AND FEES

Admission Deadline 2010-2011 for Masters program .................December 15, 2009 Admission Deadline 2010-2011 for Ph.D program ......................December 15, 2009 Financial Aid Deadline 2010-2011 for Masters program .............December 15, 2009 Financial Aid Deadline 2010-2011 for Ph.D Program .................December 15, 2009 In-State Tuition and Fees: ............................................................$6,848 per semester Out-of-State Tuition and Fees: ..................................................$13,481 per semester Application Fee ......................................................................................$60/$75 (Int.) Additional Fees: ................................................................................. $0 per semester

Year Initiated: 1946 PAB Accredited Degrees Granted through 5/31/09...........................................................944 Degrees Granted from 5/31/08 to 5/31/09 ................................................28

Annual Student Enrollment Applied


Undergraduate Masters Doctoral 54 134 41 47 103 39

Accepted Enrolled
40 44 7 29 36 5 17 22 5 19 25 5

07/08 08/09 07/08 08/09 07/08 08/09

Community Development for Social Justice, Geographic Information Systems and Analysis, Land Use and Transportation Planning, Local and Regional Economic Development, Sustainable Design and Development
MASTERS ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS
University Admission Policy: Minimum Undergraduate GPA: Minimum GRE: Minimum TOEFL Ranking in Undergraduate Class: Departmental Requirement: Bachelors degree from an accredited institution 3.0 75th Percentile Minimum 102 iBT, 610 PBT, 253 CBT Not Required Introductory Microeconomics and Statistics

Masters Concentrations

UNDERGRADUATE DEGREE
BA in Urban and Regional Planning
Contact Person: Alice Novak, Lecturer and Assistant to the Head, Academic Programs Phone: (217) 333-3890 E-mail: novak2@illinois.edu Year Initiated:1953 PAB Accredited Degrees Granted through 5/31/09........................................................1009 Degrees Granted from 5/31/08 to 5/31/09 ...............................................36

Urban Planning or develop specialization, including International Planning

Undergraduate Specializations

Hours of Core ...........................................................................................30 Hours of Studio or Practice Related Courses .............................................8 Hours of Restricted Electives ...................................................................10 Hours of Unrestricted Electives .......................................................... 12-16 Recommended Internship ................... 4 (can substitute for elective hours) Total Required Hours in Planning Program: ............................................64 Exam,Thesis or Final Product: Capstone project (thesis, project, or workshop)

MASTERS GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 189

FINANCIAL AID INFORMATION

3-4 Fellowships; 20-30 Teaching and Research Assistantships, covers tuition, fees and stipend of approximately $6,715/9 months (total value: $19,827 IL resident, $32,581 IL non-resident).

TOTAL MASTERS STUDENT COMPOSITION 2009-2010 US Citizens & Permanent Residents


Hispanics* Of any Race White African American Native American/ Pacific Islander Asian American Mixed Other / Dont know Non-US Citizens Non- Permanent Residents

Planning Analysis and Information Systems, Community Development, Economic Development, Environmental Science and Sustainable Development, Regional Development, International Development Planning, Land Use and Infrastructure Planning
DOCTORAL ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS
University Admission Policy: Minimum GRE: Minimum TOEFL: Minimum GPA: Departmental Requirement: No Requirements 75th Percentile Minimum 102 iBT, 610 PBT, 253 CBT 3.0 Masters degree in relevant field; Close fit with faculty research interest

Doctoral Specializations

Male 0 14 4 0 1 0 0 5 24

Female 1 14 5 0 0 0 2 7 29

Total 1 28 9 0 1 0 2 12

DOCTORAL GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

Hours of Core .............................................................................................4 Dissertation Research ...............................................................................32 Hours of Restricted Electives .....................................................................0 Hours of Unrestricted Electives ................................................................28 Other ...........................................................................................................0 Total ..........................................................................................................64 Exams or Written Requirements: Qualifying and Preliminary exams, Dissertation Defense

TOTAL DOCTORAL STUDENT COMPOSITION 2009-2010 US Citizens & Permanent Residents


Hispanics* Of any Race White African American Native American/ Pacific Islander Asian American Mixed Other / Dont know Non-US Citizens Non- Permanent Residents

Total Students

53

Male 0 6 0 0 0 0 0 10

Female 1 5 0 0 0 0 0 6

Total 1 11 0 0 0 0 0 16

DOCTORAL DEGREE
PhD in Regional Planning
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail: Andrew Isserman, Professor/Ph.D. Coordinator (217) 333-3890 isserman@illinois.edu

Year initiated 1983 Degrees Granted through 5/31/09 ............................................................2 Degrees Granted from 5/31/09 to 5/31/2009..........................................65 Dissertations Granted from 5/1/08 to 5/31/09: 1. Modeling Spatial Spillover Effects from Rental to Owner Housing: The Case of Seattle 2. Spatial Distribution of Best Management Practices for Stormwater Management 3. Reasoning With Plans: Inference of Semantic Relationships Among Plans About Urban Development 4. Challenges of Unequal Power Distribution in University-Community Partnerships 5. Our Uncertain Future: Can Good Planning Create Sustainable Communities 6.Local Economic Impact and Adjustment after a Natural Disaster: Evidence from the 1993 Midwest Flood 7. Planning Access Differences: Collaborative Planning in the California Central Valley

Total Students

16

12

28

Page 190 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

PLANNING FACULTY
Assistant Professor. BS (1983), M.Arch. (1997) and Ph.D. (2003), University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign. Specializations: Sustainable Architecture and Design, Land Use Planning, Computer Application to Planning and Design.

Geoffrey Hewings

Brian Deal

Professor. BA, University of Birmingham, UK (1965); MA (1967) and Ph.D. (1969), University of Washington. Specializations: Economic Development Planning, Regional Analysis, International Development Planning.

(217) 333-4740

hewings@illinois.edu

(217) 333-1911

deal@illinois.edu

Assistant Professor. BS, Rensselaer Polytechnic University (1983); BArch, Rensselaer Polytechnic University (1983); MArch, University of Oregon Eugene (1994); Ph.D., University of Wisconsin Milwaukee (2004). Specializations: Architecture, Design, Housing, Community Development.

Lynn Dearborn

Adjunct Lecturer. BA, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (1973); JD, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (1977); MUP, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (1992). Specializations: Planning Law.

Joe Hooker

(217) 333-3890

jhooker@illinois.edu

(217) 333-4331

dearborn@illinois.edu AICP

Mary Edwards

Lewis D. Hopkins FAICP Professor Emeritus. BA (1968), MRP (1972) and Ph.D. (1975), University of Pennsylvania. Specializations: Planning Theory, Computer Applications in Planning, Planning Methods, Planning Practice.
(217) 333-3890 ldhopkin@illinois.edu

Assistant Professor. BB (1985) and MA (1986), Western Illinois University; MA, University of Illinois at Chicago; Ph.D., University of Wisconsin, Madison (1997). Specializations: Land Use Planning and Policy, Comprehensive Planning, Fiscal Impacts of Planning, Planning Methods.

Andrew Isserman

(217) 333-3211

mmedward@illinois.edu

Professor. BS, Amherst College (1968); MA (1970) and Ph.D. (1975), University of Pennsylvania. Specializations: Regional Planning and Analysis, Quantitative Methods, Rural Development, Urban and Regional Economics.

Edward Feser

(217) 244-2858

isserman@illinois.edu

Professor. BA, University of San Francisco (1989); MRP (1994) and Ph.D. (1997), University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Specializations: State and Local Economic Development Policy, Regional Economic Analysis, Urban Planning Methods, Regional Development Theory.

Tschangho John Kim

(217) 244-6767

feser@illinois.edu

Endowed Professor of Urban and Regional Systems. BS, Hanyang, Seoul University (1967); MS, Pratt Institute (1972); Ph.D., Princeton University (1976). Specializations: Transportation, GIS, Metropolitan and Regional Planning, International Development Planning.

FAICP Professor Emeritus. BA (1960) and JD (1962), University of Tulsa. Specializations: Planning Law, Environmental Planning, Land Use and Growth Management, Negotiation, Planning Practice.

Clyde Forrest

(217) 244-5369

tjohnkim@illinois.edu

Bruce Knight

(217) 244-5406

cforrest@illinois.edu FAICP

FAICP Adjunct Lecturer. BS, Iowa State University (1977); MA, University of Iowa. Specializations: Urban Planning Processes, Planning Practice, Land Use and Growth Management.

Albert Z. Guttenberg
(217) 244-5376

(217) 333-3890

baknight@illinois.edu

Professor Emeritus. BA, Harvard University (1948). Specializations: Land use Classification, History of American Planning.

a-gutten@illinois.edu

Stacy Harwood

Associate Professor. BA, University of California, San Diego (1986; MURP, University of California, Irvine (1994); Ph.D., University of Southern California (2001). Specializations: Neighborhood Planning, Community Development in Immigrant Communities, Qualitative Methods, Social Inequality and Social Planning.

Assistant Professor. BS, Hanyang University (1994); MCP, Seoul National University (1996); Ph.D., University of Southern California (2006). Specializations: Urban Spatial Structure, Metropolitan Development, Urban Land Use, Travel Behavior and Transportation Planning, Regional Economic Analysis and Modeling.

Bumsoo Lee

(217) 333-3601

bumsoo@illinois.edu

Daniel McMillen

(217) 265-0874

sharwood@illinois.edu

Professor Emeritus. B.Arch. (1965), MCP (1967), and Ph.D. (1973), University of Pennsylvania. Specializations: Housing Policy and Planning, Aging and Planning, Community Development, Social Policy Planning.

Leonard F. Heumann

Professor. BS, University of Illinois at Chicago (1981); MA, University of Illinois at Chicago (1982); Ph.D., Nortwestern University (1987). Specializations: Urban Economics, Housing, Local Public Finance, Real Estate, Industrial Location and Spatial Econometrics.

(217) 333-4741

mcmillen@illinois.edu

(217) 244-5373

lheumann@illinois.edu

ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 191

Faranak Miraftab

Associate Professor. BA, Tehran University (1980); MA, Norwegian Institute of Technology (1985); Ph.D., University of California, Berkeley (1995). Specializations: International Development Planning, Community Development in Developing Nations, Housing and Gender Issues in International Planning.

OTHER AFFILIATED FACULTY


Varkki George Pallathucheril
Associate Professor, American University of Sharjah, and Adjunct Research Professor, University of Illinois. B.Arch., IIT, Kharagpur (1981); MCRP (1988) and Ph.D. (1992), Ohio State University. Specializations: Urban Design, Computer Applications in Design and Planning, Site Design and Physical Planning, Community Planning and Design.

(217) 265-8238

faranak@illinois.edu

Zorica Nedovic-Budic

Professor. BA, University of Belgrade (1984); MUP, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign (1989); Ph.D., University of North Carolina. Specializations: GIS, International Development Planning, Land Use/ Growth Management, Planning in Post-Socialist Eastern Europe.

(217) 333-3890

varkki@illinois.edu

(217) 244-5402

budic@illinois.edu

FYI
Joint Masters Degrees:
Masters of Urban Planning and Masters of Architecture Masters of Urban Planning and Juris Doctorate Also, it is possible to fashion dual degree programs with other Illinois graduate programs in area studies and other disciplines. Contact Masters Coordinator for further information or consult department web site.

Alice Novak

Lecturer and Assistant to the Head. BS, University of Missouri, Columbia (1981); MUP, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign (1985). Specialization: Historic Preservation Planning.

(217) 333-3890

novak2@illinois.edu

Robert Olshansky AICP Professor. BS, California Institute of Technology (1974); MUP (1982) and Ph.D. (1987), University of California, Berkeley. Specializations: Land Use Planning/Growth Management, Comparative International Perspective, Environmental Planning, Planning Practice.
(217) 333-8703 robo@illinois.edu

Craig Rost

Adjunct Lecturer. BALA and MUP (1999), University of Illinois, UrbanaChampaign. Specializations: Economic Development Planning, Urban Financial Analysis.

(217) 333-3890

rostcr@illinois.edu

Ken Salo

Lecturer & Community Engagement Coordinator. BSC (1978) and LLM (1999), University of Cape Town ; LLB, University of Western Cape (1993). Specializations: International Environmental Planning, Citizen Participation Processes, Negotiation and Conflict Management.

(217) 244-0285

kensalo@illinois.edu

Professor. BA, Wesleyan University (1981); Ph.D., University of Wisconsin, Madison (1990). Specializations: Environmental Planning and Policy, Ecological Factors in Planning, Watershed Planning, Environmental History.

Daniel Schneider

(217) 244-7681

ddws@illinois.edu

Elizabeth L. Sweet

Assistant Professor. BA, Boston University (1985); MUP (1992), Ph.D. (2000) University of Illinois at Chicago. Specializations: International Economic Development, Community Development, Gender and Development, Qualitative Research methods.

(217) 333-9069

esweet1@illinois.edu

Bev Wilson

Assistant Professor. BA, Duke University (1997); MRP (2002) and Ph.D (2009), University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Specializations: Land Use and Environmental Planning and Policy; Growth Management; Spatial Analysis; GIS, Sustainability; Urban Simulation Modeling

(217) 333-3890

bevwilso@illinois.edu

Page 192 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

UNIVERSITY OF IOWA
Urban and Regional Planning
347 Jessup Hall Iowa City, Iowa 52242-1316 Phone (319) 335-0032 Fax (319) 335-3330 E-mail: urban-planning@uiowa.edu www.urban.uiowa.edu Charles E. Connerly, Director Phone (319) 335-0039 E-mail: charles-connerly@uiowa.edu
University Admission Policy:

MA/MS PAB

ACSP Member: FULL

MASTERS ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS


Minimum Undergraduate GPA: Minimum GRE: Minimum TOEFL Ranking in Undergraduate Class: Departmental Requirement:

Bachelors degree from an accredited institution 3.0 Not Required No Requirements

MASTERS GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

Hours of Core ...........................................................................................17 Hours of Studio or Practice Related Courses (in core) .............................4 Hours of Concentration...............................................................................9 Hours of Unrestricted Electives ................................................................20 Total Required Hours in Planning Program .............................................50 Thesis Exams or final product ................................................. Not required

PROGRAM INFORMATION
Admission Deadline 2009-10 for Masters program .............................. July 15, 2009 Financial Aid Deadline 2009-10 for Masters program.....................January 15, 2009 In-State Tuition and Fees ........................................................$3,850.50 per semester Out-of-State Tuition and Fees...............................................$10,652.50 per semester Application Fee ..........................................................................$60/$85 International Additional Fees ......................................................................Some course fees apply

FINANCIAL AID INFORMATION


Tuition Awards:

GRADUATE DEADLINES, TUITION AND FEES

Eligibility Criteria:

14 teaching and 9 research assistantships @ $8,287.50/year with/in-state tuition and $5,230 tuition scholarship. Further research assistantships and internships available. Merit and Diversity

Annual Student Enrollment


2008 2009 2008 2009 2008 2009 Masters 60 58 45 39 28 26

TOTAL MASTERS STUDENT COMPOSITION 2008-2009 US Citizens & Permanent Residents


Hispanics* Of any Race White African American Native American/ Pacific Islander Asian American Mixed Other / Dont know Non-US Citizens Non- Permanent Residents

Applied Accepted

Enrolled

Male 0 22 1 0 1 0 0 0

Female 0 10 1 1 1 0 0 6

Total 0 32 2 1 2 0 0 6

MASTERS DEGREE
Master Urban and Regional Planning
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail Charles E. Connerly, Director (319) 335-0039 charles-connerly@uiowa.edu

Year Initiated: 1964 PAB Accredited Degrees Granted through 2009 ...............................................................714 Degrees Granted from 9/1/08 to 8/31/09 ..................................................19

Economic Development; Land Use and Environmental Planning; Housing and Community Development; Transportation Planning, GIS

Masters Specializations

Total Students

24

19

43

*Do not double count Hispanics; Hispanics also appear in the racial categories below.

ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 193

PLANNING FACULTY
Associate Professor. B.Arch., University of Kerala, India (1989); Master of Town Planning, School of Planning and Architecture, India (1991); Ph.D., Florida State University (2000). Specializations: Land Use Planning, Housing Policy, Growth Management. www.urban.uiowa.edu

Jerry Anthony

AICP

Associate Professor. Masters in Demography, University PantheonSorbonne, France (1995); Masters in Sociology, University of Rene Descartes, France (1995); Ph.D., University of North Carolina (2001). Specializations: Urban and Environmental Planning, Plan Implementation, Public Participation in Environmental Decision Making, Demography: Population-Environment Interactions, Migration. www.urban.uiowa.edu

Lucie Laurian

(319) 335-2955

lucie-laurian@uiowa.edu

(319) 335-0622

jerry-anthony@uiowa.edu

Charles E. Connerly

Professor/Director. B.A. History, Grinnell College (1968); M.A. History, University of Connecticut (1974); MUP, Urban Planning University of Michigan (1976); Ph.D. Urban and Regional Planning, University of Michigan (1980) Specializations: Housing, Community Development, Civil Rights, Planning History. www.urban.uiowa.edu

Assistant Professor. Bachelor of Engineering, University of Tokyo (2002); Ph.D. Harvard Graduate School of Design, Cambridge, Massachusetts (2008). Specializations: Transportation Planning, GIS, employment and accessibility.

Miwa Matsuo

James A. Throgmorton

(319) 335-0039

charles-connerly@uiowa.edu

Peter S. Fisher

Professor. AB, Notre Dame (1966); MS, University of Louisville (1972); Ph.D., University of California, Los Angeles (1983). Specializations: Planning Theory, Planning History, Planning for Sustainable Places and Conflict Resolution. www.urban.uiowa.edu

Professor. BA, Haverford (1968); MA, University of Missouri (1972); Ph.D., University of Wisconsin (1978). Specializations: Economic Development Planning, Infrastructure/Public Services, Public Finance/ Fiscal Planning, Social Policy/Human Services. www.urban.uiowa.edu

(319) 335-0037

james-throgmorton@uiowa.edu

OTHER AFFILIATED FACULTY


Les Beck
Adjunct Lecturer. M.S. Community and Regional Planning, Iowa State University. Specializations: Land Use Planning Also, Director of Linn County Planning and Development. www.urban.uiowa.edu

(319) 335-0034

peter-fisher@uiowa.edu AICP

Professor. AB, San Diego State University (1962); Ph.D., Washington State University (1968). Specializations: Transportation, International Development and Planning, Public Finance/Fiscal Planning, Public Management/Strategic Planning, and Urban and Regional Economics. www.urban.uiowa.edu

John W. Fuller

(319) 335-0032

les.beck@linncounty.org

(319) 335-0038

john-w-fuller@uiowa.edu

Richard G. Funderburg

Assistant Professor. BA, California State University, Fullerton (1990); Master of Public Policy and Administration, California State University, Sacramento (1998); Ph.D., University of California, Irvine (2006). Specializations: Regional Science, Economic Development Policy, Spatial Analysis using GIS. www.urban.uiowa.edu

Adjunct Lecturer. M.S. Urban and Regional Planning, University of Illinois, Champaign, Illinois (2006). Specialization: LEED-AP certifiedUnited States Green Building Council. Also Assistant Land-Use Planner, Johnson County Planning & Zoning Department, Iowa City, Iowa. www. urban.uiowa.edu

Joshua Busard

(765) 730-7645

jbusard@co.johnson.ia.us

(319) 335-0036

richard-funderburg@uiowa.edu AICP

Associate Professor. BS, Rutgers University (1988); MS, New Jersey Institute of Technology (1990); MUP (1994); and Ph.D. (1998), University of Illinois. Specializations: Transportation, Computer Applications, Infrastructure/Public Services. Also, Associate Professor in the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Director of Transportation Policy Research at the Public Policy Center, and Associate Director of the Mid-America Transportation Center. www.urban.uiowa.edu

Paul Hanley

Adjunct Lecturer. M.S. Urban and Regional Planning, University of Iowa (2008). Specializations: GIS, Virtual Reality. Also Community Development Planner/GIS Specialist ECICOG in Cedar Rapids, Iowa. www.urban.uiowa.edu

Hilary Copeland

(319) 365-9941

hilary.copeland@ecicog.org

Bart Cramer

Adjunct Assistant Professor. Ph.D. Geography, University of Iowa. Specializations: Transportation, Industry and Firm Economics, Spatial Impacts. www.urban.uiowa.edu

(319) 335-0043

paul-hanley@uiowa.edu

(319) 335-0032

barton-cramer@uiowa.edu AICP

Karin Franklin

Adjunct Lecturer. M.A. Urban and Regional Planning, University of Iowa. Also, former Iowa City Planning Director. www.urban.uiowa.edu

(319) 335-0032

karinf@q.com

Page 194 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

Rick Havel

Adjunct Lecturer. M.S. Resource Planning, Southwest Missouri State University. Specializations: Applied GIS for Planners. Also, GIS Coordinator for Johnson County Information Services. www.urban.uiowa.edu

(319) 335-0032

rhavel@co.johnson.ia.us

Adjunct Lecturer. M.S. Urban and Regional Planning, University of Iowa (2008). Specializations: Virtual Reality and Economic Development. Also Associate Planner, City of Iowa City, Iowa City, Iowa. www.urban.uiowa.edu

Christina Kuecker

(515) 556-7256

christina-kuecker@iowa-city.org

Ronald Mirr

Adjunct Lecturer. M.S. Social Work, University of Iowa (1987). Specialization: Grant Writing. Also independent consultant for schools, health and human services agencies to assist with program planning, grant development, and program evaluation. www.urban.uiowa.edu

Class Trip to New Orleans

(319) 430-4315

rmirr@mac.com

Jeffrey Schott

Adjunct Lecturer. Associate Director, Nonprofit Resource Center, B.A. Political Science, State University of New York at Albany, M.A. in Political Science, University of Iowa. Also, Associate Director of the Nonprofit Resource Center at the University of Iowa www.urban.uiowa.edu

(319) 335-0032

jeff-schott@uiowa.edu AICP

Jim Schwab

Adjunct Lecturer. M.A. Urban and Regional Planning, University of Iowa Specializations: Disaster Planning. Also, Senior Research Associate with the APA in Chicago, Illinois www.urban.uiowa.edu

(319) 335-0032

jschwab@planning.org

James Stoner

Associate Professor. Civil-Environmental Engineering, M.S. Urban and Regional Planning, University of Iowa, Ph.D. Civil Engineering, Northwestern University. Specializations: Transportation Engineering, Transportation Planning, and Traffic Systems www.engineering.uiowa.edu

Bus Interchange and Bicycle Parking Downtown Iowa City

FYI
For over 40 years, The University of Iowa has been offering high quality graduate education in urban and regional planning. Located in a vibrant urban and academic setting, the University of Iowa Graduate Program in Urban and Regional Planning offers a fully accredited Master's degree in Urban & and Regional Planning, with areas of concentration in economic development, Geographic Information Systems, housing and community development, land use and environmental planning, and transportation. Its nine faculty members are committed scholars and teachers who are also engaged in the community.

(319) 335-5664

james-stoner@uiowa.edu

Adjunct Lecturer. MA Urban and Regional Planning, University of Iowa (2000). Specializations: Applied GIS for Planners. Also, Planning Division Manager for Linn County, Iowa www.urban.uiowa.edu

Dan Swartzendruber

(319) 335-0032

dan.swartzendruber@linncounty.org

Adjunct Lecturer. BS, University of South Dakota (1979); MA in Political Science (1981) and MA in Urban & Regional Planning (1985), University of Iowa. Specializations: Applied Analysis and Methods. Also, Research Scientist at Iowa State University www.urban.uiowa.edu

David Swenson

(319) 335-0032

dswenson@iastate.edu

ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 195

UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Graduate Program in Urban Planning
1465 Jayhawk Boulevard Lawrence, Kansas 66045-7614 Phone (785) 864-4164 Fax (785) 864-5301 www.saup.ku.edu/UBPL James M. Mayo, Department Chair Phone (785) 864-3350 E-mail: jimmayo@ku.edu

MA/MS PAB

ACSP Member: FULL

MASTERS GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

Hours of Core ...........................................................................................21 Hours of Studio or Practice Related Courses .............................................0 Hours of Restricted Electives ...................................................................12 Hours of Unrestricted Electives ................................................................15 Thesis ..........................................................................................................0 Total Required Hours in Planning Program .............................................48 Exams or Written Requirements ............................... Comprehensive Exam

FINANCIAL AID INFORMATION


Tuition Awards: Eligibility Criteria:

Alan Black Urban Planning Scholarship Academic Bachelors degree from an accredited institution and a faculty sponsor. Required no minimum 530 University/ 570 Department Not Required No Requirements

MASTERS ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS


University Admission Policy: Minimum Undergraduate GPA: Minimum GRE: Minimum TOEFL Ranking in Undergraduate Class: Departmental Requirement:

PROGRAM INFORMATION
GRADUATE DEADLINES, TUITION AND FEES
Admission Deadline for Masters program ............................................. July 1, 2009 Admission Deadline for Ph.D program ............................................................... N/A Financial Aid Deadline for Masters program .......................................March 1, 2009 Financial Aid Deadline for Ph.D Program .......................................................... N/A In-State Tuition and Fees .............................................................$3,469 per semester Out-of-State Tuition and Fees......................................................$7,723 per semester Application Fee ..................................................................................................... $55 Additional Fees .............................................................................. $423 per semester

MASTERS GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

Annual Student Enrollment Applied


Masters 60 56

Hours of Core .............................................................................................0 Hours of Studio or Practice Related Courses .............................................0 Hours of Restricted Electives .....................................................................0 Hours of Unrestricted Electives ................................................................42 Total Required Hours in Planning Program ............................................ 48 Thesis ......................................................................................................... 6

Accepted
48 32

Enrolled
24 18

07/08 08/09 07/08 08/09 07/08 08/09

MASTERS DEGREE
Master of Urban Planning
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail James M. Mayo, Chair (785) 864-4184 jimmayo@ku.edu

TOTAL MASTERS STUDENT COMPOSITION 2008-2009 US Citizens & Permanent Total Male Female Residents
Hispanics* Of any Race White African American Native American/ Pacific Islander Asian American Mixed Other / Dont know Non-US Citizens Non- Permanent Residents

1 22 1 0 1 0 0 0 25

0 14 2 0 0 0 0 2 18

1 36 3 0 1 0 0 2 43

Year Initiated: 1974 PAB Accredited Degrees Granted through 8/31/09...........................................................426 Degrees Granted from 9/1/08 to 8/31/09 ..................................................23

Environmental and Land Use; Housing and Development; Physical Development; Transportation
MASTERS ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS
University Admission Policy: Minimum Undergraduate GPA: Minimum GRE: Minimum TOEFL Ranking in Undergraduate Class: Departmental Requirement:

Masters Specializations:

Bachelors degree from an accredited institution 3.0 230 Not Required No Requirements

Total Students

*Do not double count Hispanics; Hispanics also appear in the racial categories below.

Page 196 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

PLANNING FACULTY
Professor Emeritus. AB, Harvard (1953); MCP, University of California, Berkeley (1960); Ph.D., Cornell (1975). Specializations: Transportation Planning. www.saup.ku.edu/people/UBPLfaculty/AlanBlack/blacka.shtml

Dennis Enslinger
FAICP

Alan Black

Lecturer. BSB (1986) and M.Arch. (1993), University of Kansas. Specialization: Historic Preservation. www.saup.ku.edu/People/UBPLFaculty/DennisEnslinger/EnslingerD. shtml

(785) 864-4184

dennise@merriam.org

(785) 864-3208

ablack@ku.edu AICP

Mike Grube

Bonnie Johnson

Assistant Professor. BA. (1990), MA. (1992) and Ph.D (2006), MUP (1994), University of Kansas. Specializations: Land Use Planning, Planning Practice and Democracy, Organization Behavior www.saud.ku.edu/People/UBPLFaculty/BonnieJohnson/JohnsonBonnie. shtml

Lecturer. BGS (1990) and MUP (1992), University of Kansas. Specialization: Real Estate Development. www.saup.ku.edu/People/AdvisoryBoard/GrubeM.shtml

(785) 864-4184 michael.grube@mccormackbaron.com

(785) 864-7147

bojojohnson@ku.edu

Charles Miller

James Mayo

Professor. B.Arch. (1966) and MUP (1968), Texas A&M University; Ph.D., Oklahoma State (1974). Specializations: Urban Design, American Landscape, Political-Economy of Space. www.saup.ku.edu/people/UBPLfaculty/JimMayo/MayoJ.shtml

Lecturer. BS (1985) and MS (1990), University of Kansas, Ph.D., Vanderbilt University (1999). Specialization: Transportation Planning www.saud.ku.edu/People/UBPLFaculty/CharlesMiller.shtml

(785) 864-4184

cmiller@hntb.com

(785) 864-3350

jimmayo@ku.edu

Dale Nimz

Associate Professor. B.Arch. (1973) and BA (1974), University of Kansas; MCP, Massachusetts Institute of Technology (1978); Ph.D., University of California, Berkeley (1985). Specializations: Housing Affordability, Community Development, Real Estate Development. www.saup.ku.edu/People/UBPLFaculty/KirkMcClure/MCClureK.shtml

Kirk McClure

Lecturer. BA, Kansas State University (1970); MA, George Washington University (1984). Specializations: Historic Preservation Economics. www.saup.ku.edu/People/UBPLFaculty/DaleNimz/NimzD.shtml

(785) 864-4184

dnimz@sunflower.com

Marcy Smalley

(785) 864-3888

mcclure@ku.edu

Lecturer. BA (1973), MUP (1981), University of Kansas. Specialization: Transportation Planning. www.saup.ku.edu/People/UBPLFaculty/MarcySmalley.shtml

Daniel Serda

(785) 864-4184

msmalley@kc.rr.com

Lecturer. AB, Harvard (1991); MCP and Ph.D. (2003), Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Specializations: Politics of Urban Design, Planning Practice, Community Design, Environmental Behavior. www.saup.ku.edu/People/UBPLFaculty/DanSerda/SerdaD.shtml

(785) 864-3178

dserda@ku.edu

FYI
Joint Masters Degrees:
o American Studies o Architecture o Geography o Law o Public Administration.

Stacey S. White

Associate Professor. BA, Emory University (1989); MS, University of Montana (1993); Ph.D., University of Wisconsin-Madison (1998). Specializations: Public Participation in Land Use and Environmental Planning, Stormwater Management, Planning Pedagogy. www.saup.ku.edu/People/UBPLFaculty/StaceyWhite/WhiteS.shtml

(785) 864-3530

sswhite@ku.edu

OTHER AFFILIATED FACULTY


Lecturer. MA, University of Nebraska-Lincoln (1980); Ph.D., University of Kansas (2000). Specialization: Environmental Planning. www.saup.ku.edu/People/UBPLFaculty/PhilEnglehart/EnglehartP.shtml

Phil Englehart

(785) 864-4184

ppajkcjk@ku.edu

ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 197

UNIVERSITY OF LOUISVILLE
School of Urban and Public Affairs
426 West Bloom Street Louisville, Kentucky 40208 Phone (502) 852-7906 Fax (502) 852-4558 E-mail: upa@louisville.edu http://supa.louisville.edu Steven Bourassa, Department Chair Phone (502) 852-5720 E-mail: steven.bourassa@louisville.edu

MA/MS PAB
University Admission Policy:

Ph.D.

ACSP Member: FULL

MASTERS ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS


Minimum Undergraduate GPA: Minimum GRE: Minimum TOEFL Ranking in Undergraduate Class: Departmental Requirement:

Bachelors degree from an accredited institution 3.0 500 V/500 Q 210 Not Required No Requirements

MASTERS GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

PROGRAM INFORMATION
Admission Deadline 2009-2010 ...........................................................July 15, 2009 Financial Aid Deadline 2009-2010 ..................................................... March 1, 2009 In-state tuition and fees....................................................................................$4,311 Out-of State ....................................................................................................$9,252 Application Fee .....................................................................................................$50 Additional Fees ............................. $35 Student Health fee, Facility fee $15, $12.50 ........................................................................................... per credit hour course fee Admission Deadline 2009-2010 ...........................................................July 15, 2009 Financial Aid Deadline 2009-2010 ..................................................... March 1, 2009 In-state tuition and fees....................................................................................$4,311 Out-of State ....................................................................................................$9,252 Application Fee .....................................................................................................$50 Additional Fees ............................. $35 Student Health fee, Facility fee $15, $12.50 ........................................................................................... per credit hour course fee

Hours of Core ...........................................................................................24 Hours of Studio or Practice Related Courses .............................................3 Hours of Restricted Electives .....................................................................9 Hours of Specialization...............................................................................9 Other (Internship) .......................................................................................3 Total Required Hours in Planning Program .............................................48 Exam, Thesis or Final Product ...............................................Not Required

GRADUATE DEADLINES, TUITION AND FEES

FINANCIAL AID INFORMATION


Tuition awards: Eligibility criteria:

18-24 Graduate Research Assistanships: 1-2 Fellowships Strong application credentials, full-time status

DOCTORAL DEADLINES, TUITION AND FEES

TOTAL MASTERS STUDENT COMPOSITION 2008-2009 US Citizens & Permanent Residents


Hispanics* Of any Race White African American Native American/ Pacific Islander Asian American Mixed Other / Dont know Non-US Citizens Non- Permanent Residents

Male

Female

Total

Annual Student Enrollment Applied


Masters Doctoral 21 9 24 15

1 20 1 0 0 0 0 0 23

0 17 0 0 0 0 1 2 20

1 37 1 0 0 0 1 2 42

Accepted
20 21 7

Enrolled
10 5 13 6

07/08 08/09 07/08 08/09 07/08 08/09

MASTERS DEGREE
Master of Urban Planning
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail: Yani Vozos Student Advisor (502) 852-8002 yani.vozos@louisville.edu

Year Initiated: 2000 Degrees Granted through 8/31/09.............................................................81 Degrees Granted from 9/1/07 to 8/31/09 ..................................................21

Land Use and Environmental Planning, Housing and Community Development Spatial Analysis for Planning Administration of Planning Organizations
Page 198 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

Masters Specializations

Total Students

*Do not double count Hispanics; Hispanics also appear in the racial categories below.

DOCTORAL DEGREE
Doctor of Philosophy
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail: Yani Vozos Student Advisor (502) 852-8002 yani.vozos@louisville.edu

TOTAL DOCTORAL STUDENT COMPOSITION 2008-2009 US Citizens & Permanent Residents


Hispanics* Of any Race White African American Native American/ Pacific Islander Asian American

Male 0 15 1 0 0 0 0 2 18

Female 0 7 1 0 1 0 0 0 9

Total 0 22 2 0 1 0 0 2

Year initiated 1988 Degrees Granted through 8/31/2008.........................................................60 Degrees Granted from 9/1/2008 to 8/31/2008 ............................................3 Dissertations Granted from 9/1/2005 to 8/31/2007 1. Urban Transportation: Analysis of Causes Leading to Rebirth of Light Rail 2. Regionalism in the New Globalized Economy: Politics of Scale and the Discourse of Regionalism - Comparative Politics of Two Japanese Global City Regions

Urban Planning and Development, Urban Policy and Administration

Doctoral Specializations

Mixed Other / Dont know Non-US Citizens Non- Permanent Residents

DOCTORAL ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS


University Admission Policy: Minimum GPA: Minimum GRE: Minimum TOEFL: Ranking in Undergraduate Class: Departmental Requirement:

Masters degree in relevant subject 3.0 (Undergraduate)/3.5 (Graduate) 500V/ 500Q/ 4.5A 210 Not Required No Requirements

Total Students

27

*Do not double count Hispanics; Hispanics also appear in the racial categories below.

PLANNING FACULTY
Steven Bourassa
KHC Real Estate Research Professor. Ph.D., University of Pennsylvania (1988). Specializations: Housing, Land Policy, Urban Economics.

DOCTORAL GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

Hours of Core ...........................................................................................18 Hours of Studio or Practice Related Courses .............................................0 Hours of Restricted Electives .....................................................................0 Hours of Specialization...............................................................................9 Other (Dissertation) ..................................................................................12 Total Required Hours in Planning Program .............................................48 Exam,Thesis or Final Product: Students must pass 2 qualifying exams and complete a dissertation and oral defense of the dissertation.

(502) 852-5720

steven.bourassa@louisville.edu

John Gilderbloom

Professor. Ph.D., University of California, Santa Barbara (1983). Specializations: Housing and Community Development, International Planning. www.louisville.edu/org/sun

(502) 852-8557

jigild01@louisville.edu

Frank Goetzke

Assistant Professor. Ph.D., West Virginia University (2006). Specializations: Transportation Policy and Planning, Urban Economics.

(502) 852-8256

f0goet01@louisville.edu

Brown and Williamsen Distinguished Research Professor. Ph.D., New York University (1971). Specializations: Political Economy, Politics, and Governance, Comparative Urban Development, Urban Public Management.

H. V. Savitch

(502) 852-7929

hvsavi01@louisville.edu

ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 199

David M. Simpson

Fifth Third Bank Professor of Community Development. Ph.D., University of California, Berkeley (1996). Specializations: Environmental Planning, Citizen Participation, Conflict Management. hazardcenter.louisville.edu

AICP

FYI
Planning Student Organization Web Site: pso.louisville.edu

(502) 852-8019

dave.simpson@louisville.edu

Sumei Zhang

Assistant Professor, PhD. The Ohio State University (2007) Specializations: Land Use Planning, Planning Theory, Research Methods

(502) 852-7915

sumei.zhang@louisville.edu

OTHER AFFILIATED FACULTY


Tony Arnold
Boehl Chair in Property and Land Use Law. J.D., Stanford University (1990). Specializations: Land Use and Environmental Law

(502) 852-6388

tony.arnold@louisville.edu

Adjunct Lecturer. MA, Webster University (1975). Specialization: Real Estate Development.

William Cahaney

(502) 213-2380

william.cahaney@kctcs.net

Carrie Donald

Associate Professor. JD, University of Louisville (1975). Specializations: Labor Management, Labor Law, Labor Relations, Workplace Issues of Women and Minorities. www.louisville.edu/cbpa/lmc

(502) 852-6449

cgdona01@louisville.edu

Steven Koven

Professor. Ph.D., University of Florida (1982). Specializations: Economic Development Planning, Politics and Governance, Public Finance.

(502) 852-8257

sgkove01@louisville.edu

Clara Leuthart

Associate Professor. Ph.D., University of Louisville (1975). Specialization: Environmental Planning.

(502) 852-6844

caleut01@louisville.edu RLA

Michael McCoy

Adjunct Lecturer. MLA, University of Virginia (1984). Specializations: Neighborhood Planning, Site Planning.

(502) 893-3550

michael.mccoy@insightbb.com AICP

John I. Trawick

Adjunct Lecturer. MBA, Bellarmine University (1999). Specialization: Neighborhood Planning.

(502) 589-0343

jackt@centerforneighborhoods.org AICP

Adjunct Lecturer. MA, University of Arkansas (1999). Specialization: Professional Practice.

Dawn Warrick

(502) 574-5178

dawn.warrick@louisvilleky.gov

Page 200 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

UNIVERSITY OF MARYLAND, COLLEGE PARK


School of Architecture, Planning And Preservation
College Park, Maryland 20742 Phone (301) 405-6795 Fax (301) 314-9583 www.arch.umd.edu/planning James R. Cohen, Program Director Phone: (301) 405-6795 E-mail: jimcohen@umd.edu

MA/MS PAB
University Admission Policy:

Ph.D.

ACSP Member: FULL

MASTERS ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS


Minimum Undergraduate GPA: Minimum GRE: Minimum TOEFL Ranking in Undergraduate Class: Departmental Requirement:

Bachelors degree from accredited institution 3.0 GPA of 3.50, need not take GRE Required Not Required Graduate school application, statement of purpose, official academic transcript and GRE scores; may accept 9 transfer credits toward MCP (make transfer request on official application).

MASTERS GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

PROGRAM INFORMATION
Admission Deadline 2009-10 ...................................................... December 15, 2009 Financial Aid Deadline 2009-10 .................................................. December 15, 2009 In-State Tuition and Fees .................................................................. $471/credit hour Out-of-State/International Tuition and Fees ................................... $1016/credit hour Application Fee: .....................................................................................................$50 Additional Fees: .............................................$337 to $593 per semester, Mandatory

GRADUATE DEADLINES, TUITION AND FEES

Hours of Core ...........................................................................................21 Hours of Studio or Practice Related Courses .............................................6 Hours of Restricted Electives .....................................................................0 Hours of Unrestricted Electives ................................................................18 Field Internships .........................................................................................3 Total Required Hours in Planning Program .............................................48 Exam,Thesis or Final Product: ................................... Optional Final Paper

FINANCIAL AID INFORMATION

Admission Deadline 2009-10.......................................................December 15, 2008 Financial Aid Deadline 2009-10.........................................................January 1, 2008 In-State Tuition and Fees ................................................................. $471/credit hour Out-of-State/ international Tuition and Fees ................................... $602/credit hour Application Fee: .....................................................................................................$50 Additional Fees: .............................................$337 to $593 per semester, Mandatory

DOCTORAL DEADLINES, TUITION AND FEES

Graduate Assistantship, Lefrak Fellowship, Amounts vary each year. Eligibility Criteria: Based on GPA, GRE, professional experience, extracurricular activities and statement of purpose.

TOTAL MASTERS STUDENT COMPOSITION 2009-2010 US Citizens & Permanent Residents


Hispanics* Of any Race White African American Native American/ Pacific Islander Asian American Mixed Other / Dont know Non-US Citizens Non- Permanent Residents

Annual Student Enrollment Applied


Masters Doctoral 131 60 166 63

Accepted
66 81 9

Enrolled
25 9 29 4

2008 2009 2008 2009 2008 2009

Male 0 23 4 0 0 0 0 2 29

Female 0 31 6 0 0 0 0 2 39

Total 0 54 10 0 0 0 0 4 68

MASTERS DEGREE
Masters of Community Planning
Contact Person: James R. Cohen, Director Phone: (301) 405-6795 E-mail jimcohen@umd.edu

Year Initiated: 1973 PAB Accredited Degrees Granted through 5/31/09...........................................................322 Degrees Granted from 9/1/08 to 5/31/09 ..................................................23

Community, Housing & Economic Development; Urban Design; Land Use and Growth Management; Social Planning, Organization and Administration; Transportation Planning; International Planning; Real Estate Development

Masters Specializations

Total Students

*Do not double count Hispanics; Hispanics also appear in the racial categories below. ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 201

DOCTORAL DEGREE
Urban and Regional Planning and Design
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail: Marie Howland, Director of Ph.D Program (301) 405-6791 mhowland@umd.edu

Alexander Chen

Associate Professor. MUP, New York University (1976); Ph.D., University of Michigan (1981). Specializations: Quantitative Methods, Community Mapping, Housing and Neighborhood Planning. www.arch.umd.edu/people/faculty_and_staff/directory.cfm/planning

(301) 405-6798

achen@umd.edu

Year Initiated 2002 Degrees Granted through 05/31/2009.........................................................7 Degrees Granted from 9/1/08 to 5/31/08 ....................................................1

Associate Professor. MS, University of Arizona (1995); Ph.D., University of Texas at Austin (2001). Specializations: Transportation Planning. www.arch.umd.edu/people/faculty_and_staff/directory.cfm/planning

Kelly Clifton

(301) 405-5495

kclifton@eng.umd.edu

Land Use Planning, Urban Spatial Structure, Economic Development, Urban Design, Community Social Development, International Planning
DOCTORAL ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS
University Admission Policy: Minimum GRE: Departmental Requirement: No requirements No requirements Masters degree in related field, but not exclusively planning, preservation, architecture. 2 semesters of graduate level quantitative methods. Fall admissions only.

Doctoral Specializations

James Cohen

Lecturer. MRP (1985) and Ph.D. (1981) Cornell University. Specializations: Land Use/Growth Management, Environmental Planning, Planning History & Theory. www.arch.umd.edu/people/faculty_and_staff/directory.cfm/planning

(301) 405-6795

jimcohen@umd.edu

Chengri Ding

Associate Professor. MS, Sinica Academy of Sciences (1989); Ph.D., University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign (1996). Specializations: GIS, Urban and Regional Economic Analysis, International Development Planning. www.arch.umd.edu/people/faculty_and_staff/directory.cfm/planning

(301) 405-6626

cding@umd.edu

DOCTORAL GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

William Hanna

Hours of Core ...........................................................................................12 Field Specialty Courses ............................................................................15 Hours of Restricted Electives .....................................................................0 Hours of Unrestricted Electives ..................................................................6 Dissertation Research .................................................................................6 Total Required Hours in Planning Program .............................................39 Exam,Thesis or Final Product:....... Comprehensive exams in 2 fields; oral defense of dissertation proposal; final dissertation

Professor. MA (1960) and Ph.D. (1962), University of California, LA. Specializations: Community Development, International Development Planning, Urban and Regional Development Planning. www.arch.umd.edu/people/faculty_and_staff/directory.cfm/planning

(301) 405-4005

bhanna@umd.edu

Marie Howland

Professor. MCP, University of California, Berkeley (1974); Ph.D., Massachusetts Institute of Technology (1981). Specializations: Economic Development Planning, International Development Planning, Rural Development, Urban & Regional Economics. www.arch.umd.edu/people/faculty_and_staff/directory.cfm/planning

PLANNING FACULTY
Howell S. Baum
Professor. MA, University of Pennsylvania (1978); MCP (1971) and Ph.D. (1974), University of California, Berkeley. Specializations: Community Development, Planning Practice, Planning Theory, Politics and Government and Social Policy/Human Services. www.arch.umd.edu/people/faculty_and_staff/directory.cfm/planning

(301) 405-6791

mhowland@umd.edu

Gerrit Knaap

Professor. MS and Ph.D., University of Oregon (1978). Specializations: Land Use/Growth Management, Metropolitan/Regional Planning, Urban and Regional Economics. www.smartgrowth.umd.edu/whoweare/facultyandstaff-gerritknaap.htm

(301) 405-6083

gknaap@umd.edu

(301) 405-6792

hbaum@umd.edu AICP

Qing Shen

Sidney Brower

Professor. MCP, Massachusetts Institute of Technology (1964). Specializations: Environmental Planning, Housing and Neighborhood Planning, Physical Planning/Urban Design, Urban and Regional Economics. www.arch.umd.edu/people/faculty_and_staff/directory.cfm/planning

Professor. MA, University of British Columbia, Canada (1986); Ph.D., University of California, Berkeley (1993). Specializations: Transportation Planning, Metropolitan Planning, Urban Economics, Methods and GIS. www.arch.umd.edu/people/faculty_and_staff/directory.cfm/planning

(301) 405-6797

qshen@umd.edu

(301) 405-6796

sbrower@umd.edu

Page 202 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

OTHER AFFILIATED FACULTY


Adjunct Professor. MS, University of Arizona, Ph.D., University of Washington. Specializations: Urban and Regional Policy, Land Use Governance, Economic Geography

Andrew B. Frank

John I. Carruthers

Lecturer. BA, Rutgers University (1989); MA, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill (1993). Specializations: Community Development, Planning Theory, Real Estate Development.

Stephen J. Karina

john_i_carruthers@hud.gov AICP

Adjunct Professor. MA, University of Wyoming (1973); Ph.D. (1978) and JD (1988), University of Maryland. Specializations: Planning Law. www.martindale.com/Stephen-J-Karina/358160-lawyer.htm

Lecturer. BA (1979) and MA (1982), University of Maryland, College Park. Specializations: Community Development, Environmental Planning, Housing and Neighborhood Planning.

Celia Craze

Adjunct Professor. BA, Harvard College (1958); JD, Harvard Law School (1961). Specializations: Real Estate Development. www.puaf.umd.edu/facstaff/faculty/falk.html

David Falk

AICP

dfalk@umd.edu

IS PLANNING THE CAREER FOR ME?


Are you interested in positive social, economic, environmental, and physical change? Do you want to work with people from various backgrounds to develop a better community? Do you like to communicate with others about ideas, programs, and plans? Are you challenged by complex problemsand excited about being part of a cooperative process to devise solutions to those problems? Do you think about the futureabout what could berather than about what is?

If you answered "YES" to any of these questions, you should seriously consider becoming a planner!

ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 203

UNIVERSITY OF MEMPHIS
Graduate Program in City and Regional Planning
208 McCord Hall Memphis Tennessee 38152 Phone (901) 678-2161 Fax (901) 678-4162 http://planning.memphis.edu Kenneth Reardon, Ph.D., Director Phone (901) 678-2161 E-Mail: kreardon@memphis.edu

MA/MS PAB
University Admission Policy: Minimum Undergraduate GPA: Minimum GRE: Minimum TOEFL Ranking in Undergraduate Class: Departmental Requirement:

ACSP Member: FULL

MASTERS ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS


No Requirements No Requirements No Requirements No Requirements Not Required No Requirements

MASTERS GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

PROGRAM INFORMATION
Admission Deadline 2010-2011 for Masters program ............................ July 1, 2010 Financial Aid Deadline 2010-2011 for Masters program ........................ July 1, 2010 In-State Tuition and Fees .............................................................$4,084 per semester Out-of-State Tuition and Fees......................................................$9,502 per semester Application Fee ......................................................................................................$35 Additional Fees: .........................................................................................................0

Hours of Core ...........................................................................................30 Hours of Studio or Practice Related Courses .............................................6 Hours of Restricted Electives .....................................................................0 Hours of Unrestricted Electives ................................................................15 Other ...........................................................................................................3 Total Required Hours in Planning Program .............................................48 Exams or Written Requirements:: ...... Comprehensive exams and Written Capstone Project.

FINANCIAL AID INFORMATION


Tuition Awards: Eligibility Criteria:

GRADUATE DEADLINES, TUITION AND FEES

Graduate Assistantship: Stipend + Tuition Federal Financial Aid; Workstudy Program Letter of application, 2 letters of recommendation, statement of career goals Federal Guidelines

Annual Student Enrollment Applied


Masters 26 26

TOTAL MASTERS STUDENT COMPOSITION 2008-2009 US Citizens & Permanent Residents


Hispanics* Of any Race White African American Native American/ Pacific Islander Asian American Mixed Other / Dont know Non-US Citizens Non- Permanent Residents

Accepted
19 20

Enrolled
10 14

07/08 08/09 07/08 08/09 07/08 08/09

Male 0 18 0 1 0 0 0 1

Female 1 3 6 0 0 0 0 0

Total 1 21 6 1 0 0 0 1

MASTERS DEGREE
Master of City & Regional Planning
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail: Dr. Kenneth M. Reardon, Director (901) 678-2610 kreardon@memphis.edu

Year Initiated: 1974 PAB Accredited Degrees Granted through 8/31/09...........................................................198 Degrees Granted from 9/1/08 to 5/31/08 ....................................................7

City and Regional Planning Community Planning & Development Youth Participation & Planning Strategic Planning for Schools and Neighborhoods Sustainable Development

Masters Specializations

Total Students

19

10

29

*Do not double count Hispanics; Hispanics also appear in the racial categories below.

Page 204 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

PLANNING FACULTY
Phyllis Betts
Associate Professor, PhD, University of Chicago,PhD., Associate Professor, School of Urban Affairs and Public Policy. Specializations: Housing, Community Development and Public Safety.

OTHER AFFILIATED FACULTY


Thomas Fox
Assistant Professor. MURP, University of New Orleans; Ph.D., Vanderbilt University. Specializations: Transportation Planning, Computer Applications, Military Planning.

(901) 678-2161

Professor: BA, University of Massachusetts, Amherst; MUP, Hunter College, CUNY; Ph.D., Cornell University. Specializations: Neighborhood Planning, Community Development, Municipal Reform, Community and University Partnerships. http://planning.memphis.edu

Ken Reardon

Hsiang-te Kung

(901) 678-2610

kreardon@memphis.edu FAICP

Professor. BS, University of Chinese Culture; MS and Ph.D., University of Tennessee. Specializations: Urban Hydrology, Urban Physical Environment, GIS, Water Resources. http://www.people.memphis.edu/~hkung/

(901) 678-4538

hkung@memphis.edu

Gene Pearson

Esra Ozdenerol

Associate Professor Emeritus. MURP, University of Mississippi. Specializations: Land Development Policy, Urban Design, Mass Transit. http://planning.memphis.edu

(901) 678-2161

gpearson@memphis.edu

Assistant Professor. BS, University of Ankara, Turkey; PhD, 2000, MS, Louisiana State University. Specializations: Geographic Information Systems (GIS), Community Participation GIS, Geovisualization, Spatial Analytical Methods and Modeling.

Susan Roakes

Phillip Poteet

Associate Professor. BA, Virginia Polytechnic Institute; MSP, University of Tennessee; Ph.D., University of Wisconsin, Madison. Specializations: Policy Implementation, Land Use Planning, Urban Land Economics, Community Schools. http://planning.memphis.edu

Assistant Professor. BS and MCRP, University of Memphis. Specializations: Planning, Architectural Design. http://planning.memphis.edu/

(901) 678-2161

ppoteet@memphis.edu

(901) 678-4560

sroakes@memphis.edu

Professor. B.Arch., Miami University; M.Arch., Virginia Polytechnic University; MA and Ph.D., University of Pennsylvania. Specializations: Planning Theory, Site Planning & Regional Planning, Quantitative Methods, Urban Design. http://www.people.memphis.edu/~rbanai/

Reza Banai

FYI

(901) 678-4559

rbanai@memphis.edu

Charles Santo

Assistant Professor. B.A., Washington & Lee University (1996); M.U.R.P., Virginia Commonwealth University (1999); Ph.D., Portland State University, (2005). Specialization: Housing, Economic Development, Youth Participation.

(901) 678-3566

csanto@memphis.edu

Assistant Professor. BA, Auburn University; M.Ed., University of West Georgia; MBA, Mississippi State University. Specializations: Economic Development. http://planning.memphis.edu/

T. Steve Redding

Pyramid Arena in downtown Memphis, former home of Tigers Basketball

(901) 678-4558

tredding@memphis.edu

ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 205

UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN
A. Alfred Taubman College of Architecture and Urban Planning
2000 Bonisteel Boulevard Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109-2069 Phone (734) 764-1298 Fax (734) 763-2322 E-mail: urp@umich.edu http://www.tcaup.umich.edu/urp Jonathan Levine, Program Chair Phone (734) 764-1298 E-mail: jnthnlvn@umich.edu

MA/MS PAB

Ph.D.

ACSP Member: FULL

MASTERS ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS


University Admission Policy: Minimum Undergraduate GPA: Minimum GRE: Minimum TOEFL Ranking in Undergraduate Class: Departmental Requirement:

No Requirements not specified not specified 220/560 (Univ.); 250/600 (Dept.) Not Required Microeconomics & Statistics but can be taken 1st semester.

Hours of Core ..................................................................................... 20-27 Hours of Studio or Practice Related Courses ......................................... 6-9 Hours of Restricted Electives ................................................................. 3-6 Hours of Unrestricted Electives .......................................................... 19-28 Total Required Hours in Planning Program .............................................48 Exam,Thesis or Final Product: ...............................................Not Required

MASTERS GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

PROGRAM INFORMATION
Admission Deadline 2010-11 ........................................................... January 5, 2010 Financial Aid Deadline 2010-11 ....................................................... January 5, 2010 In-State Tuition and Fees ........................................................ $10,683 per semester Out-of-State/International Tuition and Fees ............................ $16,513 per semester Application Fee: . $60-Domestic $75-International Additional Fees: ....... .. $95 per semester

FINANCIAL AID INFORMATION


Fellowships Eligibility Criteria: Graduate Student Assistantships Eligibility Criteria: Merit-based (GSI) Merit-based

GRADUATE DEADLINES, TUITION AND FEES

DOCTORAL DEADLINES, TUITION AND FEES

TOTAL MASTERS STUDENT COMPOSITION 2008-2009 US Citizens & Permanent Residents


Hispanics* Of any Race White African American Native American/ Pacific Islander Asian American Mixed Other / Dont know Non-US Citizens Non- Permanent Residents

Doctoral Deadline 2010-11 ............................................................... January 9, 2010 In-State Tuition and Fees ......................................................... $10,683 per semester Out-of-State/International Tuition and Fees ............................ $16,513 per semester Application Fee: . $60-Domestic $75-International Additional Fees: ....... .. $95 per semester

Male 3 45 3 2 2 0 3 9

Female 1 27 3 1 4 0 7 16

Total 4 72 6 3 6 0 10 25

Annual Student Enrollment Applied


Masters Doctoral 197 48 190 59

Accepted
163 6 179 5

Enrolled
49 4 60 3

07/08 08/09 07/08 08/09 07/08 08/09

MASTERS DEGREE
Master of Urban Planning
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail: Beverly Walter, Admissions Coordinator (734) 763-3075 beverlyw@umich.edu

Year Initiated: 1970 PAB Accredited Degrees Granted through 8/31/08.........................................................1247 Degrees Granted from 9/1/07 to 8/31/08 ..................................................37

Land Use & Environmental Planning, Housing, Community & Economic Development, Physical Planning & Urban Design, Transportation Planning, Planning in Developing Countries
Page 206 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

Masters Specializations

Total Students

67

59

126

*Do not double count Hispanics; Hispanics also appear in the racial categories below.

DOCTORAL DEGREE
Ph.D. in Urban & Regional Planning
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail: Scott Campbell, Coordinator of Doctoral Studies (734) 763-2077 sdcamp@umich.edu

TOTAL DOCTORAL STUDENT COMPOSITION 2008-2009 US Citizens & Permanent Residents


Hispanics* Of any Race White African American Native American/ Pacific Islander Asian American Mixed Other / Dont know Non-US Citizens Non- Permanent Residents

Male 0 9 1 0 0 0 0 1 10

Female 0 9 0 0 0 0 0 4 13

Total 0 18 1 0 0 0 0 5

Year Initiated 1968 Degrees Granted through 8/31/2008.......................................................177 Degrees Granted from 9/1/2007 to 8/31/2008 ............................................6 Dissertations Granted from 9/1/2006 to 8/31/2007 ....................................3 1. "Planning at the Edge: Planning Capacity, Growth Pressure, and Growth Management at the Urban Fringe" 2. Why Cooperate? An evaluation of the formation and persistence of voluntary regional land use cooperative arrangements in Michigan 3. Planning a Metropolitan Atlanta: The Atlanta Regional Commission, 1970-2002

Computers/GIS, Community Development, Economic Development, Environmental Planning, Housing, International Development, Land Use/ Growth Management, Physical Planning, Real Estate Development, Transportation, Urban/ Regional Development, Urban Design/Landscape & Technological Planning

Doctoral Specializations

Total Students

23

*Do not double count Hispanics; Hispanics also appear in the racial categories below.

PLANNING FACULTY
Maria Arquero de Alarcon
Assistant Professor: Dipl. Architecture, E.T.S.A. Madrid Polytechnic University (2001): MASLA, ETH Zurich (2004); MLAUD, GSD Harvard University (2008). Specializations: Interdisciplinary Design with a Focus on Multi-scalar Landscape and Urban Strategies; Techniques of Visualization and Representation.

DOCTORAL ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS


University Admission Policy: Minimum Undergraduate GPA: Minimum GRE: Minimum TOEFL Departmental Requirement:

None 3.3 (Undergraduate); 3.5 (Graduate) Required 560 (Paper); 220 (Computer); 84 (Internet) Masters degree in planning or related field preferred

marquero@umich.edu

Scott D. Campbell

DOCTORAL GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

Associate Professor. BAS, Stanford University (1980); MCP (1985) and Ph.D. (1990), University of California, Berkeley. Specializations: Planning Theory & History, Quantitative Methods, Regional Economic Development, Environmental Economics, Comparative Urbanization.

Hours of Core ...........................................................................................10 Hours of Studio or Practice Related Courses .............................................0 Hours of Restricted Electives .....................................................................0 Hours of Unrestricted Electives ..................................................................0 Total Required Hours in Planning Program ....................................... 24-36 Exam,Thesis or Final Product: ................ Exams and Dissertation (Thesis)

(734) 763-2077

sdcamp@umich.edu

Assistant Professor. BS (1996), MS (1999), Beijing University, Ph.D. (2004), University of California, Berkeley. Specializations: Urban Economics and Urban Policies, Real Estate Development and Finance, Land Use Economics and Policies, Housing Economics and Policy.

Lan Deng

(734) 936-0951

landeng@umich.edu

ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 207

Margaret E. Dewar

Professor. AB, Wellesley College (1970); MCP, Harvard University (1974); Ph.D., Massachusetts Institute of Technology (1979). Specializations: State, Local & Community Economic Development Planning, Planning for Declining Industries, Industrial Policy, Processes of Regional Restructuring.

OTHER AFFILIATED FACULTY


Peter Allen
Adjunct Lecturer. MBA, University of Michigan (1973). Specialization: Real Estate Development.

(734) 763-2528

medewar@umich.edu AICP

ptallen@umich.edu
Professor: BS, Northern Arizona University (1970); MA (1971), Ph.D. (1977) University of Michigan. Specializations: Diversity Issues in Urban Policy, Planning, and Higher Education; Quantitative Methods in Racial, Ethnic, and African American Studies.

Joseph Grengs

Phillip Bowman

Assistant Professor. MSE, University of Minnesota Institute of Technology (1989); MP, University of Minnesota (1997); Ph.D., Cornell University (2002). Specializations: Transportation Planning & Policy, Urban Politics, Community Development, Planning Methods & International Development.

(734) 764-6497

pjbowman@umich.edu

(734) 763-1114

grengs@umich.edu

Bunyan Bryant

Larissa Larsen

Assistant Professor. BAS (1989) and MLA (1992), University of Guelph; Ph.D., University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (1997). Specializations: Landscape Architecture, Design and Planning.

Professor. BS, Eastern Michigan University (1958); MSW (1965), Ph.D. (1970) University of Michigan. Specializations: Environmental Advocacy, Policy and Justice.

(734) 763-2470

bbryant@umich.edu

(734) 936-0234

larissal@umich.edu

Christopher Leinberger

Professor of Practice, MBA Harvard Business School (1976). Director of the Real Estate Development Certificate Program. Specializations: Downtown Redevelopment, Real Estate Company Strategic Planning, Metropolitan Development Trends, Real Estate Development, Real Estate Market and Financial Analysis.

Professor. BA (1969),Wesleyan University; MA (1971), Ph.D. (1977) University of Pennsylvania. Specializations: Community Organization, Social Planning and Neighborhood Development.

Barry Checkoway

(734) 763-5960

barrych@umich.edu

Robert Fishman

(734) 764-9453

cleinber@umich.edu

Professor. A.B., Stanford University (1968); Ph.D., Harvard University (1974). Specializations: History of Urban Design and Planning.

Jonathan Levine

(734) 764-6885

fishmanr@umich.edu

Professor. MCP (1982), MS (1987) and Ph.D. (1990), University of California, Berkeley. Specializations: Transportation & Land Use Planning, Regulation & Markets in Metropolitan Development, Public Transit Planning & Evaluation, Public Economics.

Monica Ponce de Leon

Dean/Professor. M.Arch., Harvard Graduate School (1991) Specializations: Urban Design

(734) 763-0039

jnthnlvn@umich.edu

June Manning Thomas

Douglas Kelbaugh

Professor: BA, Michigan State University (1970), Ph.D., University of Michigan (1977). Specializations: Planning History, Urban Redevelopment, Neighborhood Planning, Social Equity in Planning.

Professor. M.Arch., Princeton University (1972). Specializations: Urban Design, Land Use, New Urbanism.

kelbaugh@umich.edu

Associate Professor. MA and MEM, Duke University (1987); JD, University of North Carolina (1998); Ph.D., University of North Carolina (2001). Specializations: Planning Theory & History, Quantitative Methods, Regional Economic Development, Environmental Economics, Comparative Urbanization.

Richard Norton

Adjunct Professor: BS (1966), MS (1969), Ph.D. (1975), State University of New York at Buffalo. Specializations: Travel Behavior, Transportation Safety, Mobility and Accessibility.

Lidia Kostyniuk

(734) 763-2466

lidakost@umich.edu

(734) 936-0197

rknorton@umich.edu

Gavin Shatkin

Associate Professor: BA, Furman University (1992), MA (1994), Ph.D. (1999), University of Virginia. Specializations: 20th Century United States, Urban/Suburban, Political, Social, Southern, Popular Culture.

Matthew Lassiter

Associate Professor. MURP, University of Hawaii (1996); Ph.D., Rutgers University (2001). Specializations: Community & Economic Development Planning, Planning in Developing Countries, Political Economy of Urban Development, Planning Theory, Research Methods.

(734) 647-4618

mlassite@umich.edu

David Thacher

(734) 763-2075

shatkin@umich.edu

AssociateProfessor. BS (1992) and BA (1992), University of California,Los Angeles; MUP, University of Michigan (1994); Ph.D., Massachusetts Institute of Technology (1999). Specializations: Public Management,Crime Policy, Ethics, Housing & Community Development.

(734) 615-4074

dthacher@umich.edu

Page 208 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

FYI
Joint Degree Programs:
o MUP/M.Arch. o MUP/MBA o MUP/JD o MUP/MSW o MUP/MS in Resource Policy & Behavior o MUP/MLA (Landscape Architecture) o MUP/MPP (Public Policy) o MUP/MPH (Health Beh./Health Ed.) o MUP/MUD (Urban Design) o MUP/MPH (Epidemiology or Health Mgmt. & Policy) o MUP/MS (Res. Ecology & Mgmt.) o MUP/MS (Information) o MUP/Ph.D. (e.g., Sociology, Anthropology, Classical Archaeology, & Architecture)

Capstone presentation; "Filling in the Gaps: A Plan for Vacant Properties in Osborn

WHAT IS URbAN AND REGIONAL PLANNING?


Urban and regional planners do many types of jobs and are involved in almost any kind of government or private activity which seeks to affect the future or respond to community change. The majority of planners work in traditional planning areas such as land use, environmental protection, economic development, transportation, community design, housing, and social planning. However individual planners can still have a wide variety of responsibilities within these broadly defined specialities. Other planners work in less traditional areas, often with people from other disciplines, such as healthy communities or energy development or school planning. Some planners become generaliststhey develop a level of expertise in several substantive areas. Others become specialists and define themselves as housing or transportation or environmental planners.

ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 209

UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA
Hubert H. Humphrey Institute of Public Affairs
301 Ninteenth Avenue South Minneapolis, Minnesota 55455 Phone (612) 624-3800 Fax (612) 625-3513 E-mail: hhhadmit@umn.edu www.hhh.umn.edu Ragui Assaad, Department Chair Phone (612) 625-4856 E-mail: assaad@umn.edu
University Admission Policy:

MA/MS PAB

ACSP Member: FULL

MASTERS ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS


Minimum Undergraduate GPA: Minimum GRE: Minimum TOEFL: Ranking in Undergraduate Class: Departmental Requirement:

Bachelors degree from an accredited institution No minimum: 3.39 No minimum: 541/659/4.6 Average Scores of Present Students 550/213 (Univ.); 600/250/100 (Dept.) Not Required Resume, 3 letters of recommendation, and a statement of purpose.

Hours of Core ............................................................................... 25.5-26.5 Hours of Studio or Practice Related Courses .............................................3 Hours of Restricted Electives .....................................................................0 Hours of Unrestricted Electives .................................................... 18.5-19.5 Total Required Hours in Planning Program .............................................48 Exams or Written Requirements: ..... 400 hour professional internship only

MASTERS GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

PROGRAM INFORMATION
GRADUATE DEADLINES, TUITION AND FEES
Admission Deadline 2009-2010 for Masters program ......................... April 1, 2010 Financial Aid Deadline 2009-2010 for Masters program ................ January 5, 2010 In-State Tuition and Fees .......................................................... $7,191 per semester Out-of-State Tuition and Fees.................................................. $10,732 per semester Application Fee ......................................................$75(Domestic) $95(International) Additional Fees: .........................$852/Semester student health benefit plan assessed to those who do not have coverage.

FINANCIAL AID INFORMATION


Tuition awards:

Eligibility criteria:

Teaching Assistantships: time, $6,350 salary, partial health/tuition benefits. Research Assistantships: time, $6350 salary, partial health/tuition benefits. Tuition scholarships and fellowships: $5,000 to $22,000 plus full tuition benefits Merit and Need

Annual Student Enrollment Applied


Masters 98 102

TOTAL MASTERS STUDENT COMPOSITION 2008-2009 US Citizens & Permanent Residents


Hispanics* Of any Race White African American Native American/ Pacific Islander Asian American Mixed Other / Dont know

Accepted
N/A N/A

Enrolled
33 38

07/08 08/09 07/08 08/09 07/08 08/09

Male 2 50 1 0 1 0 3 5 62

Female 1 36 4 1 4 0 0 2 48

Total 3 86 5 1 5 0 3 7 110

MASTERS DEGREE
Master of Urban & Regional Planning
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail: Julie Harold, Director Graduate Student Services (612) 624-3800 hhhadmit@umn.edu

Year Initiated: 1999 PAB Accredited Degrees Granted through 8/31/08...........................................................352 Degrees Granted from 9/1/07 to 8/31/08 ..................................................40

Land Use & Urban Design, Transportation Planning, Housing & Community Development, Economic Development & Workforce Planning, Environmental Planning

Masters Specializations

Non-US Citizens Non- Permanent Residents

Total Students

*Do not double count Hispanics; Hispanics also appear in the racial categories below. Page 210 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

TOTAL MASTERS STUDENT COMPOSITION 2007-2008 US Citizens & Permanent Residents


Hispanics* Of any Race White African American Native American/ Pacific Islander Asian American Mixed Other / Dont know Non-US Citizens Non- Permanent Residents

Male 3 63 1 0 1 0 3 3 74

Female 1 36 5 1 1 0 0 3 47

Total 4 99 6 1 2 0 3 6 121

Assistant Professor. BE (1998) and ME (2001), Tsinghua University; MS (2005) and Ph.D. (2006) University of California, Davis. Specializations: Transportation Planning and Policy, Land Use Planning, Travel Behavior Analysis and Demand Modeling, Neighborhood Design and Public Health. www.hhh.umn.edu/people/jcao/index.html

Xinyu Cao

(612) 625-5671

Cao@umn.edu

Yingling Fan

Assistant Professor. BS, Southeast University, China (1997); Ph.D., University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill (2007). Specializations: Land Use/Growth Management, Transportation Planning and Policy, Time Geography, Urban Health. http://www.hhh.umn.edu/people/yfan/index.html

(612) 626-2930

yingling@umn.edu

Edward G. Goetz

Professor. BA, University of California, Riverside (1979); MA (1983) and Ph.D. (1987), Northwestern University. Specializations: Community Development, Housing & Neighborhood Planning. www.hhh.umn.edu/people/egoetz/index.html

(612) 624-8737

egoetz@umn.edu

Total Students

*Do not double count Hispanics; Hispanics also appear in the racial categories below.

Associate Professor. BS, Georgia Institute of Technology (1989); MS, University of Maryland (1991); Ph.D., University of California, Berkeley (1998). Specializations: Land Use/Growth Management, Transportation Planning. www.ce.umn.edu/people/faculty/levinson

David Levinson

(612) 625-6354

levin031@umn.edu

PLANNING FACULTY
Ryan P. Allen
Assistant Professor. BA, The College of William and Mary (1997); MCP (2002) and Ph.D. (2007), Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Specializations: Immigrant and Refugee Policy, Social Networks, Urban Planning in Diverse Communities. www.hhh.umn.edu/people/rallen/index.html

Greg H. Lindsey

Professor. BUP, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign (1977); MA, Northeastern Illinois University (1987); MA (1989) and Ph.D. (1992) The Johns Hopkins University. Specializations:Environmental Planning and Management; Built Environment and Physical Activity. http://www.hhh.umn.edu/people/glindsey/

(612) 625-3375

linds301@umn.edu

(612) 625-5670

allen650@umn.edu

Ann R. Markusen

Ragui A. Assaad

Professor. BS and MS, Stanford University (1981); Ph.D., Cornell University (1991). Specializations: Community Development, Demography, Economic Development Planning, Impact Assessment, International Development & Planning. www.hhh.umn.edu/people/rassaad/index.html

Professor Emerita. BSFS, Georgetown University (1968); MA (1972) and Ph.D. (1974), Michigan State University. Specializations: Economic Development Planning, Arts and Culture Planning, Regional Planning, Political Economy. www.hhh.umn.edu/people/amarkusen/index.html

(612) 625-8092

markusen@umn.edu

(612) 626-8910

assaad@umn.edu

David G. Pitt

John M. Bryson

Professor. BA, Cornell University (1969); MA (1972), MS (1974) and Ph.D. (1987), Northwestern University. Specializations: Planning Practice, Planning Theory, Public Management/Strategic Planning. www.hhh.umn.edu/people/jmbryson/index.html

Professor. BA, Syracuse University; MLA, University of Massachusetts; Ph.D., University of Arizona (1986). Specializations: Environmental Planning, Environmental Psychology, Land Use/Growth Management, Landscape/Site Design, Natural Resource Planning. www.cala.umn.edu/landscape_architecture/fac/fac/pitt/intro.html

(612) 625-5888

bryso001@umn.edu

(612) 625-7370

pittx001@umn.edu

ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 211

Carissa Schively Slotterback

Assistant Professor. BA, Winona State University (1995); MCRP, Clemson University (1997); Ph.D., Florida State University (2004). Specializations: Environmental Planning, Land Use Planning, Planning & Public Processes, Sustainable Development. www.hhh.umn.edu/people/cschively/index.html

AICP

(612) 626-3193

schiv005@umn.edu

OTHER AFFILIATED FACULTY


Richard S. Bolan
Professor Emeritus. BA, Yale University (1954); MCP, Massachusetts Institute of Technology (1956); Ph.D., New York University (1974). Specializations: Environmental Planning, Metropolitan/Regional Planning, Planning Theory. www.hhh.umn.edu/people/dbolan/index.html

AICP

(612) 625-0128

bolan001@umn.edu

David Hollister

Professor. MSW (1962) and Ph.D. (1966), University of Michigan; PodtDoctoral Fellow, Stanford University (1978-79). Specializations: Citizen Participation/Community Organization, Social Policy/Human Services. http://ssw.che.umn.edu/Faculty_Profiles/Hollister_C_David.html

(612) 624-3695

dhollist@umn.edu

Associate Professor. BS, University of Minnesota (1985); MA (1988) and Ph.D. (1992), University of Michigan. Specializations: Analysis of Federal and State Taxation of Businesses, Consumption Taxation, Tax Reform, Local Fiscal Impact Models. http://www.apec.umn.edu/Laura_Kalambokidis.html

Laura Kalambokidis

(612) 625-1995

kalam002@umn.edu

Judith A. Martin

Professor. MA (1971 & 1973) and Ph.D. (1976), University of Minnesota. Specializations: Landscape & Cultural Concerns, Metropolitan Governance, Urban & Cultural Geography. www.geog.umn.edu/Faculty/Martin.html

(612) 626-1626

jmartin@umn.edu

Julian D. Marshall

Assistant Professor. BSE, Princeton University (1996); MS (2002) and Ph.D. (2005), University of California, Berkeley. Specializations: Energy and Environmental Impacts of Transportation, Urban Growth Theory, Environmental Justice. http://www.ce.umn.edu/people/faculty/marshall/index.html

(612) 625-2397

julian@umn.edu

Myron W. Orfield, Jr.

Associate Professor. BA, University of Minnesota (1983); Ph.D. candidate, Princeton University (1983-84); J.D., University of Chicago Law School (1987). Specializations: Civil Rights, State and Local Government, State and Local Finance, Land Use, Questions of Regional Governance, Legislative Process. www.irpumn.org

(612) 625-7976

orfield@umn.edu

Page 212 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

UNIVERSITY OF MISSOURIKANSAS CITY


Epperson House 5100 Rockhill Road Kansas City, Missouri 64110 Phone (816) 235-1725 Fax (816) 235-5226 http://cas.umkc.edu/aupd Joy Swallow, Department Chair aupd@umkc.edu

BA

ACSP Member: FULL

Urban Planning and Design

PLANNING FACULTY
Michael Frisch
Associate Professor. BA, Earlham College (1983); MCP, MIT (1996); PhD, Rutgers (2002). Specializations: Environmental Planning, Economic Development, Land Use and Zoning, Community Development. (816) 235-6369 frischm@umkc.edu

AICP

Sungyop Kim

PROGRAM INFORMATION
Admission Deadline 2009-10 ................................................................ April 1, 2008 Financial Aid Deadline 2009-10 .......................................................... March 1, 2008 In-State Tuition and Fees ....................................................... $310.25 per credit hour Out-of-State Tuition and Fees................................................ $679.95 per credit hour Application Fee ......................................................................................................$35

UNDERGRADUATE DEADLINES, TUITION AND FEES

Assistant Professor. BA Sungkyunkwan (1994), University of Hawaii (1996), MURP University of Hawaii (2000) , PhD, University of Washington (2004). Specializations: Transportation, Land Use, GIS. (816) 235-6898 kims@umkc.edu

Joy Swallow

Annual Student Enrollment Applied


Undergraduate 34 32

Associate Professor and Chair. B.Arch., (1980) Kansas State; M.Arch. (1986) and Teaching Certificate, Historic Preservation, University of Pennsylvania. Specializations: Historic Preservation, Urban Design, Architecture. (816) 235-2998 swallowj@umkc.edu

AIA

Accepted
34 30

Enrolled
43 56

Jacob Wagner

07/08 08/09 07/08 08/09 07/08 08/09

UNDERGRADUATE DEGREE
BA in Urban Planning and Design
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail: Stella Szymanski (816) 235-1725 aupd@umkc.edu

Assistant Professor. BA, University of Oregon (1994); MCRP, University of Oregon (1998); PhD, University of New Orleans (2004). Specializations: Community Development, Historic Preservation, Planning History, Planning Theory. (816) 235-6053 wagnerjaco@umkc.edu

OTHER AFFILIATED FACULTY


Adjunct. M.Arch University of California at Berkeley, MA Cornell University, B.Arch Washington University, St Louis MO. Specialization: Historic Preservation Planning

Sylvia Rose Augustus

Year Initiated: 2002-03 Degrees Granted through May 2009 .......................................................32

Chris Brewster John Eck

Adjunct. BS, University of Delaware; JD, University of Missouri, Kansas City. Specializations: Planning Law.

AICP

Urban Design, Community Planning, Environmental Planning, Historic Preservation, Transportation Planning UNDERGRADUATE ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS
Departmental Requirement: No Requirements Minimum GPA: 2.5 / ACT 21 Minimum SAT or ACT Scores: 21/ACT (Department)

Undergraduate Specializations

Adjunct. M.Arch University of Virginia, B.Arch Kansas State University Specialization: Architecture, Building Technology, Urban Design, Architectural Rendering Adjunct. B.Arch The University of Kansas. Specialization: New Urbanism

RA

Brian Hendrickson Vincent Gauthier

UNDERGRADUATE GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS


Hours of Core .......................................................................................... 27 Hours of Studio Courses .......................................................................... 24 Hours of Restricted Elective ...................................................................... 9 Hours of Unrestricted Elective ................................................................ 21 Hours of General Education. ................................................................... 43 Total Required Hours In Planning Program .......................................... 124 Thesis or Final Product ............................................................ Not required

Adjunct. MAP, University of Tennessee; MA, Harvard. Specializations: Urban Redevelopment.

AICP

Kevin Klinkenberg Ted Seligson

Adjunct. B.Arch University of Kansas Specialization: New Urbanism Visiting Professor. B.Arch, Washington University. Specializations: Urban Design, Architecture.

AIA

FAIA

FINANCIAL AID INFORMATION


Not available

Richard Wetzel

Adjunct. BArch University of Kansas, MBA University of Missouri Kansas City. Specialization: Urban Design

AIA

ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 213

UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA-LINCOLN
Community and Regional Planning Program
302 Architecture Hall Lincoln, Nebraska 68588-0105 Phone (402) 472-9280 Fax (402) 472-3806 E-mail: crpinfo2@unl.edu http://planning.unl.edu Professor Kim L. Wilson, Program Director Phone (402) 472-9230 E-mail: kwilson4@unl.edu

MA/MS PAB

ACSP Member: FULL

Hours of Core ...........................................................................................24 Hours of Studio or Practice Related Courses .............................................3 Hours of Unrestricted Electives .......................................................... 18-24 Thesis or Professional Project ....................................................................6 Total Required Hours in Planning Program .............................................48 Exams or Written Requirements: .................. Comprehensive written exam ................................................. is one of three possible completion tracks.

MASTERS GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

FINANCIAL AID INFORMATION


Tuition Awards:

PROGRAM INFORMATION
GRADUATE DEADLINES, TUITION AND FEES
Admission Deadline ..................................................................... Rolling admissions Financial Aid Deadline .................................... N/A Early application recommended *In-State Tuition and Fees ........................................... $224/credit hour per semester *Out-of-State Tuition and Fees.................................... $604/credit hour per semester Application Fee ......................................................................................................$45 *9-12 credit hours=Full Time

Up to six internship positions annually with local agencies include stipends and tuition waiver benefits. Occasional funded projects in the program include research assistantships with stipend and tuition waiver benefits. Several College of Architecture and University scholarships and fellowships are available on a competitive basis. Merit and Need

Eligibility Criteria:

TOTAL MASTER STUDENT COMPOSITION 2008-2009 US Citizens & Permanent Residents


Hispanics* Of any Race White African American Native American/ Pacific Islander Asian American Mixed Other / Dont know Non-US Citizens Non- Permanent Residents

Annual Student Enrollment Applied


Masters 29 40

Male 0 10 0 0 0 0 0 0 10

Female 0 9 1 0 0 0 0 1 11

Total 0 19 1 0 0 0 0 1 21

Accepted Enrolled
17 36 17 20

07/08 07/08 07/08 07/08 07/08 07/08

MASTERS DEGREE
Master of Community and Regional Planning
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail: Kim L. Wilson, Director (402) 472-9230 kwilson4@unl.edu

Year Initiated: 1974 PAB Accredited Degrees Granted through 8/31/09...........................................................364 Degrees Granted from 9/1/08 to 8/31/09 ....................................................4

Community and Regional Planning


MASTERS ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS
University Admission Policy:

Masters Specializations

Total Students
Bachelors degree from an accredited institution Minimum Undergraduate GPA: 3.0 Minimum GRE: Not required Minimum TOEFL Paper 550; Computer 213 Ranking in Undergraduate Class: Not Required

*Do not double count Hispanics; Hispanics also appear in the racial categories below.

Page 214 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

PLANNING FACULTY
Associate Professor. BS in Urban Planning (1975), Iowa State University; MA in Urban and Regional Planning (1979) and MA in Economics (1980); PhD in Planning (1988), University of Southern California. Specializations: Economic Development Plannng, International Development and Planning, Quantitative Methods, Computer Applications in Planning.

FYI
Joint Masters Degrees:
o MCRP/Master of Architecture (MCRP/MArch) o MCRP/Juris Doctor (MCRP/JD) o MCRP/Master of Science in Civil Engineering (Transportation specialization) (MCRP/MSCE)

Rodrigo Cantarero

(402) 472-9278

rcantarero1@unl.edu

N. Brito Mutunayagam

Professor. BS in Civil Engineering (1963), University of Kerala, India; DTCP (1967), School of Planning and Architecture, New Delhi; MEngg in Systems Engineering and Management (1974), Asian Institute of Technology; DEDP (1981), Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University. Specializations: Regional Development and Planning, Planning Theory, Computer Applications in Planning.

(402) 472-9283

brito@unl.edu

Assistant Professor. BS in Sociology (1989) and MPA (1992), Yonsei University, Seoul; MCRP (1999) and PhD in City and Regional Planning (2004), University of Pennsylvania. Specializations: Geographic Information Systems, Urban Spatial Structure, Urban Modeling, Urban Policy.

Yunwoo Nam

(402) 472-9279

ynam2@unl.edu

Gordon Scholz

Professor. BArch (1968), University of NebraskaLincoln; MUP and MArch (1971), University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign; MBA (1975), University of Nebraska at Omaha. Specializations: Urban and Community Planning and Design, Land Use Planning, Historic Preservation Planning.

AICP

(402) 472-9284

gscholz1@unl.edu

ARCHITECTURE HALL, LOCATION OF CRP PROGRAM

Zhenghong Tang

Assistant Professor. BS in Land Management (1997), Hunan Normal University, China; MS in Soil Science (2000), Huazhong Agricultural University, China; PhD in Urban and Regional Science (2007), Texas A & M University. Specializations: Environmental Planning and Policy, Land Use Planning, Quantitative Methods, GIS Analysis, Urban and Regional Development Policy, International Planning.

(402) 472-9281

ztang2@unl.edu

OTHER AFFILIATED FACULTY


Thomas Huston
Lecturer. BS in Business Administration (1982) and JD (1986), University of NebraskaLincoln. Specializations: Planning Law.

(402) 477-6900

thuston@clinewilliams.com

INTERIOR OF ARCHITECTURE HALL

ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 215

UNIVERSITY OF NEVADA
Department of Geography
201 Mackay Science Hall/154 Reno, Nevada 89557-0154 Phone (775) 784-6995 Facsimile (775) 784-1058 Email: geog@unr.edu www.unr.edu/geography Kate Berry, Chair Phone (775) 784-1865 / Email: kberry@unr.edu
GRADUATE DEADLINES, TUITION AND FEES

MS

ACSP Member: FULL

MASTERS GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

Hours of Core ............................... Thesis option-14; Non-thesis option-21 Hours of Studio or Practice Related Courses .............................................4 Hours of Restrictive Electives ....................................Non-thesis option 15 Hours of Unrestrictive Electives..... Thesis option-10; Non-thesis option 6 Total Hours in Planning Program . Thesis option-31; Non-thesis option-42 Exam, Thesis or Final Product ..Thesis and comprehensive exam required for thesis option. Exit exam required for non thesis option.

FINANCIAL AID INFORMATION

PROGRAM INFORMATION

Teaching and Research Assistantships: $12,600/academic-year. Includes health insurance, non-resident tuition and grant in aid for partial tuition waivers. Number depends on funding available. Graduate Fellowships Eligibility Criteriacompetitive merit-based awards

Admission Deadline 2009-10 ......................................................... February 1, 2009 Financial Aid Deadline 2009-10 ......................................................................Various In-State Tuition and Fees ................................................$2,927/semester (12 credits) Out-of-State Tuition and Fees.........................................$9,097/semester (12 credits) Application Fee ....................................................... $60; International students$95 Additional Fees ............................................................. International students $1,080

Annual Student Enrollment Applied Accepted


Masters 7 10 6 8

TOTAL MASTERS STUDENT COMPOSITION 2009-2010 US Citizens & Permanent Total Male Female Residents
Hispanics* Of any Race White African American Native American/ Pacific Islander Asian American Mixed Other / Dont know Non-US Citizens Non- Permanent Residents

Enrolled
6 8

08/09 09/10 08/09 09/10 08/09 09/10

0 8 1 1 0 0 1 0 11

0 3 0 0 0 0 3 0 6

0 11 1 1 0 0 4 0 17

MASTERS DEGREE
Master of Science in Land Use Planning Policy
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail: P. Anthony Brinkman, Director, Land Use Planning Policy Program (775) 784-4762 brinkman@unr.edu

Year Initiated: 1985 Degrees Granted through 8/31/08.............................................................48 Degrees Granted from 9/1/08 to 8/31/09 ....................................................6

Growth Management, Environmental Planning, Historical Preservation.


A completed baccalaureate degree from an appropriate accredited institution. Minimum Undergraduate GPA: 3.0 Minimum GRE: As Required Minimum TOEFL: As Required Ranking in Undergraduate Class: Not Required Departmental Requirement: Graduate school application, 3 letters of recommendation, statement of purpose and goals and official college transcript(s).

Masters Specializations

Total Students

MASTERS ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS


University Admission Policy:

*Do not double count Hispanics; Hispanics also appear in the racial categories below.

PLANNING FACULTY
Assistant Professor. BS, Utah State University; MS, Utah State University; DDes, Harvard University. Specializations: Conservation Biology, Environmental Planning, GIS, Integrative Modeling.

Scott Bassett

(775) 784-1434

sbassett@unr.edu

Page 216 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

P. Anthony Brinkman

Assistant Professor. BA, University of Wisconsin, Madison; MS, University of Wisconsin, Madison; PhD, University of California, Berkeley. Specializations: Ethics, Land Use, Theory, Transportation.

AICP

FYI
The Department of Geography offers a graduate program leading to a Masters of Science (MS) degree in Land Use Planning Policy aimed at preparing students for planning research or professional practice. The Land Use Planning Policy program curriculum is multi-disciplinary, taking full advantage of a wide-range of planning and planning-related courses offered in Geography and in over twenty other disciplines campus-wide. It offers emphases in three critical sub-fields of land use planning and stresses in all areas a holistic policy approach for addressing the planning challenges of the Twenty-first Century. The Department also offers a graduate program leading to a Ph.D. in Geography with, inter alia, emphases in various areas related to land use planning.

(775) 784-4762

brinkman@unr.edu

AFFILIATED FACULTY
Kate Berry
Associate Professor and Chair. BS, Northern Arizona University; MS, Colorado State University; PhD, University of Colorado, Boulder. Specializations: Law and Public Policy, Water Resources, Historical Geography, Identity Studies.

(775) 784-1865

kberry@unr.edu

Mella Rothwell Harmon

BA, University of California, Berkeley; MS, University of Nevada, Reno. Specializations: Historic Preservation, Architectural History.

mellah@unr.edu

Professor. BA Stanford; MA and PhD Syracuse. Specializations: Urban Geography, Political Geography, Cultural Landscape Analysis.

Gary J. Hausladen

hausl@unr.edu

BA, University of California, Berkeley; MA, Indiana University, Bloomington; PhD, Indiana University, Bloomington. Specializations: Qualitative Research Methods-Fieldwork, Vernacular Architecture, Western Culture and Heritage.

Jeanne Harrah Johnson

jharrahj@gmail.com

Hilary F. Lopez

CENTRAL CAMPUS

Photo Credit: Tyler Keck

Chief of Federal Programs, Nevada Housing Division. BA, Bard College; MS, University of Nevada, Reno; PhD, University of Denver. Specializations: Urban Geography, Housing, Land Use.

hlopez@nvhousing.state.nv.us

Scott A. Mensing

Professor. BA, MA, PhD University of California, Berkeley. Specializations: Biogeography, Fire History, Invasion of Exotic Species, Early Agriculture.

smensing@unr.edu

Professor. BA University of California, San Diego; MA & PhD, University of California, Berkeley. Specializations: Cartography & Graphic Representation, Natural Resources, Cultural Geography, Agriculture.

Paul F. Starrs

starrs@unr.edu

MACKAY SCIENCE HALL

Photo Credit: Crista Hecht

ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 217

UNIVERSITY OF NEW MEXICO


Community and Regional Planning Program
School of Architecture and Planning 2401 Central Ave. NE, MSC04 2530 1 University of New Mexico Albuquerque, NM 87131 Phone (505) 277-5050 Fax (505) 277-0076 http://www.unm.edu/~crp/ Teresa L. Crdova, Director Email: crp@unm.edu

PAB

MA/MS PAB

ACSP Member: FULL


Community Development Natural Resource and Environmental Planning Physical Planning and Design MA in Latin American Studies/MCRP Master of PublicAdministration/MCRP Master of Water Resources/MCRP Graduate Minor in Community & Reg. Planning Bachelor of Arts in Environmental Planning & Design Undergraduate Minor in Community & Reg. Planning Certificate in Town Design Certificate in Historic Preservation and Regionalism Bachelors degree from an accredited institution

MCRP Specializations:

Dual Degree Programs:

Other Degrees:

Certificate Programs:

PROGRAM INFORMATION
GRADUATE DEADLINES, TUITION AND FEES
MCRP Application Postmark Deadline for 2010-2011 .................. January 30, 2010 Financial Aid Deadline for 2010-2011 ............................................... March 1, 2010 In-State Tuition for 10 credit hours, Fall 2009 ..................... $2,332.00 per semester Out-of-State & Intl. Tuition for 10 credit hours, Fall 2009 $7,388.50 per semester Application Fee ................................................................................................ $50.00 Additional Fees ........ $40.00 per credit hour for Graduate Students in the School of Architecture & Planning; $25.00 GPSA fee per semester

MASTERS ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS


University Admission Policy:

Master in Community & Regional Planning Degree Program (MCRP Program) Annual New Student Enrollment Number Applied Number Accepted Number Enrolled Fall 2008 42 30 18 Fall 2009 49 37 30

Min. GPA in last two years of undergraduate study: 3.0 GRE: Not required TOEFL/IELTS/CPE/CAE: The minimum acceptable score for IELTS is 7; and for the TOEFL is 550 on the paper test, 213 on the computerized test, or 79-80 on the internet-based test. For the CPE or CAE the minimum score is a C. Applicants who have received a bachelor's or graduate degree from an accredited institution in the United States, English-speaking Canada, the United Kingdom, South Africa, Australia, or New Zealand are exempt from submitting IELTS, TOEFL, CPE, or CAE scores.

MASTERS GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

MASTERS DEGREE
Master in Community & Regional Planning Degree Program (MCRP Program)
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail: Program Assistant: Phone: Email: Year initiated: 1979 Teresa L. Crdova, Ph. D., Program Director (505) 277-3922 tcordova@unm.edu Liz Siletti (505) 277-5050 esiletti@unm.edu PAB Accredited since 1986

Hours of Core/Studio Work .................................................................... 18 Hours of Emphasis Work ........................................................................ 24 Hours of Exit Course Work ..................................................................... 8 Total Required Hours in Planning Program ........................................... 50 Exams or Written Requirements ............................. Complete a Committee ..................................................... Reviewed Thesis or Professional Project

FINANCIAL AID INFORMATION


Tuition Awards:

6 new Project Assistantships annually, which garner in-state tuition for the year. NM Graduate Scholars Awards available to continuing students (number varies). Merit

Eligibility Criteria:

Degrees Granted through 2008 .............................................................. 244 Degrees Granted in 2008 ......................................................................... 13 Total # of Students Enrolled: Spring 2008 68; Fall 2008 62; Spring 2009 - 70

Page 218 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

TOTAL MASTERS STUDENT COMPOSITION 2008-2009/


US Citizens & Permanent Residents Hispanics Caucasian African American Native American/ Pacific Islander Asian American Mixed Other/Dont Know Non-US Citizens Non-Perm. Residents Total Male 8 10 0 2 2 0 1 1 24 Female 8 18 1 13 1 0 4 3 46 Total 16 28 1 15 3 0 5 4 70

James R. Richardson

Professor. M.Arch/AS and MCP, Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Specializations: Negotiation and Public Dispute Resolution, Land Use Planning, Community Development, Urban Design

(505) 277-6460

jrich@unm.edu

Jos A. Rivera

Professor. Ph.D., Brandeis University. Specializations: Community Development, Water Resources, and Policy Analysis

(505) 277-0599

jrivera@unm.edu

Paul E. Lusk

Professor Emeritus. M.Arch., University of Pennsylvania

William J. Siembieda

Professor Emeritus. Ph.D., University of California (Los Angeles)

ADJUNCT FACULTY
Steve Borbas
Adjunct Associate Professor. M.Arch, Pratt Institute.

Porus Olpadwala V. B. Price

Adjunct Professor. Ph.D., Cornell University. Adjunct Professor. B.A., The University of New Mexico

PLANNING FACULTY
Teresa L. Crdova
Associate Professor. Ph.D., University of California (Berkeley). Specializations: Community Development, Political Economy of Urban Development, Local Governance, Global/Local Dynamics

PART-TIME FACULTY
Adelamar Alcantara Christopher Blewett Moises Gonzales Sharon Hausam Anita Miller
Lecturer. Ph.D., University of Hawaii. Lecturer. M.A., University of New Mexico. Lecturer. M.C.R.P., University of New Mexico Lecturer. Ph.D., University of Wisconsin (Madison). Lecturer. J.D., New York University.

(505) 277-3922

tcordova@unm.edu

William Fleming

Associate Professor. Ph.D., University of British Columbia. Specializations: Natural Resource Planning and Watershed Management

(505) 277-6455

fleming@unm.edu

David S. Henkel

Professor. Ph.D., Cornell University. Specializations: Trans-national Resource Management, Development Planning, and Regional Planning

(505) 277-1276

cymro@unm.edu

Timothy O. Imeokparia
(505) 277-1666

Assistant Professor. Ph.D., Ohio State University. Specializations: Physical Planning and Urban Design

timeokpa@unm.edu

Claudia B. Isaac

Associate Professor and Regents Lecturer. Ph.D., University of California (Los Angeles). Specializations: Community Development, Planning Theory, Latin American Planning, Gender and Development

(505) 277-5939

cisaac@unm.edu

Theodore Jojola

Professor and Regents Professor. Ph.D., University of Hawaii. Specializations: Community Development, Indigenous Human Rights, Indigenous Planning, Tribal Economic Development, Microcomputer Applications in Education and Planning

(505) 277-6428

tjojola@unm.edu

ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 219

UNIVERSITY OF NEW ORLEANS


Department of Planning and Urban Studies
2000 Lakeshore Drive New Orleans, Louisiana 70148 Phone (504) 280-6277 Fax (504) 280-6468 E-mail: gradmurp@uno.edu (Masters) gradurbs@uno.edu (Doctoral) http://planning.uno.edu Jane S. Brooks, Department Chair Phone (504) 280-6514 E-mail: jsbrooks@uno.edu

BA/BS PAB

MA/MS PAB

Ph.D.

ACSP Member: FULL

UNDERGRADUATE ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS


Departmental Requirement: No requirement Minimum GPA: 2.5 Minimum SAT or ACT Scores: ACT composite score of 23 or greater; SAT I Math and Critical Reading combined score of 1060 or greater

UNDERGRADUATE GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS


Hours of Core .......................................................................................... 60 Hours of Studio Courses ............................................................................ 0 Hours of Restricted Elective ........................................................................ Hours of Unrestricted Elective ................................................................ 10 Other ........................................................................................................ 50 Total Required Hours In Planning Program .......................................... 120 Thesis or Final Product ............................................................ Not required

PROGRAM INFORMATION
UNDERGRADUATE DEADLINES, TUITION AND FEES
Admission Deadline 2010-11 ..................................................................July 1, 2010 Financial Aid Deadline 2010-11 ........................................................................ Open In-State Tuition and Fees Fall 2009: .......................................... $1,852 per semester Out-of-State Tuition and Fees Fall 2009: ................................. $5,735 per semester Application Fee.......................................................................................................$40 Additional Fees ....................................................................... Check with university

FINANCIAL AID INFORMATION

Grants, Loans, Scholarships, Work-Study Available (Check with University).

MASTERS DEGREE
Master of Urban and Regional Planning
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail: Marla Nelson, PhD, AICP Associate Professor/ MURP Coordinator (504) 280-3110 mnelson@uno.edu

GRADUATE DEADLINES, TUITION AND FEES

Admission Deadline 2010-11 .................................................................July 1, 2010 Financial Aid Deadline 2010-11 ................................................... February 15, 2010 In-State Tuition and Fees Fall 2009: .......................................... $1,852 per semester Out-of-State Tuition and Fees Fall 2009: ................................. $5,735 per semester Application Fee ......................................................................................................$40 Additional Fees ....................................................................... Check with university

Year Initiated: 1974 PAB Accredited Degrees Granted through 12/31/08.........................................................357 Degrees Granted from 9/1/07 to 8/31/08 ....................................................9

Annual Student Enrollment Applied


Undergraduate Masters Doctoral N/A 40 19

Accepted Enrolled
N/A 45 9 59 18 11 64 35 5

07/08 08/09 07/08 08/09 07/08 08/09

N/A N/A 98 18 29 16

Land Use/Environmental, Housing and Community Development/Economic Development, Historic Preservation, Land Use/Transportation
MASTERS ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS
University Admission Policy: Minimum Undergraduate GPA: Minimum GRE: Minimum TOEFL Ranking in Undergraduate Class: Departmental Requirement:

Masters Specializations

UNDERGRADUATE DEGREE
Bachelor of Science in Urban Studies and Planning
Contact Person: Patrick Haughey, Undergraduate Program Coordinator (504) 280-1231 pmhaughe@uno.edu

Phone: E-mail: Year initiated: 2001 Degrees Granted through 8/31/08............................................................ 45 Degrees Granted from 9/1/07 to 8/31/08 ................................................. 12

Bachelors degree from an accredited institution 2.75 (Department) 1000 (Department) 213 (computer)/550 (paper) Not Required Department of Planning and Urban Studies application, statement of purpose; 3 letters of recommendation; satisfactory academic standing at the last school attended

Transportation, Housing and Community Development, Environmental Planning, Nonprofit Leadership, Public Culture, Urban Design
Page 220 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

Undergraduate Specializations

Hours of Core ...........................................................................................24 Hours of Studio or Practice Related Courses .........3 (included in the core) Hours of Restricted Electives ...................................................................12 Hours of Unrestricted Electives ........................................................ up to 9 Total Required Hours in Planning Program: ............................................45 Exam,Thesis or Final Product: ................................Thesis or Final Project

MASTERS GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

FINANCIAL AID INFORMATION

Graduate scholarships, research assistantships, and paid internships available on a competitive basis (check with program administrators).

DOCTORAL ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS


University Admission Policy:

TOTAL MASTERS STUDENT COMPOSITION 2008-2009 US Citizens & Permanent Residents


Hispanics* Of any Race White African American Native American/ Pacific Islander Asian American Mixed Other / Dont know Non-US Citizens Non- Permanent Residents

Male 1 17 2 0 0 0 4 1 25

Female 1 21 5 0 0 0 2 1 30

Total 2 38 7 0 0 0 6 2

Baccalaureate degree from an accredited institution Minimum GRE: 1100 Minimum TOEFL: 213 (computer)/ 550 (paper) Minimum Undergraduate GPA: 2.5 (University)/3.0 (Department) Departmental Requirement: Department of Planning and Urban Studies application; statement of purpose; 3 letters of recommendation; satisfactory academic standing at the last school attended; a masters degree in urban planning or related discipline.

Hours of Core/Required courses...............................................................18 Hours of Studio or Practice Related Courses ........................................N/A Hours of Restricted Electives ............................................................... 9-12 Hours of Unrestricted Electives .......................................................... 42-45 Other ............................................................................... 6 (thesis research) Total ..........................................................................................................72 Exams or Written Requirements: ............... General examination; final oral .............................................................................. examination; dissertation

DOCTORAL GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

TOTAL DOCTORAL STUDENT COMPOSITION 2008-2009 US Citizens & Permanent Residents


Hispanics* Of any Race

Male 2 13 4 0 0 0 0 2 21

Female 1 9 4 0 0 0 0 1 15

Total 3 22 8 0 0 0 0 3 36

Total Students

55

White African American Native American/ Pacific Islander Asian American Mixed Other / Dont know Non-US Citizens Non- Permanent Residents

DOCTORAL DEGREE
Ph.D. in Urban Studies
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail: Michelle Thompson, Ph.D. Director (504) 280-6593 mmthomp1@uno.edu

Year initiated 1990 Degrees Granted through 8/31/2009........................................................53 Degrees Granted from 9/1/2008 to 8/31/2009 ...........................................2 Dissertations Granted from 9/1/2007 to 8/31/2008 1. Spring Break: The Economic, Socio-Cultural and Public Governance Impacts of College Students at Spring Break Host Locations 2. The Aftermath of Katrina: The Ability of Black Protestant Churches to Provide for Their Congregations in Post-Katrina New Orleans

Total Students

PLANNING FACULTY
Professor and Boebel Chair in Historic Preservation. BLA, Louisiana State University (1974); MLA, Harvard (1976). Specializations: Historic Preservation, Urban Design, Metropolitan/Regional Planning, Planning History and Planning Practice. http://planning.uno.edu/faculty_bios/JaneBrooks.cfm

Land Use and Environmental Management, Social and Cultural Change, Urban and Regional Development

Doctoral Specializations

Jane S. Brooks

FAICP

(504) 280-6514

jsbrooks@uno.edu

ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 221

Renia Ehrenfeucht

Assistant Professor. B.A., University of California, Santa Barbara; M.U.P., University of Washington; Ph.D., University of California, Los Angeles. Specializations: Politics of Public Space Use, Social Production of the Built Environment, Public Participation, Politics of Urban Design, Public Space History. http://planning.uno.edu/faculty_bios/ReniaEhrenfeucht.cfm

(504) 280-6517

renia.ehrenfeucht@uno.edu

Assistant Professor. BA (1999) University of Colorado at Boulder; MURP (2000) University of Colorado at Denver; Ph.D. (2005), Rutgers University. Specializations: Land Use and Transportation Planning, Real Estate Development and Finance, Evacuation Planning, Smart Growth and Sustainable Development. http://planning.uno.edu/faculty_bios/JohnRenne.cfm

John L. Renne

AICP

(504) 280-6592

jrenne@uno.edu

David Gladstone

Associate Professor and Louisiana Manufactured Housing Association Professor. BA (1990), MCRP (1994), and Ph.D. (2001), Rutgers University. Specializations: Urban and Regional Development, Social Policy, Tourism Planning, Real Estate Development, International Development. http://planning.uno.edu/faculty_bios/DavidGladstone.cfm

Director, Ph.D. in Urban Studies Program/MSUS Graduate Coordinator and Assistant Professor. BA, Syracuse University (1982); MRP (1984) and Ph.D. (2001) Cornell University. Specializations: Geographic Information Systems (GIS) and GeoSpatial Analysis, Community and Economic Development using Public Participation GIS, Real Estate and Market Valuation, Housing, Land Use.

Michelle M. Thompson

(504) 280-3206

david.gladstone@uno.edu AICP

BSUSP Coordinator/Assistant Professor. B.Ed, McGill University (1993); MURP, University of New Orleans (1995); Ph.D. (2004) Trinity College Dublin. Specializations: Neighborhood Planning, Community Development and Public Participation, Geographic Information Systems (GIS) http://planning.uno.edu/faculty_bios/PatrickHaughey.cfm

Patrick Haughey

OTHER AFFILIATED FACULTY


Robert Becker
Senior Research Associate. BA, SUNY Buffalo; MA, University of Iowa, Ph.D., University of New Orleans. Specializations: Land Use Planning, Recreation Planning, New Community Development.

FAICP

(504) 280-6277

bbecker@uno.edu

(504) 280-1231

pmhaughe@uno.edu

Wendel Dufour

Professor. BLA, Louisiana State University (1968); MLA, Harvard (1974). Specializations: Urban Design, Site Planning. http://planning.uno.edu/faculty_bios/EarlHedrick.cfm

Earl Hedrick

Director, Div. of Planning. BGS and MURP, University of New Orleans. Specializations: Neighborhood Planning, Land Use Planning, Housing Database Development, GIS. http://planning.uno.edu/faculty_bios/wendelldufour.cfm

(504) 280-6515

ehedrick@uno.edu

(504) 280-5474

wdufour@uno.edu

Hiroyuki Iseki

Assistant Professor. B. Eng. (1991) Kyoto University; M. Eng. (1994) University of Tokyo; MA (1998) and Ph.D. (2004) University of California, Los Angeles. Specializations: Transportation Policy, Transportation and Land Use Planning, Transportation Economics, Travel Behavior, Urban Public Finance, Applications of GIS to planning and policy analysis. http://planning.uno.edu/faculty_bios/HiroyukiIseki.cfm

Robert Rivers

Adjunct Professor. A.B.Architecture (1986) Princeton; MURP (1992), The George Washington University; JD (2003) Tulane. Specializations: Historic Preservation, Historic Preservation Law, Environmental Law, Architectural History.

(504) 280-6277

(504) 280-6029

hiseki@uno.edu

Elrhei Thibodeaux

Earthea Nance

Adjunct Professor. B.Arch., Tulane University; MURP, University of New Orleans. Specializations: Historic Preservation.

Assistant Professor. BS (1985) and MS (1991) University of California, Davis; Ph.D. (2004) Stanford University.Specializations: Infrastructure, Environment, and Development in Post-Disaster Areas; Developing Countries; and Communities of Color and Poverty. http://planning.uno.edu/faculty_bios/EartheaNance.cfeanance@uno.edu

(504) 280-6277

Steve Villavaso

(504) 280-4017

eanance@uno.edu

Adjunct Professor. BS and MURP, University of New Orleans; JD, Loyola University School of Law. Specializations: Zoning Law, Development/Environmental Management, Brownfields Policy.

FAICP

Marla Nelson

MURP Coordinator/Associate Professor. BA, University of Massachusetts, Amherst (1992); MCRP (1997) and Ph.D. (2003), Rutgers University. Specializations: Local and Regional Development, Economic Development Planning, Community Development. http://planning.uno.edu/faculty_bios/marlanelson.cfm

AICP

(504) 280-6029

svillavaso1@cox.net

FYI
Joint Degree Programs:
o Joint MURP-JD Program with Loyola University of New Orleans Law School.

(504) 280-3110

mnelson@uno.edu

Page 222 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA


Department of City and Regional Planning
New East Building, CB#3140 Chapel Hill, North Carolina, 27599-3140 Phone (919) 962-3983 Fax (919) 962-5206 E-mail: dcrp-admissions@unc.edu www.planning.unc.edu Emil E. Malizia, Chair Phone (919) 962-4759 E-mail: malizia@email.unc.edu
GRADUATE DEADLINES, TUITION AND FEES

MA/MS PAB

Ph.D.

ACSP Member: FULL

Bachelors degree from accredited institution Minimum Undergraduate GPA: 3.0 Minimum GRE: 50th percentile (both sections) Minimum TOEFL: 213/550 Ranking in Undergraduate Class: Not Required Departmental Requirement: GRE taken w/in last 5 years, department application, 3 letters of recommendation, statement of purpose, and original transcripts from all undergraduate schools.

MASTERS ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS


University Admission Policy:

MASTERS GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

PROGRAM INFORMATION

Admission Deadline Fall 2010 ......................................................... March 15, 2010 Financial Aid Deadline Fall 2010....January 1, 2010 (Merit awards)/March 1(other) In-State Tuition and Fees ................................................................................. $7,162 Out-of-State/International Tuition and Fees .................................................. $21,560 Application Fee ..................................................................................................... $77 Additional Fees ................................................................................................ $1,749

Hours of Core............................................................................................12 Hours of Studio or Practice Related Courses..............................................3 Hours of Restricted Electives....................................................................15 Hours of Unrestricted Electives.................................................................18 Other................................................................ 3 (to complete final project) Total Required Hours in Planning Program..............................................51 Exam, Thesis or Final Product:.......Final Project of professional quality on topic in focus area, e.g. research paper, critical essay, project, plan.

FINANCIAL AID INFORMATION

DOCTORAL DEADLINES, TUITION AND FEES

Admission Deadline Fall 2010 ............................. February 1, 2010 (recommended) Financial Aid Deadline Fall 2010 ...January 1, 2010 (Merit awards)/March 1 (other) In-State Tuition and Fees .................................................................................. $7,162 Out-of-State/International Tuition and Fees ................................................... $21,560 Application Fee ...................................................................................................... $77 Additional Fees ................................................................................................. $1,749

Teaching & Research Assistantships: $10,700/year stipend, plus tuition and health insurance; number depends on funding available; total value $15,380 for North Carolina residents or $29,380 for non-residents. Graduate Merit Assistantships; Total value $34,000/year. Eligibility Criteria: Competitive merit-based awards

TOTAL MASTERS STUDENT COMPOSITION 2009-2010


US Citizens & Permanent Residents Hispanics* of any Race White African American Native American/Pacific Islander Asian American Mixed Other/Dont Know Non-US Citizens Non-permanent Residents Total Students Male 1 44 5 0 0 2 0 1 53 Female 0 45 0 0 6 1 0 2 54 Total 1 89 5 0 6 3 0 3 107

Applied Masters Doctoral

Accepted

Enrolled

08/09 09/10 08/09 09/10 08/09 09/10 195 235 101 71 55 40 47 58 6 5 2 5

MASTERS DEGREE
Masters of City & Regional Planning
Contact Person: Carolyn Turner, Student Services Manager Phone: (919) 962-4784 E-mail: turnerc@email.unc.edu
Year Initiated: 1946 PAB Accredited Degrees Granted through 8/31/09.........................................................1937 Degrees Granted from 9/1/08 to 8/31/09 ..................................................39

Design & Preservation of the Built Environment, Economic Development, Housing/ Real Estate/Community Development, Land Use & Environmental Planning, Transportation Planning

Masters Specializations

*Do not double count Hispanics; Hispanics also appear in the racial categories below. ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 223

DOCTORAL DEGREE
Ph.D. in City & Regional Planning
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail: Carolyn Turner, Student Services Manager (919) 962-4784 turnerc@email.unc.edu

TOTAL DOCTORAL STUDENT COMPOSITION 2009-2010


US Citizens & Permanent Residents Hispanics* of any Race White African American Native American/Pacific Islander Asian American Mixed Other/Dont Know Non-US Citizens Non-permanent Residents Total Students Male 0 9 2 0 0 0 0 2 13 Female 1 6 1 0 1 1 0 3 13 Total 1 15 3 0 1 1 0 5 26

Year Initiated 1961 Degrees Granted through 8/31/09...........................................................131 Degrees Granted from 9/1/08 to 8/31/09 ....................................................1 Dissertations Titles 1. Scale effects and the determinants of parcel subdivision: a discretetime hazard analysis

Community Development/Housing, Economic Development/Real Estate Development, Land Use Planning, Environmental Planning, Transportation Planning, Design & Preservation of the Built Environment
DOCTORAL ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS
University Admission Policy: Minimum Undergraduate GPA: Minimum GRE: Minimum TOEFL: Ranking in Undergraduate Class: Departmental Requirement: Bachelors degree from accredited institution 3.0 (last 2 years of study) 50th percentile (both sections) 213/550 Not Required Strong academic preparation, evidence of potential to conduct highquality research. Research interests must match those of one or more faculty member.

Doctoral Specializations

*Do not double count Hispanics; Hispanics also appear in the racial categories below.

PLANNING FACULTY
Todd BenDor
Assistant Professor. BS, BS, Worcester Polytechnic Institute; MS, Washington State University; Ph.D., University of Illinois-Urbana. Specializations: Environmental Planning, Land Use Dynamics, Environmental Markets, Spatial Analysis, System Dynamics.

Hours of Core ..........................................................................................12 Hours of Studio or Practice Related Courses .............................................0 Hours of Restricted Electives ..................................................................12 Hours of Unrestricted Electives .................................................................6 Total Required Hours in Planning Program .............................................30 Exam, Thesis or Final Product: .........Comprehensive written and oral exams after completing coursework, followed by approval of the dissertation proposal. Program requires demonstration of competence in graduate-level intermediate multivariate statistics, research and teaching experience, and successful defense of the Ph.D. Dissertation.

DOCTORAL GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

(919) 962-4760

bendor@unc.edu

Philip Berke

Professor. BS, Empire State College; MS, University of Vermont; Ph.D. Texas A&M University. Specializations: Environmental Planning, Land Use, Sustainable Development, Natural Hazards Mitigation.

(919) 962-4765

pberke@email.unc.edu

FINANCIAL AID INFORMATION

Teaching & Research Assistantships: $14,700/year stipend, plus tuition and health insurance; number depends on funding available; total value $33,000/year. Graduate School Fellowships: total value $38,000/year. Eligibility Criteria: Competitive merit-based awards.

Thomas Campanella

Associate Professor. BS, SUNY, Syracuse; MLA, Cornell; Ph.D., MIT. Specializations: Urban Design, History of American Landscape & Built Environment, Contemporary Chinese Urbanism.

(919) 962-4776

tomcamp@email.unc.edu

Nikil Kaza

Assistant Professor. B.Arch, Indian Institute of Technology, Kharagpur; MUP, MS (Applied Mathematics), Ph.D., University of Illinois-Urbana. Specializations: Plans, Land Use Planning, Planning Support Systems, Complex Systems, Decision Theory.

(919) 962-4767

nkaza@unc.edu

Page 224 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

Nichola Lowe

Assistant Professor. BS, University of California, Berkley; MS, University of California, Davis; Ph.D., MIT. Specializations: Economic and Workforce Development.

OTHER AFFILIATED FACULTY


Professor. AB, Yale; MRP and Ph.D., University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill. Specializations: Environmental Policy, Infrastructure Planning.

(919) 843-2319

nlowe@email.unc.edu

Richard Andrews

Emil Malizia

Professor/Chair. BA, Rutgers; MRP and Ph.D., Cornell University. Specializations: Real Estate Development, Development Finance, Economic Development, Urban Redevelopment, Public Health & Safety.

AICP

(919) 843-5011

pete_andrews@unc.edu FAICP

(919) 962-4759

malizia@email.unc.edu

Assistant Professor. AB, Harvard; MS, MCP and Ph.D., University of California, Berkeley. Specializations: Transportation Policy, Physical Activity, Transportation & Land Use, School Travel, School Siting.

Noreen McDonald

Research Professor. BA and JD, University of Michigan. Specializations: Planning Law, Coastal Zone Management, Land Use/Growth Management, Natural Hazards Mitigation.

David Brower

(919) 962-4775

brower@email.unc.edu

(919) 962-4781

noreen@unc.edu

Mai Nguyen

Assistant Professor. BA, University of California, Riverside; MA, Pennsylvania State University; Ph.D., University of California, Irvine. Specializations: Housing and Community Development, Housing Policy.

Professor Emeritus. AB, George Washington University; MRP and Ph.D., University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill. Specializations: Natural Hazards Mitigation, Land Use Planning, Development Management, Sustainable Cities.

Ray Burby

FAICP

(919) 962-4774

burby@email.unc.edu

(919) 962-4762

nguyen@unc.edu

Maryann Feldman

Roberto Quercia

Professor. M.Arch., Nacional de Buenos Aires, Argentina; MA, University of Hawaii; Ph.D., University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill. Specializations: Housing & Affordable Home Ownership, Housing Finance, Fair Lending (Anti-Predatory Lending), Community Development.

Distinguished Professor. BA, Ohio State University; MS and Ph.D., Carnegie Mellon University. Specializations: Technology-Based Economic Development, Innovation & Entrepreneurship.

(919) 962-0674

feldmanm@email.unc.edu FAICP

(919) 962-4766

quercia@email.unc.edu

Daniel Rodriguez

Associate Professor. BS, Fordham University; MA, MIT; Ph.D., University of Michigan. Specializations: Transportation & Land Use Policy, Urban Spatial Structure, Traveler Behavior, Public Health & Safety.

Professor Emeritus. AB, Dartmouth; B.Arch., University of Florida; MRP and Ph.D., University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill. Specializations: Land Use & Environmental Planning, Sustainable Development, Hazards Mitigation, Negotiation & Conflict Resolution.

David Godschalk

(919) 962-5012

dgod@email.unc.edu

Edward Kaiser

(919) 962-4763

danrod@email.unc.edu

Distinguished Professor. BA, SUNY at Buffalo; MS, MRP and Ph.D., Pennsylvania State University. Specializations: Urban Redevelopment, Neighborhood Revitalization, Community Development Planning & Policy, Affordable & Workforce Housing Programs.

William Rohe

Professor Emeritus. BA, University of San Francisco; MRP and Ph.D.,University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill. Specializations: Land Use Planning, Development Management.

FAICP

(919) 962-4781

ekaiser@email.unc.edu

(919) 962-4769

rohe@email.unc.edu

Research Professor. BS, Mississippi State University; MS, North Carolina State University; Ph.D., Harvard. Specializations: Environmental Policy & Planning, Infrastructure/Public Services, Water Resources Planning.

David Moreau

Yan Song

(919) 962-4756

dmoreau@email.unc.edu

Associate Professor. BS, Shen Zhen University; MS, Florida State University; Ph.D., University of Illinois-Urbana. Specializations: Land Use Planning & Design, Spatial Analysis of Urban Form, Planning Support Systems, Urban Planning in China.

(919) 962-4761

ys@email.unc.edu

Professor. AB, Brown; MPA and Ph.D., University of Texas, Austin; MS, London School of Economics. Specializations: International Planning, Environmental Economics, Water Resources Planning in Developing Countries.

Dale Whittington

Meenu Tewari

(919) 962-4755

dale.whittington@unc.edu

Associate Professor. B.Arch., School of Planning & Architecture, India; MS, MCP and Ph.D., MIT. Specializations: Economic Development, International Development, Local Political Economy, Poverty Alleviation, Small Firms & the Informal Sector.

FYI
Dual Degree Programs:
o MCRP/JD o MCRP/MBA o MCP/MPA o MCRP/MLA o MCRP/MPH o MCRP/MS Environmental Engineering

(919) 962-4758

mtewari@email.unc.edu

ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 225

UNIVERSITY OF OKLAHOMA
Regional and City Planning
830 Van Vleet Oval, Gould Hall, Room 162 Norman, Oklahoma 73019-6141 Phone (405) 325-2444 Fax (405) 325-7558 E-mail: rcpl@ou.edu http://rcpl.ou.edu Guoqiang Shen, Division Director Phone (405) 325-2444 E-mail: guoqiangs@ou.edu
University Admission Policy:

MA/MS PAB

ACSP Member: FULL

MASTERS ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS


Minimum Undergraduate GPA: Minimum GRE: Minimum TOEFL Ranking in Undergraduate Class: Departmental Requirement:

Undergraduate degree from an accredited institution B (3.0) or better Not Required 550 Not Required Three Letters of Recommendations Statement of Intent

PROGRAM INFORMATION
Admission Deadline 2009-10 for Masters program ...................................... Rolling Financial Aid Deadline 2009-10 for Masters program.........................March 1, 2009 In-State Tuition and Fees ............................................................................... $7,400* Out-of-State Tuition and Fees....................................................................... $17,400* Application Fee .................................................................................................$50-90

Hours of Core .........................................................................................29* Hours of Studio or Practice Related Course...............................................5 Hours of Restricted Elective .......................................................................9 Hours of Unrestricted Electives ......................................................... 10-12 Thesis ..........................................................................................................4 Total Required Hours in Planning Program ..... 48(thesis)- 50 (non-thesis) Exams or Written Requirements ........ Thesis or final comprehensive exam *29 core credit hours include a five credit studio

MASTERS GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

GRADUATE DEADLINES, TUITION AND FEES

FINANCIAL AID INFORMATION


Tuition Awards: Eligibility Criteria:

3-8 Graduate Research Assistantships; 3-4 Scholarships Academic interests, academic merit, financial need.

NOTE: *Tuition and Fee estimate based on 24 semester hours per academic year. The University of Oklahomas Master of Regional and City Planning degree is part of the Academic Common Market. Students from the States of Arkansas and Delaware are eligible for in-state tuition if they enroll in the Regional and City Planning program at the University of Oklahoma.

TOTAL MASTERS STUDENT COMPOSITION 2008-2009 US Citizens & Permanent Total Male Female Residents
Hispanics* Of any Race White African American Native American/ Pacific Islander Asian American Mixed Other / Dont know Non-US Citizens Non- Permanent Residents

Annual Student Enrollment Applied


Masters 30 35

Accepted
26 28

Enrolled
17 18

0 9 2 0 0 0 0 3 14

0 7 1 0 0 0 0 14 22

0 16 3 0 0 0 0 17 36

2008 2009 2008 2009 2008 2009

MASTERS DEGREE
Master of Regional and City Planning
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail: Guoqiang Shen, Program Director (405) 325-1698 guoqiangs@ou.edu

Year Initiated: 1947 PAB Accredited Degrees Granted through 8/31/09...........................................................660 Degrees Granted from 9/1/08 to 8/31/09 ..................................................17

Transportation Planning, Economic and Community Development, Urban Design, Environmental Planning
Page 226 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

Masters Specializations

Total Students

*Do not double count Hispanics; Hispanics also appear in the racial categories below.

PLANNING FACULTY
Fernando Costa
Professor of the Practice. BS, Georgia Institute of Technology (1974); MS, Civil Engineering and Masters of City Planning, Georgia Institute of Technology (1976). Specializations: Planning Management and Practice.

Tom Schurch
AICP

Associate Professor. BA, United States International University (1971); MLA, California Polytechnic University (1978); PhD, University of Washington (1989) Specialization: Urban Design.

AICP

(405) 325-0358

schurch@ou.edu AICP

John Sharp

Professor. BS, Bowling Green State University (1968); MArch., University of New Mexico (1975); PhD, University of Washington (1981). Specializations: Transportation Planning, Economic Development, Public Finance.

Richard Marshment

AICP

Adjunct Professor. BA Geography (1983) and MRCP (1987) University of Oklahoma. Specialization: Geographic Information Systems (GIS)

Michael Southard

(405) 325-2399

rmarshment@ou.edu

Adjunct Professor. BA Public Administration (1991) and MRCP (1993) University of Oklahoma. Specialization: Planning Management and Practice

AICP

Guoqiang Shen

Associate Professor. B.Arch., Tsinghua University (1985); MS, Beijing University (1988); MCRP, Ohio State University (1994); PhD, Ohio State University (1998). Specializations: Urban Design, Transportation, Real Estate Development, GIS, Research Methods.

Eleanor Weinel

Associate Professor. BA, Dickenson College (1966); M.Arch, Carnegie Mellon University (1978). Specialization: Architectural History.

AIA

(405) 325-2276 eweinel@ou.edu

(405) 325-1698

guoqiangs@ou.edu

Director, Oklahoma Institute for Quality Communities Associate Professor. BS, University of Wyoming (1992); MPA, University of Louisville (1996); PhD, Florida State University (2003). Specializations: Economic Development, Land Use Planning.

Charles Warnken

James Clare Woodside

Adjunct Professor. B.Arch (1973), MRCP (1977) University of Oklahoma. Specialization: Regional Planning, Urban Design

AICP

FYI
RCPL MISSION STATEMENT
RCPL's mission is to advance the art and practice of planning through educating students for lifelong professional practice and through expanding the knowledge on which practice is based. Distinguished features include the program's: * * * * * * * Singular focus on the professional masters degree, Well-established reputation, dating to its founding in 1948, Alumni, many of whom have achieved national prominence, Small size, which allows close student-faculty relationships, Curricular flexibility, which accommodates students' interests, Multi-disciplinary perspective, Commitment to improving professional planning practice that addresses urban and regional issues in Oklahoma and environs.

(405) 325-3871

cwarnken@ou.edu AICP

Assistant Professor. BA, Trinity University (1993), MSCRP, UT-Austin (1995), Ph.D. Texas A&M (2009). Specializations: Environmental Planning, History and theory, Planning Practice.

Meghan Wieters

(405) 325-3857

mwieters@ou.edu

OTHER AFFILIATED FACULTY


Khosrow Bozorgi
Associate Professor. B.Arch. (1974) and M.Arch (1977), National University of Iran; MSArch.(1988) and PhD(1989), University of Pennsylvania. Specialization: Urban Design.

AIA

(405) 325-3348 kbozorgi@ou.edu

Charles Robert Goins

2005-2008 RESEARCH PROJECTS INVOLVING RCPL FACULTY AND STUDENTS


* * * * * * * * * * * * * High speed passenger rail transportation systems. Mobility benefits of urban rail transit projects. Data mining the National Transit Database. Economic effects of highway bypasses on rural communities. Comprehensive Plans for the cities of Mustang, Tuttle, Geary, Noble, Perkins and Newcastle OK. Reuse Strategies for Superfund Sites in Oklahoma City, OK. Homeless Service Provision in Oklahoma. Northeast 23rd St. Streetscape Assessment in Oklahoma City, OK. Freight Movement for Tulsa's Transportation Plan 2030. Freight Movement Modeling for State of Oklahoma. Inter-Modal Containerized Freight Flow & Port Security. Operating and Maintenance Cost Models for Light Rail Transit. Oklahoma Institute for Quality Communities founded in July 2008.

Professor Emeritus. B.Arch (1956), MRCP (1960) University of Oklahoma. Specialization: Planning History, Housing

William Harless

Adjunct Professor. BED (1980), MLA (1984), MRCP (1985) University of Oklahoma. Specialization: Subdivision Planning

AICP

Neal McCaleb Kent Schell

Adjunct Professor. Specialization: Transportation politics and policy

Adjunct Professor. BS (1970) Business Administration and MRCP (1973), Kansas State University; JD (1978) University of Tulsa. Specialization: Historic Preservation

ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 227

UNIVERSITY OF OREGON
Department of Planning, Public Policy and Management 1209 University of Oregon Eugene, Oregon 97403-1209 Phone (541) 346-3635 Fax (541) 346-2040 E-mail: pppm@uoregon.edu http://pppm.uoregon.edu Richard D. Margerum, Program Director Phone: (541) 346-2526 E-mail: rdm@uoregon.edu

MA/MS PAB
University Admission Policy:

ACSP Member: FULL

Community and Regional Planning

MASTERS ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS


Minimum Undergraduate GPA: Minimum GRE: Minimum TOEFL Ranking in Undergraduate Class: Departmental Requirement:

Bachelors degree from an accredited institution 3.0 NA 575/88 University; 575/91 Department Not Required No Requirements

MASTERS GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

Hours of Core ...........................................................................................36 Hours of Studio or Practice Related Courses ...........................................10 Hours of Restricted Electives ............................................................. 14-19 Hours of Unrestricted Electives ..................................................................0 Other ..................................................................................................... 7-12 Total Required Hours in Planning Program .............................................72 Exams or Written Requirements ........................Thesis or Terminal Project

PROGRAM INFORMATION
GRADUATE DEADLINES, TUITION AND FEES
Admission Deadline for masters program, Fall..........................................February 1 Financial Aid Deadline for masters program..............................................February 1 In-State Tuition and Fees 2008-09 .................................................$4,048 per quarter Out-of-State Tuition and Fees 2008-09 ..........................................$5,722 per quarter Application Fee ..........................................................................................$50 majors Additional Fees: ......................................... $250 Student activities fee; $75 per term Optional extended health insurance for graduate students

FINANCIAL AID INFORMATION


Tuition Awards:

Eligibility Criteria:

Approximately 27 Graduate Teaching Fellowships; University Financial Aid Package Merit and Need

TOTAL MASTERS STUDENT COMPOSITION 2008-2009 US Citizens & Permanent Residents


Hispanics* Of any Race White African American Native American/ Pacific Islander Asian American Mixed Other / Dont know Non-US Citizens Non- Permanent Residents

Annual Student Enrollment Applied


Masters 82 97

Accepted Enrolled
32 52 20 23

Male 0 11 0 0 0 0 11 0

Female 0 12 0 0 0 0 5 0

Total 0 23 0 0 0 0 16 0

07/08 08/09 07/08 08/09 07/08 08/09

MASTERS DEGREE
Master of Community and Regional Planning
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail: Richard D. Margerum, Program Director (541) 346-2526 rdm@uoregon.edu

Year Initiated: 1968 PAB Accredited Degrees Granted through 6/30/09...........................................................759 Degrees Granted from 9/1/08 to 6/30/09 ....................................................9

Environmental Planning Land Use and Built Environment Community Development Governance and Civic Engagement Sustainable Cities Nonprofit/Philanthropy

Masters Specializations

Total Students

22

17

39

*Do not double count Hispanics; Hispanics also appear in the racial categories below.

Page 228 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

PLANNING FACULTY
Professor. BS, California Polytechnic; MSW (1971) and Ph.D. (1980), San Diego State. Specializations: Community and Regional Development.

Bethany Johnson

Michael Hibbard

Adjunct Instructor. BA, Middlebury College (1996); MS,Environmental Psychology, Cornell (2001). Specializations: Community Outreach, Youth and Planning.

(541) 346-3615

bethanyj@uoregon.edu

(541) 346-3897

hibbard@uoregon.edu

Andre LeDuc

Associate Professor. BA, Wittenberg (1987); MCP, Cincinnati (1989); Ph.D., Wisconsin (1995). Specializations: Environmental Planning and Management, Planning Processes, Collaborative Planning.

Richard Margerum

Adjunct Instructor. BS, Wisconsin (1996); MCRP, Oregon (1999). Specializations: Hazard Prevention and Mitigation.

(541) 346-5833

onhw@uoregon.edu

Laura Leete

(541) 346-2526

rdm@uoregon.edu

Marc Schlossberg

Assistant Professor. BA, California, Berkeley, (1982); MA (1988) and Ph.D. (1992), Harvard. Specializations: Poverty and Social Policy, Workforce Policy, Nonprofit Economics.

Associate Professor. BBA, Texas (1987); MUP, San Jose State (1994); Ph.D., Michigan (2001). Specializations: Geographic Information Systems, Social Planning, Transportation Planning.

(541) 346-0834

leete@uoregon.edu

Robert Parker

(541) 346-2046

schlossb@uoregon.edu

Assistant Professor, B.Arch., Tianjin (1995); MS, Tsinghua (1998); MRP, (2001) and Ph.D., Cornell (2007). Specializations: Environmental Planning, Sustainable Living Design and Analysis, Geographic Information Systems.

Yizhao Yang

Instructor. BS, Colorado State (1986); MUP, Oregon (1989). Specializations: Community Planning Workshop, Microcomputers in Planning and Policy Analysis.

(541) 346-3801

rgp@uoregon.edu

Megan E. Smith

(541) 346-0833

yizhao@uoregon.edu

Instructor. BA, Southern Oregon State (1990); MCRP, University of Oregon (1996). Specializations: Community Outreach, Watershed Planning, Rural Planning.

Robert F. Young

(541) 346-3881

smith@uoregon.edu

Assistant Professor, B.A. (1982), M.C.R.P (1987), Ph.D. (2007) Cornell. Specializations: environmental and economic policy and planning, environmental policy and planning history.

FYI
Oregon is renowned for the Oregon Land Use system, which is considered one of the model state planning programs in the U.S. Eugene is located within 90 minutes of both the Oregon coast and Cascade Mountains, offering year round hiking, fishing, kayaking, as well as winter skiing. Eugene is a progressive city with more than 100 miles of trails, a metropolitan bus service free to UO students, an extensive open space and parks system, and new sustainable business initiatives. PPPM is known for its work on sustainability, collaborative and participatory approaches to planning, community development, and environmental planning. PPPM is affiliated with the community service center (CSC), providing students with access to real world experience with actual clients. The CSC also coordinates yearlong paid internship through the Resource Assistance for Rural Environments (RARE) program, which provides students with (1) a monthly stipend, (2) medical insurance, (3) possible eligibility for in-state tuition after one year of service, and (4) up to 9 graduate credits in the UO Planning Program. PPPM is linked with the Institute for a Sustainable Environment, the Institute for Policy Research and Innovation, and the Sustainable Cities Initiative. The community and regional planning program offers concurrent degrees in business, conflict and dispute resolution, environmental studies, geography, historic preservation, landscape architecture, law and public administration. ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 229

(541) 346-1950

ryoung@uoregon.edu

OTHER AFFILIATED FACULTY


Neil Bania
Associate Professor. BA (1980), MA (1983) and Ph.D. (1985), Oregon. Specializations: Public Policy Analysis, Economics.

(541) 346-3635

Robert Choquette

Adjunct Instructor. BS (1982) and MUP (1991), Oregon. Specializations: Strategic Planning, Project Management.

(541) 346-0822

choquette@uoregon.edu

Jessica Greene

Associate Professor. BA, Michigan (1989); MPH, MIA (1996) and Ph.D. (2003), Columbia. Specializations: Health Policy, Quantitative Methods, Evaluation Research.

(541) 346-0138

jessicag@uoregon.edu

Associate Professor. BA, Oregon (1984); MA (1991) and Ph.D. (1998), Washington. Specializations: Nonprofit Management, Economics, Public Finance.

Renee Irvin

(541) 346-2155

rirvin@uoregon.edu

UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA
Master of City Planning
127 Meyerson Hall Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19104 Phone (215) 898-8329 Fax (215) 898-5731 E-mail: cityplan@design.upenn.edu www.design.upenn.edu John Landis, Department Chair E-mail: jlan@design.upenn.edu

MA/MS PAB

Ph.D.

ACSP Member: FULL

MASTERS ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS

University Admission Policy: Diversity of undergraduate majors accepted. Prefer students with coursework in economics, statistics, & urban design, though not required. Students without these classes enroll in a pre-matriculation CPLN Summer Institute. Minimum Undergraduate GPA: 3.0 or higher Minimum GRE: 600 Minimum TOEFL 575 Ranking in Undergraduate Class: 90 Departmental Requirement: No Requirements Hours of Core ...........................................................................................30 Hours of Studio or Practice Related Courses .............................................9 Hours of Restricted Electives .....................................................................0 Hours of Unrestricted Electives ............................................................ 3-12 Other .........................................................................................................15 Total Required Hours in Planning Program .............................................57 Exam,Thesis or Final Product: .......... Studio report or professional project

MASTERS GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

PROGRAM INFORMATION
GRADUATE DEADLINES, TUITION AND FEES
Admission Deadline 2009-2010 ..................................................... February 1, 2010 Financial Aid Deadline 2009-2010 ...................................................................... N/A In-State Tuition and Fees: ................................................................$38,590 per year Out-of-State/International Tuition and Fees ....................................$38,590 per year Application Fee: .................................................................................................... $70 Additional Fees: ........................................................................................................ 0

FINANCIAL AID INFORMATION


University Fellows (2/year): Merit-based Grants: Need-based Federal Loans/Work Study: Need-based Merit Grants (10+/year): Merit-based

DOCTORAL DEADLINES, TUITION AND FEES

Admission Deadline 2009-2010 ...................................................... .January 2, 2010 Financial Aid Deadline 20092010...........................................................................N/A In-State Tuition and Fees: ................................................................$24,070 per year Out-of-State/International Tuition and Fees ....................................$24,070 per year Application Fee: .................................................................................................... $70 Additional Fees: ........................................................................................................ 0

TOTAL MASTERS STUDENT COMPOSITION Fall 2009 US Citizens & Permanent Residents
Hispanics* Of any Race White African American Native American/ Pacific Islander Asian American Mixed Other / Dont know Non-US Citizens Non- Permanent Residents

Annual Student Enrollment Applied


Masters Doctoral 228 49 296 48

Accepted
173 5 185 6

Enrolled
61 2 64 2

Male 2 46 3 0 4 0 9 7 71

Female 4 43 6 1 7 0 12 7 80

Total 6 89 9 1 11 0 21 14

06/07 07/08 06/07 07/08 06/07 07/08

MASTERS DEGREE
Master of City Planning
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail: John Landis, Department Chair (215) 746-2340 jlan@design.upenn.edu

Year Initiated: 1950 PAB Accredited Degrees Granted through 8/31/09.........................................................2162 Degrees Granted from 9/1/07 to 8/31/09 ..................................................72

Community & Economic Development Land Use & Environmental Planning Private & Public Development Transportation Planning Urban Design
Page 230 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

Masters Specializations

Total Students

151

*Do not double count Hispanics; Hispanics also appear in the racial categories below.

DOCTORAL DEGREE
PhD in City & Regional Planning
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail: Eugunie L. Birch, Professor & Graduate Group Chair (215) 898-6097 elbirch@design.upenn.edu

TOTAL DOCTORAL STUDENT COMPOSITION Fall 2009 US Citizens & Permanent Residents
Hispanics* Of any Race White African American Native American/ Pacific Islander Asian American Mixed Other / Dont know Non-US Citizens Non- Permanent Residents

Male 1 4 0 0 0 0 1 1 7

Female 0 6 1 0 1 0 0 1 9

Total 1 10 1 0 1 0 1 2 16

Year Initiated 1953 Degrees Granted through 8/31/2009....................................................... 303 Degrees Granted from 9/1/2006 to 8/31/2009 ............................................4 Dissertations Granted from 9/1/2005 to 8/31/2006 1. Public Participation using consensus building for land-use planning in the US & Japan 2. Impact of inner city commuter and community congregations on civil engagement and social action 3. Port Authorities and urban redevelopment: politics, organizations, and institutions of a changing waterfront 4. Protecting habitats: New York-New Jersey Harbor Estuary program, collaborative planning and scientific information 5. Business Improvement Districts: untold stories and substantiated impacts.

Community & Economic Development; Land Use, Transportation & Environmental Planning; Urban Design & Development; Cartography & Spatial Statistics; Historic Preservation
DOCTORAL ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS
University Admission Policy: * Minimum Undergraduate GPA: 3.0 or higher Minimum GRE: 600 Minimum TOEFL: 615 Departmental Requirement: Writing sample

Doctoral Specializations

Total Students

*Do not double count Hispanics; Hispanics also appear in the racial categories below.

PLANNING FACULTY
Jonathan Barnett
Professor of Practice. BA and MArch., Yale University; MA, Cambridge University. Specializations: Physical Planning, Urban Design, Planning Practice.

FAICP

Hours of Core ........................................................................................N/A Hours of Studio or Practice Related Courses ........................................N/A Hours of Restricted Electives ................................................................N/A Hours of Unrestricted Electives .............................................................N/A Total Required Hours in Planning Program .............................................60 Exam,Thesis or Final Product: .........Doctoral Seminar, Preliminary Exam .............................................................................................. & Dissertation. * Students from all disciplines are encouraged to apply but preference will be given to those whose research interests match the graduate group.

DOCTORAL GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

(215) 732-5215

jonathanbarnett@verizon.net FAICP

Eugenie L. Birch

Professor. BA, Bryn Mawr; MA and PhD, Columbia University. Specializations: Community Development, Economic Development, Planning History.

(215) 898-6097

elbirch@design.upenn.edu

Professor. BA, Harvard University; MS, University of Newcastle-uponTyne; PhD, Oregon State University. Specializations: Environmental Planning, Land Use Planning, Land Preservation.

Thomas L. Daniels

(215) 573-8965

thomasld@design.upenn.edu AICP

Gary Hack

Professor. MArch and MUP, University of Illinois, PhD, Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Specializations: Physical Planning, Urban Design.

(215) 898-8480

gahack@design.upenn.edu

ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 231

Amy Hillier

Assistant Professor. BA, Middlebury College; MSW and PhD., University of Pennsylvania. Specializations: GIS, Community Development.

Lecturer. MArch. and MCP, University of Pennsylvania. Specialization: Planning Practice

James Kise

(215) 746- 2341

ahillier@design.upenn.edu

Professor. BS, MIT; PhD, UC Berkley. Specializations: Housing, GIS, Urban Development.

John Landis

Paul Levy

Lecturer. PhD, Columbia University. Specialization: Planning Practice; Economic Development

(215) 746-2340

jlan@design.upenn.edu

Harris Sokoloff

Associate Professor. BA and MArch, University of California, Los Angeles; PhD, University of California, Berkeley. Specializations: Urban Design

Michael Larice

Adjunct Associate Professor. BA and M.Ed., Temple University; PhD, Syracuse University. Specialization: Conflict Resolution

(215) 573-5845

larice@design.upenn.edu

Adjunct Assistant Professor. BA University of Pennsylvania, MArch, University of Pennsylvania. Specialization: Physical Planning, Urban Design, Citizen Participation.

Harris Steinberg

Randy Mason

Associate Professor. BA, Bucknell University; MS, Penn State University; PhD, Columbia University. Specialization: Historic Preservation.

Dana Tomlin

Professor. BS, University of Virginia; MLA, Harvard University; M.Phil. and PhD, Yale University. Specialization: GIS

(215) 898-3169

rfmason@design.upenn.edu

Domenic Vitiello

Assistant Professor. BA, Wesleyan University; MCD, MIT; PhD, University of Pennsylvania. Specializations: Community and Economic Development.

Professor. Diploma-Ing, University of Belgrade; M.Eng. and PhD, University of California, Berkeley. Specialization: Transportation Engineering.

Vukan Vuchic

Rachel Weinberger

Susan Wachter

Assistant Professor. BA and MUP, Hunter College of the City University of New York: MS and PhD, University of California, Berkeley. Specialization: Transportation.

Professor. BA, Harvard College; PhD, Boston College. Specialization: Real Estate Finance

(215) 746-4263

rrw@design.upenn.edu

Laura Wolf Powers


(215) 746-4263

Assistant Professor. BA, Yale University; MDA, Princeton; PhD Rutgers University. Specializations: Community and Economic Development.

lwpowers@design.upenn.edu

Robert Yaro

Professor of Practice. BA, Wesleyan University; MCRP, Harvard University. Specializations: Regional Planning, Planning Practice

yaro@rpa.org

OTHER AFFILIATED FACULTY


Lecturer. BA, University of Pennsylvania.Specializations: Housing Development

Hanley Bodek

Paul Brophy

Lecturer. BA, LaSalle University. MCP, University of Pennsylvania. Specializations: Housing, Community & Economic Development

Lecturer. PhD, University of Amsterdam. Specialization: International Planning, Housing

Marja Hoek-Smit

Page 232 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

UNIVERSITY OF QUEENSLAND
School of Geography, Planning and Environmental Management
St. Lucia, Brisbane Queensland 4072, Australia Phone [61] 7 3365-6455 Fax [61] 7 3365-6899 E-mail:pagpem@uq.edu.au http://www.gpem.uq.edu.au/ Professor James Shulmeister, Department Head [01161] 7 3365-6455 E-mail: pagpem@uq.edu.au

MA/MS PIA

Ph.D.

ACSP Member: Corresponding

MASTERS ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS


University Admission Policy: Minimum Undergraduate GPA: Minimum GRE: Minimum TOEFL Ranking in Undergraduate Class: Departmental Requirement:

Relevant Bachelors degree. Not required Required no minimum 550 Not Required Relevant Bachelors degree.

MASTERS GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

Hours of Core ...........................................................................................16 Hours of Studio or Practice Related Courses .............................................2 Hours of Restricted Electives .....................................................................2 Hours of Unrestricted Electives ..................................................................0 Thesis ..........................................................................................................4 Total Required Hours in Planning Program .............................................24

FINANCIAL AID INFORMATION

National research scholarships--Nationally Competitive.

PROGRAM INFORMATION
Admission Deadline 2009 for Masters program .............................................January Admission Deadline 2009 for Ph.D program .............................................. Any time Financial Aid Deadline 2009 for Masters program .............................................. N/A Financial Aid Deadline 2009 for Ph.D Program .................................................. N/A In-State Tuition and Fees ...................................................................................... N/A Out-of-State Tuition and Fees............................................................................... N/A International Tuition and Fees ................................................ $A12,800 per semester Application Fee ...................................................................................................$A50

Master of Development Practice


Contact Person: Phone: E-mail: Donovan Storey (011) 61-7-3365-6707 d.storey@uq.edu.au

GRADUATE DEADLINES, TUITION AND FEES

Year Initiated: 2004 Degrees Granted through 8/31/08.............................................................79 Degrees Granted from 9/1/07to 8/31/08 ...................................................27

Annual Student Enrollment Applied


Masters Masters Doctoral 21 20 15 28 50 50

Accepted
19 20 9 28 20 7

Enrolled
19 20 7 27 48 12

07/08 07/08 07/08 07/08 07/08 07/08

Development Planning, Community Planning, International Political Development


MASTERS ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS
University Admission Policy: Minimum Undergraduate GPA: Minimum GRE: Minimum TOEFL Ranking in Undergraduate Class: Departmental Requirement:

Masters Specializations

MASTERS DEGREE
Master of Urban and Regional Planning
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail: John Minnery (011) 61-7-3365-3880 j.minnery@uq.edu.au

Relevant Bachelors degree. Not required Required no minimum 550 Not Required Relevant Bachelors degree.

MASTERS GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

Year Initiated: 1975 PIA Accredited Degrees Granted through 8/31/08...........................................................360 Degrees Granted from 9/1/07 to 8/31/08 ..................................................21

Hours of Core ...........................................................................................12 Hours of Studio or Practice Related Courses .............................................0 Hours of Restricted Electives .....................................................................8 Hours of Unrestricted Electives ..................................................................0 Thesis ..........................................................................................................4 Total Required Hours in Planning Program .............................................24

Masters Specializations
Urban Governance Urban Planning

FINANCIAL AID INFORMATION

National research scholarships--Nationally Competitive.

ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 233

TOTAL MASTERS STUDENT COMPOSITION 2008-2009 Citizens


White Indigenous People Other / Dont know Non- Citizens

DOCTORAL GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

Male 0 0 18 25 43

Female 0 0 13 22 35

Total 0 0 31 47 78

Hours of Core ............................................................................................... Hours of Studio or Practice Related Courses ............................................... Hours of Restricted Electives ....................................................................... Hours of Unrestricted Electives .................................................................... Total Required Hours in Program............................................................

TOTAL DOCTORAL STUDENT COMPOSITION 2008-2009 Citizens


White Indigenous People Other / Dont know Non- Citizens

Male 0 0 11 12 23

Female 0 0 10 7 17

Total 0 0 21 19 40

Total Students

DOCTORAL DEGREE
Doctor of Philosophy (Research)
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail: Stuart Phinn, Associate Professor (011) 61-7-3365-6526 s.phinn@uq.edu.au

Total Students

Year Initiated: 1980 Degrees Granted through 8/31 ................................................................123 Degrees Granted from 9/1/08 to 8/31/09 ....................................................6 Dissertations Granted from 9/1/2002 to 8/31/2008 1. Understanding and Managing Uncertainty in Metropolitan Planning. 2. The Choice Between Rural Living and Agriculture: Implications for Land Use and Subdivision Policy. 3. Urban Management in Indonesia: A Case Study of Banda Aceh. 4. Housing Opportunity and Residential Mobility in Seoul Metropolitan Region: Macro and Micro Approaches. 5. The Dynamics of the Evolution of Residential Property Price Premiums in a Metropolitan Setting. 6. Modeling Quality of Life in Urban Environments. 7. The Role of Planning in Achievement of Sustainable Tourism. 8. The Urban Informal Sector in Colombo, Sri Lanka 9. Sustainable Coastal Tourism in S.E. Asia

PLANNING FACULTY
John Minnery
Associate Professor. Ph.D., MPubAdmin (Qld); GDTP (Wits); BSc (Hons) (Cantuar). Specializations: Urban Policy, Urban Governance, Planning Theory, Planning History.

FPIA

(61) 7-3365-3880

j.minnery@uq.edu.au

Tiffany Morrison

Lecturer. BSe (Griffith), Hons (Qld), PhD (Qld). Specialzations: Environmental Policy, Planning, Governance and Institutional Theory, Comparative Environmental Policy and Planning, Political Geography.

(61) 7-3365-6535

t.morrison@uq.edu.au

Ann Peterson

Urban Policy and Management, Environmental Management, GIS, Property and Development, Demography, Development Planning
DOCTORAL ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS
University Admission Policy: Minimum GRE: Minimum TOEFL Departmental Requirement: Exams or Written Requirements: Masters degree. 550 Masters degree. Ph.D. by thesis only (Normally 3 years full-time)

Doctoral Specializations

Senior Lecturer. BA (Hons); BHMS, Dip.Ed., MURP (Qld.); Ph.D. Specializations: Environmental Planning, Wildlife Planning, Buffer Zones.

(61) 7-3365-3979

a.peterson@uq.edu.au FPIA

Glen Searle

Associate Professor. BA (Hons), Ph.D. Specializations: Political Economy of Planning, Metropolitan Spatial Planning, Residential Intensification

Lecturer. MA (Manc); Dip.TP (Trent); Ph.D. Specializations: Planning Methodology, Project Assessment, Network Analysis.

Phillip Smith

(61) 7-3365-3916

phillip.smith@uq.edu.au

Page 234 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

Donovan Storey

Lecturer, BA (Hons) (Cantuar), PD DevStud (Massey), PhD (Massey). Specializations: Internationasl Development Planning, Urbanization in Asia Pacific

Jurek Kozlowski

(61) 7-3365-6707

d.storey@uq.edu.au

Adjunct Professor. BArch., MArch., Dip.Urd., Ph.D., Dr.Hab. Specializations: Environmental Planning, Planning Methods, Threshold Analysis.

FPIA

(61)-7-3365-6455

David Wadley

Snr. Lecturer. BA (Syd); Dip.Ed. (Melb); Ph.D (ANU); MBA. Specializations: Economic Geography, Marketing Geography, Commercial Planning, Futurology.

Adjunct Professor. BSurv, MSc, MURP (Qld). Specializations: Planning Practice, Planning Law, Heritage Planning.

John Brannock

FPIA

(61) 7-3365-6535

d.wadley@uq.edu.au

(61)-7-3365-6455

Jeff Humphreys

OTHER AFFILIATED FACULTY


Martin Bell
Professor. BA (Hons); MA (Finders); Ph.D. (Qld). Specializations: Demographic Projections & Forecasts, Internal Migration, Local Population Change.

Adjunct Professor. BRTP (Hons), BA. Specializations: Planning Practice, Planning Theory.

FPIA

(61)-7-3365-6455

MPIA

Adjunct Professor. BA (Hons), MCD. Specialization: Urban Management.

Michael Kerry

FPIA

(61) 7-3365-7087

martin.bell@uq.edu.au

(61)-7-3365-6455

Professor. BA, Mlitt (UNE); Ph.D (Finders). Specializations: Behavioral Geography, Urban Geography, Survey Research Methods.

Robert Stimson

Michael Fagence

Research Associate. BA (Nott), MA, Mphil. Specialization: Tourism Planning.

(61) 7-3365-6307

r.stimson@uq.edu.au FPIA

(61)-7-3365-6455

m.fagence@uq.edu.au

Adjunct Professor. BA, MUS (Qld). Specializations: Planning Practice, Land Use Planning.

Victor Feros

Sandra Vigar

Adjunct Professor, BRTP, MBus Admin, MSc (Env. Man). Specializations: Environmental Management, Community Consultation.

FPIA

(61)-7-3365-6455

Arnis Siksna

Research Associate. BE (Arch), MTP, Ph.D. Specialization: Urban Design.

FPIA

FYI
We also offer a 4-year undergraduate Bachelor of Regional and Town Planning, accredited by the Planning Institute of Australia.

(61)-7-3365-6455

a.siksna@uq.edu.au

HOUSING, SOCIAL, AND COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT PLANNING


Many planners practice in these overlapping areas. Housing planners help develop strategies to increase the supply of affordable housing and expand home ownership among low income or disadvantaged groups. These planners often try to create incentives and remove constraints on private home builders or work with public or non-profit organizations to build housing units for low income families or senior citizens. Many housing planners try to encourage mixed use developments which offer services and jobs close to where people live; others promote projects which provide housing opportunities for people from a mixture of income levels. Planners concerned with the social aspects of a community often combine their interest in housing with efforts to increase the overall quality of life in poor or minority neighborhoods. Many social and community planners work to improve multiple aspects of a targeted neighborhood, combining many substantive planning skills from economic development to urban design. For example, community and social planners may work to improve transit service in disadvantaged communities or develop job training programs for unemployed residents or provide better public health facilities in low income neighborhoods. These planners often work with land use and transportation planners.

ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 235

UNIVERSITY OF SOUTH AUSTRALIA


School of Natural and Built Environments
Department of Urban and Regional Planning GPO Box 2471 Adelaide 5001 Australia Phone [61] 8 8302 2227 or [61] 8 8302 1142 nadia.amfiteatro@unisa.edu.au http://www.unisa.edu.au/nbe Associate Professor Jon Kellett Head of Urban and Regional Planning 061 8302 2297 jon.kellett@unisa.edu.au

MA/MS PAB

Ph.D.

ACSP Member: FULL

MASTERS ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS


Relevant Bachelors degree Minimum: Ranking in undergraduate class: Required Not required Not required

MASTERS GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

Completion of 54 units (equivalent to 12 courses) over 2 years ( 3 courses per semester for 4 semesters)

DOCTORAL DEGREE
Doctor of Philosophy (Research)
Contact Person: Phone: Email: Dr Sada Karuppannan +61 8 8302 1066 sada.karuppannan@unisa.edu.au

PROGRAM INFORMATION
Admission Deadline 2008-9 for Masters Program Applications close in January each year for commencement in late February. The academic year runs from February to November Fees: 13,500 per annum (Australian Dollars)

Doctoral Specializations Include:


Urban Design GIS in PlanningPlanning in the Asia-Pacific Planning and Environmental Law Transport Policy and Planning Sustainable Urban Design Social and Community Planning
DOCTORAL ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS

Annual Student Enrollment


04/05 Masters Doctoral 20 5 05/06 25 4 07/08 28 6 07/08 59 7

MASTERS DEGREE
Master of Urban and Regional Planning
Contact Person Phone: E-mail: Dr. Matthew Rofe, Program Director +61 8 8302 2297 matthew.rofe@unisa.edu.au

Exams or Written Requirements: Ph.D. by thesis only (Normally 3 years fulltime)

FYI
University of South Australia in Adelaide is Australias oldest planning school with programs first offered in 1949. the School also offers a 4 year professionally accredited undergraduate Bachelor of Urban and Regional Planning with Honors.

Year program initiated 1987 Full professional accreditation by the Planning Institute of Australia Degrees Granted through 12/31/07...........................................................80 Granted from 1/1/07 to 12/31/07 ..............................................................20

Masters Specializations
Sustainable Urban Design/Transport Policy and Planning

Page 236 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

UNIVERSITY OF SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA


School of Policy, Planning, and Development
Ralph and Goldy Lewis Hall, Room312 Los Angeles, California 90089-0626 Phone (213) 740-0350 Fax (213) 740-7573 E-mail: sppd@usc.edu www.usc.edu/schools/sppd Jack Knott, Dean Phone (213) 740-0350 E-mail: jhknott@usc.edu

BA/BS PAB

MA/MS PAB PAB

Ph.D.

ACSP Member: FULL

UNDERGRADUATE ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS


Departmental Requirement: No Requirement Minimum GPA: 3.5 Transfer admission only Minimum SAT or ACT Scores: No Requirement

UNDERGRADUATE GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

Hours of Core .......................................................................................... 30 Hours of Studio Courses .............................................................................. Hours of Restricted Elective ........................................................................ Hours of Unrestricted Elective ................................................................ 34 Total Required Hours In Planning Program (Track) .............................. 28 Total Required Hours to graduate from University ............................... 128 Thesis or final product .........................................................................None

FINANCIAL AID INFORMATION


University Grants Eligibility Criteria: Federal Aid Eligibility Criteria: Need and Merit Need

PROGRAM INFORMATION
Admission Deadline 2010 -11 ..................................................................... January 1 Financial Aid Deadline 2010 -11 ............................................................... February 2 In-State Tuition and Fees: .............. $1,299 per unit ($19,285 full time per semester) Out-of-State Tuition and Fees: ..... $1,299 per unit ($19,285 full time per semester) Application Fee ......................................................................................................$65 Additional Fees: .............................................. Approximately $12,000 (books, room and board,transportation, Misc.)

UNDERGRADUATE DEADLINES, TUITION AND FEES

MASTERS DEGREE
Master of Planning
Contact Person: Tridib Banerjee, Professor and Director of Graduate Programs in Urban Planning Phone: (213)740-4724 E-mail: tbanerje@usc.edu

GRADUATE DEADLINES, TUITION AND FEES

Admission Deadline 2010 -11 for Masters program ..................................January 15 Admission Deadline 2010 -11 for Ph.D program......................................January 15 Financial Aid Deadline 2010 -11 for Masters program ..............................January 15 Financial Aid Deadline 2010 -11 for Ph.D Program ..................................January 15 In-State Tuition and Fees: ............ $1,299 per unit ($19,285 full time per semester) Out-of-State Tuition and Fees: ...... $1,299 per unit ($19,285 full time per semester) Application Fee ...................................................................................................... $85 Additional Fees: .............................................. Approximately $14,000 (books, room and board,transportation, Misc.)

Year Initiated: 1955 PAB Accredited Degrees Granted through 8/31/06.........................................................1184 Degrees Granted from 9/1/05 to 8/31/06 ..................................................75

Annual Student Enrollment Applied


2008

Accepted Enrolled
2008 2008

Sustainable Land Use Planning, Preservation and Design of the Built Environment, Social and Community Development, Economic Development, Transportation and Infrastructure Planning
MASTERS ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS
University Admission Policy: Minimum Undergraduate GPA: Minimum GRE: Minimum TOEFL Ranking in Undergraduate Class: Departmental Requirement: Bachelors degree from an accredited institution 3.0 1000 600 Not Required Same as University

Masters Specializations

Undergraduate Masters Doctoral

229 151 78

54 105 20

54 36 15

UNDERGRADUATE DEGREE
BS in Public Policy, Management, and Planning
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail David Sloane, Professor and Director, Undergraduate Programs (213) 740-5768 dsloane@usc.edu

MASTERS GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

Year initiated:1987 Not Accredited Degrees Granted through 8/31/06................................................................. Degrees Granted from 9/1/05 to 8/31/06 ................................................ 112

Hours of Core ...........................................................................................16 Hours of Studio or Practice Related Courses .............................................8 Hours of Restricted Electives ...................................................................12 Hours of Unrestricted Electives ..................................................................2 Other ...........................................................................................................0 Total Required Hours In Planning Program ............................................ 48 Exam, Thesis or Final Product: ................................ Comprehensive Exam

ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 237

FINANCIAL AID INFORMATION


Tuition awards: Assistantships:

Full and Partial Tuition Scholarships Graduate Assistantships

DOCTORAL (PH.D.) ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS


Departmental Requirement: Minimum Undergraduate GPA: Minimum GRE: Minimum TOEFL

TOTAL MASTERS STUDENT COMPOSITION 2006-2007 US Citizens & Permanent Residents


Hispanics* Of any Race White African American Native American/ Pacific Islander Asian American Mixed Other / Dont know Non-US Citizens Non- Permanent Residents

Masters degree in Planning or 12 units of graduate-level Planning coursework 3.5 1100 (Verbal and Quantitative) 600

Male 7 21 2 0 9 0 0 11 50

Female 5 22 10 0 12 0 0 17 66

Total 12 43 12 0 21 0 0 28

Hours of Core ...........................................................................................12 Hours of Methodology or Teaching Related Courses ..............................10 Hours of Restricted Electives ...................................................................14 Hours of Unrestricted Electives ..................................................................0 Other .........................................................................................................24 Total Required Hours In Planning Program ........... min 46 (with advanced ................................................................................................ standing) - 60 Exam, Thesis or Final Product: .....................Screening, Qualifying Exam, ............................................................................................ and Dissertation

DOCTORAL (PH.D.) GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

FINANCIAL AID INFORMATION


Tuition awards: Assistantships:

Full and Partial Tuition Scholarships Graduate Assistantships

Doctor of Policy, Planning, and Development (DPPD)


Contact Person: Phone: E-mail Richard Callahan, Director of Leadership Programs (916) 442-6911 rcallaha@usc.edu

Total Students

116

*Do not double count Hispanics; Hispanics also appear in the racial categories below.

Year initiated 2005 Degrees Granted through 8/31/05.............................................................. 3 Degrees Granted from 9/1/05 to 8/31/06 ................................................... 5

DOCTORAL DEGREE
Doctor of Philosophy in Policy, Planning, and Development (Ph.D.)
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail Tridib Banerjee, Professor and Director of Graduate Programs in Urban Planning (213) 740-4724 tbanerje@usc.edu

DOCTORAL (DPPD) ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS


Departmental Requirement: Minimum Undergraduate GPA: Minimum GRE: Minimum TOEFL

Bachelors Degree in relevant fields and Masters degree strongly advised 3.5 Not required 600

Year Initiated 1983 Degrees Granted through 8/31/05............................................................ 30 Degrees Granted from 9/1/05 to 8/31/06 ................................................. 19

Community and Economic Development, Environmental Policy and Management, Housing, International Planning and Development, Planning Theory, Real Estate Development, Transportation and Land Use, Urban Design
Page 238 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

Doctoral Specializations

Hours of Core .............................................................................................8 Hours of Studio or Practice Related Courses .............................................0 Hours of Restricted Electives .....................................................................0 Hours of Unrestricted Electives ..................................................................0 Other .........................................................................................................52 Total Required Hours In Planning Program ........... min 46 (with advanced ................................................................................................ standing) - 60 Exam, Thesis or Final Product: ................Screening, Conspectus Defense, and Planning, Design, and Development Project

DOCTORAL (DPPD) GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

ALL DOCTORAL PROGRAMS:

Sample of dissertations granted 2008 and 2009 1. The Kindered Community: Using a Child's Perspective to Improve Planning and Evaluate Neighborhood Friendliness 2. Spaces of Market-Culturalism: Chungking Mansions, Hong Kong 3. Urban Spatial Transformation and Job Accessibility: Spatial Mismatch Revisited 4. Place Production in Globalizing Middle Eastern Cities: A Study of Cairo and Dubai 5. Order Before Zoning: Land Use Regulation in Los Angeles, 1880 1915 6. Beyond the Limits to Planning for Equity: The Emergence of Community Benefits Agreements as Models in Participatory Processes 7. Institutional Analysis of Stakeholder Collaboration in Freight Movement at the Ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach

Professor. Ph.D., Stanford University. (On leave. Serving as Assistant Secretary for Policy Development and Research, HUD). Specializations: Urban and Regional Economics, Housing and Neighborhood Planning, Real Estate Development, Economic Development Planning.

Raphael Bostic

(213) 740-1220

bostic@usc.edu

Assistant Professor. Ph.D., Columbia University. Specializations: Economic Development and Arts/Culture.

Elizabeth Currid

(213) 740-4012

currid@usc.edu

Peter Gordon

TOTAL DOCTORAL STUDENT COMPOSITION 2003-2004 US Citizens & Permanent Residents


Hispanics* Of any Race White African American Native American/ Pacific Islander Asian American Mixed Other / Dont know Non-US Citizens Non- Permanent Residents

Professor. Ph.D., University of Pennsylvania. Specializations: Community Development, Economic Development Planning, Infrastructure/Public Services, Land Use/Growth Management.

(213) 740-1467

pgordon@usc.edu

Genevieve Giuliano Male 4 8 3 0 2 4 0 21 Female 1 7 3 0 3 1 0 25 Total 5 15 6 0 5 5 0 46

Professor. Ph.D., University of California, Irvine. Specializations: Transportation Planning and Policy, Urban/Regional Economics, Land Use/Growth Management.

(213) 740-3956

giuliano@usc.edu

Eric J. Heikkila

Professor. Ph.D., University of British Columbia. Specializations: International Development and Planning, Urban and Regional Economics, Metropolitan/Regional Planning. http://www.rcf.usc.edu/~heikkila/

(213) 821-1037

heikkila@usc.edu

Professor. Ph.D. Columbia University. Specializations: Visual Documentation of Urban Phenomena, Mathematical Modeling, Planning Theory, Environmental Planning. http://www.usc.edu/sppd/krieger http://www.usc.edu/schools/sppd/faculty/detail.php?id=18

Martin H. Krieger

(213) 740-3957

krieger@usc.edu

Total Students

38

39

77

Professor. Ph.D. Washington University. Specializations: Environmental Policy, Policy Implementation, Sustainable Communities, Political Science

Daniel A. Mazmanian

mazmania@usc.edu

*Do not double count Hispanics; Hispanics also appear in the racial categories below.

PLANNING FACULTY
Tridib Banerjee
Professor. Ph.D., Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Specializations: Physical Planning/Urban Design, International Development and Planning, Planning Theory.

Professor. Ph.D. Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Specializations: Demography, Housing, Planning Theory, Race/Ethnicity and Planning, Land Use/Growth Management. http://www.rcf.usc.edu/~dowell/

Dowell Myers

FAICP

(213) 740-7095

dowell@usc.edu

Juliet Musso

(213) 740-4724

tbanerje@usc.edu

Associate Professor. Ph.D. University of California, Berkeley. Specializations: Citizen Participation/Community Organization, Politics and Governance.

(213) 740-0636

musso@usc.edu

ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 239

Harry W. Richardson

James Irvine Chair/Professor. MA. Manchester University, UK. Specializations: Economic Aspects of Terrorism, Urban and Regional Economics, Transportation.

Alan Kreditor

Professor and Senior Vice President Emeritus, Special Advisor for Development. Specializations: Real Estate

FAICP

(213) 740-3954

hrichard@usc.edu

(213) 740-2939

kreditor@usc.edu

Lisa Schweitzer

Assistant Professor. PhD University of Califonria, Los Angeles. Specializations: Transportation Planning and Policy, Environmental Planning.

LLB and JD University of Maryland. Specializations: Health, Law and Planning.

James Kushner

(213) 738-6821

jkushner@swlaw.edu

(213) 740-3866

lschweit@usc.edu

David Sloane

Leonard Mitchell

Professor. Ph.D. Syracuse University. Specializations: Planning History, Social Policy/Human Services, Race/Ethnicity and Planning.

(213) 740-5768

dsloane@usc.edu

Clinical Professor of Policy, Planning and Development. M.B.A., George Washington University; JD., Antioch School of Law. Specializations: Economic Development Finance, Planning Law, Economic Development Planning, International Development and Planning. www.usc.edu/schoolls/sppd/ced

OTHER AFFILIATED FACULTY


Austin G. Anderson
Lecturer. MBA, Stanford. Specializations: Urban and Regional Economics, Real Estate Development.

(213) 740-1487

mitchell@usc.edu

Katherine Perez

Adjunct Instructor. M.A. University of California, Los Angeles. Specialization: Community Participation

perez@uli-la.org

(310) 477-9585

Austin.Anderson@econres.conff

Hilda Blanco

Jon Pynoos

Ph.D. University of California Berkeley. Specializations: Planning Theory, Community Development and Planning, Environmental Policy and Governance.

Professor, Gerontology and Planning. Ph.D. Harvard University. Specialization: Housing and the elderly

(213) 740-5156

pynoos@usc.edu

hblanco@u.washington.edu

Deborah Torres

Wallis Annenberg Chair of Communication Technology & Society. Ph.D. University of Paris-Sorbonne. Specializations: Political Economy, International Development and Planning, Planning Theory, Social Policy.

Manuel Castells

Adjunct Professor. Master of Architecture, Harvard. Specializations: Housing and Neighborhood Planning, Landcape/Site Design, Metropolitan/Regional Planning, Physical Planning/Urban Design.

(310) 809-7970

datorres@excite.com FAICP

(213) 821-2079

castells@usc.edu

Frank B. Wein

Liz Falletta

Clincial Assistant Professor. M.A. The Southern California Institute of Architecture, MRED University of Southern California. Specialization: Urban Design

Adjunct Professor. DPDS University of Southern California. Specializations: Policy Plans (General Plans,Specific Plans), Environmental Impact Studies/Reports, Public Participation programs.

(213) 996-2413

frank.wein@ursccorp.com

lizfalletta@yahoo.com

Jack L. Wong
Adjunct Professor. Masters, University of California, Los Angeles. Specializations: Redevelopment/Economic Development; Housing; City Planning; Public Outreach, Community Development, Physical Planning, Ethnicity and Planning. www.jwauc.com

James A. Fawcett

Lecturer. Ph.D. University of Southern California. Specializations: Environmental Planning, Coastal Planning and Management, Negotiation and Conflict Management, Politics and Governance.

(213) 740-4477

fawcett@usc.edu

(310) 347-6310

jacklwong@msn.com

William Fulton

Senior Scholar. MS. Planning, University of California, Los Angeles. Specializations: Growth Management, Planning Process, Land Use Policy.

(805) 643-7700

bfulton@solimar.org

Allan D. Kotin

Adjunct Professor. MA. University of California, Los Angeles. Specializations: Real Estate Development, Economic Development Planning, Public Finance/Fiscal Planning, Impact Assessment. www.adkotin.com

(213) 623-3841

akotin@adkotin.com

Page 240 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

UNIVERSITY OF SOUTHERN MAINE


Community Planning and Development Muskie School of Public Service
96 Falmouth Street, P.O. Box 9300 Portland, Maine 04104-9300 Phone (207) 228-8593 Fax (207) 780-4317 http://www.muskie.usm.maine.edu Charles S. Colgan, Chair Phone: (207)780-4008 E-mail: csc@usm.maine.edu
University Admission Policy:

MA/MS

ACSP Member: FULL

MASTERS ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS


Minimum Undergraduate GPA: Minimum GRE: Minimum TOEFL Ranking in Undergraduate Class: Departmental Requirement:

Bachelors degree from an accredited institution Required Not Required No Requirements

MASTERS GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

Hours of Core ...........................................................................................27 Hours of Studio or Practice Related Courses Required .............................3 Hours of Restricted Electives .....................................................................9 Hours of Unrestricted Electives ..................................................................9 Total Required Hours in Planning Program .............................................48 Capstone Project .........................................................................................3

PROGRAM INFORMATION
Admission Deadline 2010-11 for Masters program ................................ July 1, 2010 Financial Aid Deadline 2010-11 for Masters program .....................February 1, 2010 In-State Tuition and Fees .................. $347/credit hour per semester. For residents of .............................................................New Hampshire, Vermont, Rhode Island, and .............................................. Connecticut and residents of Canada: $520/credit hour Out-of-State Tuition and Fees...................................... $985/credit hour per semester Application Fee ......................................................................................................$50 Additional Fees: ...............................................$24.00/credit hour, Unified Fee; $80, Health Fee for 6+ credits; $50 (up to 6 credit hours) /$75 (6-12 credit hours) /$100 (12+ credit hours), Transportation Fee.

FINANCIAL AID INFORMATION


Tuition Awards:

GRADUATE DEADLINES, TUITION AND FEES

Scholarships (Full-time status) Graduate/Research Assistantships (Registered for 6 credit hours) Stipend + credits tuition. Grant funded research assistantships with or without tuition waivers: Number varies by year.

TOTAL MASTERS STUDENT COMPOSITION 2008-2009 US Citizens & Permanent Residents


Hispanics* Of any Race White African American Native American/ Pacific Islander Asian American Mixed Other / Dont know Non-US Citizens Non- Permanent Residents

Annual Student Enrollment Applied


Masters 16 14

Male 0 9 1 0 0 0 0 0 9

Female 0 11 0 0 0 0 0 0 11

Total 0 20 1 0 0 0 0 0 20

Accepted Enrolled
16 14 12 12

07/08 07/08 07/08 07/08 07/08 07/08

MASTERS DEGREE
Master of Community Planning and Development
Contact: Phone: E-mail: Charles S. Colgan, Chair (207)780-4008 csc@usm.maine.edu

Year Initiated: 1997 Degrees Granted through 8/31/06.............................................................26 Degrees Granted from 9/1/05 to 8/31/06 ....................................................3

Land Use & Environment, Community & Economic Development, Health Planning Joint Degree Program with University of Maine Law School

Masters Specializations

Total Students

*Do not double count Hispanics; Hispanics also appear in the racial categories below.

ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 241

PLANNING FACULTY
Research Professor. AB, Harvard College (1959); MA, University of Massachusetts (1963); Ph.D., Massachusetts Institute of Technology (1968). Specializations: Natural Resource Planning, Sustainable Development, Smart Growth, State Politics & Policy. efc.muskie.usm.maine.edu

OTHER AFFILIATED FACULTY


John Bauman
Research Professor. BA, Ursinus College (1960); MA, Temple University (1964); Ph.D., Rutgers University (1969). Specializations: Planning History, Housing & Historic Preservation.

Richard Barringer

(207) 780-5389

baumanj@adelphia.net

(207) 780-4418

barringr@usm.maine.edu

Kristina Ford

Charles S. Colgan

Professor. BA, Colby College (1971); Ph.D., University of Maine (1992). Specializations: Economic Development Planning, Transportation & Urban/Regional Economics, Quantitative Methods, GIS. muskie.usm.maine.edu/csc/homepage/index.htm

Distinguished Visiting Professor. BA Michigan State University (1967), Ph.D. University of Michigan (1976). Specializations: Land Use Planning, Planning Theory

Alan Holt

(207) 780-4008

csc@usm.maine.edu

Jack Kartez

Adjunct Assistant Professor. BA, Marlboro College (1982); M.Arch., Columbia University. Specializations: Urban Design, Architecture, Participatory Design.

Professor. BA, Middlebury College (1974); MUP, University of Oregon (1976); Ph.D., University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill (1990). Specializations: Public Policy & Environmental Dispute Resolution, Planning Theory, Land Use Planning, GIS.

(207) 773-3833

info@holtandlachman.com

FYI
The Muskie School of Public Service's Community Planning and Development program was inaugurated in 1997 and graduated its first students in 1999. The degree reflects the commitment to the environmental and community development values of the School's namesake, the late Senator Edmund S. Muskie. The program focuses on the planning and development needs of New England communities, but prepares students to deal with issues encountered across the United States. In addition to the core courses, students may select from concentrations in land use and the environment, community and regional development,or a joint Masters-JD degree program with the University of Maine School of Law. The student body is drawn primarily from Maine and New England states, and courses are offered on schedules suitable for both full and part-time students. The CPD program is affiliated with three research centers located within the Muskie School. The Casco Bay National Estuary project is a cooperative program addressing the environmental quality of Casco Bay and its watersheds. The EPA New England environmental Finance Center undertakes projects addressing smart growth issues throughout New England. The Maine Center for Business and Economic Research undertakes research and technical assistance projects in economic development and transportation. The program is also part of a major new initiative in sustainability in partnership with University of Maine. The Program endeavors to provide financial assistance to all students who require it. Non Maine resident students may be eligible to apply funding assistance to tuition at resident rates. Residents of New Hampshire, Vermont and Connecticut are eligible for reduced tuition.

(207) 780-5389

jackk@usm.maine.edu

Josephine LaPlante

Associate Professor. BA (1973), MA (1983) and Ph.D. (1984), Syracuse University. Specializations: Public Finance, Applied Statistics, Policy Analysis.

(207) 228-8593

josielm@suscom-maine.net

Mark Lapping

Distinguished Professor. BS, State University of New York, New Paltz (1967); Ph.D., Emory University (1972). Specializations: Community Development, Environmental/Natural Resource Planning, Regional Development Planning; Rural Planning.

(207) 228-8180

lapping@usm.maine.edu

Sam Merrill

Research Assistant Professor. BA, University of Maine (1991); MS (1994) and Ph.D. (2002), University of Minnesota. Specializations: Conservation Planning, Environmental Planning, Wildlife Ecology.

(207) 228-8596

smerrill@usm.maine.edu AICP

Evan Richert

Research Associate Professor. BA (1969) and MRP (1974), Syracuse University. Specializations: Land Use Planning, Marine Resources, Growth Management. www.usm.maine.edu/gulfofmaine_census

(207) 780-4824

erichert@usm.maine.edu

Page 242 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS, ARLINGTON


City and Regional Planning Program
UTA Box 19588 Arlington, TX 76019 Phone (817) 272-3071 Fax (817) 272-5008

MA/MS PAB

Ph.D.

ACSP Member: FULL

Master's Specializations
Community and Economic Development and Housing Land Use and Physical Planning Environmental Planning, Policy and Management Transportation Policy, Modeling and Planning Design-your-own and hybrid emphasis areas are also available Certificate Programs are available in GIS, Development Review, Non-Profit Management, Law and Policy, and Public Budgeting
MASTER'S ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS
University Admission Policy: Minimum Undergraduate GPA: Minimum GRE: Ranking in Undergraduate Class: Departmental Requirements:

http://www.uta.edu/supa/cirp Ard Anjomani, Director Phone (817) 272-3071 anjomani@uta.edu

PROGRAM INFORMATION
GRADUATE DEADLINES, TUITION AND FEES
Masters Admission Deadlines 2009-10 For International Students: ...................................................FALL 09: April 3, 2009 SPRING 10: September 11, 2009 SUMMER 10: January 15, 2010 For U.S. Students: ..................................................................FALL 09: June 5, 2009 SPRING 10: October 16, 2009 SUMMER 10: March 19, 2010 Doctoral Admission Deadline Admission for Fall Semester Only ..............................April 1 for the following Fall Financial Aid Deadline: ................................................................ Receipt by April 1 In-State Tuition 2009-10 ............................................. $400 per semester credit hour Out-of-State Tuition 2009-10 ..................................... $677 per semester credit hour ........................... (additional fees may also apply; see Graduate Catalog for details) Application Fee .............................................................. $40-$70 (for U.S. Students) $60 (for International Students)

Bachelors degree from an accredited institution. 3.0 1000 (verbal + quantitative) Not Required. Three letters of recommendation, 250 word essay

MASTER'S GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

GENERAL COST OF LIVING

Approximate Annual Cost: ............................................................................ $18,000

Hours of Core (semester hours) ................................................................24 Hours of Studio or Practice Related Courses ......................................... 3/6 Hours of Electives............................................................................... 12/15 Hours of Restricted Electives ...................................................................12 Thesis or Final Report Product ..................................................................... - Theses ...............................................................................................6 -Professional Report ............................................................................3 Total Required Hours in Planning Program .............................................48

Annual Student Enrollment


Applied
06-07 Masters Masters in City and Regional Planning 84 75 54 184 08-09

FINANCIAL AID INFORMATION


Internship Opportunities:

Enrolled
06-07 08-09

Dept. Awards and Grants: Research Assistantships:

MASTER'S DEGREE
Master's in City and Regional Planning
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail: Ard Anjomani, Director (817) 272-3071 Anjomani@uta.edu

Many of the 200 jurisdictions in the region and several consultants offer internships opportunities. Numerous scholarships make it possible for recipients to pay in-state tuition. Institute of Urban Studies provides research grants and projects; academic assistantships make it possible for recipients to pay in-state tuition.

Year Initiated: 1975 PAB Accredited Degrees Granted through May 2009 ......................................................356 Degrees Granted in 2008-2009 academic year.........................................24

ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 243

TOTAL MASTER'S STUDENT COMPOSITION Fall 2008 US Citizens & Permanent Residents
Hispanics* Of any Race White African American Native American/ Pacific Islander Asian American Mixed Other / Dont know Non-US Citizens Non- Permanent Residents

Departmental Requirements:

Masters degree from an accredited institution; 3.6+ GPA in masters; three letters of recommendation; statement of research interests.

Male 4 16 6 1 1 0 1 10 39

Female 3 13 5 0 0 0 0 5 24

Total 7 29 11 1 1 0 1 15

DOCTORAL GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

Hours of Core (semester hours) ................................................................30 (some core hours may be waived upon recommendation of students supervisory committee, depending on students previous preparation) Hours of Studio or Practice Related Courses .............................................0 Hours of Electives.......................................................................................9 Hours of Unrestricted Electives ..................................................................0 Total Required Hours in Doctoral Program .....................39 + dissertation Thesis or Final Product ............................................. Dissertation Required Indicators of Academic Progress ..............................Completion of written comprehensive exam in Planning/Policy; completion of diagnostic evaluation; completion of oral presentation of dissertation proposal; successful oral defense of dissertation proposal

FINANCIAL AID INFORMATION


Internship Opportunities:

Dept. Awards and Grants:

Research Assistantships:

Total Students

63

Many of the 200 jurisdictions in the region and several consultants offer internship opportunities. Graduate Deans Doctoral Fellowships; numerous scholarships make it possible for recipients to pay in-state tuition. Institute of Urban Studies provides research grants and projects; academic assistantships make it possible for recipients to pay in-state tuition.

DOCTORAL DEGREE
Ph.D. in Urban Planning and Public Policy
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail: Ard Anjomani, Director (817) 272-3071 Anjomani@uta.edu

TOTAL DOCTORAL STUDENT COMPOSITION Fall 2008 US Citizens & Permanent Residents
Hispanics* Of any Race White African American Native American/ Pacific Islander Asian American Mixed Other / Dont know Non-US Citizens Non- Permanent Residents

Male 0 6 0 0 0 0 0 7 13

Female 0 3 4 0 0 0 0 0 7

Total 0 9 4 0 0 0 0 7 20

Year initiated 2003 Degrees Granted 2004-2009 ....................................................................... 4 Dissertations Granted from 2004-2009 1. Spatial Patterns and Determinants of Industrial Regional Growth in Mexico, 1993-2003: Implications for Regional Planning and Public Policy. 2. Growth/Decline of Employment Subcenter in Polycentric Regions: The Case of the Dallas-Fort Worth Metropolitian Area. 3. Shared Land Use Impacts Between Military Installations and Contiguous Communities (post-BRAC): Fact and Opinion Differences in Planning and Public Policy. 4. Planning for Growth in Cities and Metropolitan Regions: An Empirical Study of Impact Fee and Choice.

DOCTORAL ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS


University Admission Policy:

Minimum GRE:

Current GRE score; Current minimum TOEFL score of 213 on computer-based exam (Non-native English speakers only) 1000 (minimum 500 on verbal + minimum 500 on quantitative)

Total Students

*Do not double count Hispanics; Hispanics also appear in the racial categories below.

Page 244 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

PLANNING FACULTY
Ardeshir Anjomani
Professor. M.Arch., University of Tehran (1968); M. Planning (1976) and Ph.D. (1979), University of Southern California. Specializations: Urban and Regional Economics, Economic Development and Developing Countries, Research and Analytical Technique, Transportation Planning, Land Use Analysis and Modeling.

OTHER AFFILIATED FACULTY


Edith Juanita Barrett
Professor and Distinguished Teaching Professor. B.S., Baylor University (1982); M.S. (1984) and Ph.D. (1987), Northwestern University. Specializations: Urban Public Policy (esp. adolescent issues, education, housing, social welfare), Methodology and Program/Policy Evaluation, Political Attitudes and Behavior (esp. among under-represented groups), Public Opinion/Survey Research.

(817) 272-3310

anjomani@uta.edu

Enid Arvidson

(817) 272-3385

ebarrett@uta.edu

Associate Professor. B.A., University of California Santa Barbara (1979); M.R.P. (1985) and Ph.D. (Economics, 1996), University of Massachusetts. Specializations: Urban Political Economy, Urban Economics, Economic Development, Urban and Regional Theory, Planning Theory.

Karabi C. Bezboruah

(817) 272-3349

enid@uta.edu

Assistant Professor. B.A. Gauhati University, India (1998), MBA Gauhati Univesity, India (2001), Ph.D., University of Texas at Dallas (2008). Specializations: Nonprofit Organizations; Management and Administrations; Philantrophy Individual and Institutional

(817) 272-3071

Barbara Becker

Dean and Professor. B.S. (1969), M.S. (1983) and Ph.D. (1989), University of Texas at Austin. Specializations: Land Use Planning, Rural and Small Town Planning, Comprehensive and Strategic Planning, Economic Development.

Colleen Casey

(817) 272-3301

bbecker@uta.edu

Assistant Professor. B.A., University of Arizona (1995); M.S., University of Texas Austin (1999); Ph.D. University of California Los Angeles (2006). Specializations: Urban Redevelopment, Community and Economic Development, Cultural Policy and Planning, Urban Tourism, Urban Design/Built Environment, Historic Preservation.

Carl Grodach

Assistant Professor. B.S., Southern Illinois University Edwardsville (1995); M.S., Southern Illinois University Edwardsville (1997); Ph.D., Saint Louis University (2007). Specializations: Governance, Collaborative Management, Social Context of Public Policy and Administration, Community Reinvestment, Access to Mortgage Credit in Low-Income/Urban Communities.

(817) 272-3356

colleenc@uta.edu

(817) 272-3358

grodach@uta.edu

Professor. B.A. (1967) and M.A. (1968), University of North Texas; Ph.D., Purdue University (1973). Specializations: Intergovernmental Relations, Public Policy, Urban Politics, Research Strategies, Methodology.

Richard L. Cole

Jeff Howard

(817) 272-3300

cole@uta.edu

Assistant Professor. B.A., University of Texas Austin (1981); M.S. (1997) and Ph.D. (2004), Rensselaer Polytechnical Institute. Specializations: Environmental Policy; Critical Environmental Theory; Political Dimensions of Environmental Science; Social Steering of Technology; Participatory Democratic Decision Making; Decision Making in Highly Uncertain Contexts; Social Policy Formation; Qualitative Research Methods.

Rodney V. Hissong

Associate Professor. B.S. (1974) and M.S. (1978), Iowa State University; Ph.D., Rice University (1989). Specializations: Theory and Policy of Urban Economics, Urban Public Finance, Research Methods.

(817) 272-3350

hissong@uta.edu

(817) 272-5119

howardj@uta.edu AICP/APA

Jianling Li

Associate Professor. B.S., Zhongshan University (1982); M.A. (1992) and Ph.D. (1997), University of California Los Angeles. Specializations: Transportation Research and Planning; Geographic Information Systems (GIS); Intelligent Transportation Systems (ITS).

Assistant Professor. B.A. (1982), M.Ed. (1995), M.A. (1998), Ph.D. (2003), University of California San Diego. Specializations: Urban Sociology, Race and Ethnic Relations, Urban Politics, Urban Ethnography.

Maria Martinez-Cosio

(817) 272-3302

mcosio@uta.edu

(817) 272-3367

jjli@uta.edu

Darla Flint Paulson

Assistant Professor. B.A. St. Cloud State University (1997), Ph.D., University of Minnesota (2009). Specializations: Macro and Micro Human Resource Management; Business Ethics.

(817) 272-3071

Alejandro Rodriguez

Associate Professor. B.S., City College of New York (1982), M.P.A., Marist College (1991), Ph.D., Florida International University (1999). Specializations: Government Reform, Performance Measurement, Strategic Planning, Local Government, Public-private Relationships, Information Technology in Government.

(817) 272-3357

aro@uta.edu

ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 245

Delbert A. Taebel

Professor Emeritus. B.A., Ripon College (1956), M.A., San Jose State University (1965), Ph.D., University of Texas Austin (1971).

David W. Tees

Associate Professor. B.A. (1956) and M.A. (1965), University of Texas Austin. Specializations: Public Administration, Technical Writing, training Design and Assessment, Group Facilitation, Community Service.

The application of planning theory and knowledge to real world planning problems gives students practical experience and field orientation to the profession of planning in a variety of topic areas. Using the metroplex as a laboratory, MCRP students choose an emphasis area in Urban and Suburban Design and Development, Green Cities and Transportation, and Creative Cities and Economic Development. MCRP students have an opportunity to pursue dual masters degrees in seven programs: Public Administration, Architecture, Landscape Architecture, Urban Affairs, Civil Engineering, Environmental and Earth Science, and Social Work. Dual Degree programs enable students to earn two masters degrees simultaneously by sharing up to 18 credit hours between both degrees.

(817) 272-3304

tees@uta.edu

Professor. B.A., Stanford University (1957), M.P.A., Syracuse University (1959), Ph.D., University of Southern California (1969). Specializations: Urban Development, Urban Management, Public Organizational Change and Development.

Sherman M. Wyman

(817) 272-3359

wyman@uta.edu

Qiushi Wang

Assistant Professor. B.S. Guangdon University of Foreign Studies (1998), MPP University of Minnesota, (2005), Ph.D., University of Nebraska (2009). Specializations: Public Economics; Public Budgeting; State and Local Public Finance

(817) 272-3071

FYI
A distinguishing feature of the planning degree in the School of Urban and Public Affairs (SUPA) is its location in the heart of the Dallas-Fort Worth metroplex, a rich urban laboratory of 12 urban counties and 136 municipalities with a total regional population of over 6 million. The Dallas-Fort Worth (DFW) metropolitan area is currently the fastest growing major metropolitan area in the nation, with a population growth rate of 29 percent between 1990 and 2000, which is twice the national average. Its size moved up in rank from number 9 in 1990 to number 4 in 2006 among United States metropolitan areas, with total population of over six million, according to July 2008 estimates (U.S. Census Bureau, 2008), and estimates of 2008 total employment is about 3.6 million. This complex urban arena offers a wide array of opportunities for student projects, internships, and employment. Planning faculty, staff, and students frequently work on projects in cooperation with city governments, public agencies, and nonprofit organizations through the Institute of Urban Studies. The Institute supports many graduate students through research grants and projects funded by various organizations, providing hands-on experience studying urban issues and involvement with the problems facing our communities. The Masters in City and Regional Planning (MCRP) program prepares students for professional planning careers in the public, private and nonprofit/nongovernmental sectors. The Urban Planning and Public Policy PhD program prepares doctoral students for careers in university teaching and research, as well as senior-level research or practitioner positions. Coursework combines theoretical inquiry and analysis with application, offering students diverse approaches to policy and planning issues. Page 246 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

Our urban laboratory

It's not all work and no play

UNIVERSITY OF TOLEDO
Department of Geography and Planning
2801 W. Bancroft Street, MS 932 Toledo, Ohio 43606-3390 Phone (419) 530-2545 Fax (419) 530-7919 http://www.utoledo.edu/as/geography Dr. Peter S. Lindquist, Department Chair Phone: (419) 530-4287 E-mail: peter.lindquist@utoledo.edu

BA/BS PAB

MA/MS PAB

ACSP Member: FULL

UNDERGRADUATE ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS


Departmental Requirement: None Minimum GPA: 2.0 Minimum SAT or ACT Scores: Not Required

UNDERGRADUATE GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

Hours of Core .......................................................................................... 12 Hours of Studio Courses .............................................................................. Hours of Restricted Elective ........................................................................ Hours of Unrestricted Elective .................................................................... Total Required Hours In Planning Program ............................................ 31 Thesis or final product ............................................................. Not required

FINANCIAL AID INFORMATION

PROGRAM INFORMATION
Admission Deadline 2008-09 ..........................................................................Rolling Financial Aid Deadline 2008-09 ........................................................................... N/A In-State Tuition and Fees as of 2008-09......................................$4,000 per semester Out-of-State Tuition and Fees as of 2008-09 ..............................$8,400 per semester Application Fee ...................................................................................................... $40 Additional Fees: ........................................................... Please see University website

Wide variety available in the Office of Student Financial Aid (Rm. 1200 Rocket Hall)

UNDERGRADUATE DEADLINES, TUITION AND FEES

MASTERS DEGREE
Master of Arts in Geography and Planning
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail: Year Initiated: 1971 Dr. Patrick Lawrence, Grad. Advisor (419) 530-4128 patrick.lawrence@utoledo.edu

GRADUATE DEADLINES, TUITION AND FEES

Admission Deadline 2010-2011 for Masters program .......................March 30, 2010 Financial Aid Deadline 2008-09 for Masters program..........................................N/A In-State Tuition and Fees: ..............................................Approx. $5,800 per semester Out-of-State Tuition and Fees: ....................................Approx. $10,400 per semester Application Fee ...................................................................................................... $45 Additional Fees: ........................................................... Please see University website

Annual Student Enrollment Applied


09/10 Masters 16

Accepted Enrolled
09/10 6 09/10 6

GIS, Community Development, Economic Development, Environmental Planning, Historic Preservation, International Development, Land Use/Growth Management, Public Policy, Real Estate Development, Transportation, Urban/Regional Development and Urban Design/Landscape
MASTERS ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS
University Admission Policy: Minimum Undergraduate GPA: Minimum GRE: Minimum TOEFL Ranking in Undergraduate Class: Departmental Requirement:

Masters Specializations

UNDERGRADUATE DEGREE
BA in Geography & Planning
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail: Year initiated:1996 Dr. David J. Nemeth, Undergrad. Advisor (419) 530-4049 david.nemeth@utoledo.edu

Bachelors degree from an accredited institution 2.7 500 verbal, 500 quantitative 550 Not Required No Requierments

MASTERS GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

GIS, Community Development, Economic Development, Environmental Planning, Historic Preservation, International Development, Land Use/Growth Management, Public Policy, Real Estate Development, Transportation, Urban/Regional Development and Urban Design/Landscape

Undergraduate Specializations

Hours of Core ...........................................................................................12 Hours of Studio or Practice Related Courses .............................................0 Hours of Restricted Electives .....................................................................3 Hours of Unrestricted Electives ................................................................21 Total Required Hours in Planning Program: ............................................36 Exam,Thesis or Final Product: ............................................Exam & Thesis

FINANCIAL AID INFORMATION

Internship opportunities, Department awards, University financial aid.

ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 247

TOTAL MASTERS STUDENT COMPOSITION 2009-2010 US Citizens & Permanent Residents


Hispanics* Of any Race White African American Native American/ Pacific Islander Asian American Mixed Other / Dont know Non-US Citizens Non- Permanent Residents

Daniel J. Hammel

Male 0 10 0 0 1 0 0 1 12

Female 0 10 0 0 0 0 0 6 16

Total 0 20 0 0 1 0 0 7

Associate Professor. Ph.D . University of Minnesota, (1994), MA University of Minnesota, (1988), BA Kansas State University, (1984). Specializations: Community and Economic Development Planning, Urban and Regional Economics, Housing. www.utoledo.edu/as/geography

(419) 530-4709

dhammel@utnet.utoledo.edu

Patrick Lawrence

Associate Professor and Graduate Student Advisor. Ph.D. Geography, University of Waterloo, (1996), MS Geography, University of Guelph, Ontario, (1991), BES Environmental Studies, University of Waterloo, Ontario, (1989). Specializations: Environmental Planning, Impact Assessment, Land Use/Growth Management, Natural Resource Planning. www.utoledo.edu/as/geography

(419) 530-4128

Patrick.Lawrence@utoledo.edu

Peter S. Lindquist

Associate Professor and Department Chair. Ph.D. University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, (1988), MS University of Wisconsin, Madison, (1981), BS University of Wisconsin, Eau-Claire, (1978). Specializations: Computer Applications, GIS, Transportation, Urban and Regional Economics www.utoledo.edu/as/geography

(419) 530-4287

Peter.Lindquist@utoledo.edu

Total Students

David J. Nemeth 28

*Do not double count Hispanics; Hispanics also appear in the racial categories below.

PLANNING FACULTY
Bhuiyan Alam
Assistant Professor. Ph.D. Urban & Regional Planning, Florida State University, (2005), MS Civil & Environmental Engineering, Florida State University, (2005), MS Regional and Rural Development Planning, Asian Institute of Technology, Bangkok, Thailand, (1995), BS Civil Engineering, Bangladesh University of Engineering & Technology, Bangladesh, (1992). Specializations: GIS Applications in Transportation, Environmental Planning, Urban and Regional Planning, Quantitative Methods/Spatial Statistics, Transportation Planning and Modeling, Regional Development www.utoledo.edu/as/geography

Professor and Undergraduate Student Advisor. Ph.D. University of California, Los Angeles, 1984), MA California State University, Northridge, BA California State University, Northridge. Specializations: Historic Preservation, Natural Resource Planning, Physical Planning, Urban Design www.utoledo.edu/as/geography

(419) 530-4049

David.Nemeth@utoledo.edu

Neil Reid

Associate Professor. Ph.D. Arizona State University, (1991), MA Miami University, (1987), MA University of Glasgow, (1985). Specializations: Demography & Economic Development Planning www.utoledo.edu/as/geography

(419) 530-3591

Neil.Reid@utoledo.edu

(419) 530-7269

balam@utnet.utoledo.edu

Professor. Ph.D., University of Oklahoma, (1978), MA, Wayne State University, (1974), BA, Wayne State University, (1972). Specializations: Economic and Community Development. www.utoledo.edu/as/geography

Frank Calzonetti

Lecturer. Ph.D University of Madison-Wisconisn, (2003) MA University of Missouri, (1997), BA University of Missouri (1993). Specializations: Cultural and Historical Geography www.utoledo.edu/as/geography

Mary Beth Schlemper

(419) 530-5492

mschlem@utnet.utoledo.edu

Sujata Shetty

(419) 530-4749

FCalzon@utnet.utoledo.edu

Kevin P. Czajkowski

Associate Professor. Ph.D. Atmospheric Sciences, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI, (1995), BS Meteorology , State University of New York at Oneonta, Oneonta, NY., (1989). Specializations: Remote Sensing, Computer Applications, Environmental Planning, GIS, Systems & Natural Resource Planning www.utoledo.edu/as/geography

Assistant Professor. Ph.D. College of Architecture and Urban Planning, University of Michigan, (2002), MUP College of Architecture and Urban Planning, University of Michigan, (1992), BA School of Planning and Architecture, New Delhi, (1987). Specializations: Community and Economic Development Planning, Gender and Planning, International Development www.utoledo.edu/as/geography

(419) 530-2567

sshetty4@utnet.utoledo.edu

(419) 530-4274

kevin.czajkowski@utoledo.edu

Page 248 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO
Program In Planning
Room 5053, Sidney Smith Hall 100 St. George Street Toronto, Ontario, Canada M5S 3G3 Phone (416) 946-0269 Fax (416) 946-3886 http://www.geog.utoronto.ca/programs/planning Katharine Rankin, Planning Director Phone: (416) 978-1592 E-mail: rankin@geog.utoronto.ca

MA/MS/Ph.D. CIP

ACSP Member: Corresponding

MASTERS ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS


University Admission Policy: Minimum Undergraduate GPA: Minimum GRE: Minimum TOEFL IBT overall Departmental Requirement:

Must hold a 4-year Bachelors degree from an accredited institution. 3.3 in final year No Requirements Writing 93/ Speaking 22 Must hold a 4-year Bachelors degree from an accredited institution.

MASTERS GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

Core Half Courses.......................................................................................7 Unrestricted Half Course Electives ...........................................................9 Other Half Courses .....................................................................................0 Total Half Courses Required in Program .................................................16 Exams or Written Requirements: ................................Current Issues Paper

PROGRAM INFORMATION
GRADUATE DEADLINES, TUITION AND FEES
Application Deadline 2009-10 ..........................................................January 15, 2010 Document Deadline 2009-10 ............................................................February 5, 2010 Domestic Fees: ............................................................................. $8,596.04 per year International Tuition and Fees .................................................... $21,277.04 per year Application Fee .................................................................................................... $110 Additional Fees .................................................................................................. None

Master of Urban Design Studies


Contact Person: Phone: E-mail:

http://www.geog.utoronto.ca/programs/planning/muds Marija Wright, Planning Advisor (416) 946-0269 wright@geog.utoronto.ca

Annual Student Enrollment Applied Accepted


MScPl MUDS 250 10 251 26 50 4 9

Year Initiated: 1999 Degrees Granted through 8/31/09.............................................................25 Degrees Granted from 9/1/08 to 8/31/09 ....................................................5

Enrolled
36 3 33 9

08/09 09/10 08/09 09/10 08/09 09/10

MASTERS ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS


University Admission Policy: Minimum Undergraduate GPA: Minimum GRE: Minimum TOEFL IBT overall Departmental Requirement:

MASTERS DEGREE
M.S.C. in Planning
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail: http://www.geog.utoronto.ca/programs/planning/mscpl Marija Wright, Planning Advisor (416) 946-0269 wright@geog.utoronto.ca

Must hold a Bachelors degree from an accredited institution. 3.3 in final year No Requirements Writing 93/ Speaking 22 Must hold a 4-year Bachelors degree from an accredited institution.

MASTERS GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

Core Half Courses.......................................................................................6 Unrestricted Half Course Electives ............................................................2 Other Half Courses .....................................................................................0 Total Half Courses Required in Program ...................................................8 Exams or Written Requirements: ..................................... No Requirements

Year Initiated: 1963 CIP Accredited Degrees Granted through 8/31/09...........................................................783 Degrees Granted from 9/1/08 to 8/31/09 ..................................................24

TOTAL MASTERS STUDENT COMPOSITION 2009-2010 Citizens & Permanent Residents Total Students Male 34 Female 43 Total 77

Urban Planning and Development Social Planning and Policy Economic Planning and Policy Environmental Planning Urban Design

Masters Specializations

ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 249

DOCTORAL DEGREE
Ph.D. in Planning
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail:
Year Initiated: 2007

Virginia Maclaren

http://www.geog.utoronto.ca/programs/planning/phd Marianne Ishibashi (416) 978-3377 ishi@geog.utoronto.ca

Associate Professor. BA, Bishops University; MPL, Ottawa University; MA and Ph.D., Cornell University. Specializations: Waste Management, Sustainable Urban Development, Environmental Assessment.

FAICP

(416) 978-1594

maclaren@geog.utoronto.ca

Katharine Rankin

Associate Professor. BA, MPL, and Ph.D., Cornell University. Specializations: Critical development studies, comparative market regulation; feminist and planning theory, South and Southeast Asia

(416) 978-1592

rankin@geog.utoronto.ca

Ph.D. ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS


University Admission Policy: Minimum Undergraduate GPA: Minimum GRE: Minimum TOEFL

Departmental Requirement:

Must hold a Masters degree from an accredited institution. 3.7 in final year No Requirements 580 (paper) or 237 (computer) plus 5.0 TWE. Minimum score for inter net-based testing is 93/120 overall and 22/30 for each of the Writing and Speaking sections Must hold a Masters degree from an accredited institution.

Susan Ruddick

Associate Professor. MA, McGill University; Ph.D., UCLA. Specializations: Social Theory/Social Construction of Childhood, Public Space and the Public Sphere, Urban Political Economy.

(416) 978-1589

ruddick@geog.utoronto.ca

Matti Siemiatycki

PH.D. GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

Assistant Professor. BA, Ryerson University, MA, Oxford University; Ph.D., Univeristy of British Columbia. Specializations: Transporttation Policy and Planning; Infrastructure Finance and Delivery; Community and Regional Planning Space and the Public Sphere, Urban Political Economy.

Core Half Course ........................................................................................8 Hours of Half Course Electives ................................................................ 6 Other Half Courses .....................................................................................0 Total Half Courses Required in Program .................................................14 Exams or Written Requirements .........................Comprehensive exam and ...............................................................................................thesis proposal

(416) 946-5145

siemiatycki@geog.utoronto.ca

FYI
Note that the Planning program is part of the Department of Geography; planning students therefore have access to jointgeography-planning courses taught by both planning and geography faculty and to the supervisory services of both Planning and Geography faculty. There are total of 40 graduate faculty in the Department of Geography (including the core Planning faculty).

PLANNING FACULTY
Amrita Daniere
Professor. AB, Dartmouth College (1981); MP, Harvard University (1984) Ph.D., Harvard University (1990). Specializations: Urban Infrastructure in Developing Countries, Social Capital, Civic Space.

Joint Degree Programs:


Planning and Community Development Planning and South Asian Studies Planning and Environmental Studies Planning and Public Health

(416) 978-3236

daniere@geog.utoronto.ca FAICP

Meric Gertler

Professor. BS, McMaster University; MPP, UC Berkeley; Ph.D., Harvard. Specializations: Economic Geography, Regional and National Systems of Innovation.

(416) 978-3887

gertler@geog.utoronto.ca

Associate Professor. BS, University of Moratuwa; MSP, University of Southern California; Ph.D., Cornell University. Specializations: Cultural Studies, Urban Planning Theory, Globalization.

Kanishka Goonewardena

(416) 978-3377

kanishka@geog.utoronto.ca

Paul Hess

Assistant Professor. Ph.D., University of Washington. Specializations: History of Planning, Travel Behavior, Urban Form Analysis.

(416) 978-1586

hess@geog.utoronto.ca

Page 250 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

UNIVERSITY OF UTAH
City & Metropolitan Planning Program
375 South 1530 East, Room 220 Salt Lake City, Utah 84112 Phone (801) 581-8255 Fax (801) 581-8217 cmpweb.arch.utah.edu Thomas W. Sanchez, Chair Phone: (801) 585-9354 E-mail:tom.sanchez@utah.edu

BA/BS PAB

MCMP PAB

ACSP Member: AFFILIATE

UNDERGRADUATE ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS


University Requirement: Departmental Requirement: Minimum GPA: Minimum SAT/ACT Scores: Admissions index number Refer to University Requirement 2.75 860/18

UNDERGRADUATE GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

Hours of Core .......................................................................................... 28 Hours of Studio Courses ............................................................................ 4 Hours of Restricted Elective .................................................................... 12 Other .......................................................................................................... 3 Total Required Hours In Planning Program ............................................ 47 Thesis or Final Product ............................................................ Not required

PROGRAM INFORMATION
Admission Deadline 2008-09 ................................................................ April 1, 2009 Financial Aid Deadline 2008-09 ........................................................ March 15, 2009 In-State Tuition and Fees: .............................. 12 cr. hours $2,443; 15 cr. hrs, $2,900 Out-of-State Tuition and Fees: ...................... 12 cr. hours $7,687; 15 cr. hrs, $9,175 Application Fee ......................................................................................................$35 Additional Fees: .................................................................. Some special course fees

FINANCIAL AID INFORMATION


Available on competitive basis.

UNDERGRADUATE DEADLINES, TUITION AND FEES

MASTERS DEGREE
Master of City & Metropolitan Planning
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail: Thomas W. Sanchez, Chair (801) 585-9354 tom.sanchez@utah.edu

GRADUATE DEADLINES, TUITION AND FEES

Admission Deadline 2008-09 for Masters program ...............................April 1, 2009 Financial Aid Deadline 2008-09 for Masters program.........................March 1, 2009 In-State Tuition and Fees: .............................. 12 cr. hours $4,195; 15 cr. hrs, $5,031 Out-of-State Tuition and Fees: .................. 12 cr. hours $10,497; 15 cr. hrs, $12,570 Application Fee ......................................................................................................$45 Additional Fees: .................................................................. Some special course fees

Year Initiated: 2004 PAB Accreditation anticipated by 2010 Degrees Granted through 8/31/09............................................................61 Degrees Granted from 9/1/08 to 8/31/09 .................................................18

Annual Student Enrollment Applied


Undergraduate Masters 27 36

Accepted
19 26

Enrolled
82 15 97 17

07/08 08/09 07/08 08/09 07/08 08/09

Physical Planning & Design, Environmental Planning, Land Use, Growth & Transportation
MASTERS ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS
University Admission Policy:

Masters Specializations

UNDERGRADUATE DEGREE
BA/BS in Urban Planning
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail: Thomas W. Sanchez, Chair (801) 585-9354 tom.sanchez@utah.edu

Minimum Undergraduate GPA: Minimum GRE: Minimum TOEFL Ranking in Undergraduate Class: Departmental Requirement:

Year initiated:1980 Degrees Granted through 8/31/09..........................................................425 Degrees Granted from 9/1/08 to 8/31/09 .................................................31

Bachelors degree from an accredited institution; Application and an under graduate record 3.0 Required but no set minimum 173/500 Not Required Program application, recommendations and statement of intent

MASTERS GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

Physical Planning & Design, Environmental Planning, Land Use, Growth & Transportation

Undergraduate Specializations

Hours of Core ...........................................................................................22 Hours of Studio or Practice Related Courses .............................................5 Hours of Restricted Electives ...................................................................12 Hours of Unrestricted Electives ..................................................................6 Total Required Hours in Planning Program: ........................................... 50 Exam,Thesis or Final Product: ...............................................................4-6

ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 251

FINANCIAL AID INFORMATION

Several awards scholarships and assistantships are available on a competitive basis.

Stephen A. Goldsmith

Associate Professor Lecturer. BA, Webster College, St. Louis, Missouri, 1976; Loeb Fellow in Advanced Environmental Studies, Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts, 1999.

TOTAL MASTERS STUDENT COMPOSITION Full and Part-time Autumn 2008 US Citizens & Permanent Residents
Hispanics* Of any Race White African American Native American/ Pacific Islander Asian American Mixed Other / Dont know Non-US Citizens Non- Permanent Residents

(801) 585-5147

goldsmith@arch.utah.edu FAICP

Arthur C. Nelson

Male 0 29 0 0 1 0 0 0 30

Female 1 10 0 0 1 0 0 2 14

Total 1 39 0 0 2 0 0 2

Presidential Professor. BS, Portland State University, 1972; Masters of Urban Studies in Public Administration, Portland State University, 1976; Ph.D. Portland State University, 1984.

(801) 581-8253

acnelson@utah.edu

Thomas W. Sanchez

Associate Professor. BA, University of California, Santa Barbara, 1984; M.C.R.P. California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo, 1986; Ph.D. Georgia Institute of Technology, 1996.

(801)-585-9354

tom.sanchez@utah.edu AICP

Brenda Case Scheer

Dean/Professor. M.Arch., Rice University (1977). Specializations: Smart Growth, Urban Design, Urban Redevelopment, Sustainable Development.

(801) 581-8254

scheer@arch.utah.edu

OTHER AFFILIATED FACULTY


Adjunct Associate Professor. MS, University of Texas, San Antonio

Robert Farrington

Total Students

44

(1978). Specializations: Economic Development & Planning, Real Estate Development.

*Do not double count Hispanics; Hispanics also appear in the racial categories below.

(801) 535-7941

bob.farrington@slcgov.com

PLANNING FACULTY
Keith Bartholomew
Assistant Professor. JD, University of Oregon (1987). Specializations: Environmental Planning, Land Use/Growth Management, Planning Law, Metropolitan/Regional Planning.

Hal Johnson

Adjunct Professor. MURP and MA, State University of New York, Albany (1994). Specializations: Community Planning, Transit Planning, TODs.

(801) 287-2539

HJohnson@rideuta.com

(801) 581-8944

bartholomew@arch.utah.edu

Caitlin Cahill

Adjunct Professor. Ph.D., University of Utah (1992). Specializations: Computer Applications, Demography, Economic Development Planning, Urban and Regional Planning.

Pam Perlich

(801) 581-3358

pam.perlich@utah.edu

Assistant Professor. BA, Middlebury College, Vermont, 1991; Masters of Art, University of New York, 1998; Masters of Philosophy, University of New York, 2000; Ph.D. University of New York, 2005.

Patrick Putt

(801) 581-4042

cahill@arch.utah.edu

Adjunct Assistant Professor. BS, Northern Arizona University, 1982; MA, Northern Arizona University, 1984.

Professor. Ph.D., University of North Carolina (1979). Specializations: Environmental Planning, Planning Theory, Metro/Regional Planning, System Dynamics.

Philip C. Emmi

(435) 553-9161

put1@live.com

(801) 581-4255

emmi@arch.utah.edu

Specializations: Planning Processes & Methods.

George Shaw AICP Adjunct Associate Professor.MS, Brigham Young University (1976).
(801) 568-7261 gshaw@sjc.utah.gov

Reid Ewing

Professor. BS, Purdue University, 1970; MS, Harvard University, 1971; MCP, Harvard University, 1973; PhD, MIT, 1978.

(801) 581-8255

ewing@arch.utah.edu

Page 252 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

UNIVERSITY OF VIRGINIA
Campbell Hall P.O. Box 400122 Charlottesville, Virginia 22904 Phone (434) 924-1339 Fax (434) 982-2678 http://www.arch.virginia.edu/planning A. Bruce Dotson, Department Chair Phone (434) 924-6459 E-mail: dotson@virginia.edu

BA/BS PAB PAB

MA/MS PAB PAB

ACSP Member: FULL

School of Architecture

UNDERGRADUATE ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS


Departmental Requirement: Completion of high school or community college transfer Minimum GPA: 3.0+ encouraged Minimum SAT or ACT Scores: SAT 1200+ encouraged

UNDERGRADUATE GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

Hours of Core .................................. 37 Hours of Studio Courses ................................... .4 Hours of Restricted Elective ..................................... ..73 Hours of Unrestricted Elective ................................... .15 Total Required Hours in Planning Program ................................ ..122 Thesis or Final Product ................... .Not required

FINANCIAL AID INFORMATION


State Financial Aid and Work Study

PROGRAM INFORMATION
Admissions Deadline 2010-11 ........................................................... January 1, 2010 Financial Aid Deadline 2010-11 .......................................................... March 1, 2010 In-State Tuition and Fees ................................................. $9,870 per year (2009-10) Out-of-State Tuition and Fees..........................................$31,870 per year (2009-10) Application Fee ......................................................................................................$60 Additional Fees ......................................................................................................$60

UNDERGRADUATE DEADLINES, TUITION AND FEES

MASTERS DEGREE
Master of Urban & Environmental Planning
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail: A. Bruce Dotson, Professor and Chair (434) 924-6459 dotson@virginia.edu

Admissions Deadline 2010-11 ........................................................... January 5, 2010 Financial Aid Deadline 2010-11 .................................................... February 15, 2010 In-State Tuition and Fees .................................................$12,644 per year (2009-10) Out-of-State Tuition and Fees..........................................$22,644 per year (2009-10) Application Fee ......................................................................................................$60 Additional Fees ......................................................................................................$60

GRADUATE DEADLINES, TUITION AND FEES

Year Initiated: 1964 PAB Accredited Degrees Granted through 8/31/09.........................................................1240 Degrees Granted from 9/1/07 to 8/31/08 ..................................................26

Annual Student Enrollment Applied


Undergraduate Masters 115 -

Accepted Enrolled 43 20 62 38

07/08 08/09 07/08 08/09 07/08 08/09

*All but 4-6/year transfer into major

73

Environmental Management & Conservation, Land Use & Growth Management, Housing and Community Development, Public Policy and Planning Historic Preservation
MASTERS ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS
University Admission Policy: Minimum Undergraduate GPA: Minimum GRE: Minimum TOEFL Ranking in Undergraduate Class: Departmental Requirement: Bachelor s degree from an accredited institution 3.0+ suggested 1000+ suggested 600 Not Required Application, student letter of interest, GRE and reference letters.

Masters Specializations

UNDERGRADUATE DEGREE
Bachelor of Urban and Environmental Planning
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail: David Phillips, Professor (434) 982-2196 dlp@virginia.edu

Year Initiated:1958 PAB Accredited Degrees Granted through 8/31/08.......................................................... 419 Degrees Granted from 9/1/07 to 8/31/08 ................................................. 16

MASTERS GRADUATION Requirements

Undergraduate Specializations
Environmental Planning, Land Use/Growth Management, Community Development

Hours of Core ...........................................................................................23 Hours of Studio or Practice Related Courses .............................................6 Hours of Restricted Electives ...................................................................15 Hours of Unrestricted Electives ..................................................................6 Total Required Hours in Planning Program.............................................50 Exam,Thesis or Final Product..................................................Not required

FINANCIAL AID INFORMATION

Internship opportunities, Department awards, University financial aid.

ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 253

TOTAL MASTERS STUDENT COMPOSITION 2008-2009 US Citizens & Permanent Residents


Hispanics* Of any Race White African American Native American/ Pacific Islander Asian American Mixed Other / Dont know Non-US Citizens Non- Permanent Residents

Suzanne Morse Moomaw

Lecturer. BA, University of Alabama (1973); MA, University of Alabama (Birmingham) (1997); PhD, University of Alabama (1982). Specializations: Community Development, Neighborhood Housing, Civic Engagement and Citizen Participation

Male 1 14 1 0 0 1 1 1 18

Female 1 21 1 0 2 0 0 2 25

Total 2 35 2 0 2 1 1 3

(434) 924-1339

swm2x@virginia.edu AICP

Professor. MS, Stanford University (1966); PhD, Cornell University (1976). Specializations: Computer Applications, GIS, Quantitative Methods.

David L. Phillips

(434) 982-2196

dlp@virginia.edu

Daphne Spain

Professor. BA, University of North Carolina (1972); MS (1974) and Ph.D. (1976), University of Massachusetts. Specializations: Demography, Gender Studies and Planning, Planning History.

(434) 924-6430

spain@virginia.edu

OTHER AFFILIATED FACULTY


Warren Boeschenstein
Professor. BA, University of Massachusetts, Amherst (1962); B.Arch., Washington State University (1966); MUD, Harvard (1971). Specializations: Metropolitan and Regional Planning, Transportation.

Total Students

43

(434) 924-6440

web9w@virginia.edu AICP

*Do not double count Hispanics; Hispanics also appear in the racial categories below.

E. Frank Dukes

PLANNING FACULTY
Professor. BP, University of Virginia (1979); MUP, University of Oregon (1981); PhD, University of North Carolina (1986). Specializations: Environmental Planning, Land Use/Growth Management, Natural Resource Planning.

Lecturer. Ph.D., George Mason University (1972). Specializations: Public Involvement, Mediation, Dispute Resolution.

(434) 924-2041

ed7k@virginia.edu AICP

Timothy Beatley

Satyendra Huja

Lecturer. BA, Roberts Wesleyan (1966); MA, Michigan State University (1968). Specializations: Urban Revitalization, Planning Process.

(434) 977-5094

huja1@comcast.net

(434) 924-6457

tb6d@virginia.edu

Gary Okerlund

Assistant Professor. Specializations: Community Development, Public Health.

Nisha Botchwey

Lecturer. BA, University of Washington (1960); MLA, Harvard (1970). Specializations Urban Design.

(434) 924-1339

go2n@virginia.edu

(434) 924-6444

nbotchwey@virginia.edu

A. Bruce Dotson

Associate Professor. BA (1966) and Ph.D. (1970), Cornell University. Specializations: Land Use/Growth Management, Planning Practice and Negotiation, Conflict Management.

(434) 924-6459

dotson@virginia.edu AICP

William H. Lucy

Professor. BA, Knox (1961); MA, University of Chicago (1961); PhD, University of Syracuse (1973). Specializations: Metropolitan/Regional Planning, Politics and Governance, Public Finance/Fiscal Planning, Public Management/Strategic Planning.

(434) 924-4779

whl@virginia.edu

Page 254 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

UNIVERSITY OF WASHINGTON
Department of Urban Design and Planning
Box 355740 Seattle, Washington 98195-5740 Phone (206) 543-4190 Fax (206) 685-9597 E-mail: udp@u.washington.edu http://urbdp.be.washington.edu Qing Shen, PhD, Department Chair (as of 9/16/09) Phone: (206) 685-3937 E-mail: qs@u.washington.edu

MA/MS PAB
University Admission Policy: Minimum Undergraduate GPA: Minimum GRE: Minimum TOEFL Ranking in Undergraduate Class: Departmental Requirement:

Ph.D.

ACSP Member: FULL

MASTERS ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS

Bachelors Degree 3.0 No Minimum 500/173c Not Required Micro Economics, Mathematics, Statistics, American Government, Environmental Systems, Cultural Diversity

MASTERS GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

PROGRAM INFORMATION
GRADUATE DEADLINES, TUITION AND FEES
Admission Deadline 2009-10 ...........................................................February 1, 2009 Financial Aid Deadline 2009-10 .......................................................February 1, 2009 In-State Tuition and Fees (2008-09): ..............................................$3,473 per quarter Out-of-State/International Tuition and Fees (2008-09) ..................$7,488 per quarter Application Fee: ..................................................................................................... $65 Additional Fees: ....................................$50 per course for MUP Core courses/thesis

Hours of Core ...........................................................................................33 Hours of Studio or Practice Related Courses .............................................5 Hours of Restricted Electives ...................................................................14 Hours of Unrestricted Electives ................................................................16 Thesis/Professional Project .........................................................................9 Total Required Hours in Planning Program .............................................72 Exam, Thesis or Final Product: .............................................................N/A

FINANCIAL AID INFORMATION

Varies: Annual appointments of about 3 GTA, 10 RA, 5 SA, 3 Fellowships.

DOCTORAL DEADLINES, TUITION AND FEES

Admission Deadline 2009-10...........................................................February 1, 2009 Financial Aid Deadline 2009-10 ........................................................................... N/A In-State Tuition and Fees (2008-09): ..............................................$3,139 per quarter Out-of-State/International Tuition and Fees (2008-09) ..................$7,155 per quarter Application Fee: ..................................................................................................... $65 Additional Fees: ......................................................................................................... 0

TOTAL MASTERS STUDENT COMPOSITION 2008-2009


US Citizens & Permanent Residents Hispanics* Of any Race Male 3 36 2 0 0 2 0 4 3 50 Female 3 29 0 0 0 5 0 7 2 46 Total 6 65 2 0 0 7 0 11 5 96

Annual Student Enrollment Applied


Masters Doctoral 179 56 209 39

Accepted Enrolled
98 9 112 5 34 7 43 3

White African American Native American/ Pacific Islander Asian American Mixed Other / Dont know Non-US Citizens Non- Permanent Residents Total Students

06/07 07/08 06/07 07/08 06/07 07/08

MASTERS DEGREE
Master of Urban Planning
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail: Krista Bargsten, Counseling Services Coordinator (206) 685-4055 bargsk3@u.washington.edu

Year Initiated: 1959 PAB Accredited Degrees Granted through 8/31/08...........................................................979 Degrees Granted from 9/1/07 to 8/31/08 ..................................................26

Urban Design, Historic Preservation, Land Use & Infrastructure, Environmental Planning, Real Estate

Masters Specializations

*Do not double count Hispanics; Hispanics also appear in the racial categories below.

ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 255

DOCTORAL DEGREE
Interdisciplinary PhD in Urban Design & Planning
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail: Jean Rogers, Coordinator (206) 543-6398 jeanp@u.washington.edu

TOTAL DOCTORAL STUDENT COMPOSITION 2008-2009


US Citizens & Permanent Residents Hispanics* Of any Race White African American Native American/ Pacific Islander Asian American Mixed Other / Dont know Non-US Citizens Non- Permanent Residents Total Students Male 0 3 0 0 0 2 0 0 9 14 Female 0 4 0 0 0 0 0 0 5 9 Total 0 7 0 0 0 2 0 0 14 23

Year initiated 1967 Degrees Granted through 8/31/2008......................................................... 65 Degrees Granted from 9/1/2007 to 8/31/2008 ............................................2 Dissertations Granted from 9/1/2007 to 8/31/2008 1. "Building Political Community via Annexation in White Center, WA: the Role of Culture and Translation." 2. "Closing the Policy Gap: Notions of Home Among Homeless."

Urban Ecology & Environmental Planning, Urban Design, Land Use & Transportation, Growth Management, Real Estate Development DOCTORAL ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS
University Admission Policy: Minimum Undergraduate GPA: Minimum GRE: Minimum TOEFL Departmental Requirement:

Doctoral Specializations

None 3.58 608/773 580/237C Masters or equivalent degree

DOCTORAL GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

Hours of Core ...........................................................................................15 Hours of Studio or Practice Related Courses ............................................... Hours of Restricted Electives ...................................................................15 Other ...........................................................................................................3 Total Required Hours in Planning Program .............................................60 Exam,Thesis or Final Product: Phase I Evaluation w/paper; general exam (written and oral); dissertation

*Do not double count Hispanics; Hispanics also appear in the racial categories below.

PLANNING FACULTY
Daniel Abramson
Associate Professor. MCP and M.Arch., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, PhD., Tsing Hua University, Beijing. Specializations: Urban Design, Historic Preservation, Neighborhood Planning, Transnational Comparative Urbanism. //urbdp.be.washington.edu/f-abramson.html

(206) 543-2089

abramson@u.washington.edu

Marina Alberti

Professor. PhD., Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Specializations: Urban Ecology, Environmental Planning. //urbdp.be.washington.edu/f-alberti.html

(206) 616-8667

malberti@u.washington.edu

Christine Bae

Associate Professor. MRP, State University of New York; PhD., University of Southern California. Specializations: Land Use, Transportation Planning, Analytical Techniques in Planning, Community Planning for Diverse Neighborhoods. //urbdp.be.washington.edu/f-bae.html

(206) 616-9034

cbae@u.washington.edu

Page 256 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

Hilda Blanco

Professor emeritus. MCRP and PhD., University of California, Berkeley. Specializations: Strategic Planning for Critical Infrastructures. Director, MSPCI Program. //urbdp.be.washington.edu/f-blanco.html

Mark Purcell

Associate Professor. MA and PhD., UCLA. Specializations: Urban Democracy, Urban Social Movements. //urbdp.be.washington.edu/f-purcell.html

hblanco@u.washington.edu

(206) 543-8754

mpurcell@u.washington.edu

Branden Born

George Rolfe

Assistant Professor. MS and PhD., University of Wisconsin. Specializations: Land Use, Food Systems Planning, Planning Process & Social Justice. //urbdp.be.washington.edu/f-born.html

Associate Professor. M.Arch. and MCP, University of Pennsylvania. Specializations: Real Estate, Market Analysis. //urbdp.be.washington.edu/f-rolfe.html

(206) 543-6918

rolfe@u.washington.edu A.I.C.P.

(206) 543-4975

bborn@u.washington.edu

Lecturer. MA and PhD., UCLA. Specializations: Planning Education, Urban Sociology. //urbdp.be.washington.edu/f-campbell.html

Christopher Campbell

Dennis Ryan

Associate Professor. MCP and PhD., University of Pennsylvania. Specializations: Urban Design Methods & Theories, Urban Planning & Design Communications. //urbdp.be.washington.edu/f-ryan.html

(206) 543-6063

ccamp1@u.washington.edu

(206) 543-8293

frango@u.washington.edu

Manish Chalana

Assistant Professor. PhD., University of Colorado. Specializations: Preservation Planning, Cultural Landscapes, Multicultural Planning. //urbdp.be.washington.edu/f-chalana.html

(206) 616-6051

chalana@u.washington.edu

Professor and Chair. MA, University of British Columbia, PhD., University of California, Berkeley. Specializations: Urban Economics, Transportation Planning, Statistical Methods and Geographic Information Systems. //urbdp.be.washington.edu/f-shen.html

Qing Shen

James DeLisle

(206) 685-3937

qs@u.washington.edu A.I.C.P.

Associate Professor. MS and PhD., University of Wisconsin. Specialization: Real Estate Studies. //urbdp.be.washington.edu/f-delisle.html

Frederick Wagner

(206) 616-2090

jdelisle@u.washington.edu A.I.A., A.P.A.

Associate Professor. B.Arch., University of Notre Dame; MUP, University of Washington. Specializations: Urban Design Process & Methods, Public Participation. //urbdp.be.washington.edu/f-kasprisin.html

Ron Kasprisin

Research Professor. PhD., University of Washington. Specializations: Managing Director, NW Center for Livable Communities; Land Use & Legal Planning, Health Policy Across Urban & Rural Communities. //urbdp.be.washington.edu/f-wagner.html

(206) 543-7459

fwagner@u.washington.edu

Frank Westerlund

(206) 543-4190

paparon@u.washington.edu

Donald Miller

Professor. MCRP and PhD., University of California, Berkeley. Specializations: Land Use Planning, Urban Spatial Structure, Environmental Planning, Politics of Planning. //urbdp.be.washington.edu/f-miller.html

Associate Professor. MUP and PhD., University of Washington. Specializations: Land Use Planning, Environmental Planning, Hazards Mitigation. //urbdp.be.washington.edu/f-westerlund.html

(206) 543-4912

fwest@u.washington.edu A.I.C.P.

Jan Whittington

(206) 543-7355

millerd@u.washington.edu

Professor. B.Arch., University of California, Berkeley; Dr. es Sc., Ecole Polytechnique Federal. Specializations: Urban Design, Research Methods, Land Monitoring, Non-Motorized Transportation. //urbdp.be.washington.edu/f-moudon.html

Anne Vernez Moudon

Assistant Professor. MCRP, California State Polytechnical University, St. Luis Obispo, PhD., University of California, Berkeley. Specializations: Infrastructure Development and Management, Transportation Project Delivery. //urbdp.be.washington.edu/f-whittington.html

(206) 221-9629

janwhit@u.washington.edu

(206) 685-4057

moudon@u.washington.edu

OTHER AFFILIATED FACULTY


William Beyers
Professor of Geography, Adjunct Professor UDP, Public Affairs, Landscape Architecture. PhD., University of Washington. Specializations: Economic Geography, Local and Regional Development (Growth Management Act). //urbdp.be.washington.edu/f-beyers.html

Professor. PhD., University of Texas, Austin. Specializations: Theory & Research Methods, Values, Social & Cultural Factors, Sustainability. //urbdp.be.washington.edu/f-mugerauer.html

Robert Mugerauer

(206) 221-4415

drbobm@u.washington.edu

(206) 543-5871

beyers@u.washington.edu

ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 257

Professor of Forest Resources. Adjunct Professor UDP. MLA and PhD., Cal State Polytechnic University. Specializations: Urban Ecology, Forest Land Use Planning, Conservation. //urbdp.be.washington.edu/f-bradley.html

Gordon Bradley

Sharon Sutton

Professor of Architecture. Joint Professor UDP. M.Arch., Columbia University; MA and PhD., City University of New York. Specializations: Youth, Culture & Environment. //urbdp.be.washington.edu/f-sutton.html

F.A.I.A.

(206) 685-0881

gbradley@u.washington.edu F.A.I.A., A.I.C.P.

(206) 685-3361

sesut@u.washington.edu

Daniel Friedman

Dean and Professor, College of Built Environments. Adjunct Professor UDP. PhD., University of Pennsylvania. Specializations: Professional Education, Public Architecture, Twentieth Century Theory. //urbdp.be.washington.edu/f-friedman.html

FYI
Joint or Concurrent Degree Programs:
o MUP/JD and MUP/MPA

(206) 616-2442

dsfx@u.washington.edu

Lecturer. MUP, University of Washington. Specializations: Director, Institute for Hazards Mitigation Planning & Research. //urbdp.be.washington.edu/f-freitag.html

Robert Freitag

(206) 818-1175

bfreitag@u.washington.edu

Joaquin Herranz, Jr.

Assistant Professor of Public Affairs. Adjunct Professor UDP. PhD., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, MCP, University of California, Berkeley. Specializations: Strategic Management of Public and Nonprofit Agencies, Inter-organizational Networks, Workforce Development, Intersections of Community Development and Arts and Culture. //urbdp.be.washington.edu/f-herranz.html

(206) 616-1647

jherranz@u.washington.edu

Associate Professor of Public Affairs. Adjunct Associate Professor UDP. MA, Urban and Regional Policy, Tufts University, MS and PhD., University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill. Specializations: Public Housing, Social Policy. //urbdp.be.washington.edu/f-kleit.html

Rachel Garshick Kleit

(206) 221-3063

kleit@u.washington.edu

Jeffrey Ochsner

Professor of Architecture. Adjunct Professor UDP. MArch, Rice University. Specializations: Urban Design, Historic Preservation, Architectural History. //urbdp.be.washington.edu/f-ochsner.html

F.A.I.A.

(206) 685-8454

jochsner@u.washington.edu

Nancy Rottle

Associate Professor of Landscape Architecture, Adjunct Associate Professor UDP, Adjunct Associate Professor Architecture. Specializations: Urban Design, Historic Preservation, Environmental Ecology. //urbdp.be.washington.edu/f-rottle.html

(206) 543-7897

nrottle@u.washington.edu

Professor, Transportation Engineering. Adjunct Professor UDP. MS, Washington State University, PhD., Northwestern University. Specializations: Transit Planning, Transportation Planning and Policy, Bus Rapid Transit, Travel Demand Management. //urbdp.be.washington.edu/f-rutherford.html

G. Scott Rutherford

(206) 685-2481

scottrut@u.washington.edu

Page 258 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN-MADISON
Urban and Regional Planning
Music Hall, 925 Bascom Mall Madison, Wisconsin 53706 Phone (608) 262-1004 Fax (608) 262-9307 http://www.urpl.wisc.edu Brian W. Ohm, Department Chair E-mail: bwohm@wisc.edu

MA/MS Ph.D. PAB PAB PAB

ACSP Member: FULL

MASTERS ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS


University Admission Policy: Minimum Undergraduate GPA: Minimum GRE: Minimum TOEFL Ranking in Undergraduate Class: Departmental Requirement:

Bachelors degree from an accredited institution 3.0 Not Required 237 (University)/250 (Department) Not Required Introductory Statistics Course.

MASTERS GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

PROGRAM INFORMATION
Admission Deadline for Fall Admittance for Masters or PhD Program.............. Varies Admission Deadline for Spring Admittance for Master or PhD Program ... October 15 Financial Aid Deadline for Masters or PhD program ....................................... Varies In-State Tuition and Fees: ............................................................ $5,011 per semester Out-of-State Tuition and Fees: ................................................. $12,472 per semester Application Fee ......................................................................................................$56 Additional Fees: ........................................................................................................0

Hours of Core ...........................................................................................19 Hours of Studio or Practice Related Courses .............................................4 Hours of Restricted Electives ...................................................................12 Hours of Unrestricted Electives ................................................................14 Total Required Hours in Planning Program: ............................................45 Exam,Thesis or Final Product: ....................Thesis or professional project.

GRADUATE DEADLINES, TUITION AND FEES

FINANCIAL AID INFORMATION

University Fellowship (Only available to outstanding new Fall applicants intending to pursue a Ph.D., competition across entire university division) Variable Research and Project Assistantships. Advanced Opportunity Fellowship for targeted under-representative minority students. Scholarships need and merit based.

Annual Student Enrollment Applied


Masters Doctoral 95 26 108 31

Accepted Enrolled
63 2 60 4 21 2 17 1

07/08 08/09 07/08 08/09 07/08 08/09

TOTAL MASTERS STUDENT COMPOSITION 2008-2009


US Citizens & Permanent Residents Hispanics of any race White African American Native American/Pacific Islander Asian American Mixed Male 1 13 0 0 0 0 0 3 17 Female 0 9 0 0 0 0 1 1 11 Total 1 22 0 0 0 0 1 4 28

MASTERS DEGREE
Master of Urban and Regional Planning
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail: Alice Justice, Graduate Admissions Coordinator (608) 265-0509 ajustice@wisc.edu

Year Initiated: 1962 PAB Accredited Degrees Granted through 8/31/09.........................................................1054 Degrees Granted from 9/1/08 to 8/31/09 ..................................................39

Community Development Planning, Economic Planning, Land Use Planning, Ecological Planning, International Development Planning

Masters Specializations

Other/dont know Non-US Citizens Nonpermanent residents Total Students

ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 259

DOCTORAL DEGREE
PhD in Urban & Regional Planning
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail: Year Initiated 1966 Degrees Granted through 8/31/2009........................................................65 Degrees Granted from 9/1/2008 to 8/31/2009 ...........................................2 Dissertations Granted from 9/1/2005 to 8/31/2008 1/. Co-Management, Cultural Landscapes, and Decentralization: Collaborating to Compete at Mt. Pulag National Park, the Philippines. 2/. Effectiveness Beliefs of WAPA-Member Planners Practicing in Wisconsin 3/. Native American and Non-Native Involvement in Collaborative Planning Processes: Interactions and Outcomes: A Case Study of the Planning Process for the Reuse of the badger Army Ammunition Plant. Alice Justice, Graduate Admissions (608) 265-0509 ajustice@wisc.edu

TOTAL DOCTORAL STUDENT COMPOSITION 2008-2009


US Citizens & Permanent Residents Hispanics of any race White African American Native American/Pacific Islander Asian American Mixed Other/dont know Non-US Citizens Non-Permanent residents Total students Male 0 4 1 0 0 0 0 0 5 Female 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 1 3 Total 0 6 1 0 0 0 0 1 8

Doctoral Specializations
Urban and Regional Planning

DOCTORAL ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS


University Admission Policy: Minimum GRE: Minimum TOEFL: Minimum GPA: Departmental Requirement:

No Requirements No Requirements 237 (University)/250 (Department) 3.0 Masters degree in planning or planning-related field; one year of professional planning or planningrelated work experience.

PLANNING FACULTY
Kenneth D. Genskow
Assistant Professor. MUP University of Illinois (1994); Ph.D. University of Wisconsin-Madison (2001). Specializations: Water Resources Policy, Watershed Planning, Collaborative Planning, Program Evaluation.

(608) 262-8756

kgenskow@wisc.edu

Hours of Core ............................................................................................... Hours of Studio or Practice Related Courses ............................................... Hours of Restricted Electives ....................................................................... Hours of Unrestricted Electives .................................................................... Other ............................................................ 9 (Urban & Regional Theory) Total .............................................................................................................. Exams or Written Requirements: Minor field requirement; 3 written preliminary exams on 1) planning theory, 2) the area of research specialization of the student, 3) research methods.

DOCTORAL GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

Assistant Professor. MA, University of Cincinnati (1994); Ph.D., University of Michigan (2006). Specializations: Environmental Planning, Geographic Information Systems, Environmental Psychology, Spatial Analysis.

Asli Gocmen

(608) 265-0789

gocmen@wisc.edu

Jack R. Huddleston

Professor. MS (1973) and Ph.D. (1976), Oklahoma State University. Specializations: State and Local Development Finance, Economic Analysis of Natural Resource Utilization, Economic Development Planning, Energy Analysis and Policy.

(608) 262-6152

jrhuddle@wisc.edu

Harvey M. Jacobs

Professor. MRP (1981) and Ph.D. (1984), Cornell University. Specializations: Property Rights, Land Use Policy Alternatives, Smart Growth, Urban Sprawl and Peri-Urban Land Management, Social Content of Land Use and Environmental Policy.

(608) 262-0552

hmjacobs@wisc.edu

Page 260 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

James A. Lagro, Jr.

Professor. MLA (1982) and Ph.D. (1991), Cornell University. Specializations: Sustainability of the Built Environment, Smart Growth Implementation, Climate Change Mitigation and Adaption, Urban Open Space Systems, Pedestrian Circulation Systems, Site Analysis and Planning, Landscape Ecology.

Samuel F. Dennis, Jr.


Affiliate Assistant Professor (Department of Landscape Architecture).

(608) 263-7699

sfdennisjr@wisc.edu

(608) 263-6507

jalagro@wisc.edu

Herman Felstehausen
Professor Emeritus.

Senior Scientist. MS (1974) and Ph.D. (1981) University of WisconsinMadison. Specializations: Land Tenure, Gender, International Development.

Susana Lastarria-Cornhiel

(608) 262-1004

Jessica Gao

(608) 262-0097

slastarr@wisc.edu AICP

Affiliate Assistant Professor (Dept. of Civil and Environmental Engineering)

(608) 890-1004

jygao@wisc.edu

David W. Marcouiller

Professor. MS, University of Minnesota (1988); Ph.D., Oklahoma State University (1992). Specializations: Natural Amenity-Driven Development, Economics of Exurban Land Uses, Rural Resource Dependency, Integrative Tourism & Recreation Planning, Regional Science.

Gary P. Green

Affiliate Professor (Rural Sociology)

(608) 262-9532

gpgreen@wisc.edu

(608) 262-2998

dwmarcou@wisc.edu

David Hart

Adjunct Faculty (UW SeaGrant Institute) Coastal GIS Specialist

Alfonso Morales

(608) 262-6515

Assistant Professor. MA, Political Economy, University of Texas-Dallas (1987); MA, Sociology, University of Chicago (1989); Ph.D. Sociology, Northwestern University (1993). Specializations: Markets and Food Systemns, Community Development, Social, Political and Economic Contexts of Planning Processes, Qualitative Methods.

Jerome Kaufman
Professor Emeritus.

(608) 262-1004

(608) 263-4848

morales@wisc.edu

Stephen Malpezzi

Brian W. Ohm

Affiliate Professor (Real Estate).

(608) 262-6007

smalpezzi@wisc.edu

Professor. MA, University of Wisconsin-Madison (1982); JD (1986), University of Wisconsin-Madison. Specializations: Legal Framework for Land Use Planning, Growth Management and Environmental Protection, Smart Growth, New Urbanism.

Lisa Naughton

Affiliate Associate Professor (Department of Geography)

(608) 262-2098

bwohm@wisc.edu

(608) 262-4846

lnaughto@wisc.edu

Assistant Professor. MA, Agricultural and Applied Economics, University of Wisconsin - Madison (1999); MA, Development Policy and Public Administration, University of Wisconsin - Madison (1999); Ph.D., Urban Planning and Policy Development, Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey (2004). Specializations: Land Use and Comprehensive Planning, Quantitative Methods, Spatial Analysis, Public Finance, Housing.

Kurt G. Paulsen

Kristopher Olds

Affiliate Professor (Department of Geography)

(608) 262-5685
Affiliate Professor (Division of Continuing Studies)

kolds@wisc.edu

Barry M. Orton

(608) 262-8990

kpaulsen@wisc.edu

(608) 262-2394

bmorton@facstaff.wisc.edu

OTHER AFFILIATED FACULTY


Stephen M. Born
Professor Emeritus.

Randy Stoecker

Affiliate Associate Professor (Department of Rural Sociology)

(608) 890-0764

rstoecker@wisc.edu

(608) 262-1004

smborn@wisc.edu

Affiliate Assistant Professor (Department of Landscape Architecture)

Susan A. Thering

(608) 263-6506

sathering@facstaff.wisc.edu

Richard E. Chenoweth
Professor Emeritius

Stephen J. Ventura
rechenow@wisc.edu

(608) 262-1004

Affiliate Professor (Institute for Environmental Studies & Department of Soil Science)

Steven C. Deller

(608) 262-6416

ventura@facstaff.wisc.edu

Affiliate Professor (Agricultural and Applied Economics)

(608) 263-6251

scdeller@wisc.edu ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 261

UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN-MILWAUKEE
P.O.Box 413 Milwaukee, Wisconsin 53201-0413 Phone (414) 229-5563 Fax (414) 229-6976 E-mail: urbanplanning@uwm.edu www.urbanplanning.uwm.edu Nancy Frank, Department Chair Phone (414) 229-5372 E-mail: frankn@uwm.edu

MA/MS PA PAB

ACSP Member: FULL

Urban Planning

Urban Revitalization, Geographic Information Systems, Transportation Planning, Urban Design, Economic Development, Environmental Planning
MASTERS ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS
University Admission Policy: Minimum Undergraduate GPA: Minimum GRE: Minimum TOEFL Ranking in Undergraduate Class: Departmental Requirement: Bachelors degree from an accredited institution 2.75 University, 3.0 Departmental Required 100 (IBT) Not Required

Masters Specializations

PROGRAM INFORMATION
Admission Deadline ....................................................... priority date for application to Masters program Jan. 1 Financial Aid Deadline ................................................... priority date for application to Masters program Jan. 1 In-State Tuition and Fees, Fall 2008: ..........................................$4,802 per semester Out-of-State Tuition and Fees, Fall 2008: ................................. $11,815 per semester Application Fee: ..................................................................................................... $56 Additional Fees (segregated fees included in tuition fees) : ...............................None

MASTERS GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

GRADUATE DEADLINES, TUITION AND FEES

Hours of Core ...........................................................................................24 Hours of Studio or Practice Related Courses (included in core) ...............9 Hours of Restricted Electives .....................................................................3 Hours of Unrestricted Electives ................................................................21 Total Required Hours in Planning Program: ............................................48 Exam, Thesis or Final Product: ............................... Comprehensive Exam

Coordinated Master of Architecture & Master of Urban Planning


Contact Person: Phone: E-mail: Nancy Frank, Chair (414) 229-5372 urbanplanning@uwm.edu

FINANCIAL AID INFORMATION

(3) Teaching Assistantship Strong academic preparation (4) Project Assistantship Strong academic preparation (5) Scholarships for $1,000 each Strong academic preparation (1) Scholarship for $2,000 Strong academic preparation Various Chancellors Awards $1,500-$5,000 Annually Various Graduate School Fellowships $15,000 - $25,000 Annually Various Advanced Opportunity Fellowships for Minority/Disadvantaged.

Year Initiated: 1982 PAB Accredited Degrees Granted through 8/31/08.............................................................83 Degrees Granted from 9/1/07 to 8/31/08 ....................................................2

Annual Student Enrollment Applied


Masters 78 87

Masters Specializations
Accepted
55 53

Enrolled
28 29

Urban Design

07/08 08/09 07/08 08/09 07/08 08/09

MASTERS ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS


University Admission Policy: Minimum Undergraduate GPA: Minimum GRE: Minimum TOEFL Ranking in Undergraduate Class: Departmental Requirement:

MASTERS DEGREE
Master of Urban Planning
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail: Nancy Frank, Chair (414) 229-5372 urbanplanning@uwm.edu

Bachelors degree from an accredited institution 2.75 University, 3.0 Departmental Required 100 (IBT) Not Required Portfolio for admission to M.Arch. plus specific Undergraduate work in Architecture.

MASTERS GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

Year Initiated: 1974 PAB Accredited Degrees Granted through 8/31/08...........................................................405 Degrees Granted from 9/1/07 to 8/31/08 ..................................................13

Hours of Core ...........................................................................................54 Hours of Studio or Practice Related Courses (included in core) .............27 Hours of Restricted Electives ...................................................................24 Hours of Unrestricted Electives ..................................................................6 Total Required Hours in Planning Program: ............................................84 Exam,Thesis or Final Product: .............. Thesis and Comprehensive Exam

Page 262 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

Coordinated Master of Urban Planning & Master of Science in Civil Engineering/Transportation


Contact Person: Phone: Nancy Frank, Chair (414) 229-5372

E-mail: urbanplanning@uwm.edu Year Initiated: 1986 PAB Accredited Degrees Granted through 8/31/08.............................................................11 Degrees Granted from 9/1/07 to 8/31/08 ....................................................1

TOTAL MASTERS STUDENT COMPOSITION 2008-2009 US Citizens & Permanent Total Male Female Residents
Hispanics* Of any Race White African American Native American/ Pacific Islander Asian American Mixed Other / Dont know Non-US Citizens Non- Permanent Residents

0 45 0 0 0 0 0 2 47

0 20 1 0 0 0 0 1 22

0 65 1 0 0 0 0 3

Masters Specializations
Transportation Planning
MASTERS ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS
University Admission Policy: Minimum Undergraduate GPA: Minimum GRE: Minimum TOEFL Ranking in Undergraduate Class: Departmental Requirement: Bachelors degree from an accredited institution Not Required 100 (IBT) Not Required None

MASTERS GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

Hours of Core ...........................................................................................33 Hours of Studio or Practice Related Courses (included in core) ...............9 Hours of Restricted Electives ...................................................................15 Hours of Unrestricted Electives ..................................................................6 Total Required Hours in Planning Program: ............................................54 Exam,Thesis or Final Product: .............. Thesis and Comprehensive Exam

Total Students

69

Coordinated Master in Public Administration & Urban Planning


Contact Person: Phone: E-mail: Nancy Frank, Chair (414) 229-5372 urbanplanning@uwm.edu

*Do not double count Hispanics; Hispanics also appear in the racial categories below.

PLANNING FACULTY
Associate Professor. PhD, Geography and Planning, University of Toronto. Specializations: Sustainability, Urban Development. (414) 229-5323

Chris DeSousa

Year Initiated:1986 PAB Accredited Degrees Granted through 8/31/08...............................................................7 Degrees Granted from 9/1/07 to 8/31/08 ....................................................2

desousa@uwm.edu

Municipal Management, Nonprofit Management


MASTERS ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS
University Admission Policy: Minimum Undergraduate GPA: Minimum GRE: Minimum TOEFL Ranking in Undergraduate Class: Departmental Requirement: Bachelors degree from an accredited institution 2.75 University, 3.0 Departmental Not Required 100 (IBT) Not Required None

Masters Specializations

Adjunct Assistant Professor. MArch and MUP, University of WisconsinMilwaukee. Specializations: Urban Design, Comprehensive Planning. (414) 271-2545 cesswein@pdisite.com AICP

Carolyn Esswein

Nancy Frank

Associate Professor. BS, University of Wisconsin, Madison (1977); MS (1978) and PhD (1982), State University of New York, Albany. Specializations: Environmental Planning, Planning Practice, Planning Theory.

(414) 229-5372

frankn@uwm.edu

MASTERS GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

Hours of Core ..................................................................................... 39-42 Hours of Studio or Practice Related Courses (included in core) ...............9 Hours of Restricted Electives .....................................................................6 Hours of Unrestricted Electives ..................................................................9 Total Required Hours in Planning Program: ...................................... 54-57 Exam,Thesis or Final Product: ............ Capstone & Comprehensive Exam

of Kentucky (1982); JD, Western State University (1985); PhD, Cornell University (1992). Specializations: Citizen Participation, Negotiation and Conflict Management, Planning Law, Politics and Government.

Assistant Professor. BA, Rutgers University (1979); MPA, University

Kirk Harris

(414) 229-5824

drkharris@comcast.net

ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 263

William Huxhold

Professor. BS, Northwestern University (1968); MS, University of Dayton (1973). Specializations: Geographic Information Systems.

FYI
The Master in Urban Planning program focuses on urban development, especially in the context of large cities and their suburbs and larger regional contexts. The program aims to develop the professional skills needed for planning practice, especially critical thinking, communication skills (including consensus-building and negotiation), and preparedness to work in the diverse social context of planning in large, metropolitan areas. In addition to our Masters degree programs and specializations, the department offers an undergraduate Certificate in Urban Planning Studies and an interdisciplinary post-baccalaureate Certificate in Geographic Information Systems. For more information about these programs, please visit the program web page. Our location in the largest city in Wisconsin means that students have excellent access to a rich set of studio and internship experiences. The University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee is an urban research university located less than two miles from downtown and only a few blocks from beautiful Lake Michigan in a quiet neighborhood of homes and small shops. The campus is easily accessible by walking, bike, and public transportation from many areas of the city. Beginning in Fall 2006, graduate student housing will be available in Milwaukee's lively Prospect and North commercial district, an area of eclectic shops, restaurants, nightlife. Our faculty represents diverse backgrounds and expertise. Students in the program comment that the faculty members are outgoing toward students and involved in assuring the success of each of our students. All faculty members are involved in community-based scholarship and teaching. Faculty members are especially well-known for their work in economic development (including entrepreneurship, data infrastructure for local economic development planning, and neighborhood revitalization), GIS, and sustainability. Faculty members are also involved in research on urban politics and planning, participation in planning, and reindustrialization of urban centers. Faculty serve on a wide variety of public and nonprofit boards and committees, including the Wisconsin Brownfields Study Group, the Wisconsin Policy Research Institute, the Public Policy Forum Committee on Wisconsin Water Policy, the Menomonee Valley Partners, Hmong-American Friendship Association, and the Center for Resilient Cities. The faculty in urban planning also founded a charter high school, the School for Urban Planning and Architecture that serves students in the City of Milwaukee promoting community development and social justice.

(414) 229-6954

hux@uwm.edu

Lecturer. BA, University of Wisconsin, Madison. Specializations: Community Development, Housing and Neighborhood Planning, Real Estate Development.

Welford Sanders

(414) 229-2992

welford@uwm.edu

Sammis White

Professor. BA, Williams College; MCRP and PhD, University of Pennsylvania. Specializations: Economic Development Planning, Housing and Neighborhood Planning, Metropolitan/Regional Planning, Planning Practice and Social Policy, Human Services.

(414) 229-6086

sbwhite@uwm.edu

Page 264 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

VIRGINIA COMMONWEALTH UNIVERSITY


Master of Urban and Regional Planning
L. Douglas Wilder School of Government and Public Affairs 923 West Franklin Street, P.O. Box 842028 Richmond, Virginia 23284-2028 Phone (804) 828-2292 Fax (804) 827-1275 http://www.pubapps.vcu.edu/gov I-Shian (Ivan) Suen, Ph.D, Program Coordinator Phone (804) 828-2721 E-mail: isuen@vcu.edu http://www.has.vcu.edu/usp/MURP
University Admission Policy:

MA/MS PAB

ACSP Member: FULL

MASTERS ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS


Minimum Undergraduate GPA: Minimum GRE: Minimum TOEFL Ranking in Undergraduate Class: Departmental Requirement:

Bachelors degree from an accredited institution 2.7 Satisfactory Satisfactory Not Required No Requirements

MASTERS GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

Hours of Core ...........................................................................................21 Hours of Studio or Practice Related Courses .............................................3 Hours of Restricted Electives .....................................................................0 Hours of Unrestricted Electives ................................................................18 Thesis or Final Product ...............................................................................6 Total Required Hours in Planning Program .............................................48 Tuition Awards: Paid Interships (Mandatory for all students) State Tuition Assistantships: Varying Amounts (Full-time students) Wilder Fellowship: Tuition plus stipend (Full-time students) Willey Scholarship $4,000 (2nd Year students) T. Edward Temple Scholarship $900 (2nd Year students) John Marlles Scholarship $500 (Full-time students) Paid Research or Graduate Teaching Assistantships (Project specific)

FINANCIAL AID INFORMATION

PROGRAM INFORMATION
Admission Deadline 2009-10 for Masters Program ...................................... 7/15/10 Financial Aid Deadline 2009-10 for Masters Program .....................................3/1/10 In-State Tuition and Fees 2009-10 ..............................................$4,058 per semester Out-of-State Tuition and Fees 2009-10 ..................................$8,435.50 per semester Application Fee ...................................................................................................... $50 Additional Fees ...............................................................................$949 per semester

GRADUATE DEADLINES, TUITION AND FEES

TOTAL MASTERS STUDENT COMPOSITION 2008-2009 US Citizens & Permanent Residents


Hispanics* Of any Race White African American Native American/ Pacific Islander Asian American Mixed Other / Dont know Non-US Citizens Non- Permanent Residents

Annual Student Enrollment Applied


Masters 72 64

Accepted
58 55

Enrolled
35 34

Male 1 29 5 0 1 0 3 3 42

Female 1 27 5 0 1 0 2 0 36

Total 2 56 10 0 2 0 5 3 78

07/08 08/09 07/08 08/09 07/08 08/09

MASTERS DEGREE
Master of Urban & Regional Planning
Contact: Phone: E-mail: I-Shian (Ivan) Suen, Ph.D, Program Coordinator (804) 828-2721 isuen@vcu.edu

Year Initiated: 1972 PAB Accredited Degrees Granted through 8/31/08...........................................................585 Degrees Granted from 9/1/07 to 8/31/08 ..................................................30

Urban Revitalization, Regional & Metropolitan Planning, Environmental Planning & Sustainability

Master's Specializations

Total Students

*Do not double count Hispanics; Hispanics also appear in the racial categories below.

ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 265

PLANNING FACULTY
John J. Accordino
Associate Professor. BA, University of Rochester (1976); Ph.D., Massachusetts Institute of Technology (1987). Specializations: Economic Development Planning, Commercial District Revitalization, Community Development, European Planning.

OTHER AFFILIATED FACULTY


AICP

Helen-Ruth Aspaas

(804) 827-0525

jaccordi@vcu.edu AICP

Associate Professor. BA, Fort Lewis College (1972); MA, University of Nebraska (1986); Ph.D., University of Colorado, Boulder (1992). Specializations: International Development, Gender Studies, Economic Development.

(804) 828-8086

hraspaas@vcu.edu

Xueming (Jimmy) Chen

Associate Professor. BA, Nanjing University (1982); M.S. Nanjing University (1985); Ph.D University of Southern California (1991). Specializations: Transportation Policy, Planning, Modeling, and GIS.

Kimberly M. Chen

Adjunct Professor. MURP, Virginia Commonwealth University (1989). Specialization: Historic Preservation Planning.

(804) 358-4993

kim@johannasdesign.com

(804) 828-1254

Meghan Gough

Assistant Professor. BS, James Madison University (1997); MURP, Virginia Polytechnic Institute (2003); Ph.D, Ohio State University (2008). Specializations: Planning Theory and Processes, Citizen Participation, Sustainable Development, Regional Cooperation.

Adjunct Professor. MCP University of North Carolina (1996), JD University of North Carolina (1994). Specializations: Land-use Law, Legal Foundations of Planning.

Aubrey W. Fountain, III, Esq.

afountain@HClawfirm.com ASLA

(804) 827-0869

Ralph B. Higgins

Associate Professor. BA (1961) and Ph.D. (1980), University of Pennsylvania; MURP, VIP & SU (1972). Specializations: Urban Design, Urban Revitalization, Physical Planning, Planning Practice.

Morton B. Gulak

AICP/AIA

Adjunct Professor. BLA, University of Georgia (1969). Specializations: Landuse & Site Planning, Landscape Architecture.

(804) 740-7500

higgins@1hg.net

Karl Huber

(804) 827-0778

mbgulak@vcu.edu

Adjunct Professor. BS, Rutgers University (1975); MRP, Penn State University (1979). Specializations: GIS/Spatial Analysis.

Avrum J. Shriar

(804) 371-7484

KLH@der.state.va.us

Associate Professor. BA, Bishops University (1984); MES, Dalhousie University (1984); Ph.D., University of Florida (1999). Specializations: Environmental Planning, Rural Development Policy & Planning.

Gary Johnson

(804) 827-0788

ajshriar@vcu.edu

I-Shian (Ivan) Suen

Professor Emeritus. BS, Northern Michigan University (1972); MUP, Wayne State University (1974); DED, Texas A&M University (1979). Specializations: Community Development, Housing & Neighborhood Planning, Transportation Planning, Land-Use/Growth Management.

(804) 828-0469

gjohnson@mail1.vcu.edu AICP

Associate Professor. MUP, University of Oregon (1988); Ph.D., University of Washington (1998). Specializations: GIS/Spatial Analysis, Planning Methods, Land-Use Planning, eGovernment Services.

Thomas E. Jacobson
(804) 748-1040

(804) 828-2721

isuen@vcu.edu

Adjunct Professor. MURP, University of Minnesota (1971). Specializations: Land-use Planning, Planning Practice

Weiping Wu

jacobsont@chesterfield.gov

Professor. BA (1986) and MUP (1989) Tsinghua University; Ph.D., Rutgers University (1996). Specializations: International Development, International Planning, Migration, Land Use/Growth Management.

Allan Mills

(804) 827-3413

wwu@vcu.edu

Associate Professor. Ph.D (1975) University of Minnesota. Specialization: Tourism Policy and Planning; Urban Forestry.

amills@vcu.edu

Michela Zonta

Keith Ready

Assistant Professor. Laurea (doctorate), University of Milan (1990); MA (1998) and Ph.D. (2003), UCLA. Specializations: Housing & Community Development, Race, Ethnicity & Urban Poverty, GIS/Spatial Analysis, Planning Methods.

Associate Professor. Ph.D. Specialization: Parks and Recreation Planning and Design.

kfready@vcu.edu

(804) 827-0787

mmzonta2@vcu.edu

Ed Simpson

Adjunct Professor. MPA (1977) University of Puget Sound. Specialization: Adaptive Reuse Planning.

Nelson Wikstrom

ewsimpson@vcu.edu

Associate Professor. B.A. Northeastern University; M.A., Ph.D. University of Connecticut. Specialization: Intergovernmental Relations, Urban Politics.

nwikstro@vcu.edu

Page 266 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

VIRGINIA POLYTECHNIC INSTITUTE AND STATE UNIVERSITY


Urban Affairs and Planning
202 Architecture Annex Blacksburg, Virginia 24061 Phone (540) 231-5485 Fax (540) 231-3367 E-mail: uapvt@vt.edu http://www.uap.vt.edu Ted Koebel, Program Chair Phone (540) 231-0412 E-Mail: tkoebel@vt.edu

BA/BS

MA/MS PAB PAB B

Ph.D.

ACSP Member: FULL

Urbanization, Planning & Policy, Public Policy, Public & Nonprofit Management, Environmental Affairs, Global Development
UNDERGRADUATE ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS
Departmental Requirement: 4 yrs. English; 3 yrs. Math; 2 yrs. Soc. Sci. including History; 2 yrs. Science Minimum GPA: Min N/A; avg 3.69 Minimum SAT or ACT Scores: Min N/A; avg 1187

Undergraduate Specializations

UNDERGRADUATE GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

PROGRAM INFORMATION
Adm. Deadline, 2010-2011 ..........................................................................1/15/10 Financial Aid Deadline, 2010-2011 ................................................................3/11/10 Instate Tuition and Fees ....................................................................... $4,302.50/sem Out-of-state Tuition and Fees ............................................................ $10,939.00/sem Application Fee ......................................................................................................$50

UNDERGRADUATE DEADLINES, TUITION AND FEES

Hours of Core .......................................................................................... 39 Hours of Studio Courses ............................................................................ 3 Hours of Restricted Elective .................................................................... 15 Hours of Unrestricted Elective ................................................................ 33 Other ............................................33 (university-required liberal arts core) Total Required Hours In Planning Program .......................................... 120 Thesis or Final Product ............................................................ Not required

BS in Environmental Policy & Planning


Contact Person: Phone: E-mail: Diane Zahm, Undergraduate Programs Coordinator (540) 231-7503 dzahm@vt.edu

Adm. Deadline, 2010-11- Masters...................................................................3/11/10 Adm. Deadline, 2010-11- PhD ........................................................................3/11/10 Financial Aid Deadline, 2010-11-Masters ......................................................1/15/10 Financial Aid Deadline, 2010-11-PhD ...........................................................1/15/10 Instate Tuition and Fees (per semester) ...... $5114.00; $4905.50 (extended campus) Out-of-state tuition and fees (per semester)....$8964.00; $8862.50; (extended campus)

GRADUATE DEADLINES, TUITION AND FEES

FINANCIAL AID INFORMATION

Undergraduate: College Scholarship, University Financial Aid; Varies by Program, available through university financial aid office. Graduate: Approximately 20 teaching and graduate assistantships awarded each year, based on admissions evaluation and match w/research & teaching needs.

Year Initiated:1997 Degrees granted through 5/15/2009 .....................................................155 Degrees granted from 8/30/08-5/15/09...................................................12

UNDERGRADUATE ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS


Departmental Requirement: 4 yrs. English; 3 yrs. Math; 2 yrs. Soc. Sci. including History; 2 yrs. Science Minimum GPA: Min N/A; avg 3.69 Minimum SAT or ACT Scores: Min N/A; avg 1187

Annual Student Enrollment 07/08 08/09


Undergraduate Masters 117 90 143 101

UNDERGRADUATE DEGREE
BA in Public & Urban Affairs
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail: Diane Zahm, Undergraduate Programs Coordinator (540) 231-7503 dzahm@vt.edu

Hours of Core .......................................................................................... 64 Hours of Studio Courses ......................................................................... 3-6 Hours of Restricted Elective ...................................................................... 6 Hours of Unrestricted Elective ................................................................ 23 Other ............................................33 (university-required liberal arts core) Total Required Hours In Planning Program .......................................... 120 Thesis or Final Product ............................................................ Not required

UNDERGRADUATE GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

Year initiated: 1969 Degrees Granted through 05/15/09.........................................................265 Degrees granted from 8/30/08-5/15/09.....................................................29

ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 267

MASTERS DEGREE
Master of Urban & Regional Planning
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail: Ted Koebel, Program Chair (540) 231-0412 tkoebel@vt.edu

MASTERS GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

Hours of Core ..................................................................................... 18-21 Hours of Studio or Practice Related Courses .............................................6 Hours of Restricted Electives ....................................................................... Hours of Unrestricted Electives .......................................................... 21-24 Total Required Hours in Planning Program: 48 Exam,Thesis or Final Product: Practicum, Major Paper, or Thesis

Year Initiated: 1957 PAB Accredited Degrees Granted through 8/31/09...........................................................701 Degrees Granted from 9/1/08 to 8/31/09 ..................................................22

FINANCIAL AID INFORMATION

Internship opportunities, Department awards, University financial aid.

DOCTORAL DEGREE
Planning, Governance, and Globalization
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail: Year Initiated 2007 Two Streams: Urban & Environmental Design & Planning (UEDP) Governance & Globalization (GG) Thematic Areas (concentrations): UEDP (6): Metropolitan Development Community & Economic Development Planning International Development Planning Environmental Planning & Landscape Analysis Transportation Planning Physical Planning & Urban Design GG (2): Governance, Institutions & Civil Society Globalization, Identities, Security, & Economies Gerry Kearns, SPIA director (540) 231-6971 gkearns@vt.edu

Environmental Policy & Planning; Land Use & Physical Development; Housing, Community & Economic Development; International Development
MASTERS ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS
University Admission Policy: Minimum Undergraduate GPA: Minimum GRE: Minimum TOEFL Ranking in Undergraduate Class: Departmental Requirement: Bachelors degree from an accredited institution 3.1 1100 V+Q 550 Not Required None

Masters Specializations

TOTAL MASTERS STUDENT COMPOSITION 2008-2009 US Citizens & Permanent Residents


Hispanics* Of any Race White African American Native American/ Pacific Islander Asian American Mixed Other / Dont know Non-US Citizens Non- Permanent Residents

Male 2 27 4 0 3 0 3 2

Female 1 42 3 0 6 0 1 7

Total 3 69 7 0 9 0 4 9

DOCTORAL ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS


University Admission Policy: Minimum GRE: Minimum TOEFL: Minimum GPA: Departmental Requirement: No Requirements 1150 550 3.0 No Requirements

DOCTORAL GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

All students have a common set of requirements that include: Minimum 90 credit hours Core coursework and research (minimum 42 credits) Theory (3 credits) Methods (6 credits) Pedagogy (3 credits) Research (30 credits) Additional coursework depending on track, thematic, and dissertation area

Total Students

41

60

101

*Do not double count Hispanics; Hispanics also appear in the racial categories below. Page 268 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

PLANNING FACULTY
John Browder
Professor and College Associate Dean. BA, College of Wooster (1974); MPA, American University (1977); MA and Ph.D., University of Pennsylvania (1986). Specializations: International Development Planning, Environmental Ethics & Policy, Planning Practice & Theory. http://www.uap.vt.edu/uapFaculty/browder.html

C. Theodore Koebel

Professor. BS, Xavier University (1969); MCP, University of Cincinnati (1971); Ph.D., Rutgers University (1979). Specializations: Housing, Real Estate, Community Development. http://www.uap.vt.edu/uapFaculty/koebel.html

(540) 231-0412

tkoebel@vt.edu

(540) 231-6217

browder@vt.edu

Robert Lang

Ralph Buehler

Assistant Professor. MS (2002); MS (2003); Ph.D. (2008), Rutgers University. Specializations: Transportation Policy and Planning, Land Use, Energy, and Regional Governance. http://www.nvc.vt.edu/uap/people/rbuehler.html

Professor. Specializations: Demographic & Spatial Analysis, Housing & the Built Environment, Metropolitan Governance & Regulation, Downtown Development/Gentrification. http://www.nvc.vt.edu/uap/faculty_main.asp?sectionid=50&pageid=240& pagename=Robert%20Lang

(703) 706-8101

rlang@vt.edu

(703) 706-8104

ralphbu@vt.edu

Karen Danielson

Assistant Professor. BA (1989); MCRP (1991); Ph.D. (2008) Virginia Tech. Specializations: Housing, Housing Policy, Demographics. http://www.nvc.vt.edu/uap/people/danielsen.html

(703) 706-8108

kadaniel@vt.edu

Assistant Professor. BS, University of Konstanz, Germany (1995); MUS (2000) and Ph.D. (2003), Portland State University. Specializations: Regional Economic Development, Entrepreneurship & Innovation, Community Economic Development, Knowledge-Based Industries. http://www.nvc.vt.edu/uap/faculty_main.asp?sectionid=50&pageid=284& pagename=Heike%20Mayer

Heike Mayer

(703) 706-8122

heikem@vt.edu

Casey Dawkins

Assistant Professor. BS (1995), MCP (1999) and Ph.D. (2003), Georgia Tech. Specializations: Residential Segregation, Growth Management, Urban Inequality, Quantitative Spatial Analysis. http://www.uap.vt.edu/uapFaculty/dawkins.html

John Randolph

(540) 231-2690

dawkins@vt.edu

Professor. BME, University of Minnesota (1969); MS (1972) and Ph.D. (1976), Stanford University. Specializations: Environmental Planning & Policy, Water Resources Planning, Energy Planning & Policy/Renewable Energy, Land Use Planning. http://www.uap.vt.edu/uapFaculty/randolph.html

Ralph Hall

(540) 231-6971

energy@vt.edu

Assistant Professor. MS, Civil & Environmental Engineering (2002), MIT; MS, Technology & Policy (2002), MIT; Ph.D., (2006), MIT. Specializations: Sustainable Development, Transportation, Water/ Sanitation in Developing Countries.

(540) 231-5485

rphall@vt.edu

Sonia Hirt

Associate Professor and Program Chair. BS and MS, Virginia Tech; JD, University of Virginia. Specializations: Environmental Law & Policy, Land Use Law & Policy, Farmland Protection, Local Government Autonomy. http://www.uap.vt.edu/uapFaculty/richardson.html

Jesse Richardson

Assistant Professor. Arch.Dipl., Higher Institute of Architecture & Civil Engineering, Bulgaria (1991); MUP (1995) and Ph.D. (2003), University of Michigan. Specializations: Land Use Policy & Planning, Urban Form, Sustainable Metropolitan Development, Comparative/International Planning. http://www.uap.vt.edu/uapFaculty/hirt.html

(540) 231-7508

jessej@vt.edu

Max O. Stephenson

(540) 231-7509

shirt@vt.edu

Associate Professor. BA (1977), MA (1979) and Ph.D. (1985), University of Virginia. Specializations: Public Administration, Policy Implementation, Nonprofit Organizations & Management. http://www.uap.vt.edu/uapFaculty/stephenson.html

(540) 231-7340

mstephen@vt.edu

Associate Professor. BA, Colgate University (1996); MA, University of Chicago (2000); Ph.D., University of Chicago (2005). Specializations: Urban Politics, Race, Globalization, Neighborhood Poverty, Affordable Housing Finance, and Qualitative Methods.

Derek Hyra

Karen Till

(703)706-8111

derek3@vt.edu

Paul L. Knox

Associate Professor. BA, Analysis & Conservation Ecology(1986); MA, Geography (1991), Ph.D. (1996) University of Wisconsin. Specializations: Wounded Cities, Capital Cities in Transition, Cultural Politics and National Identity, Place Making and Social Memory, Public and Conceptual Urban Art and Architecture, New Urbanism, Qualitative and Feminist Research Methods. http://www.uap.vt.edu/faculty/till.html

Senior Fellow for International Advancement . BA and Ph.D., University of Sheffield, UK. Specializations: Comparative Analysis of Urbanization & Urban Planning, Social Production of the Built Environment, Evolution of the American Urban Medical Care Delivery System. http://www.uap.vt.edu/uapFaculty/knox.html

(540) 231-1109

ktill@vt.edu

(540) 231-1695

knox@vt.edu

ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 269

Kris Wernstedt

Associate Professor. PhD and MA, Cornell, MA, University of Wisconsin. Specializations: Environmental planning, management, and policy, with emphases on contaminated properties and water resources. http://www.nvc.vt.edu/uap/faculty_main.asp?sectionid=50&pageid=308& pagename=Kris%20Wernstedt

OTHER AFFILIATED FACULTY


James R. Bohland
Professor, Senior Fellow for Biomedical, Bioengineering and Health Projects. BA, Western Michigan University; MA and Ph.D., University of Georgia. Specializations: Health Policy & Planning, Population Analysis, Policy Analysis & Program Evaluation, Survey Research Methods. http://www.uap.vt.edu/uapFaculty/bohland.html

(703) 706-8132

krisw@vt.edu

Associate Professor. BS, Allegheny College (1980); MP, University of Virginia (1982); Ph.D., SUNY, Syracuse (1986). Specializations: Crime & Terrorism Prevention/Homeland Security, Environmental Design, Neighborhood Planning, Land Use Planning. http://www.uap.vt.edu/uapFaculty/zahm.html

Diane L. Zahm

(540) 231-5517

jayjon@vt.edu

Shelley Mastran

(540) 231-7503

dzahm@vt.edu

Assistant Professor. BS, Geography (1997) Peking University; MA, Geography (2000) Peking University; Ph.D. Urban and Regional Planning (2006), Texas A&M. Specializations: Urban Land Use Planning, natural Hazards Mitigation, Post Disaster Re-development, and Sustainable Urban Form, Geographic Information Systems. http://www.uap.vt.edu/faculty/zhang.html

Yang Zhang

Visiting Professor. BA, English (1965), Vassar; MA, Geography (1974), George Washington; PhD, Geography (1988), University of Maryland. Specializations: Preservation Planning, Community Planning Projects, Heritage Areas, and Scenic Byway Management Plans. http://www.nvc.vt.edu/uap/people/smastran.html

smastran@vt.edu

Elizabeth Morton

(540) 231-1128

yz@vt.edu

Professor-In-Practice. BA, English and Art History (1985), Williams College; MRP, Urban & Regional Planning (1990), UNC-Chapel Hill; PhD, Urban Planning (2006), MIT. Specializations: Urban Design, Historic Preservation and Cultural Policy and Planning. http://www.nvc.vt.edu/uap/people/emorton.html

(540)706-8111

ElizabethMorton@vt.edu

Assistant Research Professor, Prof. BA, Social Science (1979) San Diego State University; LL.M, Environmental Law (1996), George Washington University; JD, Law (1983), Hastings College. Specializations: Land Use Law, Sustainable Regions Through Better Building and Community Design. http://www.nvc.vt.edu/uap/people/jschilling.html

Joe Schilling

(703)706-8111

jms33@vt.edu

Page 270 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

WAYNE STATE UNIVERSITY


Graduate Program in Urban Planning
3193 Faculty/Administration Building Detroit, Michigan 48202 Phone (313) 577-2701 Fax (313) 577-0022 www.clas.wayne.edu/DUSP/ Robin Boyle, Department Chair Phone: (313) 577-2701 E-mail: r.boyle@wayne.edu

MA/MS PAB

ACSP Member: FULL

Hours of Core ...........................................................................................23 Project Courses ...........................................................................................4 Hours of Restricted Electives .....................................................................0 Hours of Unrestricted Electives .......................................................... 18-13 Thesis ...................................................................................................... 3-8 Total Required Hours in Planning Program .............................................48 Exams or Written Requirements: ............................... Essay (3 cr. hours) or Thesis (8 cr. hours)

MASTERS GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

FINANCIAL AID INFORMATION


Tuition awards: Eligibility criteria:

Internships; Department Awards & Research Assistantships Check w/Department

PROGRAM INFORMATION
Admission Deadline 2009-10 for Masters program ......................Rolling Admission Financial Aid Deadline 2009-10 for Masters program............................ July 1, 2010 In-State Tuition and Fees ........................................ $456.50/credit hour per semester Out-of-State Tuition and Fees.............................. $1,008.15/credit hour per semester Application Fee ......................................................................................................$50 Additional Fees: .....................................$29.20/credit hour; $155.45 registration fee

GRADUATE DEADLINES, TUITION AND FEES

TOTAL MASTERS STUDENT COMPOSITION 2008-2009 US Citizens & Permanent Residents


Hispanics* Of any Race White African American Native American/ Pacific Islander Asian American Mixed Other / Dont know Non-US Citizens Non- Permanent Residents

Annual Student Enrollment Applied


Masters 75 55

Male 1 6 7 1 0 0 3 3

Female 0 13 5 0 0 0 2 1

Total 1 19 12 1 0 0 5 4

Accepted Enrolled
29 33 22 24

04/05 05/06 04/05 05/06 04/05 05/06

MASTERS DEGREE
Master of Urban Planning
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail: (313) 577-2701

Year Initiated: 1959 PAB Accredited Degrees Granted through 05//08.............................................................476 Degrees Granted from 9/1/08 to 8/31/09 ..................................................15

Housing & Community Development, Urban & Regional Economic Development, Managing Metropolitan Growth
MASTERS ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS
University Admission Policy: Minimum Undergraduate GPA: Minimum GRE: Minimum TOEFL Ranking in Undergraduate Class: Departmental Requirement: statement

Masters Specializations

Total Students

21

21

42

No Requirements 2.6 (Univ.)/2.8 (Dept.) None Required 550 Not Required 2 letters of recommendation; personal

*Do not double count Hispanics; Hispanics also appear in the racial categories below.

ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 271

PLANNING FACULTY
Professor/Department Chair. Diploma in Planning, Glasgow School of Art (1973); MS, University of Reading (1974). Specializations: Economic Development, Land Use/Growth Management, Housing & Neighborhood Planning, Real Estate Development. www.clas.wayne.edu/faculty/

OTHER AFFILIATED FACULTY


Robert Sinclair
Emeritus Professor. BA, Wayne State University; MA and Ph.D., Northwestern University. Specializations: International Development & Planning, Political Economy. www.clas.wayne.edu/faculty/profiles/sinclair_robert.htm

Robin Boyle

(313) 577-8711

r.boyle@wayne.edu

(313) 577-0542

r.sinclair@wayne.edu

Lei Ding

Paul Vigeant

Assistant Professor. BS (1997) and MS (2000) Tsinghua University, PhD (2005) George Mason University. Specializations: Housing and Public Policy, Regional Economic Development, Public Policy and Policy Analysis, Statistical and Spatial Modeling www.clas.wayne.edu/faculty

Lecturer. BA, Clark University; (1962); Arch. & Design, University of Detroit (1966); MA, Wayne State University (1969). Specializations: Planning Practice, Physical Planning/Urban Design, Metropolitan/Regional Planning. www.clas.wayne.edu/dusp/faculty

(313) 577-0543

eg5182@wayne.edu

(313) 577-0539

ad6795@wayne.edu

George Galster

Daryl LaFlamme

Professor. BA, Wittenberg University (1970); BS, Case Western Reserve University (1971); Ph.D., Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Specializations: Housing & Neighborhood Planning, Race/Ethnicity & Planning, Quantitative Methods, Urban & Regional Economics, Impact Assessment. www.clas.wayne.edu/faculty/

Adjunct Professor. BS, Ball State University (1990); MA, Indiana State University (1995). Specializations: Demography, GIS. www.clas.wayne.edu/dusp/faculty/

(313) 577-2701

daryl.laflamme@jwt.com

(313) 577-9084

ar3571@wayne.edu

Carolyn G. Loh

Assistant Professor. BA 2001 and MUP 2002 and Ph.D. 2008, University of Michigan. Specializations: Land Use, Growth Management, Planning Methods, GIS www.clas.wayne.edu/faculty/

Lecturer. BA, Adrian College (1984); MUP, Wayne State University (1993). Specializations: Metropolitan and Regional Planning, Politics and Governance, Economic Development. www.clas.wayne.edu/dusp/faculty/

Jeffrey Horner

(313) 577-0194

jeffreyhorner@wayne.edu

(313) 577-0541

cgloh@wayne.edu

Benjamin Tallerico

Rayman Mohamed

Assistant Professor. BS, University of Guyana (1991); MS, University of South Florida (1996); Ph.D., Cornell University (2003). Specializations: Environmental Planning, GIS, Land Use/Growth Management, Quantitative Methods, Metropolitan/Regional Planning. www.clas.wayne.edu/faculty/

Adjunct Professor. BSBA, Lawrence Technical University; MUP and MA Wayne State University. Specializations: Planning Practice, Planning Methods. www.clas.wayne.edu/faculty/

(313) 577-2701

Ab9405@wayne.edu

(313) 577-3356

ar7661@wayne.edu

FYI

Kameshwari Pothukuchi

Associate Professor. B.Arch., University of Bombay (1987); MUP (1990), M.Arch. (1991) and Ph.D. (1995), University of Michigan. Specializations: Citizen Participation/Community Organization, Gender Studies & Planning, Planning Theory, Physical Planning/Urban Design, Community Development. www.clas.wayne.edu/faculty/

(313) 577-4296

k.pothukuchi@wayne.edu FAICP

Avis C. Vidal

Professor. AB, University of Chicago (1967); MCP (1973) and Ph.D. (1982), Harvard University. Specializations: Community Development, Housing & Neighborhood Planning, Economic Development, Real Estate Development, Citizen Participation/Community Organization. www.clas.wayne.edu/faculty/

(313) 577-8842

a.vidal@wayne.edu

Page 272 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

WESTERN MICHIGAN UNIVERSITY


Department of Geography
3244 Wood Hall, Kalamazoo, Michigan 49008 Phone (269) 387-3410 Fax: (269) 387-3442 http://www.wmich.edu/geography Dr. Benjamin Ofori-Amoah, Department Chair Phone: (269) 387-3424 E-mail: ben.ofori@wmich.edu

BS/BA/MA

ACSP Member: AFFILIATE

UNDERGRADUATE ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS


Departmental Requirement: Minimum GPA: Minimum SAT or ACT Scores: None 3.3 GPA 22 ACT

Hours of Core ...........................................................................................20 Hours of Restricted Elective .....................................................................12 Hours of Unrestricted Elective ...................................................................8 Total Required Hours in Planning Program .............................................32 Total Required Hours to Graduate from University ...............................122 Thesis or Final Product ............................................................ Not required Additional Requirement ................................................... .min GPA of 2.0

UNDERGRADUATE GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

PROGRAM INFORMATION
Admission Deadline .................. Fall Semester March 31, Spring Semester Sept. 30 Financial Aid Deadline ...................................................... Feb. 15 for following Fall In-State Tuition and Fees: ............................................................ $3610 per semester Out-of-State Tuition and Fees: .................................................... $8856 per semester Enrollment Fee:....................................................................................................$333 Application Fee: .....................................................................................................$35

FINANCIAL AID INFORMATION


Call (269) 387-6000

UNDERGRADUATE DEADLINES, TUITION AND FEES

MASTERS DEGREE
Master in Geography with Community Development and Planning Concentration
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail: Benjamin Ofori-Amoah, Chair (269) 387-3424 ben.ofori@wmich.edu

GRADUATE DEADLINES, TUITION AND FEES

Admission Deadline .......... Fall Semester March 31, Spring Semester September 30 Financial Aid Deadline ............................................................................ February 28 In-State Tuition: ..................................................................... $378.88 per credit hour Out-of-State Tuition: .............................................................. $601.15 per credit hour Enrollment Fee:....................................................................................................$333 Application Fee: .....................................................................................................$40

Year Initiated: 1962 Degrees Granted (in concentration) through 2007 .................................135 Degrees Granted from 9/1/07 to 8/31/06 ....................................................7

Annual Student Enrollment Applied


Undergraduate Masters N/A 17

Accepted Enrolled
N/A N/A N/A 12 7 6

07/08 07/08 07/08 07/08 07/08 07/08

N/A N/A 14 14

Land Use Planning, Geographic Information Systems, Community and Economic Development, Environmental Planning, Small Town Planning, International Planning
MASTERS ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS
University Admission Policy: Minimum Undergraduate GPA: Minimum GRE: Minimum TOEFL: Departmental Requirement: Bachelors degree from an accredited institution None Departmental: 1000 Verbal & Quantitative 500 PBT, 173 - 213 CBT or 61 80 iBT Combined Verbal and Quant GRE of 1000; lower scores admitted with deficiencies.

Masters Specializations

UNDERGRADUATE DEGREE
BS in Geography with Urban and Regional Planning Specialization
Contact Person: Phone: E-mail: Benjamin Ofori-Amoah, Chair (269) 387-3424 ben.ofori@wmich.edu

Year Initiated: 1905 Degrees Granted 2002 through 8/31/08 ...................................................29 Degrees Granted from 9/1/07 to 8/31/06 ....................................................7

MASTERS GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

Land Use Planning, Geographic Information Systems, Community and Economic Development

Undergraduate Specializations

Hours of Core ...........................................................................................10 Hours of Planning Courses .......................................................................12 Hours of Research.......................................................................................6 Hours of Unrestricted Electives ..................................................................2 Other Experiential .......................................................................................6 Total Required Hours in Planning Program .............................................36 Exam, Thesis or Research Paper ..................................................Required.

ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition | Page 273

Teaching/Research Assistantship: About 15 awarded each year. These include stipend, tuition and fees. Eligibility criteria: Merit

FINANCIAL AID INFORMATION

Jordan Yin

Assistant Professor. M.R.P., Cornell University (1994); Ph.D. Cornell University (2001). Specializations: Community Development, Housing and Neighborhood Planning, Land Use Planning.

AICP

TOTAL MASTERS STUDENT COMPOSITION 2008-2009 US Citizens & Permanent Residents


Hispanics* Of any Race White African American Native American/ Pacific Islander Asian American Mixed Other / Dont know Non-US Citizens Non- Permanent Residents

(269) 387-3484

jordan.yin@wmich.edu

OTHER AFFILIATED FACULTY


Kathleen Baker
Assistant Professor. Ph.D., Michigan State University (2002). Specializations: GIS, Physical Geography.

Male 0 10 0 0 0 0 0 1

Female 0 8 0 0 0 0 0 1

Total 0 18 0 0 0 0 0 2

Charles Emerson

Associate Professor. Ph.D., University of Iowa (1996). Specializations: GIS.

Assistant Professor. Ph.D., University of Kansas (2007). Specializations: Human Geography, Tourism Planning.

Lucius Hallet IV

FYI
Western Michigan University is located in Kalamazoo, Michigan, a mid-sized metropolitan area in Southwest Michigan. Less than one hour from the sandy shores of Lake Michigan, Kalamazoo is located halfway between Detroit and Chicago, and easily accessible by highway, Amtrak, or air via the Kalamazoo / Battle Creek International Airport (AZO). The Kalamazoo area is known as a cosmopolitan region that is home to an innovation economy, a thriving arts and cultural scene, and other educational assets, including Kalamazoo College and the Kalamazoo Promise (a nationally renowned program that offers full college scholarships to graduates of the Kalamazoo Public Schools). Western Michigan University is a major state-supported research university with more than 24,000 students and 900 full-time faculty. WMU is one of 76 upper-tier public institutions nationally recognized as a Research University by the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching. Since 1999, WMU has been named every year by US News and World Report as one of the Best National Universities. The Department of Geography at WMU was founded in 1905 and offers programs at both the undergraduate and graduate level. The Department is home to an outstanding array of resources including frequently-updated computing facilities, award-winning student organizations, and the W.E. Upjohn Center for the Study of Geographical Change. The Department has offered studies in planning for more than 30 years and has a successful record of placing students in professional positions and graduate or doctoral programs.

Total Students

11

20

*Do not double count Hispanics; Hispanics also appear in the racial categories below.

PLANNING FACULTY
David Lemberg
Associate Professor. M.R.P., University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill (1983); Ph.D., University of California, Santa Barbara (1998). Specializations: Community and Regional Development Planning, GIS.

AICP

(269) 387-3410

david.lemberg@wmich.edu

Benjamin Ofori-Amoah

Professor and Chair. Ph.D., Simon Fraser University (1990). Specializations: Economic Geography, Economic Development, Regional Development Planning, GIS, International Planning.

(269) 387-3415

ben.ofori@wmich.edu

Li Yang

Assistant Professor. Ph.D., University of Waterloo (2007). Specializations: Tourism Planning, International Planning.

(269) 387-3415

li.1.yang@wmich.edu

Page 274 | ACSP Urban & Regional Planning Guide - 15th Edition

APPENDIX A Faculty by Specialization


Advocacy, Ethics, Equity, and Social Policy Planning
Acey, Charisma; Ohio State University Ashton, Philip; University of Illinois at Chicago Awwad-Rafferty, Rula; University of Idaho Bame, Sherry; Texas A&M University Baum, Howell S.; University of Maryland, College Park Beard, Victoria; University of California, Irvine Beneria, Lourdes; Cornell University Betaneur, John; University of Illinois at Chicago Blumenberg, Evelyn; University of California, Los Angeles Born, Branden; University of Washington Briggs, Xavier de Souza; Massachusetts Institute of Technology Brinkman, P. Anthony; University of Nevada Brock, Nailah; Savannah State University Browder, John; Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University Chapple, Karen; University of California Berkeley Connerly, Charles E.; University of Iowa Covington, Kenya; California State University, Northridge Dawkins, Casey; Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University Eisinger, Peter; The New School Ellen, Ingrid Gould; New York University Erkins, Esther; University of Cincinnati Feldman, David L.; University of California, Irvine Fisher, Peter S.; University of Iowa Foley, Dolores; University of Hawaii Forester, John; Cornell University Forsyth, Ann; Cornell University Gibson, Karen; Portland State University Gladstone, David; University of New Orleans Gonzalez-Rivas, Marcela; Cornell University Haddad, Monica A.; Iowa State University Hamilton, Darrick; The New School Harwood, Stacy; University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Heumann, Leonard F.; University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Houston, Douglas; University of California, Irvine Howell, David; The New School Huntoon, Laura; University of Arizona Hyra, Derek; Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University Jaganathan, Radha; Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey Jennings,James; Tufts University Jojola, Theodore; University of New Mexico Keeble, Ronald; Ryerson University Kosny, Mitchell; Ryerson University Krimsky, Sheldon; Tufts University Lake, Robert W.; Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey Leavitt, Jacqueline; University of California, Los Angeles Murray, Sylvester; Savannah State University Rajagopal, Balakrishnan; Massachusetts Institute of Technology Rea, Louis M.; San Diego State University Rein, Martin; Massachusetts Institute of Technology Rukmana, Deden; Savannah State University Sanger, M. Bryna; The New School Schlossberg, Marc; University of Oregon Servon, Lisa J.; The New School Sloane, David; University of Southern California Smith, Sheri; Kansas State University Springer, Joseph H.; Ryerson University Takahashi, Lois; University of California, Los Angeles Tewari, Meenu; University of North Carolina Thomas, June Manning; University of Michigan Till, Karen; Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University Tilly, Chris; University of California, Los Angeles Torres, Rodolfo; University of California, Irvine Verma, Niraj; University at Buffalo, The State University of New York Vos, Jaap; Florida Atlantic University White, Sammis; University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee Wilson, Constance; Alabama A&M University Winkle, Curtis; University of Illinois at Chicago

Agricultural Land Control


Glenn, Jane; McGill University

Analytical, Quantitative, Research Methods and Technology


Alam, Bhuiyan; University of Toledo Al-Kodmany, Kheir; University of Illinois at Chicago Altshuler, Alan; Harvard University Anjomani, Ardeshir; University of Texas, Arlington Antoninetti, Maurizio; San Diego State University Bae, Christine; University of Washington Balinsky, Warren; The New School Bame, Sherry; Texas A&M University Banai, Reza; University of Memphis Bejleri, Ilir; University of Florida Bossard, Earl G.; San Jos State University Brail, Richard K.; Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey Brody, Jason; Kansas State University Brooks, Nancy; Cornell University Brown, Jeffrey; Florida State University Bunnell, Gene; State University of New York at Albany Campbell, Scott D.; University of Michigan Chapin, Timothy; Florida State University Chen, Alexander; University of Maryland, College Park Clapp, Tara Lynne; Iowa State University Clark, Thomas, University of Colorado, Denver

A- 1

Clay, Michael; Auburn University Colgan, Charles S.; University of Southern Maine Cummings, Scott; Saint Louis University Dawkins, Casey; Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University Deyle, Robert; Florida State University Ding, Lei; Wayne State University Drucker, Joshua; University of Illinois at Chicago Drummond, William J.; Georgia Institute of Technology Dunning, Anne E.; Clemson University Esnard, Ann-Margaret; Florida Atlantic University Estrada, Leobardo; University of California, Los Angeles Etienne, Harley F.; Georgia Institute of Technology Fan, Peilei; Michigan State University Feldman, Martha; University of California, Irvine Forsyth, Ann; Cornell University French, Steven P.; Georgia Institute of Technology Gaber, John; Auburn University Galster, George; Wayne State University Goemen, Asli; University of Wisconsin-Madison Gooding, Earl N. M.; Alabama A&M University Guldmann, Jean-Michel; Ohio State University Harwood, Stacy; University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Hayter, Jason Alexander; University of Arizona Hinojosa, Ren C.; Michigan State University Howard, Jeff; University of Texas, Arlington Huntoon, Laura; University of Arizona Hyra, Derek; Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University Isserman, Andrew; University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Jutla, Rajinder; Missouri State University Kaufman, Sanda; Cleveland State University Kawamura, Kazuya; University of Illinois at Chicago Keithley, C.A.; Kansas State University Krieger, Martin H.; University of Southern California LaPlante, Josephine; University of Southern Maine Lauria, Mickey; Clemson University Lawrence, Patrick; University of Toledo Lawson, Catherine T.; State University of New York at Albany Lee, Yuk; University of Colorado, Denver Lewis, David; Cornell University Liggett, Robin; University of California, Los Angeles Lindell, Michael K.; Texas A&M University London, James B.; Clemson University Lowry, Kem; University of Hawaii Mazumdar, Sanjoy; University of California, Irvine McDaniels, Timothy; University of British Columbia McDowell, Cesar; Massachusetts Institute of Technology Meltzer, Rachel; The New School Mikelbank, Brian; Cleveland State University Milczarski, William; Hunter College of CUNY Mohamed, Rayman; Wayne State University Morales, Alfonso; University of Wisconsin-Madison Morrow-Jones, Hazel; Ohio State University Moss, Mitchell; New York University

Moudon, Anne Vernez; University of Washington Mugerauer, Robert; University of Washington Nocks, Barry C.; Clemson University Noland, Robert B.; Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey Norton, Richard; University of Michigan Nuworsoo, Cornelius; California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo Oretsky, Nicole; Savannah State University Page, G. William; University at Buffalo, The State University of New York Park, JiYoung; University at Buffalo, The State University of New York Parker, Brenda; University of Illinois at Chicago Patten, Iris; University of Arizona Paulsen, Kurt G.; University of Wisconsin-Madison Peacock, Walter G.; Texas A&M University Phillips, David L.; University of Virginia Pinel, Sandra; University of Idaho von Rabenau, Burkhardl Ohio State University Radke, John; University of California Berkeley Raja, Samina; University at Buffalo, The State University of New York Rankin, Katharine; University of Toronto Rogers, George O.; Texas A&M University Rukmana, Deden; Savannah State University Sancar, Fahriye; University of Colorado, Denver Sanyal, Nick; University of Idaho Schoen, David A.; Ball State University Shatkin, Gavin; University of Michigan Shen, Guoqiang, University of Oklahoma Shen, Qing; University of Washington Silverman, Robert M.; University at Buffalo, The State University of New York Smith, Sheri; Kansas State University Srinivas, Smita; Columbia University Suarez-Villa, Luis; University of California, Irvine Sweet, Elizabeth L.; University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Thakuriah, Piyushimita; University of Illinois at Chicago Till, Karen; Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University Toker, Umut; California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo Toker, Zeynep; California State University, Northridge Tomey, E. Allan; Saint Louis University Vale, Lawrence J.; Massachusetts Institute of Technology vom Hofe, Rainer; University of Cincinnati Viton, Phillip A.; Ohio State University Wilson, Mark I.; Michigan State University Yang, Jiawen; Georgia Institute of Technology Zhang, Sumei; University of Louisville Zwick, Paul; University of Florida

Architectural Design
Chusid, Jeffrey; Cornell University Dearborn, Lynn; University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign McClure, Wendy; University of Idaho Polakit, Kasama; Florida Atlantic University Shibley, Robert G.; University at Buffalo, The State University of New York

A-2

Swallow, Joy; University of Missouri-Kansas City

Shrestha, Manoj; University of Idaho Silverman, Robert M.; University at Buffalo, The State University of New York Stephenson, Max O.; Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University Sweeney, Donald A.; Texas A&M University Takahashi, Lois; University of California, Los Angeles Thompson, J. Phillip; Massachusetts Institute of Technology Toker, Zeynep; California State University, Northridge Umemoto, Karen; University of Hawaii Van Vliet, Willem; University of Colorado, Denver Vidal, Avis C.; Wayne State University Wilder, Margaret; University of Delaware Wilson, Constance; Alabama A&M University Wong, Sidney; Morgan State University Wridt, Pamela; University of Colorado, Denver

Arts and Cultural Planning


Currid, Elizabeth; University of Southern California Markusen, Ann R.; University of Minnesota Warren, Robert; University of Delaware

Cartographic Design / Cartography


Kent, Robert B.; California State University, Northridge Kessler, Fritz; Frostburg State University

Citizen Participation/Community Organization, Education Policy, School, Youth Planning


Akers, Mary Anne Alabanza; Morgan State University Bates, Lisa K.; Portland State University Beard, Victoria; University of California, Irvine Chawla, Louise, University of Colorado, Denver Chin, John; Hunter College of CUNY Christensen, Karen; University of California Berkeley Ehrenfeucht, Renia; University of New Orleans Erkins, Esther; University of Cincinnati Esswein, Carolyn; University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee Foley, Dolores; University of Hawaii Frank, Kathryn; University of Florida Geiger, Shirley; Savannah State University Gershberg, Alec Ian; The New School Gills, Douglas; University of Illinois at Chicago Gough, Meghan; Virginia Commonwealth University Gross, Jill; Hunter College of CUNY Gurstein, Penelope; University of British Columbia Haughey, Patrick; University of New Orleans Howard, Zeljka Pavolich; California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo Hoyt, Lorlene; Massachusetts Institute of Technology Innes, Judith; University of California Berkeley Jones, Mittie Davis; Cleveland State University Kasprisin, Ron; University of Washington Keyes, Langley; Massachusetts Institute of Technology Kudva, Neema; Cornell University Laninga, Tamara; University of Idaho Lowe, Jeffrey S.; Florida State University McClure, Wendy; University of Idaho McDowell, Cesar; Massachusetts Institute of Technology Moomaw, Suzanne Morse; University of Virginia Musso, Juliet; University of Southern California Nanetti, Raffaella; University of Illinois at Chicago Parker, Brenda; University of Illinois at Chicago Pothukuchi, Kameshwari; Wayne State University Reardon, Ken; University of Memphis Salazar, Dayana M.; San Jos State University Santo, Charles; University of Memphis Seidel, Andrew; Texas A&M University Shipp, Sigmund; Hunter College of CUNY

Citizen Participation, Environmental and Geographic Education


Agyeman, Julian; Tufts University Bosselmann, Peter; University of California Berkeley Brody, Samuel; Texas A&M University Carmin, JoAnn; Massachusetts Institute of Technology Coates, Paul; Iowa State University Conroy, Maria Manta; Ohio State University Genskow, Kenneth D.; University of Wisconsin-Madison Hawley, R. Dawn; Northern Arizona University Kaufman, Sanda; Cleveland State University Kellogg, Wendy A.; Cleveland State University Laurian, Lucie; University of Iowa Lee, Joseph A.; Alabama A&M University Lowry, Michael; University of Idaho Margerum, Richard; University of Oregon May, Diane; Missouri State University Neuman, Michael C.; Texas A&M University Outland, Donald; Alabama A&M University Ozawa, Connie P.; Portland State University Prosperi, David; Florida Atlantic University Robinson, Pamela; Ryerson University Salo, Ken; University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Sanyal, Nick; University of Idaho Silva, Enrique R; Boston University Simpson, David M.; University of Louisville White, Stacey S.; University of Kansas Wolch, Jennifer; University of California Berkeley Zapata, Marisa; University of Cincinnati

Commercial & Industrial Planning


Accordino, John J.; Virginia Commonwealth University Amsden, Alice; Massachusetts Institute of Technology Bright, Elise; Texas A&M University Deringer, Nancy; University of Idaho Dewar, Margaret E.; University of Michigan Frenchman, Dennis; Massachusetts Institute of Technology

A- 3

Kotval, Zenia Z.; Michigan State University McMillen, Daniel; University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Nixon, Hilary; San Jos State University Soja, Edward; University of California, Los Angeles Wadley, David; University of Queensland

Grodach, Carl; University of Texas, Arlington Gross, Jill; Hunter College of CUNY Guerra, Fred; University of Akron Hammel, Daniel J.; University of Toledo Hanhardt, Eva; Pratt Institute Hanna, William; University of Maryland, College Park Haughey, Patrick; University of New Orleans Herzog, Lawrence; San Diego State University Heumann, Leonard F.; University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Hibbard, Michael; University of Oregon Hillier, Amy; University of Pennsylvania Howe, Deborah; Temple University Huang, Chang-Shan; Texas A&M University Immergluck, Daniel; Georgia Institute of Technology Innes, Judith; University of California Berkeley Isaac, Claudia B.; University of New Mexico Jennings,James; Tufts University Jojola, Theodore; University of New Mexico Jones, Mittie Davis; Cleveland State University Keating, W. Dennis; Cleveland State University Keyes, Langley; Massachusetts Institute of Technology Kim, Joochul; Arizona State University Kotval, Zenia Z.; Michigan State University Krumholz, Norm; Cleveland State University Kudva, Neema; Cornell University Lake, Robert W.; Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey LaMore, Rex L.; Michigan State University Lapping, Mark; University of Southern Maine Leavitt, Jacqueline; University of California, Los Angeles Lee, Joseph A.; Alabama A&M University Lewis, Ferdinand.; University at Buffalo, The State University of New York Lutzenhiser, Loren; Portland State University Main, Kelly; California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo Mayer, Heike; Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University McClure, Kirk; University of Kansas McCormick, Lynn; Hunter College of CUNY McMullen, John; Frostburg State University Meiklejohn, Susan Turner; Hunter College of CUNY Minerbi, Luciano; University of Hawaii Moomaw, Suzanne Morse; University of Virginia Morales, Alfonso; University of Wisconsin-Madison Nanetti, Raffaella; University of Illinois at Chicago Ndubisi, Forster; Texas A&M University Nelson, Marla; University of New Orleans Nettleton, John; Cornell University Newman, Kathe; Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey Olson, C. Brad; Cornell University Oretsky, Nicole; Savannah State University Owusu, Francis Y.; Iowa State University Paulsen, Kurt G.; University of Wisconsin-Madison Peuquet, Steven; University of Delaware Pinel, Sandra; University of Idaho Pothukuchi, Kameshwari; Wayne State University

Community and Economic Development


Abbott, Carl; Portland State University Accordino, John J.; Virginia Commonwealth University Adler, Sy; Portland State University Altrows, Lawrence; Ryerson University Angeles, Leonora; University of British Columbia Angotti, Thomas; Hunter College of CUNY Arefi, Mahyar; University of Cincinnati Assaad, Ragui A.; University of Minnesota Bae, Christine; University of Washington Baum, Howell S.; University of Maryland, College Park Begg, Robert B.; Indiana University of Pennsylvania Betaneur, John; University of Illinois at Chicago Betts, Phyllis; University of Memphis Birch, Eugenie L.; University of Pennsylvania Borich, Timothy O.; Iowa State University Botchwey, Nisha; University of Virginia Bradbury, Susan L.; Iowa State University Bratt, Rachel G.; Tufts University Bromley, Ray; State University of New York at Albany Calzonetti, Frank; University of Toledo Campo, Daniel; Morgan State University Chen, Alexander; University of Maryland, College Park Christensen, Karen; University of California Berkeley Clay, Phillip; Massachusetts Institute of Technology Coffin, Sara; Saint Louis University Connerly, Charles E.; University of Iowa Crdova, Teresa L.; University of New Mexico Cunningham, M. Grant; Clemson University Dearborn, Lynn; University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign DeFilippis, James; Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey Dewar, Margaret E.; University of Michigan Dobbins, Michael A.; Georgia Institute of Technology Ellen, Ingrid Gould; New York University Foley, Dolores; University of Hawaii Frankel, Bruce W; Ball State University Frisch, Michael; University of Missouri-Kansas City Fritz, Jan Marie; University of Cincinnati Gaber, John; Auburn University Geiger, Shirley; Savannah State University Gibson, Karen; Portland State University Gills, Douglas; University of Illinois at Chicago Glenn, Ezra Haber; Massachusetts Institute of Technology Goetz, Edward G.; University of Minnesota Goldman, Laurie; Tufts University Gordon, Peter; University of Southern California Grengs, Joseph; University of Michigan

A-4

Powers, Laura Wolf; University of Pennsylvania Price, Alfred D.; University at Buffalo, The State University of New York Prosperi, David; Florida Atlantic University Quercia, Roberto; University of North Carolina Raja, Samina; University at Buffalo, The State University of New York Ramasubramanian, Laxmi; Hunter College of CUNY Reardon, Ken; University of Memphis Richardson, James R.; University of New Mexico Rivera, Jse A.; University of New Mexico Rohe, William; University of North Carolina Rubenstein, James M.; Miami University Rubin, Julia Sass; Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey Rukmana, Deden; Savannah State University Sanders, Welford; University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee Sawicki, David S.; Georgia Institute of Technology Scally, Corianne P.; State University of New York at Albany Seidel, Andrew; Texas A&M University Seltzer, Ethan P.; Portland State University Serda, Daniel; University of Kansas Servon, Lisa J.; The New School Shandas, Vivek; Portland State University Shatkin, Gavin; University of Michigan Shetty, Sujata; University of Toledo Shiffman, Ronald; Pratt Institute Shipp, Sigmund; Hunter College of CUNY Siemiatycki, Matti; University of Toronto Silver, Christopher; University of Florida Silverman, Robert M.; University at Buffalo, The State University of New York Smith, Janet; University of Illinois at Chicago Smith, Sheri; Kansas State University Smith, Sheri; Texas Southern University Solitare, Laura; Texas Southern University Spencer, James; University of Hawaii Suarez-Villa, Luis; University of California, Irvine Sweet, Elizabeth L.; University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Taylor, Jr, Henry Louis; University at Buffalo, The State University of New York Thompson, Michelle M.; University of New Orleans Tilly, Chris; University of California, Los Angeles Triantafillou, Menelaos; University of Cincinnati Umemoto, Karen; University of Hawaii Van Zandt, Shannon; Texas A&M University Varady, David P.; University of Cincinnati Vidal, Avis C.; Wayne State University Vitiello, Domenic; University of Pennsylvania Wagner, Jacob; University of Missouri-Kansas City Wah, Tatiana; The New School Warner, Mildred; Cornell University Watson, Philip; University of Idaho Weiner, Vicki; Pratt Institute Wigfall, La Barbara; Kansas State University Wilder, Margaret; University of Delaware

Wilson, Constance; Alabama A&M University Winchell, Dick; Eastern Washington University Winkle, Curtis; University of Illinois at Chicago Wong, Sidney; Morgan State University Wridt, Pamela; University of Colorado, Denver Yabes, Ruth; Arizona State University Yonder, Ayse; Pratt Institute Zimmer, Richard J.; California State Polytechnic University, Pomona

Comparative Planning
Abramson, Daniel; University of Washington Bullamore, Henry W.; Frostburg State University Burayidi, Michael; Ball State University Campbell, Scott D.; University of Michigan Campo, Daniel; Morgan State University Carroll, Walter F.; Boston University Fainstein, Susan; Harvard University Hirt, Sonia; Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University Howell, David; The New School Leaf, Michael; University of British Columbia Minerbi, Luciano; University of Hawaii Morrison, Tiffany; University of Queensland Murray, Sylvester; Savannah State University Norton, Richard; University of Michigan Rankin, Katharine; University of Toronto Rein, Martin; Massachusetts Institute of Technology Silva, Enrique R; Boston University Silver, Christopher; University of Florida Zovanyi, Gabor; Eastern Washington University

Computer Applications
Bossard, Earl G.; San Jos State University Czajkowski, Kevin P.; University of Toledo Deal, Brian; University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Drummond, William J.; Georgia Institute of Technology French, Steven P.; Georgia Institute of Technology Guhathakurta, Subhrajit; Arizona State University Hanley, Paul; University of Iowa Jojola, Theodore; University of New Mexico Kaufman, Sanda; Cleveland State University Keithley, C.A.; Kansas State University Knox, Paul L.; Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University Liggett, Robin; University of California, Los Angeles Lindquist Peter S.; University of Toledo Phillips, David L.; University of Virginia Salazar, Dayana M.; San Jos State University Seidel, Andrew; Texas A&M University

Conservation and Resource Management


Bassett, Scott; University of Nevada Merrill, Sam; University of Southern Maine Precht, Francis; Frostburg State University Sanyal, Nick; University of Idaho

A- 5

Wilson, Patrick; University of Idaho Zellner, Moira; University of Illinois at Chicago

Dezzani, Raymond; University of Idaho Fan, Peilei; Michigan State University Ferreira, Jr, Joseph; Massachusetts Institute of Technology Funderburg, Richard G.; University of Iowa Houston, Douglas; University of California, Irvine Kent, Robert B.; California State University, Northridge Kim, Annette; Massachusetts Institute of Technology Kwok, Reg; University of Hawaii Lee, Bumsoo; University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Lee, Sugie; Cleveland State University Lee, Yuk; University of Colorado, Denver McMillen, Daniel; University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Miller, Donald; University of Washington Paulsen, Kurt G.; University of Wisconsin-Madison Perry, David; University of Illinois at Chicago Rodriguez, Daniel; University of North Carolina Romanos, Michael C.; University of Cincinnati Searle, Glen; University of Queensland Soja, Edward; University of California, Los Angeles Song, Yan; University of North Carolina Sperry, Stephen L.; Clemson University Sutton, Stacey; Columbia University Tomlan, Michael; Cornell University Wilson, Bev; University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

Cultural Geography and Ethnic Enclaves


Agrawal, Sandeep Kumar; Ryerson University Awwad-Rafferty, Rula; University of Idaho Betaneur, John; University of Illinois at Chicago Bollens, Scott; University of California, Irvine Briggs, Xavier de Souza; Massachusetts Institute of Technology Campo, Daniel; Morgan State University Chalana, Manish; University of Washington Chusid, Jeffrey; Cornell University Frenchman, Dennis; Massachusetts Institute of Technology Gibson, Karen; Portland State University Gonzalez-Rivas, Marcela; Cornell University Grodach, Carl; University of Texas, Arlington Irazabal, Clara; Columbia University Kwong, Peter; Hunter College of CUNY Lai, Clement; Cornell University Main, Kelly; California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo Mazumdar, Sanjoy; University of California, Irvine Mugerauer, Robert; University of Washington ORegan, Katherine; New York University Ong, Paul; University of California, Los Angeles Perera, M.C. Nihal; Ball State University Sen, Siddhartha; Morgan State University Theken, Patrice; University of Akron Till, Karen; Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University Wilson, Constance; Alabama A&M University Zhuang, Zhixi Cecilia; Ryerson University Zimmerman, Rae; New York University

Ecological Economics and Systems


Beauregard, Robert; Columbia University Cohen, William; Temple University Frank, Kathryn; University of Florida Greve, Adrienne; California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo Ndubisi, Forster; Texas A&M University Rees, William; University of British Columbia Schneider, Daniel; University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Srinivas, Smita; Columbia University

Demography
Assaad, Ragui A.; University of Minnesota Chew, Kenneth; University of California, Irvine Danielson, Karen; Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University Gooding, Earl N. M.; Alabama A&M University Hughes, James W.; Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey Jaganathan, Radha; Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey Lang, Robert; Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University Laurian, Lucie; University of Iowa Milczarski, William; Hunter College of CUNY Myers, Dowell; University of Southern California Reid, Neil; University of Toledo Rubenstein, James M.; Miami University Sawicki, David S.; Georgia Institute of Technology Seidel, Andrew; Texas A&M University Spain, Daphne; University of Virginia

Economic Development, Urban and Regional Economics and Geography


Accordino, John J.; Virginia Commonwealth University Amsden, Alice; Massachusetts Institute of Technology Anjomani, Ardeshir; University of Texas, Arlington Arvidson, Enid; University of Texas, Arlington Assaad, Ragui A.; University of Minnesota Basolo, Victoria; University of California, Irvine Beauregard, Robert; Columbia University Becker, Barbara; University of Texas, Arlington Begg, Robert B.; Indiana University of Pennsylvania Birch, Eugenie L.; University of Pennsylvania Blumenberg, Evelyn; University of California, Los Angeles Boarnet, Marlon; University of California, Irvine Bornstein, Lisa; McGill University Bostie, Raphael; University of Southern California Boyle, Robin; Wayne State University Bruckner, Tim-Allen; University of California, Irvine

Development and Spatial Structures


Alam, Bhuiyan; University of Toledo BenDor, Todd; University of North Carolina Brail, Richard K.; Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey

A-6

Burayidi, Michael; Ball State University Campbell, Scott D.; University of Michigan Calzonetti, Frank; University of Toledo Chapin, Timothy; Florida State University Chatman, Daniel G.; University of California Berkeley Christopherson, Susan M.; Cornell University Clavel, Pierre; Cornell University Colgan, Charles S.; University of Southern Maine Currid, Elizabeth; University of Southern California Dandekar, Hemalata; California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo Deng, Lan; University of Michigan Dewar, Margaret E.; University of Michigan Ding, Lei; Wayne State University Dowall, David; University of California Berkeley Drucker, Joshua; University of Illinois at Chicago Eisinger, Peter; The New School Ellen, Ingrid Gould; New York University Fester, Edward; University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Fisher, Peter S.; University of Iowa Fogarty, Michael; Portland State University Frisch, Michael; University of Missouri-Kansas City Funderburg, Richard G.; University of Iowa Gertler, Meric; University of Toronto Gibson, Karen; Portland State University Giusti, Cecilia;; Texas A&M University Gordon, Peter; University of Southern California Glasmeier, Amy K.; Massachusetts Institute of Technology Gonzalez-Rivas, Marcela; Cornell University Gross, Jill; Hunter College of CUNY Guhathakurta, Subhrajit; Arizona State University Hamlin, Roger E.; Michigan State University Hewings, Geoffrey; University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Hill, Edward W.; Cleveland State University Howland, Marie; University of Maryland, College Park Huddleston, Jack R.; University of Wisconsin-Madison Izeogu, Chukudi; Alabama A&M University Kamel, Nabil; Arizona State University Keller, John; Kansas State University Kelly, Eric Damian; Ball State University Kim, Joochul; Arizona State University Lahr, Michael L.; Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey Leigh, Nancey Green; Georgia Institute of Technology London, James B.; Clemson University Malizia, Emil; University of North Carolina Markusen, Ann R.; University of Minnesota Marshment, Richard, University of Oklahoma Mayer, Heike; Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University McCormick, Lynn; Hunter College of CUNY Meiklejohn, Susan Turner; Hunter College of CUNY Meltzer, Rachel; The New School Mikelbank, Brian; Cleveland State University Morales, Alfonso; University of Wisconsin-Madison

Moss, Mitchell; New York University Nelson, Marla; University of New Orleans Norton, Richard; University of Michigan ORegan, Katherine; New York University Ofori-Amoah, Benjamin; Western Michigan University Ong, Paul; University of California, Los Angeles Pan, Qisheng; Texas Southern University Peiser, Richard B.; Harvard University Polenske, Karen R.; Massachusetts Institute of Technology Raja, Samina; University at Buffalo, The State University of New York Redding, T. Steve; University of Memphis Reid, Neil; University of Toledo Romanos, Michael C.; University of Cincinnati Ross, Catherine L.; Georgia Institute of Technology Rost, Craig; University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Saku, James C.; Frostburg State University Santo, Charles; University of Memphis Sanyal, Bish; Massachusetts Institute of Technology Sawicki, David S.; Georgia Institute of Technology Saxenian, AnnaLee; University of California Berkeley Sclar, Elliott; Columbia University Seidman, Karl; Massachusetts Institute of Technology Seltzer, Ethan P.; Portland State University Shipp, Sigmund; Hunter College of CUNY Sternberg, Ernest; University at Buffalo, The State University of New York Suarez-Villa, Luis; University of California, Irvine Sutton, Stacey; Columbia University Sweet, Elizabeth L.; University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Tewari, Meenu; University of North Carolina Theodre, Nik; University of Illinois at Chicago Thomas, Ward; California State University, Northridge Thompson, J. Phillip; Massachusetts Institute of Technology Valencia, Francisco Lara; Arizona State University Vidal, Avis C.; Wayne State University vom Hofe, Rainer; University of Cincinnati Waddell, Paul; University of California Berkeley Wadley, David; University of Queensland Wah, Tatiana; The New School Warnken, Charles; University of Oklahoma Watson, Philip; University of Idaho Weber, Rachel; University of Illinois at Chicago White, Sammis; University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee Wilder, Margaret; University of Delaware Wilson, Mark I.; Michigan State University Wong, Sidney; Morgan State University Wood, Perry; Minnesota State University, Mankato

Emergency Preparedness and Disaster Mitigation


Berke, Philip; University of North Carolina Carmin, JoAnn; Massachusetts Institute of Technology Chang, Stephanie E.; University of British Columbia Esnard, Ann-Margaret; Florida Atlantic University

A- 7

Frazier, Tim; University of Idaho Hurand, Fred A.; Eastern Washington University Keller, John; Kansas State University Lindell, Michael K.; Texas A&M University Park, JiYoung; University at Buffalo, The State University of New York Pijawka, David: Arizona State University Siembieda, William; California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo Sternberg, Ernest; University at Buffalo, The State University of New York Vale, Lawrence J.; Massachusetts Institute of Technology Xiao, Yu; Texas A&M University Yonder, Ayse; Pratt Institute

Lejano, Raul; University of California, Irvine Long, Jerrold A.; University of Idaho Martin, Jonathan; Pratt Institute Mazmanian, Daniel A.; University of Southern California McNeish, Gilbert; University of Colorado, Denver Ohm, Brian W.; University of Wisconsin-Madison Pearlman, Kenneth; Ohio State University Popper, Frank J.; Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey Prytherch, David; Miami University Rajagopal, Balakrishnan; Massachusetts Institute of Technology Randolph, John; Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University Reed-Morris, Herschelle; Morgan State University Richardson, Jesse; Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University Russell, Robert; Tufts University Strauss, Eric J.; Michigan State University Wagner, Frederick; University of Washington Wang, Rui; University of California, Los Angeles Watts, D. Whit; Indiana University of Pennsylvania Young, Robert F.; University of Oregon

Energy Planning
Akar, Gulsah; Ohio State University Allison, Charles; The New School Andrews, Clinton J.; Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey Buehler, Ralph; Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University Edelman, David J.; University of Cincinnati Flachsbart, Peter; University of Hawaii Flamm, Bradley; Temple University Guldmann, Jean-Michel; Ohio State University Huddleston, Jack R.; University of Wisconsin-Madison Lutzenhiser, Loren; Portland State University Michaels, Harvey; Massachusetts Institute of Technology Polenske, Karen R.; Massachusetts Institute of Technology Randolph, John; Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University

Environmental behavior, Planning, Economics and Protection


Agyeman, Julian; Tufts University Alam, Bhuiyan; University of Toledo Alberti, Marina; University of Washington Allison, Charles; The New School Andrews, Clinton J.; Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey Angotti, Thomas; Hunter College of CUNY Asomani-Boateng, Raymond; Minnesota State University, Mankato Audirac, Ivonne; Florida State University Auffrey, Christopher; University of Cincinnati Awwad-Rafferty, Rula; University of Idaho Badami, Madhav; McGill University Bartholomew, Keith; University of Utah Basolo, Victoria; University of California, Irvine Bassett, Scott; University of Nevada Beatley, Timothy; University of Virginia BenDor, Todd; University of North Carolina Benhart, Jr, John E.; Indiana University of Pennsylvania Berke, Philip; University of North Carolina Booth, Richard S.; Cornell University Bornstein, Lisa; McGill University Bosselmann, Peter; University of California Berkeley Boswell, Michael; California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo Browder, John; Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University Brower, Sidney; University of Maryland, College Park Bright, Elise; Texas A&M University Brody, Samuel; Texas A&M University Brooks, Nancy; Cornell University Brown, David; McGill University Campbell, Scott D.; University of Michigan Carmin, JoAnn; Massachusetts Institute of Technology Caupp, Craig C.; Frostburg State University

Environmental and Land Use Law


Auffrey, Christopher; University of Cincinnati Badami, Madhav; McGill University Benjamin, David; University of Akron Booth, Richard S.; Cornell University Bornstein, Lisa; McGill University Bourassa, Steven; University of Louisville Brown, David; McGill University Caupp, Craig C.; Frostburg State University Carmin, JoAnn; Massachusetts Institute of Technology Clark, Chris; California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo Crane, Randall; University of California, Los Angeles Deng, Lan; University of Michigan Deyle, Robert; Florida State University DiMento, Joseph; University of California, Irvine Fischler, Raphael; McGill University Fritz, Jan Marie; University of Cincinnati Glenn, Jane; McGill University Hirt, Sonia; Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University Hollenhorst, Steven J.; University of Idaho Howard, Jeff; University of Texas, Arlington Innes, Judith; University of California Berkeley Jacobs, Harvey M.; University of Wisconsin-Madison Kayden, Jerold S.; Harvard University Keller, John; Kansas State University

A-8

Chapple, Karen; University of California Berkeley Clapp, Tara Lynne; Iowa State University Clark, Chris; California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo Cohen, James; University of Maryland, College Park Cohen, William; Temple University Conn, W. David; California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo Conroy, Maria Manta; Ohio State University Corburn, Jason; University of California Berkeley Czajkowski, Kevin P.; University of Toledo Daniels, Thomas L.; University of Pennsylvania Das, Priyam; University of Hawaii Daugherty, Carolyn M.; Northern Arizona University Davis, Mary E.; Tufts University Day, Kristen; University of California, Irvine Deakin, Elizabeth; University of California Berkeley Deyle, Robert; Florida State University Dill, Jennifer; Portland State University Donaghy, Kieran; Cornell University Dyckman, Caitlin.; Clemson University Edelman, David J.; University of Cincinnati Elliott, Michael L. Poirier; Georgia Institute of Technology Emmi, Philip C.; University of Utah Feldman, David L.; University of California, Irvine Flachsbart, Peter; University of Hawaii Flamm, Bradley; Temple University Flaxman, Michael; Massachusetts Institute of Technology Forrest, Clyde; University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Frank, Nancy; University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee Frazier, Tim; University of Idaho French, Steven P.; Georgia Institute of Technology Fricano, Russell J.; Alabama A&M University Frisch, Michael; University of Missouri-Kansas City Goldstein, Bruce, University of Colorado, Denver Golub, Aaron, Arizona State University Goemen, Asli; University of Wisconsin-Madison Gooding, Earl N. M.; Alabama A&M University Gordon, Steven I.; Ohio State University Greve, Adrienne; California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo Guhathakurta, Subhrajit; Arizona State University Guo, Zhan; New York University Hanhardt, Eva; Pratt Institute Hanley, Paul; University of Iowa Hassol, Joshua; Boston University Hecht, Susanna; University of California, Los Angeles Herzog, Lawrence; San Diego State University Hoch, Richard J.; Indiana University of Pennsylvania Houston, Douglas; University of California, Irvine Howard, Jeff; University of Texas, Arlington Hurand, Fred A.; Eastern Washington University Ibitayo, Olurominiyi; Texas Southern University Ingram, Helen; University of California, Irvine Izeogu, Chukudi; Alabama A&M University Jacobs, Harvey M.; University of Wisconsin-Madison

Jaffe, Martin; University of Illinois at Chicago Johnston, Douglas M.; Iowa State University Kamel, Nabil; Arizona State University Kaufman, Ned; Pratt Institute Krieger, Martin H.; University of Southern California Krimsky, Sheldon; Tufts University Lagro, Jr., James A.; University of Wisconsin-Madison Laurian, Lucie; University of Iowa Lawrence, Patrick; University of Toledo Layzer, Judith; Massachusetts Institute of Technology Lindell, Michael K.; Texas A&M University Lindsey, Greg H.; University of Minnesota Lo, Penn S.; Tufts University Luka, Nik; McGill University Lutzenhiser, Loren; Portland State University Maclaren, Virginia; University of Toronto Margerum, Richard; University of Oregon Matthew, Richard; University of California, Irvine Mazumdar, Sanjoy; University of California, Irvine McDaniels, Timothy; University of British Columbia MacDonald, Elizabeth; University of California Berkeley Mazmanian, Daniel A.; University of Southern California Merrill, Sam; University of Southern Maine Milczarski, William; Hunter College of CUNY Miller, Donald; University of Washington Minerbi, Luciano; University of Hawaii Mitchell, Jerry V.; California State Polytechnic University, Pomona Mitsova, Diana; Florida Atlantic University Mohamed, Rayman; Wayne State University Morrison, Tiffany; University of Queensland Nalbandian, M. Richard; Temple University Nance, Earthea; University of New Orleans Nasar, Jack L.; Ohio State University Nixon, Hilary; San Jos State University Noland, Robert B.; Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey Norton, Richard; University of Michigan Ohm, Brian W.; University of Wisconsin-Madison Olshansky, Robert; University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Owusu, Francis Y.; Iowa State University Ozawa, Connie P.; Portland State University Page, G. William; University at Buffalo, The State University of New York Pendall, Rolf; Cornell University Peterson, Ann; University of Queensland Pitt, David G.; University of Minnesota Polenske, Karen R.; Massachusetts Institute of Technology Pushchak, Ronald; Ryerson University Radke, John; University of California Berkeley Randolph, John; Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University Rappaport, Ann; Tufts University Retzlaff, Rebecca; Auburn University del Rio, Vincente; California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo Robinson, Pamela; Ryerson University Rogers, George O.; Texas A&M University

A- 9

Salo, Ken; University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Sancar, Fahriye; University of Colorado, Denver Schmidt, Stephen; Cornell University Schneider, Daniel; University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Schweitzer, Lisa; University of Southern California Seltzer, Ethan P.; Portland State University Serda, Daniel; University of Kansas Shandas, Vivek; Portland State University Shriar, Avrum J.; Virginia Commonwealth University Simpson, David M.; University of Louisville Slotterback, Carissa Schively; University of Minnesota Solitare, Laura; Texas Southern University Southworth, Michael; University of California Berkeley Spencer, James; University of Hawaii Steiner, Ruth; University of Florida Stevens, Mark; University of British Columbia Stiftel, Bruce; Georgia Institute of Technology Stokols, Daniel; University of California, Irvine Stone Jr., Brian; Georgia Institute of Technology Strauss, Eric J.; Michigan State University Susskind, Lawrence; Massachusetts Institute of Technology Thomas, Ward; California State University, Northridge Toker, Umut; California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo Toor, Will; University of Colorado, Denver Wack, Paul; California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo Wang, Xinhao; University of Cincinnati Watson, Philip; University of Idaho Wernstedt, Kris; Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University Westerlund, Frank; University of Washington Wieters, Meghan; University of Oklahoma Wilson, Bev; University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Wolch, Jennifer; University of California Berkeley Valencia, Francisco Lara; Arizona State University Van Vliet, Willem; University of Colorado, Denver Vos, Jaap; Florida Atlantic University White, Stacey S.; University of Kansas Wridt, Pamela; University of Colorado, Denver Yang, Yizhao; University of Oregon Yin, Li; University at Buffalo, The State University of New York Young, Robert F.; University of Oregon Zahm, Diane L.; Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University Zegras, P. Christopher; Massachusetts Institute of Technology Zimmerman, Rae; New York University Zovanyi, Gabor; Eastern Washington University Zwick, Paul; University of Florida

Geographic Information Systems (GIS)


Alam, Bhuiyan; University of Toledo Al-Kodmany, Kheir; University of Illinois at Chicago Anselin, Luc; Arizona State University Asomani-Boateng, Raymond; Minnesota State University, Mankato Bassett, Scott; University of Nevada Benhart, Jr, John E.; Indiana University of Pennsylvania Bossard, Earl G.; San Jos State University Brail, Richard K.; Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey Brown, David; McGill University Brown, Jeffrey; Florida State University Chen, Xueming (Jimmy); Virginia Commonwealth University Cole, H.D. Samuel; University at Buffalo, The State University of New York Colgan, Charles S.; University of Southern Maine Czajkowski, Kevin P.; University of Toledo Deakin, Elizabeth; University of California Berkeley Deyle, Robert; Florida State University Dezzani, Raymond; University of Idaho Ding, Chengri; University of Maryland, College Park Ding, Lei; Wayne State University Donaghy, Kieran; Cornell University Drummond, William J.; Georgia Institute of Technology El-Geneidy, Ahmed; McGill University Esnard, Ann-Margaret; Florida Atlantic University Estrada, Leobardo; University of California, Los Angeles Ferreira, Jr, Joseph; Massachusetts Institute of Technology Flaxman, Michael; Massachusetts Institute of Technology Frazier, Tim; University of Idaho French, Steven P.; Georgia Institute of Technology Funderburg, Richard G.; University of Iowa Goemen, Asli; University of Wisconsin-Madison Gordon, Steven I.; Ohio State University Grava, Sigurd; Columbia University Guhathakurta, Subhrajit; Arizona State University Haddad, Monica A.; Iowa State University Haughey, Patrick; University of New Orleans Hillier, Amy; University of Pennsylvania Hoyt, Lorlene; Massachusetts Institute of Technology Huang, Ruihong (Ray); Northern Arizona University Huxhold, William; University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee Iseki, Hiroyuki; University of New Orleans Jang, Sung-Gheel; Cleveland State University Johnston, Douglas M.; Iowa State University Kartez, Jack; University of Southern Maine Kent, Robert B.; California State University, Northridge Kim, Do-Hyung; California State Polytechnic University, Pomona Kim, Sungyop; University of Missouri-Kansas City Kim, Tschangho John; University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Landis, John; University of Pennsylvania Lang, Robert; Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University Latimer, Stanley; University of Florida Lawson, Catherine T.; State University of New York at Albany Lee, Joseph A.; Alabama A&M University

Food Systems
Born, Branden; University of Washington Morales, Alfonso; University of Wisconsin-Madison Paul, David; University of Idaho Raja, Samina; University at Buffalo, The State University of New York Trabalzi, Ferruccio; Iowa State University

A-10

Lee, Sugie; Cleveland State University Lemberg, David; Western Michigan University Lew, Alan A.; Northern Arizona University Li, Jianling; University of Texas, Arlington Liggett, Robin; University of California, Los Angeles Lindquist Peter S.; University of Toledo Loh, Carolyn G.; Wayne State University Matsuo, Miwa; University of Iowa McCall, Raymond; University of Colorado, Denver Mikelbank, Brian; Cleveland State University Mitsova, Diana; Florida Atlantic University Mohamed, Rayman; Wayne State University Muller, Brian; University of Colorado, Denver Nedovic-Budic, Zorica; University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Ofori-Amoah, Benjamin; Western Michigan University Owusu, Francis Y.; Iowa State University Page, G. William; University at Buffalo, The State University of New York Pan, Qisheng; Texas Southern University Parmenter, Barbara; Tufts University Peng, Zhong-Ren; University of Florida Phillips, David L.; University of Virginia Precht, Francis; Frostburg State University Radke, John; University of California Berkeley Ramasubramanian, Laxmi; Hunter College of CUNY Ramspott, Matthew E.; Frostburg State University Ratti; Carlo; Massachusetts Institute of Technology Rukmana, Deden; Savannah State University Ryan, Sherry; San Diego State University Schlossberg, Marc; University of Oregon Schoen, David A.; Ball State University Shandas, Vivek; Portland State University Shen, Guoqiang, University of Oklahoma Shen, Qing; University of Washington Siebert, Loren; University of Akron Sperry, Stephen L.; Clemson University Suen, I-Shian (Ivan); Virginia Commonwealth University Thompson, Michelle M.; University of New Orleans Toker, Umut; California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo Wang, Xinhao; University of Cincinnati Wiggins, Lyna; Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey Wilson, Bev; University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Wong, Sidney; Morgan State University Yang, Jiawen; Georgia Institute of Technology Yang, Perry Pei-Ju; Georgia Institute of Technology Yang, Yizhao; University of Oregon Yin, Li; University at Buffalo, The State University of New York Zhang, Tin Wei; University of Illinois at Chicago Zhang, Yang; Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University Zonta, Michela; Virginia Commonwealth University

Globalization
Amirahmadi, Hooshang; Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey Beneria, Lourdes; Cornell University Crdova, Teresa L.; University of New Mexico Donaghy, Kieran; Cornell University Douglass, Michael; University of Hawaii Gonzalez-Rivas, Marcela; Cornell University Goonewardena, Kanishka; University of Toronto Hyra, Derek; Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University Lewis, David A.; State University of New York at Albany Matthew, Richard; University of California, Irvine Oner, Asli Ceylan; Florida Atlantic University Prytherch, David; Miami University Rajagopal, Balakrishnan; Massachusetts Institute of Technology Vidyarthi, Sanjeev; University of Illinois at Chicago

Growth Management
Altshuler, Alan; Harvard University Anthony, Jerry; University of Iowa Audirac, Ivonne; Florida State University Bartholomew, Keith; University of Utah Beatley, Timothy; University of Virginia Bollens, Scott; University of California, Irvine Boyle, Robin; Wayne State University Bunnell, Gene; State University of New York at Albany Caves, Roger; San Diego State University Chapin, Timothy; Florida State University Clapp, Tara Lynne; Iowa State University Clark, Thomas, University of Colorado, Denver Cohen, James; University of Maryland, College Park Dawkins, Casey; Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University Dill, Jennifer; Portland State University Dotson, A. Bruce; University of Virginia Drummond, William J.; Georgia Institute of Technology Fan, Yingling; University of Minnesota Forrest, Clyde; University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign French, Steven P.; Georgia Institute of Technology Fricano, Russell J.; Alabama A&M University Garnett, Mark; Saint Louis University Giuliano, Genevieve; University of Southern California Gordon, Peter; University of Southern California Havlick, Spenser; University of Colorado, Denver Hoch, Charles; University of Illinois at Chicago Innes, Judith; University of California Berkeley Jaffe, Martin; University of Illinois at Chicago Jourdan, Dawn; University of Florida Kelly, Eric Damian; Ball State University Knapp, Gerrit; University of Maryland, College Park Knight, Bruce; University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Lawhon, Larry; Kansas State University Lawrence, Patrick; University of Toledo Lee, Sugie; Cleveland State University Levinson, David; University of Minnesota

A- 11

Loh, Carolyn G.; Wayne State University Machemer, Patricia L.; Michigan State University Martin, Jonathan; Pratt Institute Mathur, Shishir; San Jos State University Mohamed, Rayman; Wayne State University Myers, Dowell; University of Southern California Ndubisi, Forster; Texas A&M University Nedovic-Budic, Zorica; University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Neuman, Michael C.; Texas A&M University Ohm, Brian W.; University of Wisconsin-Madison Olshansky, Robert; University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Parker, Francis H.; Ball State University Pendall, Rolf; Cornell University Pitt, David G.; University of Minnesota Pivo, Gary; University of Arizona Popper, Frank J.; Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey Retzlaff, Rebecca; Auburn University Richert, Evan; University of Southern Maine Rubenstein, James M.; Miami University Seltzer, Ethan P.; Portland State University Silberberg-Robinson, Susan; Massachusetts Institute of Technology Steiner, Ruth; University of Florida Szold, Terry; Massachusetts Institute of Technology Toulan, Nohan A.; Portland State University Webber, Steven; Ryerson University Wilson, Bev; University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Wu, Weiping; Virginia Commonwealth University Yin, Li; University at Buffalo, The State University of New York Zovanyi, Gabor; Eastern Washington University

Taylor, Jr, Henry Louis; University at Buffalo, The State University of New York Valencia, Francisco Lara; Arizona State University Wagner, Frederick; University of Washington

Heritage Planning and Historic Preservation


Abbott, Carl; Portland State University Abramson, Daniel; University of Washington Allison, Eric; Pratt Institute AlSayyad, Nezar; University of California Berkeley Ames, David L.; University of Delaware Barbour, John, University of Colorado, Denver Beasley, Larry; University of British Columbia Booth, Richard S.; Cornell University Brooks, Jane S.; University of New Orleans Campo, Daniel; Morgan State University Chalana, Manish; University of Washington Chusid, Jeffrey; Cornell University Crewe, Katherine; Arizona State University Drummond, William J.; Georgia Institute of Technology Frenchman, Dennis; Massachusetts Institute of Technology Grodach, Carl; University of Texas, Arlington Heidelberg, Beth Wielde; Minnesota State University, Mankato Kaufman, Ned; Pratt Institute Larsen, Kristin; University of Florida Lee, Joseph A.; Alabama A&M University Listokin, David; Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey Mason, Randy; University of Pennsylvania Nemeth, David J.; University of Toledo Novak, Alice; University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Pittari Jr, John J.; Auburn University Retzlaff, Rebecca; Auburn University Silberberg-Robinson, Susan; Massachusetts Institute of Technology Southworth, Michael; University of California Berkeley Swallow, Joy; University of Missouri-Kansas City Tomlan, Michael; Cornell University Wagner, Jacob; University of Missouri-Kansas City Weiner, Vicki; Pratt Institute Weisenburger, Ray; Kansas State University Wigfall, La Barbara; Kansas State University

Hazardous Facility Siting


Pushchak, Ronald; Ryerson University

Health Planning
Akar, Gulsah; Ohio State University Balinsky, Warren; The New School Bame, Sherry; Texas A&M University Botchwey, Nisha; University of Virginia Bruckner, Tim-Allen; University of California, Irvine Chew, Kenneth; University of California, Irvine Chin, John; Hunter College of CUNY Coutts, Christopher; Florida State University Fan, Yingling; University of Minnesota Frankel, Bruce W; Ball State University Knox, Paul L.; Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University Krizek, Kevin; University of Colorado, Denver Miles, Rebecca; Florida State University Nocks, Barry C.; Clemson University Rodriguez, Daniel; University of North Carolina Srinivas, Smita; Columbia University Steiner, Ruth; University of Florida Stokols, Daniel; University of California, Irvine Sweeney, Donald A.; Texas A&M University

Housing, Community Development and Neighborhood Planning


Abbott, Carl; Portland State University Abramson, Daniel; University of Washington Adams, Vera; Ball State University AlSayyad, Nezar; University of California Berkeley Angotti, Thomas; Hunter College of CUNY Anthony, Jerry; University of Iowa Antoninetti, Maurizio; San Diego State University Ashton, Philip; University of Illinois at Chicago Bae, Christine; University of Washington Barreto, Felix R.; California State Polytechnic University, Pomona

A-12

Basolo, Victoria; University of California, Irvine Bates, Lisa K.; Portland State University Betts, Phyllis; University of Memphis Boothroyd, Peter; University of British Columbia Bostie, Raphael; University of Southern California Bourassa, Steven; University of Louisville Boyle, Robin; Wayne State University Bratt, Rachel G.; Tufts University Briggs, Xavier de Souza; Massachusetts Institute of Technology Bromley, Ray; State University of New York at Albany Brower, Sidney; University of Maryland, College Park Burayidi, Michael; Ball State University Burchell, Robert W.; Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey Cao, Xinyu; University of Minnesota Chen, Alexander; University of Maryland, College Park Christensen, Karen; University of California Berkeley Clay, Phillip; Massachusetts Institute of Technology Coffin, Sara; Saint Louis University Connerly, Charles E.; University of Iowa Covington, Kenya; California State University, Northridge Crane, Randall; University of California, Los Angeles Cunningham, Dayna; Massachusetts Institute of Technology Danielson, Karen; Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University Dear, Michael; University of California Berkeley Dearborn, Lynn; University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign DeFilippis, James; Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey Deng, Lan; University of Michigan Deringer, Nancy; University of Idaho Ding, Lei; Wayne State University Dowall, David; University of California Berkeley Ellen, Ingrid Gould; New York University Fischler, Raphael; McGill University Fisher, Lynn; Massachusetts Institute of Technology Frankel, Bruce W; Ball State University Freeman, Lance; Columbia University Galster, George; Wayne State University Gilderbloom, John; University of Louisville Goetz, Edward G.; University of Minnesota Goldman, Laurie; Tufts University Hammel, Daniel J.; University of Toledo Harwood, Stacy; University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Haughey, Patrick; University of New Orleans Heumann, Leonard F.; University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Hoch, Charles; University of Illinois at Chicago Howe, Deborah; Temple University Hughes, James W.; Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey Hyra, Derek; Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University Ibitayo, Olurominiyi; Texas Southern University Immergluck, Daniel; Georgia Institute of Technology Jones, Mittie Davis; Cleveland State University Jourdan, Dawn; University of Florida Kamel, Nabil; Arizona State University Keating, W. Dennis; Cleveland State University

Keyes, Langley; Massachusetts Institute of Technology Kim, Joochul; Arizona State University Koebel, C. Theodore; Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University Krieger, Alex; Harvard University Krumholz, Norm; Cleveland State University LaMore, Rex L.; Michigan State University Landis, John; University of Pennsylvania Lang, Robert; Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University Larsen, Kristin; University of Florida Lauria, Mickey.; Clemson University Laverny-Rafter, David; Minnesota State University, Mankato Lawhon, Larry; Kansas State University Leavitt, Jacqueline; University of California, Los Angeles Lemberg, David; Western Michigan University Listokin, David; Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey Lowe, Jeffrey S.; Florida State University Luka, Nik; McGill University Mathur, Shishir; San Jos State University McClure, Kirk; University of Kansas McMillen, Daniel; University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Meiklejohn, Susan Turner; Hunter College of CUNY Meltzer, Rachel; The New School Miraftab, Faranak; University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Moomaw, Suzanne Morse; University of Virginia Morrow-Jones, Hazel; Ohio State University Mukhija, Vinit; University of California, Los Angeles Myers, Dowell; University of Southern California Nettleton, John; Cornell University Nguyen, Mai; University of North Carolina ORegan, Katherine; New York University Oretsky, Nicole; Savannah State University Paulsen, Kurt G.; University of Wisconsin-Madison Pendall, Rolf; Cornell University Peuquet, Steven; University of Delaware Price, Alfred D.; University at Buffalo, The State University of New York Quercia, Roberto; University of North Carolina Raitt, Jennifer M; Boston University Reardon, Ken; University of Memphis Rohe, William; University of North Carolina Rollinson, Paul; Missouri State University Rowe, Peter G.; Harvard University Sanders, Welford; University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee Santo, Charles; University of Memphis Scally, Corianne P.; State University of New York at Albany Schwartz, Alex; The New School Sen, Lalita; Texas Southern University Shoup, Donald; University of California, Los Angeles Siembieda, William; California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo Smith, Janet; University of Illinois at Chicago Springer, Joseph H.; Ryerson University Sutton, Stacey; Columbia University Thomas, June Manning; University of Michigan

A- 13

Thompson, Michelle M.; University of New Orleans Toker, Zeynep; California State University, Northridge Toulan, Nohan A.; Portland State University Vale, Lawrence J.; Massachusetts Institute of Technology Van Ammers, Phyl; California State University, Northridge Van Vliet, Willem; University of Colorado, Denver Van Zandt, Shannon; Texas A&M University Varady, David P.; University of Cincinnati Vazquez, M. Teresa; California State University, Northridge Vidal, Avis C.; Wayne State University Webber, Steven; Ryerson University Weisenburger, Ray; Kansas State University White, Sammis; University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee Wilder, Margaret; University of Delaware Winchell, Dick; Eastern Washington University Wolfe, Jeanne M.; McGill University Yin, Jordan; Western Michigan University Zahm, Diane L.; Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University Zonta, Michela; Virginia Commonwealth University

Crdova, Teresa L.; University of New Mexico Crane, Randall; University of California, Los Angeles Dorcey, Anthony H.J.; University of British Columbia Elliott, Michael L. Poirier; Georgia Institute of Technology Ellison, Charles E.; University of Cincinnati Foster, Kathryn A.; University at Buffalo, The State University of New York Harris, Kirk; University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee Jones, Mittie Davis; Cleveland State University Kim, Annette; Massachusetts Institute of Technology King, David; Columbia University Kosny, Mitchell; Ryerson University Krumholz, Norm; Cleveland State University Lang, Robert; Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University LeClair, Daniel; Boston University Lucy, William H.; University of Virginia Morrison, Tiffany; University of Queensland Moses, Stanley; Hunter College of CUNY Murray, Sylvester; Savannah State University Musso, Juliet; University of Southern California Pijawka, David: Arizona State University von Rabenau, Burkhardl Ohio State University Robinson, Pamela; Ryerson University Ross, Catherine L.; Georgia Institute of Technology Savitch, H.V.; University of Louisville Shrestha, Manoj; University of Idaho Silva, Enrique R; Boston University Suen, I-Shian (Ivan); Virginia Commonwealth University Szold, Terry; Massachusetts Institute of Technology Verma, Niraj; University at Buffalo, The State University of New York Viteritti, Joseph; Hunter College of CUNY Wack, Paul; California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo Warner, Mildred; Cornell University Warren, Robert; University of Delaware Wilson, Constance; Alabama A&M University

Human Ecology and Economics


Beard, Victoria; University of California, Irvine Beneria, Lourdes; Cornell University Chawla, Louise, University of Colorado, Denver Laurian, Lucie; University of Iowa Pijawka, David: Arizona State University Rees, William; University of British Columbia

Immigration Policy
Agrawal, Sandeep Kumar; Ryerson University Allen, Ryan P.; University of Minnesota Chin, John; Hunter College of CUNY Harwood, Stacy; University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Howell, David; The New School Ong, Paul; University of California, Los Angeles Sanchez, Arturo; Cornell University Sandoval, Gerardo; Iowa State University Wah, Tatiana; The New School Zhuang, Zhixi Cecilia; Ryerson University

International and Regional Development and Planning


Acey, Charisma; Ohio State University Accordino, John J.; Virginia Commonwealth University Akers, Mary Anne Alabanza; Morgan State University AlSayyad, Nezar; University of California Berkeley Altrows, Lawrence; Ryerson University Angeles, Leonora; University of British Columbia Angotti, Thomas; Hunter College of CUNY Assaad, Ragui A.; University of Minnesota Audirac, Ivonne; Florida State University Badami, Madhav; McGill University Balsas, Carlos; Arizona State University Banerjee, Tridib; University of Southern California Beneria, Lourdes; Cornell University Betaneur, John; University of Illinois at Chicago Bornstein, Lisa; McGill University Bromley, Ray; State University of New York at Albany

Institutions, Politics and Governance


Acey, Charisma; Ohio State University Barringer, Richard; University of Southern Maine Baum, Howell S.; University of Maryland, College Park Bollens, Scott; University of California, Irvine Bornstein, Lisa; McGill University Brock, Nailah; Savannah State University Brown, David; McGill University Buehler, Ralph; Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University Caves, Roger; San Diego State University Christopherson, Susan M.; Cornell University Clavel, Pierre; Cornell University Coates, Paul; Iowa State University

A-14

Browder, John; Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University Campanella, Thomas; University of North Carolina Campo, Daniel; Morgan State University Carolini, Gabriella Y.; Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey Cervero, Robert; University of California Berkeley Chifos, Carla; University of Cincinnati Christopherson, Susan M.; Cornell University Clark, Thomas, University of Colorado, Denver Corey, Kenneth E.; Michigan State University Crewe, Katherine; Arizona State University Dandekar, Hemalata; California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo Das, Priyam; University of Hawaii DiMento, Joseph; University of California, Irvine Ding, Chengri; University of Maryland, College Park Doan, Petra; Florida State University Donaghy, Kieran; Cornell University Douglass, Michael; University of Hawaii Dowall, David; University of California Berkeley Fan, Peilei; Michigan State University Friedmann, John; University of British Columbia Fuller, John W.; University of Iowa Gershberg, Alec Ian; The New School Gilderbloom, John; University of Louisville Gladstone, David; University of New Orleans Goldsmith, William W.; Cornell University Grengs, Joseph; University of Michigan Gross, Jill; Hunter College of CUNY Guhathakurta, Subhrajit; Arizona State University Gooding, Earl N. M.; Alabama A&M University Hanna, William; University of Maryland, College Park Hecht, Susanna; University of California, Los Angeles Heikkila, Eric J.; University of Southern California Herzog, Lawrence; San Diego State University Hewings, Geoffrey; University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Hinojosa, Ren C.; Michigan State University Hirt, Sonia; Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University Howland, Marie; University of Maryland, College Park Huntoon, Laura; University of Arizona Irazabal, Clara; Columbia University Isaac, Claudia B.; University of New Mexico Izeogu, Chukudi; Alabama A&M University Kayden, Jerold S.; Harvard University Kim, Annette; Massachusetts Institute of Technology Kim, Joochul; Arizona State University Kim, Tschangho John; University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Kudva, Neema; Cornell University Kwok, Reg; University of Hawaii Lastarria-Cornhiel, Susana; University of Wisconsin-Madison Leaf, Michael; University of British Columbia Lewis, David; Cornell University Looye, Johanna W.; University of Cincinnati Lynch, Barbara; Georgia Institute of Technology

Macedo, Joseli; University of Florida Miles, Rebecca; Florida State University Miraftab, Faranak; University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Nanetti, Raffaella; University of Illinois at Chicago Nedovic-Budic, Zorica; University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Norman, Jr., Herbert P.; Michigan State University Ofori-Amoah, Benjamin; Western Michigan University Olpadwala, Porus; Cornell University Olshansky, Robert; University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Outland, Donald; Alabama A&M University Peiser, Richard B.; Harvard University Peng, Zhong-Ren; University of Florida Perera, M.C. Nihal; Ball State University Pressley, Joyce Ann; Morgan State University Prytherch, David; Miami University Raja, Samina; University at Buffalo, The State University of New York Rankin, Katharine; University of Toronto del Rio, Vincente; California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo Romanos, Michael C.; University of Cincinnati Rowe, Peter G.; Harvard University Rubenstein, James M.; Miami University Rukmana, Deden; Savannah State University Salo, Ken; University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Sancar, Fahriye; University of Colorado, Denver Sanchez, Arturo; Cornell University Sarkis, A. Hashim; Harvard University Saxenian, AnnaLee; University of California Berkeley Sclar, Elliott; Columbia University Sen, Siddhartha; Morgan State University Shetty, Sujata; University of Toledo Siembieda, William; California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo Silver, Christopher; University of Florida Smoke, Paul; New York University Song, Yan; University of North Carolina Storey, Donovan; University of Queensland Storper, Michael; University of California, Los Angeles Sweet, Elizabeth L.; University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Tewari, Meenu; University of North Carolina Toulan, Nohan A.; Portland State University Trabalzi, Ferruccio; Iowa State University Urey, Gwendolyn H.; California State Polytechnic University, Pomona Van Vliet, Willem; University of Colorado, Denver Vazquez, M. Teresa; California State University, Northridge Verma, Niraj; University at Buffalo, The State University of New York Wah, Tatiana; The New School Webster, Douglas; Arizona State University Wu, Weiping; Virginia Commonwealth University Yabes, Ruth; Arizona State University Yang, Li; Western Michigan University Zhang, Tin Wei; University of Illinois at Chicago

A- 15

Labor Economics
Beneria, Lourdes; Cornell University Blumenberg, Evelyn; University of California, Los Angeles Christopherson, Susan M.; Cornell University Elvery, Joel A.; Cleveland State University Howell, David; The New School Levine, Jonathan; University of Michigan Levy, Frank; Massachusetts Institute of Technology Mayer, Heike; Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University Ong, Paul; University of California, Los Angeles Spencer, James; University of Hawaii Storper, Michael; University of California, Los Angeles Theodre, Nik; University of Illinois at Chicago Thompson, J. Phillip; Massachusetts Institute of Technology Tilly, Chris; University of California, Los Angeles

Bartholomew, Keith; University of Utah Basmajian, Carlton; Iowa State University Beatley, Timothy; University of Virginia Becker, Barbara; University of Texas, Arlington BenDor, Todd; University of North Carolina Benjamin, David; University of Akron Berke, Philip; University of North Carolina Booth, Richard S.; Cornell University Born, Branden; University of Washington Boyle, Robin; Wayne State University Brinkman, P. Anthony; University of Nevada Buehler, Ralph; Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University Bunnell, Gene; State University of New York at Albany Burayidi, Michael; Ball State University Burchell, Robert W.; Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey Cao, Xinyu; University of Minnesota Caupp, Craig C.; Frostburg State University Caves, Roger; San Diego State University Chapin, Timothy; Florida State University Chatman, Daniel G.; University of California Berkeley Chatterjee, Jay; University of Cincinnati Clapp, Tara Lynne; Iowa State University Clark, Chris; California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo Clay, Michael; Auburn University Cohen, James; University of Maryland, College Park Daniels, Thomas L.; University of Pennsylvania Daugherty, Carolyn M.; Northern Arizona University Deakin, Elizabeth; University of California Berkeley Deal, Brian; University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Delgado, Juliana; California State Polytechnic University, Pomona Deng, Lan; University of Michigan Dill, Jennifer; Portland State University Dotson, A. Bruce; University of Virginia Dyckman, Caitlin.; Clemson University Edwards, Mary; University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign El-Geneidy, Ahmed; McGill University Evans-Cowley, Jennifer; Ohio State University Fan, Peilei; Michigan State University Fan, Yingling; University of Minnesota Flachsbart, Peter; University of Hawaii Forrest, Clyde; University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign French, Steven P.; Georgia Institute of Technology Fricano, Russell J.; Alabama A&M University Frisch, Michael; University of Missouri-Kansas City Garnett, Mark; Saint Louis University Giuliano, Genevieve; University of Southern California Glenn, Jane; McGill University Gordon, Peter; University of Southern California Grava, Sigurd; Columbia University Guerra, Fred; University of Akron Guttenberg, Albert Z.; University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Hawley, R. Dawn; Northern Arizona University Hess, Daniel B.; University at Buffalo, The State University of New York

Landscape Architecture, Design and Planning


Austin, Gary; University of Idaho Banai, Reza; University of Memphis Ben-Joseph, Eran; Massachusetts Institute of Technology Berger, Alan; Massachusetts Institute of Technology Ellis, Clifford D.; Clemson University Farberow, Herschel; California State Polytechnic University, Pomona Hayter, Jason Alexander; University of Arizona Hedrick, Earl; University of New Orleans Hoversten, Mark; University of Idaho Keeble, Ronald; Ryerson University Lagro, Jr., James A.; University of Wisconsin-Madison Larsen, Larissa; University of Michigan Lister, Nina-Marie; Ryerson University Luka, Nik; McGill University McClure, Wendy; University of Idaho Perera, M.C. Nihal; Ball State University Pitt, David G.; University of Minnesota Ragonetti, Thomas; University of Colorado, Denver Ramasubramanian, Laxmi; Hunter College of CUNY Schoen, David A.; Ball State University Southworth, Michael; University of California Berkeley Spirn, Anne Whiston; Massachusetts Institute of Technology Stoltz, Ronald; University of Arizona Watts, D. Whit; Indiana University of Pennsylvania

Land Tenure
Glenn, Jane; McGill University Lastarria-Cornhiel, Susana; University of Wisconsin-Madison

Land Use Planning, Land Economics and Development


Altshuler, Alan; Harvard University Anjomani, Ardeshir; University of Texas, Arlington Anthony, Jerry; University of Iowa Audirac, Ivonne; Florida State University Bae, Christine; University of Washington

A-16

Hirt, Sonia; Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University Hoch, Charles; University of Illinois at Chicago Hoch, Richard J.; Indiana University of Pennsylvania Hoversten, Mark; University of Idaho Howe, Deborah; Temple University Huang, Ruihong (Ray); Northern Arizona University Hurand, Fred A.; Eastern Washington University Innes, Judith; University of California Berkeley Iseki, Hiroyuki; University of New Orleans Izeogu, Chukudi; Alabama A&M University Jacobs, Harvey M.; University of Wisconsin-Madison Jaffe, Martin; University of Illinois at Chicago Jang, Sung-Gheel; Cleveland State University Johnson, Bonnie; University of Kansas Kartez, Jack; University of Southern Maine Kaza, Nikil; University of North Carolina Keeble, Ronald; Ryerson University Kellogg, Wendy A.; Cleveland State University Kelly, Eric Damian; Ball State University Kim, Sungyop; University of Missouri-Kansas City Knapp, Gerrit; University of Maryland, College Park Knight, Bruce; University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Krizek, Kevin; University of Colorado, Denver Laninga, Tamara; University of Idaho Lawrence, Patrick; University of Toledo Layzer, Judith; Massachusetts Institute of Technology Lee, Bumsoo; University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Lee, Sugie; Cleveland State University Lee, Yuk; University of Colorado, Denver Levine, Jonathan; University of Michigan Levinson, David; University of Minnesota Lister, Nina-Marie; Ryerson University Loh, Carolyn G.; Wayne State University Lowry, Michael; University of Idaho Machemer, Patricia L.; Michigan State University Main, Kelly; California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo Marcouiller, David W.; University of Wisconsin-Madison McDonald, Noreen; University of North Carolina Minerbi, Luciano; University of Hawaii Mohamed, Rayman; Wayne State University Moudon, Anne Vernez; University of Washington Muller, Brian; University of Colorado, Denver Myers, Dowell; University of Southern California Nedovic-Budic, Zorica; University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Neuman, Michael C.; Texas A&M University Norman, Jr., Herbert P.; Michigan State University Nuworsoo, Cornelius; California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo Olshansky, Robert; University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Pan, Qisheng; Texas Southern University Parker, Francis H.; Ball State University Paulsen, Kurt G.; University of Wisconsin-Madison Pearson, Gene; University of Memphis

Pendall, Rolf; Cornell University Pinel, Sandra; University of Idaho Pitt, David G.; University of Minnesota Pivo, Gary; University of Arizona Popper, Frank J.; Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey Pressley, Joyce Ann; Morgan State University Renne, John L.; University of New Orleans Retzlaff, Rebecca; Auburn University Richardson, James R.; University of New Mexico Richardson, Jesse; Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University Richert, Evan; University of Southern Maine Roakes, Susan; University of Memphis Rodriguez, Daniel; University of North Carolina Rubenstein, James M.; Miami University Sanders, Melissa; Florida State University Seltzer, Ethan P.; Portland State University Shandas, Vivek; Portland State University Shapiro, John; Pratt Institute Shoup, Donald; University of California, Los Angeles Siebert, Loren; University of Akron Siembieda, William; California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo Slotterback, Carissa Schively; University of Minnesota Song, Yan; University of North Carolina Sperry, Stephen L.; Clemson University Stevens, Mark; University of British Columbia Stone Jr., Brian; Georgia Institute of Technology Strauss, Eric J.; Michigan State University Suen, I-Shian (Ivan); Virginia Commonwealth University Szold, Terry; Massachusetts Institute of Technology Thompson, Michelle M.; University of New Orleans Toulan, Nohan A.; Portland State University Vidyarthi, Sanjeev; University of Illinois at Chicago Waddell, Paul; University of California Berkeley Wagner, Frederick; University of Washington Warnken, Charles; University of Oklahoma Watts, D. Whit; Indiana University of Pennsylvania Webber, Steven; Ryerson University Weisenburger, Ray; Kansas State University Westerlund, Frank; University of Washington Wilson, Bev; University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Witten, Jon; Tufts University Wu, Weiping; Virginia Commonwealth University Yin, Jordan; Western Michigan University Zahm, Diane L.; Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University Zapata, Marisa; University of Cincinnati Zellner, Moira; University of Illinois at Chicago Zhang, Sumei; University of Louisville Zhang, Yang; Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University Zwick, Paul; University of Florida

A- 17

Mapping Sciences
Chen, Alexander; University of Maryland, College Park Kessler, Fritz; Frostburg State University

Levine, Jonathan; University of Michigan Lewis, David A.; State University of New York at Albany Lucy, William H.; University of Virginia Mahayni, Riad G.; Iowa State University Markusen, Ann R.; University of Minnesota Mohamed, Rayman; Wayne State University Moses, Stanley; Hunter College of CUNY Moss, Mitchell; New York University Nalbandian, M. Richard; Temple University Nelson, Marla; University of New Orleans Patten, Iris; University of Arizona Pivo, Gary; University of Arizona Raitt, Jennifer M; Boston University Ross, Catherine L.; Georgia Institute of Technology Saku, James C.; Frostburg State University Saxenian, AnnaLee; University of California Berkeley Searle, Glen; University of Queensland Seltzer, Ethan P.; Portland State University Shen, Qing; University of Maryland, College Park Spencer, James; University of Hawaii Theken, Patrice; University of Akron Toor, Will; University of Colorado, Denver Toulan, Nohan A.; Portland State University Viteritti, Joseph; Hunter College of CUNY White, Sammis; University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee Yang, Jiawen; Georgia Institute of Technology Yaro, Robert; University of Pennsylvania

Marketing Geography
Wadley, David; University of Queensland

Metropolitan/Regional Planning
Abbott, Carl; Portland State University Alam, Bhuiyan; University of Toledo Ames, David L.; University of Delaware Arvidson, Enid; University of Texas, Arlington Banai, Reza; University of Memphis Bartholomew, Keith; University of Utah Basmajian, Carlton; Iowa State University Boothroyd, Peter; University of British Columbia Brooks, Jane S.; University of New Orleans Chapple, Karen; University of California Berkeley Chatterjee, Jay; University of Cincinnati Clark, Thomas, University of Colorado, Denver Cole, H.D. Samuel; University at Buffalo, The State University of New York Dalton, Margaret M.; Frostburg State University Davis, Diane; Massachusetts Institute of Technology Deakin, Elizabeth; University of California Berkeley Doan, Petra; Florida State University Donaghy, Kieran; Cornell University Douglass, Michael; University of Hawaii Dowall, David; University of California Berkeley Drucker, Joshua; University of Illinois at Chicago Emmi, Philip C.; University of Utah Ezell, Kyle; Ohio State University Fischler, Raphael; McGill University Foster, Kathryn A.; University at Buffalo, The State University of New York Gertler, Meric; University of Toronto Gladstone, David; University of New Orleans Goldstein, Bruce, University of Colorado, Denver Hadley, Joseph; University of Akron Hamlin, Roger E.; Michigan State University Hanna, William; University of Maryland, College Park Heikkila, Eric J.; University of Southern California Henkel, David S.; University of New Mexico Hewings, Geoffrey; University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Hibbard, Michael; University of Oregon Isserman, Andrew; University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Kim, Tschangho John; University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Knapp, Gerrit; University of Maryland, College Park Krieger, Alex; Harvard University Krumholz, Norm; Cleveland State University Lapping, Mark; University of Southern Maine Lee, Bumsoo; University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Leigh, Nancey Green; Georgia Institute of Technology Leinberger, Christopher; University of Michigan Lemberg, David; Western Michigan University

Microfinance
Servon, Lisa J.; The New School

Multimedia
Christopherson, Susan M.; Cornell University

Municipal Development Charges, Finance and Laws


Amborski, David; Ryerson University Benjamin, David; University of Akron Delaney, Stephen; Boston University Hamlin, Roger E.; Michigan State University Huddleston, Jack R.; University of Wisconsin-Madison Reardon, Ken; University of Memphis Taylor, Gary D.; Iowa State University Witten, Jon; Tufts University Wong, Sidney; Morgan State University

Natural Hazard Mitigation


Boswell, Michael; California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo Havlick, Spenser; University of Colorado, Denver Lindell, Michael K.; Texas A&M University Peacock, Walter G.; Texas A&M University Westerlund, Frank; University of Washington

A-18

Zhang, Yang; Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University

Innes, Judith; University of California Berkeley Kartez, Jack; University of Southern Maine Kaufman, Sanda; Cleveland State University Lowry, Kem; University of Hawaii Mandarano, Lynn; Temple University Matthew, Richard; University of California, Irvine Ozawa, Connie P.; Portland State University Richardson, James R.; University of New Mexico Salo, Ken; University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Schneider, Richard; University of Florida Simpson, David M.; University of Louisville Stiftel, Bruce; Georgia Institute of Technology Susskind, Lawrence; Massachusetts Institute of Technology Throgmorton, James A.; University of Iowa

Natural Resources, Water Resources and Coastal Development


Barringer, Richard; University of Southern Maine Beatley, Timothy; University of Virginia Cunningham, M. Grant; Clemson University Czajkowski, Kevin P.; University of Toledo Deakin, Elizabeth; University of California Berkeley Deyle, Robert; Florida State University Dorcey, Anthony H.J.; University of British Columbia Dyckman, Caitlin.; Clemson University Feldman, David L.; University of California, Irvine Fleming, William; University of New Mexico Frank, Kathryn; University of Florida Genskow, Kenneth D.; University of Wisconsin-Madison Hecht, Susanna; University of California, Los Angeles Higgins, Lorie; University of Idaho Huddleston, Jack R.; University of Wisconsin-Madison Ingram, Helen; University of California, Irvine Johnston, Douglas M.; Iowa State University Kellogg, Wendy A.; Cleveland State University Lapping, Mark; University of Southern Maine Lawrence, Patrick; University of Toledo Layzer, Judith; Massachusetts Institute of Technology London, James B.; Clemson University Long, Jerrold A.; University of Idaho Lowry, Kem; University of Hawaii Nemeth, David J.; University of Toledo Page, G. William; University at Buffalo, The State University of New York Pitt, David G.; University of Minnesota Radke, John; University of California Berkeley Randolph, John; Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University Richert, Evan; University of Southern Maine Rivera, Jse A.; University of New Mexico Rogers, George O.; Texas A&M University Shibley, Robert G.; University at Buffalo, The State University of New York Watson, Philip; University of Idaho Wernstedt, Kris; Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University Wilson, Patrick; University of Idaho Witten, Jon; Tufts University Zellner, Moira; University of Illinois at Chicago

Physical Geography and Planning


Akers, Mary Anne Alabanza; Morgan State University Al-Kodmany, Kheir; University of Illinois at Chicago Banerjee, Tridib; University of Southern California Barnett, Jonathan; University of Pennsylvania Ben-Joseph, Eran; Massachusetts Institute of Technology Brower, Sidney; University of Maryland, College Park Crewe, Katherine; Arizona State University Forsyth, Ann; Cornell University Foulger, Paul J.; Ball State University Garde, Ajay; University of California, Irvine Grava, Sigurd; Columbia University Gulak, Morton B.; Virginia Commonwealth University Hack, Gary; University of Pennsylvania Herzog, Lawrence; San Diego State University Hirt, Sonia; Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University Hoch, Charles; University of Illinois at Chicago Imeokparia, Timothy O.; University of New Mexico Jaffe, Martin; University of Illinois at Chicago Keller, John; Kansas State University Krieger, Alex; Harvard University Loukaitou-Sideris, Anastasia; University of California, Los Angeles Mukhija, Vinit; University of California, Los Angeles Nasar, Jack L.; Ohio State University Nelessen, Anton E.; Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey Nemeth, David J.; University of Toledo Perera, M.C. Nihal; Ball State University Pittari Jr, John J.; Auburn University Pothukuchi, Kameshwari; Wayne State University Ramasubramanian, Laxmi; Hunter College of CUNY Rowe, Peter G.; Harvard University Shapiro, John; Pratt Institute Shiffman, Ronald; Pratt Institute Southworth, Michael; University of California Berkeley Sternberg, Ernest; University at Buffalo, The State University of New York Toulan, Nohan A.; Portland State University Triantafillou, Menelaos; University of Cincinnati Vidyarthi, Sanjeev; University of Illinois at Chicago

Negotiation and Conflict Resolution


Conroy, Maria Manta; Ohio State University DiMento, Joseph; University of California, Irvine Dorcey, Anthony H.J.; University of British Columbia Dotson, A. Bruce; University of Virginia Elliott, Michael L. Poirier; Georgia Institute of Technology Forester, John; Cornell University Frank, Kathryn; University of Florida Fritz, Jan Marie; University of Cincinnati Harris, Kirk; University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee

A- 19

Zhang, Tin Wei; University of Illinois at Chicago

Campo, Daniel; Morgan State University Clapp, Tara Lynne; Iowa State University Cohen, James; University of Maryland, College Park Connerly, Charles E.; University of Iowa Fischler, Raphael; McGill University Fogelson, Robert; Massachusetts Institute of Technology Forester, John; Cornell University Goonewardena, Kanishka; University of Toronto Guttenberg, Albert Z.; University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Hess, Daniel B.; University at Buffalo, The State University of New York Hess, Paul; University of Toronto Howard, Zeljka Pavolich; California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo Jutla, Rajinder; Missouri State University Larsen, Kristin; University of Florida Loukaitou-Sideris, Anastasia; University of California, Los Angeles May, Diane; Missouri State University McCormick, Lynn; Hunter College of CUNY Minnery, John; University of Queensland Nocks, Barry C.; Clemson University Norton, Richard; University of Michigan Parker, Francis H.; Ball State University Pinel, Sandra; University of Idaho Pittari Jr, John J.; Auburn University Rowe, Peter G.; Harvard University Schlemper, Mary Beth; University of Toledo Sennett, Richard; Massachusetts Institute of Technology Silver, Christopher; University of Florida Sloane, David; University of Southern California Spain, Daphne; University of Virginia Takahashi, Lois; University of California, Los Angeles Thomas, June Manning; University of Michigan Thompson, Gregory; Florida State University Throgmorton, James A.; University of Iowa Vazquez, M. Teresa; California State University, Northridge Wagner, Jacob; University of Missouri-Kansas City Warren, Robert; University of Delaware Wieters, Meghan; University of Oklahoma Wolfe, Jeanne M.; McGill University Wong, Sidney; Morgan State University Young, Robert F.; University of Oregon

Planning and Design Review


Agrawal, Sandeep Kumar; Ryerson University de Monchaux; John; Massachusetts Institute of Technology Machemer, Patricia L.; Michigan State University Onaran, Korkut; University of Colorado, Denver Sancar, Fahriye; University of Colorado, Denver Smith, Phillip; University of Queensland Studer, Jr., Raymond; University of Colorado, Denver

Planning in Developing Countries


Altrows, Lawrence; Ryerson University Anjomani, Ardeshir; University of Texas, Arlington Beard, Victoria; University of California, Irvine Brown, David; McGill University Daniere, Amrita; University of Toronto Giusti, Cecilia;; Texas A&M University Goldsmith, William W.; Cornell University Grava, Sigurd; Columbia University Hall, Ralph; Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University Lewis, David; Cornell University Mahayni, Riad G.; Iowa State University Miraftab, Faranak; University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Nance, Earthea; University of New Orleans Owusu, Francis Y.; Iowa State University Shatkin, Gavin; University of Michigan Tendler, Judith; Massachusetts Institute of Technology Yonder, Ayse; Pratt Institute

Planning Education
Abbanat, Cherie; Massachusetts Institute of Technology Adams, Vera; Ball State University Campbell, Christopher; University of Washington Forsyth, Ann; Cornell University Hoyt, Lorlene; Massachusetts Institute of Technology Klopfer, Eric; Massachusetts Institute of Technology White, Stacey S.; University of Kansas Yabes, Ruth; Arizona State University

Planning History & Cultural Studies


Abbott, Carl; Portland State University Adler, Sy; Portland State University Agrawal, Asha Weinstein; San Jos State University Awwad-Rafferty, Rula; University of Idaho Ballon, Hilary; New York University Basmajian, Carlton; Iowa State University Birch, Eugenie L.; University of Pennsylvania Brody, Jason; Kansas State University Bromley, Ray; State University of New York at Albany Brooks, Jane S.; University of New Orleans Campanella, Thomas; University of North Carolina Campbell, Scott D.; University of Michigan

Planning Law
Bartholomew, Keith; University of Utah Deakin, Elizabeth; University of California Berkeley Dyckman, Caitlin.; Clemson University Forrest, Clyde; University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Harris, Kirk; University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee Hooker, Joe; University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Jaffe, Martin; University of Illinois at Chicago Jourdan, Dawn; University of Florida Kayden, Jerold S.; Harvard University Keating, W. Dennis; Cleveland State University

A-20

Kelly, Eric Damian; Ball State University Mitchell, Jerry V.; California State Polytechnic University, Pomona Parker, Francis H.; Ball State University Pearlman, Kenneth; Ohio State University Taylor, Gary D.; Iowa State University Van Ammers, Phyl; California State University, Northridge

Forester, John; Cornell University Forrest, Clyde; University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Frank, Nancy; University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee Frankel, Bruce W; Ball State University Friedmann, John; University of British Columbia Goonewardena, Kanishka; University of Toronto Grava, Sigurd; Columbia University Grengs, Joseph; University of Michigan Hoch, Charles; University of Illinois at Chicago Hopkins, Lewis D.; University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Ioannides, Dimitri; Missouri State University Isaac, Claudia B.; University of New Mexico Johnson, Bonnie; University of Kansas Kartez, Jack; University of Southern Maine Kasprisin, Ron; University of Washington Keeble, Ronald; Ryerson University Keithley, C.A.; Kansas State University Kelley, William; Eastern Washington University Kelly, Eric Damian; Ball State University Kim, Karl; University of Hawaii Knight, Bruce; University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Krieger, Martin H.; University of Southern California Krumholz, Norm; Cleveland State University Lake, Robert W.; Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey Lauria, Mickey.; Clemson University Laurian, Lucie; University of Iowa Lawhon, Larry; Kansas State University Loh, Carolyn G.; Wayne State University Looye, Johanna W.; University of Cincinnati Mahayni, Riad G.; Iowa State University Margerum, Richard; University of Oregon Martin, Jonathan; Pratt Institute Masilela, Calvin O.; Indiana University of Pennsylvania Meiklejohn, Susan Turner; Hunter College of CUNY Minassians, Henrick; California State University, Northridge Minnery, John; University of Queensland Myers, Dowell; University of Southern California Nocks, Barry C.; Clemson University Norman, Jr., Herbert P.; Michigan State University Norton, Richard; University of Michigan Olshansky, Robert; University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Owusu, Francis Y.; Iowa State University Ozawa, Connie P.; Portland State University Park, Peter; University of Colorado, Denver Parker, Francis H.; Ball State University Pearlman, Kenneth; Ohio State University Pinel, Sandra; University of Idaho Pothukuchi, Kameshwari; Wayne State University Ragonetti, Thomas; University of Colorado, Denver Roakes, Susan; University of Memphis Rowe, Peter G.; Harvard University Ryan, Dennis; University of Washington Ryan, Sherry; San Diego State University

Planning Practice, Methodology and Theory


Adler, Sy; Portland State University Agrawal, Sandeep Kumar; Ryerson University Altshuler, Alan; Harvard University Andrews, Clinton J.; Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey Anselin, Luc; Arizona State University Arvidson, Enid; University of Texas, Arlington Asomani-Boateng, Raymond; Minnesota State University, Mankato Ballon, Hilary; New York University Banai, Reza; University of Memphis Banerjee, Tridib; University of Southern California Barnett, Jonathan; University of Pennsylvania Barreto, Felix R.; California State Polytechnic University, Pomona Baum, Howell S.; University of Maryland, College Park Beard, Victoria; University of California, Irvine Born, Branden; University of Washington Boswell, Michael; California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo Brinkman, P. Anthony; University of Nevada Brody, Jason; Kansas State University Brooks, Jane S.; University of New Orleans Browder, John; Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University Bryson, John M.; University of Minnesota Burchell, Robert W.; Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey Campbell, Scott D.; University of Michigan Campo, Daniel; Morgan State University Chen, Xueming (Jimmy); Virginia Commonwealth University Clapp, Tara Lynne; Iowa State University Clark, Thomas, University of Colorado, Denver Cohen, James; University of Maryland, College Park Costa, Fernando, University of Oklahoma Crewe, Katherine; Arizona State University Dear, Michael; University of California Berkeley Dotson, A. Bruce; University of Virginia Dotson, Charles, Eastern Washington University Drown, Stephen R.; University of Idaho Edwards, Mary; University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Elliott, Michael L. Poirier; Georgia Institute of Technology Emmi, Philip C.; University of Utah Evans-Cowley, Jennifer; Ohio State University Fainstein, Susan; Harvard University Fester, Edward; University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Fischler, Raphael; McGill University Flachsbart, Peter; University of Hawaii Gough, Meghan; Virginia Commonwealth University Gulak, Morton B.; Virginia Commonwealth University Henkel, David S.; University of New Mexico

A- 21

Sancar, Fahriye; University of Colorado, Denver Sanyal, Bish; Massachusetts Institute of Technology Sarkis, A. Hashim; Harvard University Sen, Siddhartha; Morgan State University Serda, Daniel; University of Kansas Shatkin, Gavin; University of Michigan Silva, Enrique R; Boston University Slotterback, Carissa Schively; University of Minnesota Smith, Phillip; University of Queensland Smith, Sheri; Kansas State University Soja, Edward; University of California, Los Angeles Southworth, Michael; University of California Berkeley Sternberg, Ernest; University at Buffalo, The State University of New York Stiftel, Bruce; Georgia Institute of Technology Studer, Jr., Raymond; University of Colorado, Denver Suen, I-Shian (Ivan); Virginia Commonwealth University Takahashi, Lois; University of California, Los Angeles Throgmorton, James A.; University of Iowa Urey, Gwendolyn H.; California State Polytechnic University, Pomona Vazquez, M. Teresa; California State University, Northridge Verma, Niraj; University at Buffalo, The State University of New York Wack, Paul; California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo Wagner, Jacob; University of Missouri-Kansas City Weber, Rachel; University of Illinois at Chicago White, Sammis; University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee Wieters, Meghan; University of Oklahoma Wiggins, Lyna; Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey Wilson, Constance; Alabama A&M University Wilson, Richard W.; California State Polytechnic University, Pomona Wolfe, Jeanne M.; McGill University Wong, Sidney; Morgan State University Yaro, Robert; University of Pennsylvania Zhang, Sumei; University of Louisville Zonta, Michela; Virginia Commonwealth University

Perry, David; University of Illinois at Chicago Ruddick, Susan; University of Toronto Savitch, H.V.; University of Louisville Saxenian, AnnaLee; University of California Berkeley Searle, Glen; University of Queensland Shatkin, Gavin; University of Michigan Siemiatycki, Matti; University of Toronto Soja, Edward; University of California, Los Angeles Spencer, James; University of Hawaii Storper, Michael; University of California, Los Angeles Tewari, Meenu; University of North Carolina

Property Tax Legislation and Reform


Amborski, David; Ryerson University

Public Administration, Economics, Finance, Management, and Policy


Blanco, Andres; University of Florida Borich, Timothy O.; Iowa State University Bossard, Earl G.; San Jos State University Brock, Nailah; Savannah State University Brooks, Nancy; Cornell University Bryson, John M.; University of Minnesota Carolini, Gabriella Y.; Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey Clark, Chris; California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo Clavel, Pierre; Cornell University Coates, Paul; Iowa State University Cummings, Scott; Saint Louis University Dalton, Margaret M.; Frostburg State University Davis, Diane; Massachusetts Institute of Technology Delaney, Stephen; Boston University Ding, Lei; Wayne State University Ellison, Charles E.; University of Cincinnati Elvery, Joel A.; Cleveland State University Featherstone, Jeffrey; Temple University Feldman, Martha; University of California, Irvine Fisher, Peter S.; University of Iowa Fuller, John W.; University of Iowa Geiger, Shirley; Savannah State University Gershberg, Alec Ian; The New School Hoversten, Mark; University of Idaho Huddleston, Jack R.; University of Wisconsin-Madison Ingram, Helen; University of California, Irvine Iseki, Hiroyuki; University of New Orleans Kartez, Jack; University of Southern Maine King, David; Columbia University Lahr, Michael L.; Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey LaMore, Rex L.; Michigan State University LaPlante, Josephine; University of Southern Maine Levine, Jonathan; University of Michigan Lucy, William H.; University of Virginia Marshment, Richard, University of Oklahoma Mathur, Shishir; San Jos State University

Political Geography & Economy


Altshuler, Alan; Harvard University Arvidson, Enid; University of Texas, Arlington Coates, Paul; Iowa State University Crdova, Teresa L.; University of New Mexico Dear, Michael; University of California Berkeley DeFilippis, James; Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey Ellison, Charles E.; University of Cincinnati Goldsmith, William W.; Cornell University Hawley, R. Dawn; Northern Arizona University Jones, Mittie Davis; Cleveland State University Krumholz, Norm; Cleveland State University Markusen, Ann R.; University of Minnesota Mayo, James; University of Kansas Morrison, Tiffany; University of Queensland Moses, Stanley; Hunter College of CUNY Olpadwala, Porus; Cornell University Ozawa, Connie P.; Portland State University

A-22

McMillen, Daniel; University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Minassians, Henrick; California State University, Northridge Murray, Sylvester; Savannah State University Nmeth, Jeremy; University of Colorado, Denver ORorke, John; Frostburg State University Outland, Donald; Alabama A&M University Paulsen, Kurt G.; University of Wisconsin-Madison Perry, David; University of Illinois at Chicago Pucher, John R.; Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey Rufolo, Anthony; Portland State University Sanger, M. Bryna; The New School Savitch, H.V.; University of Louisville Shoup, Donald; University of California, Los Angeles Shrestha, Manoj; University of Idaho Siemiatycki, Matti; University of Toronto Silverman, Robert M.; University at Buffalo, The State University of New York Slotterback, Carissa Schively; University of Minnesota Smoke, Paul; New York University Stephenson, Max O.; Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University Thomas, Ward; California State University, Northridge Walsh, Elaine; Hunter College of CUNY Weber, Rachel; University of Illinois at Chicago Xiao, Yu; Texas A&M University Zellner, Moira; University of Illinois at Chicago

Geltner, David; Massachusetts Institute of Technology Gladstone, David; University of New Orleans Hamlin, Roger E.; Michigan State University Immergluck, Daniel; Georgia Institute of Technology Koebel, C. Theodore; Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University Leinberger, Christopher; University of Michigan Malizia, Emil; University of North Carolina McClure, Kirk; University of Kansas McMillen, Daniel; University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Peiser, Richard B.; Harvard University Price, Alfred D.; University at Buffalo, The State University of New York Renne, John L.; University of New Orleans Rolfe, George; University of Washington Ross, Catherine L.; Georgia Institute of Technology Sanders, Welford; University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee Shen, Guoqiang, University of Oklahoma Siembieda, William; California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo Simons, Robert; Cleveland State University Smith, Frank C. Jr.; Boston University Thompson, Michelle M.; University of New Orleans Vidal, Avis C.; Wayne State University Zimmer, Richard J.; California State Polytechnic University, Pomona

Remote Sensing
Czajkowski, Kevin P.; University of Toledo Hadley, Joseph; University of Akron Ramspott, Matthew E.; Frostburg State University Siebert, Loren; University of Akron

Public Space and the Public Sphere


Campo, Daniel; Morgan State University Daniere, Amrita; University of Toronto Ehrenfeucht, Renia; University of New Orleans Frenchman, Dennis; Massachusetts Institute of Technology Haddad, Monica A.; Iowa State University Kayden, Jerold S.; Harvard University Lagro, Jr., James A.; University of Wisconsin-Madison Lindsey, Greg H.; University of Minnesota Loukaitou-Sideris, Anastasia; University of California, Los Angeles Luka, Nik; McGill University MacDonald, Elizabeth; University of California Berkeley Nmeth, Jeremy; University of Colorado, Denver Ratti; Carlo; Massachusetts Institute of Technology Ruddick, Susan; University of Toronto Shibley, Robert G.; University at Buffalo, The State University of New York Siemiatycki, Matti; University of Toronto

Rural, Small Town and Tribal Development and Planning


Becker, Barbara; University of Texas, Arlington Borich, Timothy O.; Iowa State University Bradbury, Susan L.; Iowa State University Bullamore, Henry W.; Frostburg State University Dandekar, Hemalata; California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo Daugherty, Carolyn M.; Northern Arizona University Doan, Petra; Florida State University Hecht, Susanna; University of California, Los Angeles Higgins, Lorie; University of Idaho Howland, Marie; University of Maryland, College Park Isserman, Andrew; University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Jojola, Theodore; University of New Mexico Keller, John; Kansas State University Kelley, William; Eastern Washington University Lapping, Mark; University of Southern Maine Lewis, David; Cornell University Marcouiller, David W.; University of Wisconsin-Madison McClure, Wendy; University of Idaho Miles, Rebecca; Florida State University Outland, Donald; Alabama A&M University

Real Estate Development


Bostie, Raphael; University of Southern California Boyle, Robin; Wayne State University Burayidi, Michael; Ball State University Burchell, Robert W.; Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey DeLisle, James; University of Washington Deng, Lan; University of Michigan Fisher, Lynn; Massachusetts Institute of Technology Funk, David; Cornell University

A- 23

Pressley, Joyce Ann; Morgan State University Rolland, Richard; Eastern Washington University Sandoval, Gerardo; Iowa State University Shriar, Avrum J.; Virginia Commonwealth University Strauss, Eric J.; Michigan State University Taylor, Gary D.; Iowa State University Tendler, Judith; Massachusetts Institute of Technology Wagner, Frederick; University of Washington Watson, Philip; University of Idaho Wilson, Patrick; University of Idaho Winchell, Dick; Eastern Washington University

Leavitt, Jacqueline; University of California, Los Angeles Looye, Johanna W.; University of Cincinnati Marcuse, Peter; Columbia University Miles, Rebecca; Florida State University Miraftab, Faranak; University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Morales, Alfonso; University of Wisconsin-Madison Mugerauer, Robert; University of Washington Myers, Dowell; University of Southern California Nance, Earthea; University of New Orleans Ong, Paul; University of California, Los Angeles Parker, Brenda; University of Illinois at Chicago Pinel, Sandra; University of Idaho Pothukuchi, Kameshwari; Wayne State University Purcell, Mark; University of Washington Rankin, Katharine; University of Toronto Rollinson, Paul; Missouri State University Rosenbloom, Sandra; University of Arizona Ruddick, Susan; University of Toronto Sandercock; Leonie; University of British Columbia Sawicki, David S.; Georgia Institute of Technology Schlossberg, Marc; University of Oregon Shetty, Sujata; University of Toledo Shipp, Sigmund; Hunter College of CUNY Sloane, David; University of Southern California Spain, Daphne; University of Virginia Sweet, Elizabeth L.; University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Taylor, Jr, Henry Louis; University at Buffalo, The State University of New York Till, Karen; Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University Toker, Zeynep; California State University, Northridge Torres, Rodolfo; University of California, Irvine Umemoto, Karen; University of Hawaii Viteritti, Joseph; Hunter College of CUNY Walsh, Elaine; Hunter College of CUNY White, Sammis; University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee Wilder, Margaret; University of Delaware Winkle, Curtis; University of Illinois at Chicago Wolch, Jennifer; University of California Berkeley Yonder, Ayse; Pratt Institute Zapata, Marisa; University of Cincinnati Zonta, Michela; Virginia Commonwealth University

Social, Gender, and Diversity Planning and Policy


Allen, Ryan P.; University of Minnesota Awwad-Rafferty, Rula; University of Idaho Bae, Christine; University of Washington Beneria, Lourdes; Cornell University Betaneur, John; University of Illinois at Chicago Blumenberg, Evelyn; University of California, Los Angeles Boothroyd, Peter; University of British Columbia Briggs, Xavier de Souza; Massachusetts Institute of Technology Carroll, Walter F.; Boston University Chalana, Manish; University of Washington Chawla, Louise; University of Colorado, Denver Connerly, Charles E.; University of Iowa Covington, Kenya; California State University, Northridge Crewe, Katherine; Arizona State University Dandekar, Hemalata; California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo Day, Kristen; University of California, Irvine Dear, Michael; University of California Berkeley Doan, Petra; Florida State University Estrada, Leobardo; University of California, Los Angeles Fainstein, Susan; Harvard University Fisher, Peter S.; University of Iowa Foley, Dolores; University of Hawaii Forsyth, Ann; Cornell University Galster, George; Wayne State University Gibson, Karen; Portland State University Gills, Douglas; University of Illinois at Chicago Gladstone, David; University of New Orleans Gurstein, Penelope; University of British Columbia Heumann, Leonard F.; University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Howard, Jeff; University of Texas, Arlington Howell, David; The New School Hyra, Derek; Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University Isaac, Claudia B.; University of New Mexico Kosny, Mitchell; Ryerson University Knox, Paul L.; Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University Kwong, Peter; Hunter College of CUNY Lai, Clement; Cornell University Lastarria-Cornhiel, Susana; University of Wisconsin-Madison

Strategic Planning and Smart Growth


Amborski, David; Ryerson University Arquero de Alarcon, Maria; University of Michigan Barringer, Richard; University of Southern Maine Becker, Barbara; University of Texas, Arlington Blanco, Hilda; University of Washington Bryson, John M.; University of Minnesota Chatman, Daniel G.; University of California Berkeley Fuller, John W.; University of Iowa Jacobs, Harvey M.; University of Wisconsin-Madison Kellogg, Wendy A.; Cleveland State University

A-24

Kosny, Mitchell; Ryerson University Lagro, Jr., James A.; University of Wisconsin-Madison Laverny-Rafter, David; Minnesota State University, Mankato Leinberger, Christopher; University of Michigan Lucy, William H.; University of Virginia Mathur, Shishir; San Jos State University Mukhija, Vinit; University of California, Los Angeles Nocks, Barry C.; Clemson University Ohm, Brian W.; University of Wisconsin-Madison Outland, Donald; Alabama A&M University Renne, John L.; University of New Orleans Scheer, Brenda Chase; University of Utah Siembieda, William; California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo Talen, Emily; Arizona State University Walsh, Elaine; Hunter College of CUNY

Nalbandian, M. Richard; Temple University Neuman, Michael C.; Texas A&M University Peacock, Walter G.; Texas A&M University Pijawka, David: Arizona State University Polakit, Kasama; Florida Atlantic University Rees, William; University of British Columbia Renne, John L.; University of New Orleans Robinson, Pamela; Ryerson University Romanos, Michael C.; University of Cincinnati Scheer, Brenda Chase; University of Utah Shiffman, Ronald; Pratt Institute Slotterback, Carissa Schively; University of Minnesota Smith, Sheri; Texas Southern University Talen, Emily; Arizona State University Throgmorton, James A.; University of Iowa Toker, Umut; California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo Truex, Scott I.; Ball State University Van Ammers, Phyl; California State University, Northridge Van Zandt, Shannon; Texas A&M University Vos, Jaap; Florida Atlantic University Wack, Paul; California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo Webster, Douglas; Arizona State University Wilson, Bev; University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Yang, Yizhao; University of Oregon Zegras, P. Christopher; Massachusetts Institute of Technology Zellner, Moira; University of Illinois at Chicago Zhang, Yang; Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University Zovanyi, Gabor; Eastern Washington University

Sustainable Resource Development


Agyeman, Julian; Tufts University Allison, Charles; The New School Antoninetti, Maurizio; San Diego State University Auffrey, Christopher; University of Cincinnati Badami, Madhav; McGill University Barringer, Richard; University of Southern Maine Berke, Philip; University of North Carolina Boswell, Michael; California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo Campo, Daniel; Morgan State University Chifos, Carla; University of Cincinnati Conroy, Maria Manta; Ohio State University Dandekar, Hemalata; California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo Deal, Brian; University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign DeSousa, Chris; University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee Ellin, Nan; Arizona State University Featherstone, Jeffrey; Temple University Feldman, David L.; University of California, Irvine Garde, Ajay; University of California, Irvine Gough, Meghan; Virginia Commonwealth University Hall, Ralph; Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University Hirt, Sonia; Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University Howe, Deborah; Temple University Ioannides, Dimitri; Missouri State University Kassens, Eva; Michigan State University Lagro, Jr., James A.; University of Wisconsin-Madison Laninga, Tamara; University of Idaho Lejano, Raul; University of California, Irvine London, James B.; Clemson University Maclaren, Virginia; University of Toronto Mandarano, Lynn; Temple University Matthew, Richard; University of California, Irvine Mazmanian, Daniel A.; University of Southern California McKibben, Sherry; University of Idaho Mugerauer, Robert; University of Washington

Tourism Planning
Altrows, Lawrence; Ryerson University Cole, H.D. Samuel; University at Buffalo, The State University of New York Gladstone, David; University of New Orleans Gliebe, John; Portland State University Ioannides, Dimitri; Missouri State University Kim, Karl; University of Hawaii Lew, Alan A.; Northern Arizona University Long, Judith Grant; Harvard University Marcouiller, David W.; University of Wisconsin-Madison Silberberg-Robinson, Susan; Massachusetts Institute of Technology Yang, Li; Western Michigan University

Transportation, Public Service, and Infrastructure Planning


Adler, Sy; Portland State University Agrawal, Asha Weinstein; San Jos State University Akar, Gulsah; Ohio State University Alam, Bhuiyan; University of Toledo Altshuler, Alan; Harvard University Anjomani, Ardeshir; University of Texas, Arlington Badami, Madhav; McGill University Bae, Christine; University of Washington Balsas, Carlos; Arizona State University

A- 25

Benhart, Jr, John E.; Indiana University of Pennsylvania Betts, Phyllis; University of Memphis Black, Alan; University of Kansas Boarnet, Marlon; University of California, Irvine Brail, Richard K.; Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey Brinkman, P. Anthony; University of Nevada Brown, Jeffrey; Florida State University Buehler, Ralph; Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University Bunnell, Gene; State University of New York at Albany Cao, Xinyu; University of Minnesota Cervero, Robert; University of California Berkeley Chapin, Timothy; Florida State University Chatman, Daniel G.; University of California Berkeley Chatterjee, Jay; University of Cincinnati Chen, Xueming (Jimmy); Virginia Commonwealth University Clay, Michael; Auburn University Clifton, Kelly; University of Maryland, College Park Colgan, Charles S.; University of Southern Maine Crewe, Katherine; Arizona State University Daniere, Amrita; University of Toronto Dill, Jennifer; Portland State University Doan, Petra; Florida State University Dowall, David; University of California Berkeley Dunning, Anne E.; Clemson University El-Geneidy, Ahmed; McGill University Evans-Cowley, Jennifer; Ohio State University Fan, Yingling; University of Minnesota Fisher, Peter S.; University of Iowa Flachsbart, Peter; University of Hawaii Flamm, Bradley; Temple University Frank, Lawrence; University of British Columbia Fricano, Russell J; Alabama A&M University Fuller, John W.; University of Iowa Garnett, Mark; Saint Louis University Giuliano, Genevieve; University of Southern California Gliebe, John; Portland State University Goetzke, Frank; University of Louisville Golub, Aaron, Arizona State University Gomez-Ibanez, Jose A.; Harvard University Gordon, Peter; University of Southern California Grava, Sigurd; Columbia University Grengs, Joseph; University of Michigan Guo, Zhan; New York University Hall, Ralph; Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University Hanley, Paul; University of Iowa Hassol, Joshua; Boston University Hess, Daniel B.; University at Buffalo, The State University of New York Hinojosa, Ren C.; Michigan State University Houston, Douglas; University of California, Irvine Huang, Ruihong (Ray); Northern Arizona University Iseki, Hiroyuki; University of New Orleans Kassens, Eva; Michigan State University Kawamura, Kazuya; University of Illinois at Chicago

Keller, John; Kansas State University Kelley, William; Eastern Washington University Kim, Do-Hyung; California State Polytechnic University, Pomona Kim, Karl; University of Hawaii Kim, Sungyop; University of Missouri-Kansas City Kim, Tschangho John; University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign King, David; Columbia University Koeppel, Peter; Florida State University Krizek, Kevin; University of Colorado, Denver Kyte, Michael; University of Idaho Laverny-Rafter, David; Minnesota State University, Mankato Lawson, Catherine T.; State University of New York at Albany Lee, Bumsoo; University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Lee, Yuk; University of Colorado, Denver Levine, Jonathan; University of Michigan Levinson, David; University of Minnesota Li, Jianling; University of Texas, Arlington Lindquist Peter S.; University of Toledo Long, Judith Grant; Harvard University Lowry, Michael; University of Idaho Mahayni, Riad G.; Iowa State University Malizia, Emil; University of North Carolina Marshment, Richard, University of Oklahoma Matsuo, Miwa; University of Iowa McDonald, Noreen; University of North Carolina Milczarski, William; Hunter College of CUNY Moudon, Anne Vernez; University of Washington Nance, Earthea; University of New Orleans Neuman, Michael C.; Texas A&M University Noland, Robert B.; Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey Nuworsoo, Cornelius; California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo ORegan, Katherine; New York University Oluwoye, Jacob; Alabama A&M University Pan, Qisheng; Texas Southern University Parker, Francis H.; Ball State University Pearson, Gene; University of Memphis Peng, Zhong-Ren; University of Florida Perry, David; University of Illinois at Chicago Pivo, Gary; University of Arizona Pressley, Joyce Ann; Morgan State University Pucher, John R.; Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey Rea, Louis M.; San Diego State University Renne, John L.; University of New Orleans Richardson, Harry W.; University of Southern California Rodriguez, Daniel; University of North Carolina Rolland, Richard; Eastern Washington University Rosenbloom, Sandra; University of Arizona Ross, Catherine L.; Georgia Institute of Technology Rufolo, Anthony; Portland State University Ryan, Sherry; San Diego State University Schlossberg, Marc; University of Oregon Schneider, Richard; University of Florida

A-26

Schweitzer, Lisa; University of Southern California Sclar, Elliott; Columbia University Sen, Lalita; Texas Southern University Sen, Siddhartha; Morgan State University Shen, Guoqiang, University of Oklahoma Shen, Qing; University of Washington Shoup, Donald; University of California, Los Angeles Siemiatycki, Matti; University of Toronto Smith, Sheri; Kansas State University Steiner, Ruth; University of Florida Taylor, Brian; University of California, Los Angeles Thakuriah, Piyushimita; University of Illinois at Chicago Thompson, Gregory; Florida State University Toor, Will; University of Colorado, Denver Urey, Gwendolyn H.; California State Polytechnic University, Pomona Verma, Niraj; University at Buffalo, The State University of New York Viton, Phillip A.; Ohio State University Waddell, Paul; University of California Berkeley Wang, Rui; University of California, Los Angeles Weinberger, Rachel; University of Pennsylvania Whittington, Jan; University of Washington Wilson, Constance; Alabama A&M University Wilson, Richard W.; California State Polytechnic University, Pomona Wolch, Jennifer; University of California Berkeley Yang, Jiawen; Georgia Institute of Technology Zahm, Diane L.; Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University Zegras, P. Christopher; Massachusetts Institute of Technology Zimmerman, Rae; New York University

Forsyth, Ann; Cornell University Foster, Kathryn A.; University at Buffalo, The State University of New York Goldsmith, William W.; Cornell University Grengs, Joseph; University of Michigan Hollander, Justin; Tufts University Hutson, Malo Andr; University of California Berkeley Hyra, Derek; Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University Jennings,James; Tufts University Knight, Bruce; University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Lauria, Mickey.; Clemson University Lew, Alan A.; Northern Arizona University Li, Yanmei; Florida Atlantic University Liggett, Robin; University of California, Los Angeles Masilela, Calvin O.; Indiana University of Pennsylvania Menking, William; Pratt Institute Miller, Donald; University of Washington Minassians, Henrick; California State University, Northridge Minnery, John; University of Queensland Morales, Alfonso; University of Wisconsin-Madison Moss, Mitchell; New York University Newman, Kathe; Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey ORorke, John; Frostburg State University Oretsky, Nicole; Savannah State University Parker, Brenda; University of Illinois at Chicago Purcell, Mark; University of Washington Robinson, Pamela; Ryerson University Sandercock; Leonie; University of British Columbia Talen, Emily; Arizona State University Taylor, Brian; University of California, Los Angeles Thompson, J. Phillip; Massachusetts Institute of Technology Vazquez, M. Teresa; California State University, Northridge Zimmer, Richard J.; California State Polytechnic University, Pomona

Travel behavior
Cao, Xinyu; University of Minnesota El-Geneidy, Ahmed; McGill University Gliebe, John; Portland State University Hess, Paul; University of Toronto Iseki, Hiroyuki; University of New Orleans King, David; Columbia University Lee, Bumsoo; University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Rodriguez, Daniel; University of North Carolina

Urban Design
Abramson, Daniel; University of Washington Adams, Vera; Ball State University Agrawal, Sandeep Kumar; Ryerson University Akers, Mary Anne Alabanza; Morgan State University Al-Kodmany, Kheir; University of Illinois at Chicago Anselin, Lue; Arizona State University Antoninetti, Maurizio; San Diego State University Arefi, Mahyar; University of Cincinnati Austin, Gary; University of Idaho Ballon, Hilary; New York University Banai, Reza; University of Memphis Banerjee, Tridib; University of Southern California Barnett, Jonathan; University of Pennsylvania Beasley, Larry; University of British Columbia Bejleri, Ilir; University of Florida Brody, Jason; Kansas State University Brooks, Jane S.; University of New Orleans Brower, Sidney; University of Maryland, College Park Campanella, Thomas; University of North Carolina

Urban Policy, Politics of Planning, and Government


Amirahmadi, Hooshang; Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey Ashton, Philip; University of Illinois at Chicago Bullamore, Henry W.; Frostburg State University Carroll, Walter F.; Boston University Covington, Kenya; California State University, Northridge Cummings, Scott; Saint Louis University Davis, Diane; Massachusetts Institute of Technology Deng, Lan; University of Michigan Ehrenfeucht, Renia; University of New Orleans Eisinger, Peter; The New School Ellison, Charles E.; University of Cincinnati Fainstein, Susan; Harvard University

A- 27

Campo, Daniel; Morgan State University Chatterjee, Jay; University of Cincinnati Crewe, Katherine; Arizona State University Day, Kristen; University of California, Irvine Dobbins, Michael A.; Georgia Institute of Technology Dutta-Koehler, Madhu C.; Boston University Ehrenfeucht, Renia; University of New Orleans Ellin, Nan; Arizona State University Ellis, Clifford D.; Clemson University Esswein, Carolyn; University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee Farberow, Herschel; California State Polytechnic University, Pomona Forsyth, Ann; Cornell University Frenchman, Dennis; Massachusetts Institute of Technology Garde, Ajay; University of California, Irvine Grodach, Carl; University of Texas, Arlington Gulak, Morton B.; Virginia Commonwealth University Hack, Gary; University of Pennsylvania Hedrick, Earl; University of New Orleans Heidelberg, Beth Wielde; Minnesota State University, Mankato Herzog, Lawrence; San Diego State University Hess, Daniel B.; University at Buffalo, The State University of New York Hess, Paul; University of Toronto Hoch, Charles; University of Illinois at Chicago Howard, Zeljka Pavolich; California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo Huang, Chang-Shan; Texas A&M University Hurand, Fred A.; Eastern Washington University Imeokparia, Timothy O.; University of New Mexico Irazabal, Clara; Columbia University Jaffe, Martin; University of Illinois at Chicago Jutla, Rajinder; Missouri State University Kasprisin, Ron; University of Washington Kim, Do-Hyung; California State Polytechnic University, Pomona Krieger, Alex; Harvard University Kwok, Reg; University of Hawaii Larice, Michael; University of Pennsylvania Lewis, Ferdinand.; University at Buffalo, The State University of New York Liggett, Robin; University of California, Los Angeles Lister, Nina-Marie; Ryerson University Loukaitou-Sideris, Anastasia; University of California, Los Angeles Luka, Nik; McGill University MacDonald, Elizabeth; University of California Berkeley Macedo, Joseli; University of Florida Mayo, James; University of Kansas McCall, Raymond; University of Colorado, Denver McKibben, Sherry; University of Idaho Minassians, Henrick; California State University, Northridge Moudon, Anne Vernez; University of Washington Mukhija, Vinit; University of California, Los Angeles Nasar, Jack L.; Ohio State University Nelessen, Anton E.; Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey Nemeth, David J.; University of Toledo Nmeth, Jeremy; University of Colorado, Denver

Onaran, Korkut; University of Colorado, Denver Park, Peter; University of Colorado, Denver Pearson, Gene; University of Memphis Perera, M.C. Nihal; Ball State University Perry, David; University of Illinois at Chicago Pittari Jr, John J.; Auburn University Polakit, Kasama; Florida Atlantic University Pothukuchi, Kameshwari; Wayne State University Ramasubramanian, Laxmi; Hunter College of CUNY Ratti; Carlo; Massachusetts Institute of Technology del Rio, Vincente; California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo Richardson, James R.; University of New Mexico Rowe, Peter G.; Harvard University Russell, Francis Penrose; University of Cincinnati Ryan, Brent; Massachusetts Institute of Technology Ryan, Dennis; University of Washington Salazar, Dayana M.; San Jos State University Sanders, Melissa; Florida State University Sarkis, A. Hashim; Harvard University Scheer, Brenda Chase; University of Utah Schmidt, Stephen; Cornell University Serda, Daniel; University of Kansas Shibley, Robert G.; University at Buffalo, The State University of New York Siebert, Loren; University of Akron Sen, Siddhartha; Morgan State University Senbel, Maged; University of British Columbia Sennett, Richard; Massachusetts Institute of Technology Shen, Guoqiang; University of Oklahoma Silberberg-Robinson, Susan; Massachusetts Institute of Technology Southworth, Michael; University of California Berkeley Swallow, Joy; University of Missouri-Kansas City Talen, Emily; Arizona State University Taylor, Jr, Henry Louis; University at Buffalo, The State University of New York Toker, Umut; California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo Toker, Zeynep; California State University, Northridge Toulan, Nohan A.; Portland State University Trabalzi, Ferruccio; Iowa State University Triantafillou, Menelaos; University of Cincinnati Truex, Scott I.; Ball State University Vidyarthi, Sanjeev; University of Illinois at Chicago Weisenburger, Ray; Kansas State University Yang, Perry Pei-Ju; Georgia Institute of Technology Zhang, Tin Wei; University of Illinois at Chicago Zhuang, Zhixi Cecilia; Ryerson University

Urban Development and Redevelopment


Alam, Bhuiyan; University of Toledo Allen, Ryan P.; University of Minnesota Balsas, Carlos; Arizona State University Barbour, John, University of Colorado, Denver Beauregard, Robert; Columbia University Benhart, Jr, John E.; Indiana University of Pennsylvania

A-28

Berger, Alan; Massachusetts Institute of Technology Crdova, Teresa L.; University of New Mexico Crane, Randall; University of California, Los Angeles Das, Priyam; University of Hawaii Dear, Michael; University of California Berkeley de Monchaux; John; Massachusetts Institute of Technology DeSousa, Chris; University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee Dewar, Margaret E.; University of Michigan Ellin, Nan; Arizona State University Etienne, Harley F.; Georgia Institute of Technology Fainstein, Susan; Harvard University Freeman, Lance; Columbia University Gladstone, David; University of New Orleans Grodach, Carl; University of Texas, Arlington Gulak, Morton B.; Virginia Commonwealth University Hoch, Richard J.; Indiana University of Pennsylvania Hoyt, Lorlene; Massachusetts Institute of Technology Hutson, Malo Andr; University of California Berkeley Hutton, Tom; University of British Columbia Kamel, Nabil; Arizona State University Kent, Robert B.; California State University, Northridge Landis, John; University of Pennsylvania Lang, Robert; Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University Lewis, David A.; State University of New York at Albany Lister, Nina-Marie; Ryerson University Long, Judith Grant; Harvard University Maclaren, Virginia; University of Toronto Malizia, Emil; University of North Carolina McKibben, Sherry; University of Idaho Mukhija, Vinit; University of California, Los Angeles Newman, Kathe; Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey Ohm, Brian W.; University of Wisconsin-Madison Olson, C. Brad; Cornell University del Rio, Vicente Rohe, William; University of North Carolina Ryan, Brent; Massachusetts Institute of Technology Savitch, H.V.; University of Louisville Scheer, Brenda Chase; University of Utah Shibley, Robert G.; University at Buffalo, The State University of New York Strauss, Eric J.; Michigan State University Thomas, June Manning; University of Michigan Till, Karen; Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University Warren, Robert; University of Delaware Webster, Douglas; Arizona State University Weisenburger, Ray; Kansas State University Wood, Perry; Minnesota State University, Mankato Zhuang, Zhixi Cecilia; Ryerson University

Forsyth, Ann; Cornell University Greve, Adrienne; California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo McMullen, John; Frostburg State University Stone Jr., Brian; Georgia Institute of Technology

Urban and Regional Economics


Amirahmadi, Hooshang; Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey Anjomani, Ardeshir; University of Texas, Arlington Arvidson, Enid; University of Texas, Arlington Barreto, Felix R.; California State Polytechnic University, Pomona Blanco, Andres; University of Florida Boarnet, Marlon; University of California, Irvine Bostie, Raphael; University of Southern California Bourassa, Steven; University of Louisville Brooks, Nancy; Cornell University Brower, Sidney; University of Maryland, College Park Clark, Thomas, University of Colorado, Denver Colgan, Charles S.; University of Southern Maine Dalton, Margaret M.; Frostburg State University Deng, Lan; University of Michigan Ding, Chengri; University of Maryland, College Park Ellen, Ingrid Gould; New York University Elvery, Joel A.; Cleveland State University Fuller, John W.; University of Iowa Galster, George; Wayne State University Giuliano, Genevieve; University of Southern California Goetzke, Frank; University of Louisville Gomez-Ibanez, Jose A.; Harvard University Guldmann, Jean-Michel; Ohio State University Hammel, Daniel J.; University of Toledo Heikkila, Eric J.; University of Southern California Hill, Edward W.; Cleveland State University Howland, Marie; University of Maryland, College Park Hughes, James W.; Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey Isserman, Andrew; University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Knapp, Gerrit; University of Maryland, College Park Lahr, Michael L.; Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey Lee, Bumsoo; University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Leigh, Nancey Green; Georgia Institute of Technology Leinberger, Christopher; University of Michigan Levy, Frank; Massachusetts Institute of Technology Lewis, David A.; State University of New York at Albany Lindquist Peter S.; University of Toledo McCormick, Lynn; Hunter College of CUNY McMillen, Daniel; University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Moses, Stanley; Hunter College of CUNY Muller, Brian; University of Colorado, Denver Park, Peter; University of Colorado, Denver Pucher, John R.; Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey von Rabenau, Burkhardl Ohio State University Rea, Louis M.; San Diego State University Richardson, Harry W.; University of Southern California Roakes, Susan; University of Memphis

Urban Ecology
Alberti, Marina; University of Washington Chifos, Carla; University of Cincinnati Dear, Michael; University of California Berkeley Douglass, Michael; University of Hawaii

A- 29

Rost, Craig; University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Rufolo, Anthony; Portland State University Sanchez, Arturo; Cornell University Sawicki, David S.; Georgia Institute of Technology Saxenian, AnnaLee; University of California Berkeley Shen, Qing; University of Washington Simons, Robert; Cleveland State University Smoke, Paul; New York University Storper, Michael; University of California, Los Angeles Viton, Phillip A.; Ohio State University vom Hofe, Rainer; University of Cincinnati Waddell, Paul; University of California Berkeley Wang, Rui; University of California, Los Angeles Watson, Philip; University of Idaho Xiao, Yu; Texas A&M University Yang, Jiawen; Georgia Institute of Technology Zizzi, Donald; Boston University

Urban Sociology
Campbell, Christopher; University of Washington McMullen, John; Frostburg State University

Waste Management
Maclaren, Virginia; University of Toronto Nixon, Hilary; San Jos State University

A-30

APPENDIX b Alphabetical Faculty Listing with Contact Information A


Abbanat, Cherie ................................. Massachusetts Institute of Technology (617) 324-1570 abbanat@mit.edu Abbott, Carl .............................................................. Portland State University (503) 725-5171 abbottc@pdx.edu Abramson, Daniel ..................................................... University of Washington (206) 543-2089 abramson@u.washington.edu Abrams, Robert ..................................................................... Cornell University (607) 255-1748 rha3@cornell.edu Accordino, John J. ................................... Virginia Commonwealth University (804) 827-0525 jaccordi@vcu.edu Acey, Charisma ................................................................ Ohio State University (614) 292-1012 Adams, Vera ....................................................................... ball State University (765) 285-1918 vadams@bsu.edu Adhikari, Ambika ....................................................... Arizona State University (480) 965-7533 Ambika.Adhikari@asu.edu Adler, Moshe ...................................................................... Columbia University Adler, Moshe ................................................................................ Pratt Institute (718) 399-4314 ma820@columbia.edu Adler, Sy .................................................................... Portland State University (503) 725-5172 adlers@pdx.edu Agrawal, Asha Weinstein .......................................... San Jose State University (408) 924-5853 asha.weinstein.agrawal@sjsu.edu Agrawal, Sandeep Kumar ................................................... Ryerson University (416) 979-5000 ext. 6767 sagrawal@ryerson.ca Agyeman, Julian ....................................................................... Tufts University (617) 627-3394 julian.agyeman@tufts.edu Ahrentzen, Sherry ....................................................... Arizona State University (480) 965-7533 Sherry.Arentzen@asu.edu Akar, Gulsah .................................................................... Ohio State University (614) 292-1012 Akers, Mary Anne Alabanza ...................................... Morgan State University (443) 885-1867 MaryAnne.Akers@morgan.edu Alarcon, Maria Arquero de ............................................ University of Michigan marquero@umich.edu Alcantara, Adelamar ................................................. University of New Mexico Al-Kodmany, Kheir ........................................ University of Illinois at Chicago (312) 413-3884 kheir@uic.edu Alam, bhuiyan .................................................................... University of Toledo (419) 530-7269 balam@utnet.utoledo.edu Alberti, Marina ......................................................... University of Washington (206) 616-8667 malberti@u.washington.edu Alexander, James ..................................................... Alabama A&M University (256) 372-4794 james.alexander@aamu.edu Allen, Douglas C. ........................................... Georgia Institute of Technology (404) 894-0907 doug.allen@coa.gatech.edu Allen, James J. ....................................................... University at buffalo SUNY (716) 829-2133x222 jjallen@buffalo.edu Allen, Peter .................................................................... University of Michigan ptallen@umich.edu Allen, Ryan P. ............................................................... University of Minnesota (612) 625-5670 allen650@umn.edu Allison, Charles ......................................................................... The New School (212) 229-5400 x1617 allisonc@newschool.edu Allison, David J. ................................................................. Clemson University (864) 656-3897 adavid@clemson.edu Allison, Eric ................................................................................... Pratt Institute (212) 647-7532 eallison@pratt.edu Alpern, Robert .............................................................................. Pratt Institute (718) 399-4314 bobalp140@aol.com AlSayyad, Nezar ........................................... University of California berkeley (510) 642-4852 nezar@berkeley.edu Altrows, Lawrence ................................................................ Ryerson University (416) 979-5000 ext. 6765 laltrows@ryerson.ca Altshuler, Alan .................................................................... Harvard University (617) 495-7559 aaltshul@gsd.harvard.edu Amborski, David ................................................................. Ryerson University (416) 979-5000 ext. 6768 amborski@ryerson.ca Ames, David L. ............................................................... University of Delaware (302) 831-1050 davames@udel.edu Amirahmadi, Hooshang ....................................................................... Rutgers (732) 932-3822 ext. 737 amirahma@rci.rutgers.edu Ammers, Phyl Van ............................. California State University, Northridge (818) 677-2881 phyl.ammers@csun.edu Amsden, Alice ..................................... Massachusetts Institute of Technology (617) 253-6254 amsden@mit.edu Anderson, Austin G. ..................................... University of Southern California (310) 477-9585 Austin.Anderson@econres.conff Andrews, Clinton J. ................................................................................ Rutgers (732) 932-3822 ext. 721 cja1@rci.rutgers.ed

B- 1

Andrews, Richard ................................................. University of North Carolina (919) 843-5011 pete_andrews@unc.edu Angeles, Leonora ............................................... University of british Columbia (604) 822-9312 angeles@interchange.ubc.ca Angel, Shlomo .................................................................. New York University Angotti, Thomas ........................................................ Hunter College of CUNY (212) 650-3130 tangotti@hunter.cuny.edu Anjomani, Ardeshir ........................................... University of Texas, Arlington (817) 272-3310 anjomani@uta.edu Anselin, Luc ................................................................. Arizona State University (480) 965-7533 Luc.Anselin@asu.edu Anthony, Jerry ...................................................................... University of Iowa (319) 335-0622 jerry-anthony@uiowa.edu Antolini, Denise ................................................................. University of Hawaii (808) 956-6238 antolini@hawaii.edu Antoninetti, Maurizio ............................................ San Diego State University (619) 594-4098 mantonin@mail.sdsu.edu Appleton, Albert F. ..................................................... Hunter College of CUNY Arefi, Mahyar ............................................................... University of Cincinnati (513) 556-0212 mahyar.arefi@uc.edu Arias, Ernesto .................................................. University of Colorado, Denver Arnold, Tony ................................................................... University of Louisville (502) 852-6388 tony.arnold@louisville.edu Arvidson, Enid ................................................... University of Texas, Arlington (817) 272-3349 enid@uta.edu Ascher, Kate J. ................................................................... New York University Ashford, Nicholas ............................... Massachusetts Institute of Technology (617) 253-1664 nashford@mit.edu Ashton, Philip ................................................. University of Illinois at Chicago (312) 413-7599 pashton@uic.edu Asomani-boateng, Raymond .............. Minnesota State University, Mankato (507) 389-5030 raymond.asomani-boateng@mnsu.edu Aspaas, Helen-Ruth ................................. Virginia Commonwealth University (804) 828-8086 hraspaas@vcu.edu Assaad, Ragui A. .......................................................... University of Minnesota (612) 626-8910 assaad@umn.edu Audirac, Ivonne ........................................................... Florida State University (850) 644-4510 iaudirac@fsu.edu Auffrey, Christopher ................................................... University of Cincinnati (513) 556-0579 chris.auffrey@uc.edu Augustus, Sylvia Rose .............................. Universitry of Missouri, Kansas City Austin, Gary .........................................................................University of Idaho (208) 885-7117 gaustin@uidaho.edu

Avila, Eric ................................................ University of California, Los Angeles (310) 825-9106 eavila@ucla.edu Avrami, Erika ................................................................................ Pratt Institute (212) 647-7352 Awwad-Rafferty, Rula .........................................................University of Idaho (208) 885-6832 rulaa@uidaho.edu Azis, Iwan .............................................................................. Cornell University (607) 255-4271 ija1@cornell.edu

b
badami, Madhav ..................................................................... McGill University (514) 398-3183 madhav.badami@mcgill.ca bae, Christine ............................................................ University of Washington (206) 616-9034 cbae@u.washington.edu baker, Kathleen ................................................... Western Michigan University balinsky, Warren ....................................................................... The New School (212) 229-5400 x1615 wbalinsk@newschool.edu ballon, Hilary ..................................................................... New York University (212) 998-7400 hilary.ballon@nyu.edu balsas, Carlos ............................................................... Arizona State University (480) 965-7167 Carlos.Balsas@asu.edu bame, Sherry ................................................................... Texas A&M University (979) 845-1047 sbame@archone.tamu.edu banai, Reza .....................................................................University of Memphis (901) 678-4559 rbanai@memphis.edu banerjee, Tridib ............................................ University of Southern California (213) 740-4724 tbanerje@usc.edu bania, Neil ......................................................................... University of Oregon (541) 346-3635 barbour, John ................................................... University of Colorado Denver (303) 492-8010 john.barbour@colorado.edu barnett, Jonathan .................................................. University of Pennsylvania (215) 732-5215 jonathanbarnett@verizon.net barreto, Felix R. ................. California State Polytechnic University, Pomona (909) 869-2727 fbarreto@csupomona.edu barrett, Edith Juanita ....................................... University of Texas, Arlington (817) 272-3385 ebarrett@uta.edu barrett, Linda ...................................................................... University of Akron (330) 972-6120 barrett@uakron.edu barringer, Margaret .................................................................. Tufts University (617) 627-3394 pegsquare@aol.com barringer, Richard .............................................. University of Southern Maine (207) 780-4418 barringr@usm.maine.edu barr, Sarah ...................................................... University of Illinois at Chicago sbarr3@uic.edu

B-2

bartholomew, Keith .............................................................. University of Utah (801) 581-8944 bartholomew@arch.utah.edu bartley, Ernest ................................................................... University of Florida basolo, Victoria ................................................. University of California Irvine (949) 824-3521 basolo@uci.edu bassett, Ellen M. ........................................................ Portland State University (503) 725-5174 bassette@pdx.edu bassett, Scott .................................................................... University of Nevada (775) 784-1434 sbassett@unr.edu bates, Lisa K. .............................................................. Portland State University (503) 725-8203 lkbates@pdx.edu battisto, Dina G. ................................................................ Clemson University (864) 656-3887 dbattis@clemson.edu baugher, Sherene ................................................................. Cornell University (607) 255-1648 sbb8@cornell.edu baum, Howell S. .................................... University of Maryland, College Park (301) 405-6792 hbaum@umd.edu bauman, John .................................................... University of Southern Maine (207) 780-5389 baumanj@adelphia.net beard, Victoria .................................................. University of California Irvine (949) 824-6484 vbeard@uci.edu beasley, Larry ..................................................... University of british Columbia (604) 687-5108 larrybeasley@shaw.ca beatley, Timothy .............................................................. University of Virginia (434) 924-6457 tb6d@virginia.edu beauregard, Robert ........................................................... Columbia University rab48@columbia.edu becker, barbara ................................................ University of Texas, Arlington (817) 272-3301 bbecker@uta.edu becker, Jennifer ............................................................................ Pratt Institute becker, Robert ......................................................... University of New Orleans (504) 280-6277 bbecker@uno.edu beck, Les ................................................................................ University of Iowa (319) 335-0032 les.beck@linncounty.org begg, Robert b. Indiana ........................................ University of Pennsylvania (724) 357 2250 bobbegg@iup.edu behan, John J. ........................................................................... SUNY at Albany (518) 583-4335 jbehan@behanplanning.com behan, Maeveen .............................................................. University of Arizona (520) 877-6000 beinart, Julian .................................... Massachusetts Institute of Technology (617) 253-7918 jbeinart@mit.edu bejleri, Ilir .......................................................................... University of Florida (352) 392-0997 ilir@ufl.edu

bell, Martin ................................................................ University of Queensland (61) 7-3365-7087 martin.bell@uq.edu.au belsky, Eric ........................................................................... Harvard University ebelsky@gsd.harvard.edu bencloski, Joseph W. Indiana ............................... University of Pennsylvania (724) 357 2250 joeben@iup.edu benDor, Todd ........................................................ University of North Carolina (919) 962-4760 bendor@unc.edu benedict, Chris ............................................................................. Pratt Institute (718) 399-4314 benedictra@aol.com beneria, Lourdes ................................................................... Cornell University (607) 255-2148 lb21@cornell.edu benhart Jr., John E. Indiana .................................. University of Pennsylvania (724) 357 7652 jbenhart@iup.edu benjamin, David ................................................................. University of Akron (330) 972-7620 dbenjamin@justice.com ben-Joseph, Eran ............................... Massachusetts Institute of Technology (617) 253-7305 ebj@mit.edu bennett, Daniel ................................................................... Auburn University (334) 844-4285 bennedd@auburn.edu berger, Alan ........................................ Massachusetts Institute of Technology (617) 253-6707 aberger@mit.edu berger, Gideon ................................................ University of Colorado Denver berke, Philip .......................................................... University of North Carolina (919) 962-4765 pberke@email.unc.edu berry, Kate ........................................................................ University of Nevada (775) 784-1865 kberry@unr.edu betancur, John ................................................ University of Illinois at Chicago (312) 996-2125 betancur@uic.edu betts, Phyllis .................................................................. University of Memphis beyers, William.......................................................... University of Washington (206) 543-5871 beyers@u.washington.edu bezboruah, Karabi C. ....................................... University of Texas, Arlington (817) 272-3071 billingsley, Graham ......................................... University of Colorado Denver birch, Eugenie L. .................................................... University of Pennsylvania (215) 898-6097 elbirch@design.upenn.edu bish Sanyal ......................................... Massachusetts Institute of Technology (617) 253-3270 sanyal@mit.edu black, Alan ......................................................................... University of Kansas (785) 864-3208 ablack@ku.edu blanck, Doreen Liberto ...................................... California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo (805) 203-5022 earthdesign@charter.net

B- 3

blanco, Andres .................................................................. University of Florida (352) 392-0997 agblanco@ufl.edu blanco, Hilda ................................................ University of Southern California hblanco@u.washington.edu blanco, Hilda ............................................................. University of Washington hblanco@u.washington.edu blank, Alice ................................................................. Hunter College of CUNY blaustein, Arthur .......................................... University of California berkeley (510) 642-3256 blewett, Christopher ................................................. University of New Mexico blumenberg, Evelyn .............................. University of California, Los Angeles (310) 903-3305 eblumenb@ucla.edu blustein, Jan ..................................................................... New York University boarnet, Marlon ............................................... University of California Irvine (949) 824-7695 mgboarne@uci.edu bobker, Michael ........................................................................... Pratt Institute (718) 399-4314 bodek, Hanley ....................................................... University of Pennsylvania boeschenstein, Warren..................................................... University of Virginia (434) 924-6440 web9w@virginia.edu bohland, James R. .............. Virginia Polytechnic Institute & State University (540) 231-5517 jayjon@vt.edu bolan, Richard S. ......................................................... University of Minnesota (612) 625-0128 bolan001@umn.edu boles, Claude ..................................................................... University of Florida (352) 392-0997 gboles@ufl.edu bollens, Scott .................................................... University of California Irvine (949) 824-7696 bollens@uci.edu bongang, bernard L. ............................................... Savannah State University (912) 356-2340 bongang@savstate.edu bonner-DuVal, Patricia ............................................................. Tufts University booth, Richard S. ................................................................... Cornell University (607) 255-4025 rsb6@cornell.edu boothroyd, Peter ............................................... University of british Columbia (604) 822-4155 peterb@interchange.ubc.ca borbas, Steve ............................................................. University of New Mexico borich, Timothy O. .......................................................... Iowa State University (515) 294-8707 borich@iastate.edu born, branden ........................................................... University of Washington (206) 543-4975 bborn@u.washington.edu bornstein, Lisa ........................................................................ McGill University (514) 398-4077 lisa.bornstein@mcgill.ca

born, Stephen M. ...........................................University of Wisconsin-Madison (608) 262-1004 smborn@wisc.edu bossard, Earl G. ......................................................... San Jose State University (408) 924-5860 bossard3@pacbell.net bosselmann, Peter ....................................... University of California berkeley (510) 642-6579 pbossel@berkeley.edu bostic, Raphael ............................................. University of Southern California (213) 740-1220 bostic@usc.edu boswell, Michael ... California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo (805) 756-2496 mboswell@calpoly.edu botchwey, Nisha ............................................................... University of Virginia (434) 924-6444 nbotchwey@virginia.edu bourassa, Steven C. ....................................................... University of Louisville (502) 852-5720 steven.bourassa@louisville.edu bowman, Phillip ............................................................ University of Michigan (734) 764-6497 pjbowman@umich.edu boyle, Robin ................................................................. Wayne State University (313) 577-8711 r.boyle@wayne.edu boyle, Tim ........................................................................... Columbia University bozorgi, Khosrow ........................................................ University of Oklahoma (405) 325-3348 kbozorgi@ou.edu bradbury, Susan L. ......................................................... Iowa State University (515) 294-8720 bradburyl@iastate.edu bradbury, Susan L. .......................................................... Iowa State University (515) 294-8720 bradbury1@iastate.edu bradley, Gordon ....................................................... University of Washington (206) 685-0881 gbradley@u.washington.edu bradley, Michael ............................................................... University of Arizona (520) 621-3865 mdb@hwr.arizona.edu brahmbhatt, Viren ....................................................................... Pratt Institute (718) 399-4314 anarchitect@earthlink.net brail, Richard K. ....................................................................................... Rutgers (732) 932-3822 ext. 731 rbrail@rci.rutgers.edu brannock, John ......................................................... University of Queensland (61)-7-3365-6455 bratt, Rachel G. ......................................................................... Tufts University (617) 627-3394 rachel.bratt@tufts.edu bray, Paul M. ............................................................................. SUNY at Albany (518) 472-1772 pmbray@aol.com brennan, Dean ............................................................ Arizona State University (480) 965-7533 Dean.Brennan@asu.edu brewster, Chris .......................................... University of Missouri-Kansas City briggs, Xavier de Souza .................... Massachusetts Institute of Technology (617) 253-7956 xbriggs@mit.edu bright, Elise ..................................................................... Texas A&M University (979) 845-3161 ebright@archone.tamu.edu

B-4

brinkman, P. Anthony ...................................................... University of Nevada (775) 784-4762 brinkman@unr.edu brock, Nailah ........................................................... Savannah State University (912) 303-4349 brockn@savstate.edu brody, Jason ................................................................. Kansas State University (785) 532-5961brody@ksu.edu brody, Samuel ................................................................. Texas A&M University (979) 458-4623 sbrody@archone.tamu.edu bromley, Ray .............................................................................. SUNY at Albany (518) 442-4766 r.bromley@albany.edu brooks, Jane S. ........................................................ University of New Orleans (504) 280-6514 jsbrooks@uno.edu brooks, Nancy ....................................................................... Cornell University brophy, Paul .......................................................... University of Pennsylvania browder, John ..................... Virginia Polytechnic Institute & State University (540) 231-6217 browder@vt.edu brower, David ....................................................... University of North Carolina (919) 962-4775 brower@email.unc.edu brower, Sidney ..................................... University of Maryland, College Park (301) 405-6796 sbrower@umd.edu brown, Carlton ..............................................................................Pratt Institute (718) 399-4314 brown, Cindy ................................................... University of Colorado Denver brown, David ........................................................................... McGill University (514) 398-4075 david.brown@mcgill.ca brown, Jeffrey .............................................................. Florida State University (850) 644-4510 jrbrown3@fsu.edu bruckner, Tim-Allen ......................................... University of California Irvine (949) 824-0563 tbruck@uci.edu brunn, Rachelle J. ............................................................. New York University bryson, John M. ........................................................... University of Minnesota (612) 625-5888 bryso001@umn.edu buckwalter, Donald W. ............................. Indiana University of Pennsylvania (724) 357 2250 donaldb@iup.edu buehler, Ralph .................... Virginia Polytechnic Institute & State University (703) 706-8104 ralphbu@vt.edu buholzer, bill ..................................................... University of british Columbia wbulholzer@gmail.com bullamore, Henry W. .............................................. Frostburg State University (301) 687-4413 hbullamore@frostburg.edu bunnell, Gene ............................................................................ SUNY at Albany (518) 442-4469 gbunnell@albany.edu bunyan bryant, ?? ......................................................... University of Michigan (734) 763-2470 bbryant@umich.edu

burayidi, Michael .............................................................. ball State University (765) 285-1963 maburayidi@bsu.edu burby, Ray ............................................................. University of North Carolina (919) 962-4774 burby@email.unc.edu burchell, Robert W. ................................................................................ Rutgers (732) 932-3133 ext. 542 burchell@rci.rutgers.edu burdick, Robert ......................................................................... Tufts University (617) 627-3394 rburdick@gbls.org busard, Joshua ..................................................................... University of Iowa (765) 730-7645 jbusard@co.johnson.ia.us busquets, Joan .................................................................... Harvard University (617) 496-8811 jbusquet@gsd.harvard.edu butler, Kevin ........................................................................ University of Akron (330) 972-7621 butler@uakron.edu byrne, John .................................................................... University of Delaware (302) 831-8405 jbbyrne@udel.edu byron, Joan ................................................................................... Pratt Institute (718) 636 3486 x6447 jbyron@pratt.edu

C
Cabbagestalk, Darryl ................................................................... Pratt Institute (718) 399-4314 darrylcabbagestalk@comcast.net Cahaney, William J. ....................................................... University of Louisville (502) 213-2380 william.cahaney@kctcs.net Cahill, Caitlin ......................................................................... University of Utah (801) 581-4042 cahill@arch.utah.edu Calef, III, Fred ............................................................................ SUNY at Albany (518) 442-3912 fcalef@albany.edu Callies, David ..................................................................... University of Hawaii (808) 956-6550 dcallies@hawaii.edu Campbell, Christopher ............................................. University of Washington (206) 543-6063 ccamp1@u.washington.edu Campo, Daniel ............................................................ Morgan State University (443) 885 3514 daniel.campo@morgan.edu Cantarero, Rodrigo ........................................ University of Nebraska-Lincoln (402) 472-9278 rcantarero1@unl.edu Cao, Xinyu .................................................................... University of Minnesota (612) 625-5671 Cao@umn.edu Carolini, Gabriella Y. .............................................................................. Rutgers (732) 932-3822 ext. 731 carolini@rci.rutgers.edu Carroll, Michael .....................................................................Temple University Carroll, Walter F. .................................................................... boston University Carruthers, John I. ................................ University of Maryland, College Park john_i_carruthers@hud.gov

B- 5

Cartwright, Charles ........................................................ Ohio State University (614) 292-1012 Case, Dale ......................................................... University of Colorado Denver Casey, Colleen ................................................... University of Texas, Arlington (817) 272-3356 colleenc@uta.edu Caupp, Craig C. ....................................................... Frostburg State University (301) 687-4755 ccaupp@frostburg.edu Cavanaugh, Ted ................................................................. Clemson University (864) 656-3898 tcavana@clemson.edu Cervero, Robert ............................................ University of California berkeley (510) 642-1695 robertc@berkeley.edu Chaky, Damon .............................................................................. Pratt Institute (718) 399-4314 dchaky@pratt.edu Chalana, Manish ....................................................... University of Washington (206) 616-6051 chalana@u.washington.edu Chang, Stephanie E............................................ University of british Columbia (604) 827-5054 sechang@interchange.ubc.ca Chanse, Victoria ................................................................. Clemson University (864) 656-4408 vchanse@clemson.edu Chapin, Timothy .......................................................... Florida State University (850) 644-4510 tchapin@fsu.edu Chapman, William ............................................................. University of Hawaii (808) 956-8826 wchapman@hawaii.edu Chapple, Karen ............................................. University of California berkeley (510) 642-1868 chapple@berkeley.edu Charlier, Jim ..................................................... University of Colorado Denver Chase, Mark ............................................................................... Tufts University Chatman, Daniel G. ................................................................................ Rutgers (732) 932-3822 ext. 742 chatman@rci.rutgers.edu Chatman, Daniel G. ...................................... University of California berkeley dgc@berkeley.edu Chatterjee, Jay ............................................................. University of Cincinnati (513) 556-1204 jay.chatterjee@uc.edu Chatterjee, Meera ............................................................. University of Akron (330) 972-8309 meera@uakron.edu Chawla, Louise ................................................. University of Colorado Denver (303) 492- 5228 louise.chawla@colorado.edu Chen, Alexander ................................... University of Maryland, College Park (301) 405-6798 achen@umd.edu Chen, Kimberly M. ................................... Virginia Commonwealth University (804) 358-4993 kim@johannasdesign.com Chenoweth, Richard E. ............................... University of Wisconsin-Madison (608) 262-1004 rechenow@wisc.edu

Chen, Xueming (Jimmy) .......................... Virginia Commonwealth University (804) 828-1254 Chien, Steven ........................................... New Jersey Institute of Technology (973) 596-6083 i.jy.chien@njit.edu Chin, John .................................................................... Hunter College at CUNY (212) 772-5603 john.chin@hunter.cuny.edu Calabrese, Carl ....................................................... University at buffalo SUNY (716) 829-2133x222 cc63@buffalo.edu Calzonetti, Frank ................................................................ University of Toledo (419) 530-4749 FCalzon@utnet.utoledo.edu Campanella, Thomas ........................................... University of North Carolina (919) 962-4776 tomcamp@email.unc.edu Campbell, Scott D. ......................................................... University of Michigan (734) 763-2077 sdcamp@umich.edu Cantave, Alix .............................................................................. Tufts University (617) 627-3394 alixcantave@aol.com Carlson, Virginia ....................................... University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee (414) 229-5323 vcarlson@uwm.edu Carmin, JoAnn ................................... Massachusetts Institute of Technology (617) 452-2697 jcarmin@mit.edu Cassidy, Frank .................................................................. University of Arizona (520) 682-3401 fcassidy@marana.com Castells, Manuel ................................. Massachusetts Institute of Technology Castells, Manuel ........................................... University of Southern California (213) 821-2079 castells@usc.edu Catz, Sarah ........................................................ University of California Irvine Caves, Roger .......................................................... San Diego State University (619) 594-6472 rcaves@mail.sdsu.edu Chan, Sewin ...................................................................... New York University Checkoway, barry ......................................................... University of Michigan (734) 763-5960 barrych@umich.edu Cherrington-Cucore, Janet .................. Minnesota State University, Mankato (507) 389-5031 janet.cherrington@mnsu.edu Chew, Kenneth ................................................. University of California Irvine (949) 924-6990 chew@uci.edu Chifos, Carla ................................................................. University of Cincinnati (513) 293-8195 carla.chifos@uc.edu Choquette, Robert ........................................................... University of Oregon (541) 346-0822 choquette@uoregon.edu Christensen, Karen ....................................... University of California berkeley (510) 642-3111 kchriste@berkeley.edu Christensen, Terry L. ................................................ San Jose State University (408) 924-5565 terrychr@email.sjsu.edu Christopherson, Susan M. .................................................... Cornell University (607) 255-8772 smc23@cornell.edu

B-6

Chusid, Jeffrey ....................................................................... Cornell University (607) 254-8579 jmc286@cornell.edu Ciochetti, Tony ................................... Massachusetts Institute of Technology (617) 253-3988 tc@mit.edu Clapp, Tara Lynne ........................................................... Iowa State University (515) 294-7759 tlclapp@iastate.edu Clark, Chris ........... California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo (805) 756-6605 cwclam@aol.com Clarke, Paul Walker ................................................... Morgan State University Clarke, Shima ..................................................................... Clemson University (864) 656-4498 shimac@clemson.edu Clark, Jennifer Joy ......................................... Georgia Institute of Technology (404) 385-7224 jennifer.clark@gatech.edu Clark, Thomas ................................................... University of Colorado Denver (303) 556-3296 tom.clark@ucdenver.edu Clavel, Pierre ......................................................................... Cornell University (607) 255-6212 pc29@cornell.edu Clay, Michael ........................................................................ Auburn University (334) 844-8412 claymic@auburn.edu Clay, Phillip ......................................... Massachusetts Institute of Technology (617) 253-6164 plclay@mit.edu Clifton, Kelly ......................................... University of Maryland, College Park (301) 405-5495 kclifton@eng.umd.edu Coates, Paul ..................................................................... Iowa State University (515) 294-1844 paulc@iastate.edu Cochran, Jamie .............................................. Georgia Institute of Technology (404) 285-7577 jacoch@bellsouth.net Coffin, Sarah ................................................................... Saint Louis University (314) 977-3934 coffinsl@slu.edu Cohen, James ........................................ University of Maryland, College Park (301) 405-6795 jimcohen@umd.edu Cohen, Maurie ......................................... New Jersey Institute of Technology (973) 596-5281 mcohen@adm.njit.edu Cohen, William ...................................................................... Temple University (267) 468-8303 william.cohen@temple.edu Cole, H.D. Samuel .................................................. University at buffalo SUNY (716) 829-2133x203 samcole@buffalo.edu Cole, Richard L. .................................................. University of Texas, Arlington (817) 272-3300 cole@uta.edu Colgan, Charles S. .............................................. University of Southern Maine (207) 780-4008 csc@usm.maine.edu Colton, Arlan .................................................................... University of Arizona (520) 740-6800 Commins, Stephen ................................. University of California, Los Angeles (310) 422-5997 scommins@worldbank.org

Connell, Ruth ............................................................. Morgan State University Connerly, Charles E. .............................................................. University of Iowa (319) 335-0039 charles-connerly@uiowa.edu Conn, W. David ...... California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo (805) 756-2246 dconn@calpoly.edu Conroy, Maria Manta ...................................................... Ohio State University (614) 292-8044 conroy.36@osu.edu Copeland, Hilary ................................................................... University of Iowa (319) 365-9941 hilary.copeland@ecicog.org Corburn, Jason ............................................. University of California berkeley Crdova, Teresa L. ..................................................... University of New Mexico (505) 277-3922 tcordova@unm.edu Corey, Kenneth E. ..................................................... Michigan State University (517) 432-4750 corey@msu.edu Correa, Felipe ...................................................................... Harvard University (617) 495 2521 fcorrea@gsd.harvard.edu Coslovsky, Salo ................................................................. New York University Cosner, Susan .................................................................. Iowa State University Costa, Fernando ............................................................ Universty of Oklahoma Costello, Eileen .................................................................... Ryerson University ecostello@airdberlis.com Cote, Paul ............................................................................. Harvard University (617) 496-0546 pbcote@gsd.harvard.edu Cott, Leland ......................................................................... Harvard University (617) 495-2521 lcott@gsd.harvard.edu Coughlin, Joseph ............................... Massachusetts Institute of Technology (617) 253-4978 coughlin@mit.edu Cousineau, Christine ................................................................. Tufts University (617) 627-3394 christine.cousineau@tufts.edu Coutts, Christopher ..................................................... Florida State University (850) 644-5015 ccoutts@fsu.edu Covington, Kenya .............................. California State University, Northridge (818) 677-6463 kenya.covington@csun.edu Cox, Linda .......................................................................... University of Hawaii (808) 956-7602 lcox@hawaii.edu Craft, Carter .................................................................................. Pratt Institute (718) 399-4314 Cramer, bart .......................................................................... University of Iowa (319) 335-0032 barton-cramer@uiowa.edu Crane, Randall ........................................ University of California, Los Angeles (310) 951-3576 crane@ucla.edu Craze, Celia ........................................... University of Maryland, College Park

B- 7

Creedon, James P. ..................................................................Temple University Crewe, Katherine ......................................................... Arizona State University (480) 965-7167 Katherine.Crewe@asu.edu Crisanti, Eileen ............................................................. University of Cincinnati Crocker, Jack ................................................................. Kansas State University Cromarty, Ross ............................................................ Arizona State University (480) 965-7533 rossc@asu.edu Cropf, Robert .................................................................. Saint Louis University (314) 977-3934 cropfra@slu.edu Cruz, Ramon ................................................................................. Pratt Institute (718) 399-4314 Cuff, Dana ............................................... University of California, Los Angeles (310) 206-5517 dcuff@ucla.edu Cummings, Scott ............................................................ Saint Louis University (314) 977-3934 sbcummo1@slu.edu Cunningham, Dayna .......................... Massachusetts Institute of Technology (617) 452-1380 dayna@mit.edu Cunningham, M. Grant ..................................................... Clemson University (864) 656-1587 cunninm@clemson.edu Currid, Elizabeth .......................................... University of Southern California (213) 740-4012 currid@usc.edu Curtis, Karen .................................................................. University of Delaware (302) 831-6854 kacurtis@udel.edu Cutler, Nancy ............................................................... University of Cincinnati Czajkowski, Kevin P. ........................................................... University of Toledo (419) 530-4274 kevin.czajkowski@utoledo.edu

Daniere, Amrita ................................................................ University of Toronto (416) 978-3236 daniere@geog.utoronto.ca Darbee, Jeff ..................................................................... Ohio State University (614) 292-1012 D'Arcus, bruce ......................................................................... Miami University (513) 529-1521 darcusb@muohio.edu Dagenhart, Richard ....................................... Georgia Institute of Technology (404) 894-2992 richard.dagenhart@coa.gatech.edu Damkroger, Courtney A. .......................................... San Jose State University (408) 277-4576 Dandekar, Hemalata ................................................. Arizona State University (480) 965-7167 Hema@asu.edu Daniels, Thomas L. ................................................ University of Pennsylvania (215) 573-8965 thomasld@design.upenn.edu Das, Priyam ........................................................................ University of Hawaii (808) 956-5367 priyam@hawaii.edu Daugherty, Carolyn M. ....................................... Northern Arizona University (928) 523-0984 Carolyn.Daugherty@nau.edu Davidson, John E. ..................................................... San Jose State University (408) 535-7895 john.davidson@sanjoseca.gov Davis, Diane ....................................... Massachusetts Institute of Technology (617) 452-2804 dedavis@mit.edu Davis, Mary E. ............................................................................ Tufts University (617) 627-3394 mary.davis@tufts.edu Dawkins, Casey ................... Virginia Polytechnic Institute & State University (540) 231-2690 dawkins@vt.edu Day, Kristen ....................................................... University of California Irvine (949) 824-5880 kday@uci.edu Deakin, Elizabeth ......................................... University of California berkeley (510) 642-47497 edeakin@berkeley.edu Deal, brian .................................. University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (217) 333-1911 deal@illinois.edu Dearborn, Lynn .......................... University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (217) 333-4331 dearborn@illinois.edu Dear, Michael ................................................ University of California berkeley m.dear@berkeley.edu DeFilippis, James ................................................................................... Rutgers (732) 932-3822 ext. 734 jdefilip@rci.rutgers.edu Deines, Vernon P. ......................................................... Kansas State University (785) 532-5961 planone@ksu.edu Delaney, Stephen ................................................................. boston University Delgado, Juliana ................ California State Polytechnic University, Pomona (909) 869-5427 jdelgado@csupomona.edu DeLisle, James ........................................................... University of Washington (206) 616-2090 jdelisle@u.washington.edu

D
Daas, Charles .................................................. University of Illinois at Chicago cdaas@uic.edu Dabbs, Merilyn ......................................................... Alabama A&M University (256) 372-5350 merilyn.dabbs@aamu.edu Dallessio, Thomas ................................... New Jersey Institute of Technology (609) 802-0880 tom@leadershipnj.org Dalton, Margaret M. ............................................... Frostburg State University (301) 687-4418 mdalton@frostburg.edu Dandekar, Hemalata ................................................. Arizona State University (805) 756-1315 hdandeka@calpoly.edu Daniel, Janice ........................................... New Jersey Institute of Technology (973) 642-4794 daniel@njit.edu Danielson, Karen ................ Virginia Polytechnic Institute & State University (703) 706-8108 kadaniel@vt.edu

B-8

Deller, Steven C. .............................................University of Wisconsin-Madison (608) 263-6251 scdeller@wisc.edu Deng, Lan ....................................................................... University of Michigan (734) 936-0951 landeng@umich.edu Denhardt, Kathryn ....................................................... University of Delaware (302) 831-3264 kgden@udel.edu deNie, Karen Leone ....................................... Georgia Institute of Technology (404) 217-1458 karen.leone@coa.gatech.edu Dennis Jr., Samuel F. ................................... University of Wisconsin-Madison (608) 263-7699 sfdennisjr@wisc.edu Dennis, Michael .................................. Massachusetts Institute of Technology (617) 253-7650 mdennis@mit.edu Deringer, Nancy ...................................................................University of Idaho (208) 885-7264 deringer@uidaho.edu DeSantis, Thomas .................................................. University at buffalo SUNY Devoy, Joseph .................................................. University of California Irvine Dewar, Margaret E. ....................................................... University of Michigan (734) 763-2528 medewar@umich.edu Deyle, Robert ............................................................... Florida State University (850) 644-4510 rdeyle@fsu.edu Dezzani, Raymond ..............................................................University of Idaho (208) 885-7360 dezzani@uidaho.edu Dieber, William A. (Max) ................................ University of Illinois at Chicago (312) 413-8435 maxdbr@uic.edu DiJohn, Joseph ............................................... University of Illinois at Chicago joedi@uic.edu Dill, Jennifer ............................................................. Portland State University (503) 725-5173 jdill@pdx.edu DiMento, Joseph .............................................. University of California Irvine (949) 824-5102 jfdiment@uci.edu Dimino, Richard .................................................................. Harvard University (617) 495-2521 rdimino@gsd.harvard.edu Ding, Chengri ....................................... University of Maryland, College Park (301) 405-6626 cding@umd.edu Ding, Lei ....................................................................... Wayne State University (313) 577-0543 eg5182@wayne.edu Doan, Petra .................................................................. Florida State University (850) 644-4510 pdoan@fsu.edu Dobbins, Michael A. ...................................... Georgia Institute of Technology (404) 385-4243 michael.dobbins@coa.gatech.edu Dodge, Georgina ............................................................ Ohio State University (614) 292-1012 Domahidy, Mary ............................................................. Saint Louis University (314) 977-3934 domahimr@slu.edu

Donaghy, Kieran ................................................................... Cornell University (607) 254-4865 kpd23@cornell.edu Donald, Carrie .............................................................. University of Louisville (502) 852-6449 cgdona01@louisville.edu Donnelly, Shanon ............................................................... University of Akron (330) 972-8037 sd51@uakron.edu Dorcey, Anthony H.J. ......................................... University of british Columbia (604) 822-5725 dorcey@interchange.ubc.ca Doshna, Jeffrey P. .................................................................. Temple University Jeffrey.doshna@temple.edu Dotson, A. bruce ............................................................... University of Virginia (434) 924-6459 dotson@virginia.edu Dotson, Charles ...............................................Eastern Washington Univeristy (509) 559-5818 charlesdotson48@cs.com Douglass, Michael ............................................................ University of Hawaii (808) 956-6866 michaeld@hawaii.edu Dowall, David ............................................... University of California berkeley (510) 642-6579 dowall@berkeley.edu Drennan, Matthew ............................................................... Cornell University Drohan, Joyce .................................................... University of british Columbia jdrohan@jamescheng.com Drown, Stephen R. ..............................................................University of Idaho (208) 885-7448 srdrown@uidaho.edu Drucker, Joshua ............................................. University of Illinois at Chicago (312) 413-7597 jdruck@uic.edu Drummond, William J. ................................... Georgia Institute of Technology (404) 894-9840 bill.drummond@coa.gatech.edu Dufour, Wendel ....................................................... University of New Orleans (504) 280-5474 wdufour@uno.edu Dugan, John ...................................... California State University, Northridge (818) 677-2904 john.dugan@csun.edu John.Dugan@fresno.gov Dukes, E. Frank ................................................................. University of Virginia (434) 924-2041 ed7k@virginia.edu Dumbaugh, Eric .............................................................. Texas A&M University (979) 862-4320 edumbaugh@archone.tamu.edu Dunlap, Louise .......................................................................... Tufts University (617) 627-3394 changewrite@earthlink.net Dunning, Anne E. ............................................................... Clemson University (864) 656-0151 anned@clemson.edu Dutta-Koehler, Madhu C. ...................................................... boston University Dworkin, Judith .......................................................... Arizona State University (480) 965-7533 Dyckman, Caitlin ............................................................... Clemson University (864) 656-2496 cdyckma@clemson.edu

B- 9

E
Eberle, Margaret ................................................ University of british Columbia m_eberle@telus.net Edelson, Nathan................................................. University of british Columbia njedelson@shaw.ca Edwards, Hazel R. ..................................... The Catholic University of America (202) 319-6265 edwardsh@cua.edu Edwards, Mary ........................... University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (217) 333-3211 mmedward@illinois.edu Eastwood, Rob L. ...................................................... San Jose State University (408) 299-5792 rob.eastwood@pln.co.santa-clara.ca.us Edelman, David ........................................................... University of Cincinnati (513) 556-2378 david.edelman@uc.edu Ehrenfeucht, Renia ................................................. University of New Orleans (504) 280-6517 renia.ehrenfeucht@uno.edu Ehrlich, Rayna Huber ................................................................... Pratt Institute (718) 399-4314 rerlich@pratt.edu Eisinger, Peter ........................................................................... The New School (212) 229-5400 x1516 eisingep@newschool.edu El-Geneidy, Ahmed ................................................................. McGill University (514) 398-8741 ahmed.elgeneidy@mcgill.ca Ellen, Ingrid Gould ........................................................... New York University (212) 998-7400 ingrid.ellen@nyu.edu Ellin, Nan ...................................................................... Arizona State University (480) 965-7533 Nan.Ellin@asu.edu Elliott, Michael L. Poirier ............................... Georgia Institute of Technology (404) 894-9841 michael.elliott@coa.gatech.edu Ellis, Clifford D. ................................................................... Clemson University (864) 656-2477 cliffoe@clemson.edu Ellison, Charles E. ........................................................ University of Cincinnati (513) 556-0210 charles.ellison@uc.edu Elvery, Joel A. ........................................................... Cleveland State University (216) 687-2259 j.elvery@csuohio.ed Emerson, Charles ................................................ Western Michigan University Emmi, Philip C. ...................................................................... University of Utah (801) 581-4255 emmi@arch.utah.edu Engel, Winston Von .......................................................... New York University England, Marcia ...................................................................... Miami University (513) 529-5023 m.england@muohio.edu Englehart, Phil ................................................................... University of Kansas (785) 864-4184 ppajkcjk@ku.edu Enslinger, Dennis .............................................................. University of Kansas (785) 864-4184 dennise@merriam.org Erkins, Esther .............................................................. University of Cincinnati

Esnard, Ann-Margaret ............................................Florida Atlantic University (954) 762-5646 aesnard@fau.edu Esswein, Carolyn ....................................... University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee (414) 271-2545 cesswein@pdisite.com Estrada, Leobardo .................................. University of California, Los Angeles (310) 825-6574 leobard@ucla.edu Etienne, Harley F. ........................................... Georgia Institute of Technology (404) 385-3343 hfe@gatech.edu Etzel, Fred ..................................................... University of California berkeley (510) 642-3256 fetzel@landuseprof.com Evans-Cowley, Jennifer ................................................... Ohio State University (614) 292-8044 conroy.36@osu.edu Ewing, Reid ............................................................................ University of Utah (801) 581-8255 ewing@arch.utah.edu Ezell, Kyle ........................................................................ Ohio State University (614) 292-1012 Ezzet-Lofstrom, Roxanne ...................................... San Diego State University (415) 333-1165 roxanne.ezzet@gmail.com

F
Fabozzi, Todd M. ....................................................................... SUNY at Albany (518) 588-0743 FabozziTM@aol.com Fagence, Michael ...................................................... University of Queensland (61)-7-3365-6455 m.fagence@uq.edu.au Fainstein, Susan ................................................................. Harvard University (617) 495-9901 fainstein@gsd.harvard.edu Falah, Ghazi Walid .............................................................. University of Akron (330) 972-8831 falah@uakron.edu Falk, David ............................................ University of Maryland, College Park dfalk@umd.edu Falletta, Liz ................................................... University of Southern California lizfalletta@yahoo.com Fan, Peilei ................................................................. Michigan State University (517) 432-6517 fanpeile@msu.edu Fan, Yingling ................................................................ University of Minnesota (612) 626-2930 yingling@umn.edu Farassati, Ali ...................................... California State University, Northridge (818) 677-2904 ali.farassati@csun.edu Farberow, Herschel ........... California State Polytechnic University, Pomona (909) 869-2716 hfarberow@csupomona.edu Farkas, Z. Andrew ...................................................... Morgan State University Farley, David ............................................................................ McGill University dfarle@po-box.mcgill.ca Farrington, Robert ................................................................ University of Utah (801) 359-5118 bob@downtownslc.org

B-10

Farris, J. Terrence ................................................................ Clemson University (864) 656-3903 jfarris@clemson.edu Faust, Nickolas L. ........................................... Georgia Institute of Technology (404) 894-0021 nick.faust@gtri.gatech.edu Fawcett, James A. ......................................... University of Southern California (213) 740-4477 fawcett@usc.edu Featherstone, Jeffrey ............................................................ Temple University (267) 468-8311 jeffrey.featherstone@temple.edu Felder, Frank ........................................................................................... Rutgers (732) 932-5680, ext. 670 ffelder@rci.rutgers.edu Feldman, David L. ............................................. University of California Irvine (949) 824-4384 feldmand@uci.edu Feldman, Martha .............................................. University of California Irvine (949) 824-4252 feldmanm@uci.edu Feldman, Maryann ............................................... University of North Carolina (919) 962-0674 feldmanm@email.unc.edu Feldman, Stephanie ..................................................................... Pratt Institute (718) 399-4314 Felstehausen, HermanDennis,......................University of Wisconsin-Madison (608) 262-1004 Feros, Victor .............................................................. University of Queensland (61)-7-3365-6455 Ferraro, Rocco ........................................................................... SUNY at Albany (518) 453-0850 rocky@cdrpc.org Ferreira, Jr., Joseph .......................... Massachusetts Institute of Technology (617) 253-7410 jf@mit.edu Feser, Edward J. .......................... University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (217) 244-6767 feser@illinois.edu Filipovitch, Anthony J. ......................... Minnesota State University, Mankato (507) 389-5035 tony@mnsu.edu Finch, Robert ................................................... University of Colorado Denver Finn, Donovan ............................................................. Hunter College of CUNY Finn, Stephen ......................................................................................... Rutgers (732) 932-3133 ext. 534 stfinn@rci.rutgers.edu Fischler, Raphael ..................................................................... McGill University (514) 398-4076 raphael.fischler@mcgill.ca Fisher, Peter S. ....................................................................... University of Iowa (319) 335-0034 peter-fisher@uiowa.edu Fish, Frank ......................................................................... New York University Fisher, Lynn ........................................ Massachusetts Institute of Technology (617) 252-1685 lfisher@mit.edu Fish, Frank ......................................................................... New York University Fishman, Robert ............................................................ University of Michigan (734) 764-6885 fishmanr@umich.edu

Flachsbart, Peter ............................................................... University of Hawaii (808) 956-8684 flachsbarp001@hawaii.rr.edu Flamm, bradley ..................................................................... Temple University (267) 468-8305 bradley.flamm@temple.edu Flaxman, Michael .............................. Massachusetts Institute of Technology (617) 258-0461 mflaxman@mit.edu Fleming, William ....................................................... University of New Mexico (505) 277-6455 fleming@unm.edu Fogarty, Michael ....................................................... Portland State University (503) 725-8263 fogartym@pdx.edu Fogelson, Robert ................................ Massachusetts Institute of Technology (617) 253-1671 foge@mit.edu Foley, Dolores .................................................................... University of Hawaii (808) 956-2780 dolores@hawaii.edu Folsom, Michael .............................................. Eastern Washington University (509) 359-2460 mfolsom@mail.ewu.edu Fontillas, John .................................................................. New York University Ford, Kristina ...................................................... University of Southern Maine Forester, John ........................................................................ Cornell University (607) 255-5179 jff1@cornell.edu Forrest, Clyde .............................. University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (217) 244-5406 cforrest@illinois.edu Forster, Craig ......................................................................... University of Utah (801) 581-3864 craig.forster@utah.edu Forsyth, Ann .......................................................................... Cornell University Forsythe, Dall ................................................................... New York University Foster, Kathryn A. .................................................. University at buffalo SUNY (716) 829-3777 kafoster@buffalo.edu Foulger, J. Paul .................................................................. ball State University (765) 285-2423 jpfoulger@bsu.edu Fountain, III, Esq., Aubrey W. .................. Virginia Commonwealth University afountain@brownmartinlaw.com Fox, Thomas ................................................................... University of Memphis (901) 678-2161 Franck, Karen ........................................... New Jersey Institute of Technology (973) 596-3092 karen.a.franck@njit.edu Frank, Andrew b. .................................. University of Maryland, College Park Frankel, bruce W. ............................................................... ball State University (765) 285-2680 bfrankel@bsu.edu Frank, Kathryn .................................................................. University of Florida (352) 392-0997 Kathryn.frank@gatech.edu Frank, Lawrence ................................................. University of british Columbia (604) 822-5387 dfrank@interchange.ubc.ca

B- 11

Franklin, Karin ....................................................................... University of Iowa (319) 335-0032 karinf@q.com Frank, Nancy ..............................................University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee (414) 229-5372 frankn@uwm.edu Frantz, Jonathan ................................................ University of british Columbia jon@eartothegroundplanning.com Frazier, Tim ..........................................................................University of Idaho (208) 885-6238 tfrazier@uidaho.edu Freeman, Lance .................................................................. Columbia University lf182@columbia.edu Freitag, Robert .......................................................... University of Washington (206) 818-1175 bfreitag@u.washington.edu Frenchman, Dennis ............................ Massachusetts Institute of Technology (617) 253-8847 dennisf@mit.edu French, Steven P. (404) 385-0900 Georgia Institute of Technology steve.french@coa.gatech.edu

Gao, Jessica .................................................. University of Wisconsin-Madison (608) 890-1004 jygao@wisc.edu Garde, Ajay ....................................................... University of California Irvine (949) 824-9087 agarde@uci.edu Garnett, Mark .................................................................. Saint Louis University (314) 977-3934 Gauthier, Vincent ...................................... University of Missouri-Kansas City Gebhardt, Roland ........................................................................ Pratt Institute (718) 399-4314 roland@rolandgebhardtdesign.com Geiger, Shirley ......................................................... Savannah State University (912) 356-6944 geigers@savstate.edu Geltner, David .................................... Massachusetts Institute of Technology (617) 253-5131 dgeltner@mit.edu Genskow, Kenneth .........................................University of Wisconsin-Madison (608) 262-8756 kgenskow@wisc.edu Gerecke, Sarah .................................................................. New York University Gershberg, Alec Ian .................................................................. The New School (212) 229-5400 x1412 gersh@newschool.edu Gershman, John ............................................................... New York University Gertler, Meric ................................................................... University of Toronto (416) 978-3887 gertler@geog.utoronto.ca Giarrusso, Anthony ....................................... Georgia Institute of Technology (404) 894-0127 anthony.giarrusso@coa.gatech.edu Gibson, Karen ............................................................ Portland State University (503) 725-8265 gibsonk@pdx.edu Gibson, Kimberly ............................................................ Ohio State University (614) 292-1012 Gilderbloom, John I. ...................................................... University of Louisville (502) 852-8557 jigild01@louisville.edu Gills, Douglas .................................................. University of Illinois at Chicago (312) 996-2174 dgills@uic.edu Giuliano, Genevieve ..................................... University of Southern California (213) 740-3956 giuliano@usc.edu Giusti, Cecilia ................................................................... Texas A&M University (979) 458-4304 cgiusti@archone.tamu.edu Gladstone, David .................................................... University of New Orleans (504) 280-3206 david.gladstone@uno.edu Glasmeier, Amy K. ............................. Massachusetts Institute of Technology (617) 324-6565 amyglass@mit.edu Glenn, Ezra Haber .............................. Massachusetts Institute of Technology (617) 253-2024 eglenn@mit.edu Glenn, Jane .............................................................................. McGill University (514) 398-6629 jane.glenn@mcgill.ca

Fricano, Russell J. ..................................................... Alabama A&M University (256) 372.4995 rjfricano@aol.com Friedmann, John ................................................ University of british Columbia (604) 822-0107 jrpf@interchange.ubc.ca Frisch, Michael ........................................... University of Missouri-Kansas City (816) 235-6369 frischm@umkc.edu Fritz, Jan Marie ............................................................ University of Cincinnati (513) 556-0208 jan.fritz@uc.edu Froehlich, Richard.............................................................. Columbia University Fuller, John W. ...................................................................... University of Iowa (319) 335-0038 john-w-fuller@uiowa.edu Fulton, William ............................................. University of Southern California (805) 643-7700 bfulton@solimar.org Funderburg, Richard G. ........................................................ University of Iowa (319) 335-0036 richard-funderburg@uiowa.edu Funk, David ........................................................................... Cornell University

G
Gaber, John .......................................................................... Auburn University (334) 844-5434 gaberja@auburn.edu Gaber, Sharon ...................................................................... Auburn University (334) 844-5771 gabersl@auburn.edu Gakenheimer, Ralph .......................... Massachusetts Institute of Technology (617) 253-1932 rgaken@mit.edu Galipo, Eric ........................................................................ New York University Galster, George ............................................................ Wayne State University (313) 577-9084 ar3571@wayne.edu

B-12

Glickman, Norman ................................................................................. Rutgers (732) 932-3133 ext. 570 glickman@rci.rutgers.edu Gliebe, John .............................................................. Portland State University Gocmen, Asli ..................................................University of Wisconsin-Madison (608) 265-0789 gocmen@wisc.edu Godschalk, David ................................................. University of North Carolina (919) 962-5012 dgod@email.unc.edu Godward, Christine ........................................................ Ohio State University Goethert, Reinhard ............................ Massachusetts Institute of Technology (617) 253-2402 rkg@mit.edu Goetz, Edward G. ........................................................ University of Minnesota (612) 624-8737 egoetz@umn.edu Goetzke, Frank ............................................................... University of Louisville (502) 852-8256 f0goet01@louisville.edu Goins, Charles Robert ................................................. University of Oklahoma Goldfarb, Eugene ........................................... University of Illinois at Chicago egoldf1@uic.edu Goldman, Laurie ....................................................................... Tufts University (617) 627-3394 laurie.goldman@tufts.edu Goldschmidt, Carl .................................................... Michigan State University Goldsmith, Stephen A. ......................................................... University of Utah (801) 585-5147 goldsmith@arch.utah.edu Goldsmith, William W. ........................................................... Cornell University (607) 255-2333 wwg1@cornell.edu Goldstein, bruce ............................................... University of Colorado Denver Goldstein, Carol ..................................... University of California, Los Angeles (310) 825-4896 cgold@ucla.edu Golub, Aaron ............................................................. Arizona State University (480) 965-7533 Gomez-Ibanez, Jose A. ....................................................... Harvard University (617) 495-1341 jose_gomez-ibanez@harvard.edu Gonzales, Moises ...................................................... University of New Mexico Gonzalez-Rivas, Marcela ...................................................... Cornell University (607) 255-3489 mg265@cornell.edu Gooding, Earl N. M. .................................................. Alabama A&M University (256) 372-4986 earlmg@aol.com Goonewardena, Kanishka ............................................... University of Toronto (416) 978-3377 kanishka@geog.utoronto.ca Gordon, Michael ................................................ University of british Columbia michael_gordon@city.vancouver.bc.ca Gordon, Peter ............................................... University of Southern California (213) 740-1467 pgordon@usc.edu

Gordon, Steven I. ............................................................ Ohio State University (614) 292-3372 gordon.1@osu.edu Gough, Meghan ...................................... Virginia Commonwealth University (804) 827-0869 Graham, Jackie ............................................................... Ohio State University (614) 292-1012 Grava, Sigurd ..................................................................... Columbia University sg19@columbia.edu Grech, Christopher P. ............................... The Catholic University of America (202) 319-6398 grech@cua.edu Green, Gary P. .............................................. University of Wisconsin-Madison (608) 262-9532 gpgreen@wisc.edu Green, Jerry ............................................................................. Miami University (513) 529-5017 greenje@muohio.edu Green, Keith Evan .............................................................. Clemson University (864) 656-3887 kegreen@clemson.edu Greenberg, Michael ............................................................................... Rutgers (732) 932-5475 ext. 673 mrg@rci.rutgers.edu Greene, Jamie ................................................................. Ohio State University (614) 292-1012 Greene, Jessica ................................................................. University of Oregon (541) 346-0138 jessicag@uoregon.edu Grengs, Joseph .............................................................. University of Michigan (734) 763-1114 grengs@umich.edu Gresham, Samuel ........................................................... Ohio State University (614) 292-1012 Greve, Adrienne .... California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo (805) 756-1474 agreve@calpoly.edu Griffin, Toni ......................................................................... Harvard University (617) 495 2521 tgriffin@gsd.harvard.edu Grimes, William ............................................... Eastern Washington University (509) 835-3770 bgrimes@studiocascade.com Grodach, Carl ..................................................... University of Texas, Arlington (817) 272-3358 grodach@uta.edu Gross, Jill ..................................................................... Hunter College of CUNY (212) 772-5600 igross@hunter.cuny.edu Gross, Jonathan D. ............................................................ University of Hawaii (808) 956-7375 jgross@hawaii.edu Grube, Mike ....................................................................... University of Kansas (785) 864-4184 michael.grube@mccormackbaron.com Grundy, Terry ............................................................... University of Cincinnati Gstach, Doris ...................................................................... Clemson University (864) 656-2472 dgstach@clemson.edu Guensler, Randall .......................................... Georgia Institute of Technology (404) 894-0405 randall.guensler@ce.gatech.edu

B- 13

Guerra, Fred ....................................................................... University of Akron (330) 972-7620 guerrafr@cityofcf.com Guhathakurta, Subhrajit .......................................... Arizona State University (480) 965-7167 Subhro-Guha@asu.edu Guion, Neil ................................................................ Missouri State University Gulak, Morton b. ..................................... Virginia Commonwealth University (804) 827-0778 mbgulak@vcu.edu Guldmann, Jean-Michel ................................................. Ohio State University (614) 292-2257 guldmann.1@osu.edu Gullickson, Neil .................................................. Northern Arizona University Guo, Zhan .......................................................................... New York University (212) 998-7400 zhan.guo@nyu.edu Gurstein, Penelope ........................................... University of british Columbia (604) 822-6065 gurstein@interchange.ubc.ca Gusevich, Miriam ..................................... The Catholic University of America (202) 319-5188 gusevicm@cua.edu Gushue, bill ........................................................ University of british Columbia bgushue@cbainc.bc.ca Gutfreund, Owen ....................................................... Hunter College of CUNY owen.gutfreund@hunter.cuny.edu Guthrie, Dwayne Pierce ........................... The Catholic University of America (202) 319-5188 guthrie@cua.edu Guttenberg, Albert Z. ................ University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (217) 244-5376 a-gutten@illinois.edu Guttenplan, Charles ..............................................................Temple University

Hall, Ralph .......................... Virginia Polytechnic Institute & State University (540) 231-5485 rphall@vt.edu Hamilton, Darrick ...................................................................... The New School (212) 229-5400 x1514 hamiltod@newschool.edu Hamlin, Roger, E. ...................................................... Michigan State University (517) 353-8743 hamlin@msu.edu Hammel, Daniel J. .............................................................. University of Toledo (419) 530-4709 dhammel@utnet.utoledo.edu Hanhardt, Eva ............................................................................... Pratt Institute (718) 399-4318 ehanhardt@mas.org Hanley, Paul ........................................................................... University of Iowa (319) 335-0043 paul-hanley@uiowa.edu Hanna, William ..................................... University of Maryland, College Park (301) 405-4005 bhanna@umd.edu Harless, William ........................................................... University of Oklahoma Harmon, Mella Rothwell ..................................................University of Nevada mellah@unr.edu Harper, Michael ............................................... University of Colorado Denver Harris, Edrick .................................................. Georgia Institute of Technology (404) 330-1036 eharris@hjrussell.com Harris, Kirk................................................. University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee (414) 229-6510 drkharris@comcast.net Hart, David .................................................. University of Wisconsin-Madison (608) 262-6515 Harwood, Stacy ......................... University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (217) 265-0874 sharwood@illinois.edu Hassol, Joshua ....................................................................... boston University

H
Haas, Gilda .............................................. University of California, Los Angeles (213) 745-9961 gildahaas@saje.net Hack, Gary ............................................................. University of Pennsylvania (215) 898-8480 gahack@design.upenn.edu Haddad, Monica A. .......................................................... Iowa State University (515) 294-8979 haddad@iastate.edu Haddow, David F. ........................................... Georgia Institute of Technology (404) 577-7222 dhaddow@haddowandcompany.com Hadley, Joseph ................................................................... University of Akron (330) 972-2490 jhadley@uakron.edu Haff, Holly ......................................................................... New York University Haider, Murtaza .................................................................. Ryerson University (416) 979-5000 x 2480 murtaza.haider@ryerson.ca Hallet IV, Lucius ................................................... Western Michigan University

Hata, Hiroaki .......................................................... University at buffalo SUNY (716) 829-2133x312 hata@buffalo.edu Haughey, Patrick ..................................................... University of New Orleans (504) 280-1231 pmhaughe@uno.edu Hausam, Sharon University of New Mexico

Hausladen, Gary J. .......................................................... University of Nevada hausl@unr.edu Havel, Rick ............................................................................. University of Iowa (319) 335-0032 rhavel@co.johnson.ia.us Havlick, Spenser W. .......................................... University of Colorado Denver Hawley, R. Dawn ................................................. Northern Arizona University (928) 523-1251 D.Hawley@nau.edu Hayashi, Kei ....................................................................... New York University Hayter, Jason Alexander .................................................. University of Arizona Haywood, Emmett .......................................... University of Colorado Denver

Hallett, brien ..................................................................... University of Hawaii (808) 956-4236 bhallett@hawaii.edu

B-14

Hebets, Noel ................................................................. Arizona State University (480) 965-7533 Hecht, Susanna ...................................... University of California, Los Angeles (310) 779-5654 sbhecht@ucla.edu Hedeen, John ............................................................... Kansas State University Hedrick, Earl ............................................................ University of New Orleans (504) 280-6515 ehedrick@uno.edu Heidelberg, beth Wielde ...................... Minnesota State University, Mankato (507) 389-1715 beth.wielde@mnsu.edu Heikkila, Eric J. ............................................................. University of California (213) 821-1037 heikkila@usc.edu Hein, Scot ........................................................... University of british Columbia scot.hein@vancouver.ca Hemert, James van ......................................... University of Colorado Denver Hendrickson, brian ...................................... University of Missuri, Kansas City Henkel, David S. ........................................................ University of New Mexico (505) 277-1276 cymro@unm.edu Herbert, berneece .................................................... Alabama A&M University (265) 372-4988 berneece.herbert@yahoo.com Herbert Jr., Norman P. .............................................. Michigan State University (517) 353-9054 normanh@msu.edu Herman, Catherine ....................................................................... Pratt Institute (718) 399-4314 cherman@pratt.edu Hermann, Chris ......................................................... Ohio State University 97 Herranz, Joaquin, Jr., ................................................ University of Washington (206) 616-1647 jherranz@u.washington.edu Herzog, Lawrence .................................................. San Diego State University (619) 594-6964 laherzog@mail.sdsu.edu Hess, Daniel b. ....................................................... University at buffalo SUNY (716) 829-2133x202 dbhess@buffalo.edu Hess, Paul .......................................................................... University of Toronto (416) 978-1586 hess@geog.utoronto.ca Heumann, Leonard F. ................. University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (217) 244-5373 lheumann@illinois.edu Hewings, Geoffrey ...................... University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (217) 333-4740 hewings@illinois.edu Heying, Charles ........................................................ Portland State University (503) 725-8416 heyingc@pdx.edu Hibbard, Michael .............................................................. University of Oregon (541) 346-3897 hibbard@uoregon.edu Higgins, Lorie ......................................................................University of Idaho (208) 885-9717 higgins@uidaho.edu 181 Higgins, Ralph b. ..................................... Virginia Commonwealth University (804) 740-7500 higgins@1hg.net

Higgs, Gary ..................................................................... Saint Louis University (314) 977-3934 higgsgb@slu.edu Hill, Edward W. ........................................................ Cleveland State University (216) (216) 687-2174 e.hill@csuohio.edu Hillier, Amy ............................................................. University of Pennsylvania (215) 746- 2341 ahillier@design.upenn.edu Hinojosa, Ren C. .................................................... Michigan State University (517) 353-3184 hinojosa@msu.edu Hirt, Sonia ........................... Virginia Polytechnic Institute & State University (540) 231-7509 shirt@vt.edu Hissong, Rodney V. ........................................... University of Texas, Arlington (817) 272-3350 hissong@uta.edu Hoagland, Kenneth ......................................... University of Colorado Denver Hoch, Charles .................................................. University of Illinois at Chicago (312) 996-2156 chashoch@uic.edu Hoch, Richard J. Indiana ....................................... University of Pennsylvania (724) 357 5990 rhoch@iup.edu Hoek-Smit, Marja .................................................. University of Pennsylvania Hofe, Rainer vom ......................................................... University of Cincinnati (513) 556-3835 rainer.vomhofe@uc.edu Hogan, Robert .................................................................... Clemson University (864) 656-3914 hrobert@clemson.edu Holcomb, briavel .............................................................. Columbia University Holcomb, briavel ................................................................................... Rutgers (732) 932-4101 ext. 688 holcomb@rci.rutgers.edu Hollander, Justin ....................................................................... Tufts University (617) 627-3394 justin.hollander@tufts.edu Hollenhorst, Steven J. .........................................................University of Idaho (208) 885- 5472 stevenh@uidaho.edu Hollister, David ............................................................ University of Minnesota (612) 624-3695 dhollist@umn.edu Holt, Alan ............................................................ University of Southern Maine (207) 773-3833 info@holtandlachman.com Honadle, beth .............................................................. University of Cincinnati beth.honadle@uc.edu Hooker, Joe .................................. University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (217) 333-3890 jhooker@illinois.edu Hook, Jeffrey ........ California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo (805) 781-7176 jwh4231@yahoo.com Hopkins, Lewis D. ...................... University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (217) 333-3890 ldhopkin@illinois.edu Horn, Carl Van ........................................................................................ Rutgers (732) 932-4100 ext. 714 vanhorn@rci.rutgers.edu

B- 15

Horner, Jeffrey ............................................................. Wayne State University (313) 577-0194 jeffreyhorner@wayne.edu Horsley, Scott ............................................................................ Tufts University (617) 627-3394 shorsley@cape.com Hosmer, bob ............................................................. Missouri State University Houghton, bruce ............................................................... University of Hawaii (808) 956-2561 bhought@soest.hawaii.edu Houston, Douglas ............................................ University of California Irvine Hoversten, Mark ..................................................................University of Idaho (208) 885-5423 hoverstm@uidaho.edu Howard, Jeff ...................................................... University of Texas, Arlington (817) 272-5119 howardj@uta.edu Howard, Zeljka Pavolich (805) 756-1507 ................ California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo zhoward@calpoly.edu

Hurand, Fred A. .............................................. Eastern Washington University (509) 358-2229 fhurand@mail.ewu.edu Huston, Thomas ............................................. University of Nebraska-Lincoln (402) 477-6900 thuston@clinewilliams.com Hutchinson, Robert ................................. New Jersey Institute of Technology (917) 518-0711 hutchinson@dwh advisors .com Hutson, Malo Andr ..................................... University of California berkeley m.hutson@berkeley.edu Hutton, Tom ....................................................... University of british Columbia (604) 822-4818 thutton@interchange.ubc.ca Huxhold, William .......................................University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee (414) 229-6954 hux@uwm.edu Hyra, Derek ......................Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University

I
Ibitayo, Olurominiyi ................................................ Texas Southern University Imeokparia, Timothy O. ............................................ University of New Mexico (505) 277-1666 timeokpa@unm.edu Immergluck, Daniel ....................................... Georgia Institute of Technology (404) 385-7214 dan.immergluck@coa.gatech.edu Ingram, Helen ................................................... University of California Irvine (949) 824-1434 hingram@uci.edu Innes, Judith ................................................. University of California berkeley (510) 642-3256 jinnes@berkeley.edu Ioannides, Dimitri .................................................... Missouri State University (417) 836-5318 dioannides@missouristate.edu Irazabal, Clara .................................................................... Columbia University cei2108@columbia.edu Irvin, Renee ...................................................................... University of Oregon (541) 346-2155 rirvin@uoregon.edu Isaac, Claudia b. ........................................................ University of New Mexico (505) 277-5939 cisaac@unm.edu Isard, Walter .......................................................................... Cornell University (607) 255-3306 wi11@cornell.edu Iseki, Hiroyuki ......................................................... University of New Orleans (504) 280-6029 hiseki@uno.edu 220 Iskander, Natasha ............................................................ New York University Isserman, Andrew ...................... University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (217) 244-2858 isserman@illinois.edu Ittelson, Ellen ................................................... University of Colorado Denver Izeogu, Chukudi ....................................................... Alabama A&M University (256) 372-4990 chukudi.izeogu@aamu.edu

Howe, Deborah ..................................................................... Temple University (267) 468-8301 dhowe@temple.edu Howell, David ............................................................................ The New School (212) 229-5400 x1416 howell@newschool.edu Howland, Marie .................................... University of Maryland, College Park (301) 405-6791 mhowland@umd.edu Hoyt, Lorlene ...................................... Massachusetts Institute of Technology (617) 452-2073 lorlene@mit.edu Huang, Chang-Shan ........................................................ Texas A&M University (979) 845-7873 cshuang@archone.tamu.edu Huang, Ruihong (Ray) ........................................ Northern Arizona University (928) 523-8219 Ruihong.Huang@nau.edu Huang, Youqin ........................................................................... SUNY at Albany (518) 442-4792 yhuang@albany.edu Huber, Karl ............................................... Virginia Commonwealth University (804) 371-7484 KLH@der.state.va.us Huddleston, Jack R. ...................................... University of Wisconsin-Madison (608) 262-6152 jrhuddle@wisc.edu Hugg, David ................................................................... University of Delaware Hughes, James W. ................................................................................... Rutgers (732) 932-5475 ext. 756 jwhughes@rci.rutgers.edu Huja, Satyendra ............................................................... University of Virginia (434) 977-5094 huja@comcast.net Humphreys, Jeff ........................................................ University of Queensland (61)-7-3365-6455 Huntington, Stuart H. .................................................... Iowa State University Huntoon, Laura ................................................................ University of Arizona (520) 626-1151 huntoon@email.arizona.edu

B-16

J
Jackson, Randal ................................................ University of California Irvine Jacobs, Harvey M. ..........................................University of Wisconsin-Madison (608) 262-0552 hmjacobs@wisc.edu Jacquemart, George .................................................................... Pratt Institute (718) 399-4314 G-jacquemart@peapc.com Jacquemart, Georges ....................................................... New York University Jaffe, Martin .................................................... University of Illinois at Chicago (312) 996-2178 mjaffe@uic.edu Jaganathan, Radha ................................................................................ Rutgers (732) 932-4101 ext. 668 radha@rci.rutgers.edu Jang, Sung-Gheel..................................................... Cleveland State University (216) 687-5597 s.jang75@csuohio.edu Jarman, Casey ................................................................... University of Hawaii (808) 956-5569 jarman@hawaii.edu Jabbar-bey, Raheemah ................................................ University of Delaware (302) 831-8564 jabbarra@udel.edu Jacobs, Francine ........................................................................ Tufts University (617) 627-3394 francine.jacobs@tufts.edu Jacobson, Thomas E. ............................... Virginia Commonwealth University (804) 748-1040 jacobsont@chesterfield.gov Jeihani, Monsoureh .................................................. Morgan State University

Johnston, Douglas M. ..................................................... Iowa State University (515) 294-8524 rmahayni@iastate.edu Jojola, Ted .................................................................... Arizona State University Jojola, Theodore ....................................................... University of New Mexico (505) 277-6428 tjojola@unm.edu Jones, Diane .............................................................. Morgan State University Jones, Mittie Davis................................................... Cleveland State University (216) 687-3861 m.d.jones97@csuohio.edu Joroff, Michael .................................... Massachusetts Institute of Technology (617) 253-1354 mljoroff@mit.edu Jourdan, Dawn .................................................................. University of Florida (352) 392-0997 dawnjourdan@dcp.ufl.edu Juergensmeyer, Julian Conrad ..................... Georgia Institute of Technology (404) 651-2437 jjuergensmeyer@gsu.edu Jumonville, Karen ........................................................ Florida State University Justice, Jonathan .......................................................... University of Delaware (302) 831-1682 justice@udel.edu Jutla, Rajinder .......................................................... Missouri State University (417) 836-5298 rajinderjutla@missouristate.edu

K
Kahn, Andrea ..................................................................... Columbia University

Jencks, Michael .... California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo (805) 473-2929 Jencks@maglaw.net Jennings, James ........................................................................ Tufts University (617) 627-3394 james.jennings@tufts.edu Jensen, Alan .................................................................... Iowa State University Jensen, Eric ...................................................................... Iowa State University Johnson, bethany ............................................................ University of Oregon (541) 346-3615 bethanyj@uoregon.edu Johnson, bonnie ............................................................... University of Kansas (785) 864-7147 bojojohnson@ku.edu Johnson, Gary .......................................... Virginia Commonwealth University (804) 828-0469 gjohnson@mail1.vcu.edu Johnson, Hal .......................................................................... University of Utah (801) 287-2539 HJohnson@rideuta.com Johnson, Janet .............................................................. University of Delaware Johnson, Jeanne Harrah .................................................. University of Nevada jharrahj@gmail.com Johnson, Willie ........................................................ Savannah State University (912) 351-6480 johnsonw@savstate.edu

Kaiser, Edward ...................................................... University of North Carolina (919) 962-4781 ekaiser@email.unc.edu Kalambokidis, Laura ................................................... University of Minnesota (612) 625-1995 kalam002@umn.edu Kalantari, behrooz .................................................. Savannah State University (912) 353-5265 kalantab@savstate.edu Kamel, Nabil .............................................................. Arizona State University (480) 965-7167 Kamp, Edward ................................................. University of Colorado Denver Karamouz, Mohammad..................................................... Columbia University Karina, Stephen J. ................................ University of Maryland, College Park Karl, Herman ...................................... Massachusetts Institute of Technology (617) 324-0262 hkarl@mit.edu Kartez, Jack ........................................................ University of Southern Maine (207) 780-5389 jackk@usm.maine.edu Karuppannan, Sada ............................................ University of South Australia +61 8 8302 1066 sada.karuppannan@unisa.edu.au

B- 17

Kasprisin, Ron .......................................................... University of Washington (206) 543-4190 paparon@u.washington.edu Kassens, Eva ............................................................. Michigan State University Kaufman, Andrew ............................................................. University of Hawaii (808) 956-7958 kaufmana@hawaii.edu Kaufman, Jerome ........................................ University of Wisconsin-Madison (608) 262-1004 Kaufman, Ned .............................................................................. Pratt Institute (212) 647-7532 nkpreservation@verizon.net Kaufman, Sanda ..................................................... Cleveland State University (216) 687-2367 s.kaufman@csuohio.edu Kawamura, Kazuya ........................................ University of Illinois at Chicago (312) 413-1269 kazuya@uic.edu Kayden, Jerold S. ................................................................. Harvard University (617) 496-0830 jkayden@gsd.harvard.edu Kaza, Nikil.............................................................. University of North Carolina (919) 962-4767 nkaza@unc.edu Keane, John ................................................................. Arizona State University (480) 965-7533 Keane, Tim ................................................................... Kansas State University (785) 532-5961 whisker@ksu.edu Keating, Dennis, W. ................................................. Cleveland State University (216) 687-2298 w.keating@csuohio.edu Keeble, Ronald .................................................................... Ryerson University (416) 979-5000 ext.6771 rkeeble@ryerson.ca Keenan, Kevin ............................................................. Hunter College of CUNY Keene, John C. ....................................................................... Temple University john.keene@temple.edu Keithley, C.A. ............................................................... Kansas State University (785) 532-5961 cak@ksu.edu Kelbaugh, Douglas ....................................................... University of Michigan (734) 763-1298 kelbaugh@umich.edu Keller, John .................................................................. Kansas State University (785) 532-5961 jwkplan@ksu.edu Kellett, E. Gates ............................................. Georgia Institute of Technology (404) 371-1230 x 211 gatesk@mindspring.com Kelley, Karen .............................................................................. Tufts University (617) 627-3394 kkelley@cedac.org Kelley, William ................................................ Eastern Washington University (509) 358-2226 wkelley@mail.ewu.edu Kellogg, Wendy A. .................................................. Cleveland State University (216) 687-5265 w.kellogg@csuohio.edu Kelly, Eric Damian ............................................................. ball State University (765) 285-1909 ekelly@bsu.edu

Kent, Robert b. .................................. California State University, Northridge (818) 677-4372 rob.kent@csun.edu Kerry, Michael .......................................................... University of Queensland (61)-7-3365-6455 Kessler, Fritz ............................................................ Frostburg State University (301) 687-4266 fkessler@frostburg.edu Keyes, Langley ................................... Massachusetts Institute of Technology (617) 253-1540 lkeyes@mit.edu Keynejad, Charles ............................. California State University, Northridge (818) 677-2904 charles.keynejad@csun.edu Kim, Annette ...................................... Massachusetts Institute of Technology (617) 324-6135 annette@mit.edu Kim, Do-Hyung ................... California State Polytechnic University, Pomona (909) 869-4645 dohyungKim@csupomona.edu Kim, Joochul ................................................................. Arizona State University (480) 965-7533 Kim, Karl ............................................................................ University of Hawaii (808) 956-6865 karlk@hawaii.edu Kim, Sungyop ............................................ University of Missouri-Kansas City (816) 235-6898 kims@umkc.edu Kim, Tschangho John ................. University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (217) 244-5369 tjohnkim@illinois.edu King, David ......................................................................... Columbia University dk2475@columbia.edu King, Deborah .................................................................... University of Akron (330) 972-2394 dpking@uakron.edu King, Melvin ....................................... Massachusetts Institute of Technology (617) 253-3287 mhking@mit.edu Kise, James ............................................................. University of Pennsylvania Kleit, Rachel .............................................................. University of Washington (206) 221-3063 kleit@u.washington.edu Klinkenberg, Kevin .................................... University of Missouri-Kansas City Kloot, James Van Der ..................................... University of Illinois at Chicago jvkloot@uic.edu Klopfer, Eric ........................................ Massachusetts Institute of Technology (617) 253-2025 klopfer@mit.edu Knaap, Gerrit ........................................ University of Maryland, College Park (301) 405-6792 gknaap@umd.edu Knight, bruce .............................. University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (217) 333-3890 baknight@illinois.edu Knox, Jerry ....................................................................... Iowa State University Knox, Paul L. ...................... Virginia Polytechnic Institute & State University (540) 231-1695 knox@vt.edu

B-18

Kobayashi, Kip ................... California State Polytechnic University, Pomona khk@mythograph.com Koebel, C. Theodore ........... Virginia Polytechnic Institute & State University (540) 231-0412 tkoebel@vt.edu Korbey Esq., Mitchell ................................................. Hunter College of CUNY Kordesh, Richard ............................................ University of Illinois at Chicago kordesh@uic.edu Korn, Lindy ............................................................ University at buffalo SUNY (716) 829-2133x222 lkorn@ap.buffalo.edu Kosny, Mitchell .................................................................. Ryerson University (416) 979-5000 ext.7314 mkosny@ryerson.ca Kostyniuk, Lidia ............................................................ University of Michigan (734) 763-2466 lidakost@umich.edu Kotin, Allan D. ............................................... University of Southern Califonria (213) 623-3841 akotin@adkotin.com Kotval, Zenia Z. ........................................................ Michigan State University (517) 353-9362 kotval@msu.edu Koven, Steven ............................................................... University of Louisville (502) 852-8257 sgkove01@louisville.edu Kozlowski, Jurek ....................................................... University of Queensland (61)-7-3365-6455 Kreditor, Alan ............................................... University of Southern California (213) 740-2939 kreditor@usc.edu Krieger, Alex ......................................................................... Harvard University (617) 495-4803 akrieger@gsd.harvard.edu Krieger, Martin H. ......................................... University of Southern Calfironia (213) 740-3957 krieger@usc.edu Krimsky, Sheldon ...................................................................... Tufts University (617) 627-3394 sheldon.krimsky@tufts.edu Krizek, Kevin ..................................................... University of Colorado Denver (303) 556-3282 kevin.krizek@ucdenver.edu Kropf, Roger ..................................................................... New York University Krumholz, Norm ..................................................... Cleveland State University (216) 687-6946 n.krumholz@csuohio.edu Krupp, Matthew ........................................................ San Jose State University (408) 945-5182 matt.krupp@sanjoseca.gov Kudva, Neema ....................................................................... Cornell University (607) 255-3939 nk78@cornell.edu Kuecker, Christina ................................................................. University of Iowa (515) 556-7256 christina-kuecker@iowa-city.org Kumar, Tanushri ........................................................................... Pratt Institute (718) 399-4314 Kung, Hsiang-te ............................................................. University of Memphis (901) 678-4538 hkung@memphis.edu

Kushner, James ............................................ University of Southern California (213) 738-6821 jkushner@swlaw.edu Kwok, Reg .......................................................................... University of Hawaii (808) 956-6867 rkwok@hawaii.edu Kwong, Peter .............................................................. Hunter College of CUNY (212) 772-5598 pkwong@hunter.cuny.edu Kyte, Michael .......................................................................University of Idaho (208) 885-6002 mkyte@uidaho.edu

L
LaFlamme, Daryl ......................................................... Wayne State University (313) 577-2701 daryl.laflamme@jwt.com LaGro, Jr., James A. .......................................University of Wisconsin-Madison (608) 263-6507 jalagro@wisc.edu Lahr, Michael L. ....................................................................................... Rutgers (732) 932-3133 ext. 546 lahr@rci.rutgers.edu Lai, Clement ........................................................................... Cornell University (607) 254-6540 CKL28@cornell.edu Lake, Robert W. ....................................................................................... Rutgers (732) 932-3133 ext. 521 rlake@rci.rutgers.edu LaMore, Rex L. .......................................................... Michigan State University (517) 353-9555 lamore@msu.edu Lander, brad ................................................................................. Pratt Institute (718) 636 3486 x6447 blander@pratt.edu Landis, John ........................................................... University of Pennsylvania (215) 746-2340 jlan@design.upenn.edu Landman, Richard ............................................................ New York University Lang, Frank ..................................................................................... Pratt Institue (718) 399-4314 flang@pratt.edu Lang, Robert ....................... Virginia Polytechnic Institute & State University (703) 706-8101 rlang@vt.edu Laninga, Tamara ..................................................................University of Idaho (208) 885-7117 laninga@uidaho.edu LaPlante, Josephine ........................................... University of Southern Maine (207) 228-8593 josielm@suscom-maine.net Lapp, Floyd ........................................................................ Columbia University Lapping, Mark .................................................... University of Southern Maine (207) 228-8180 lapping@usm.maine.edu Larice, Michael ....................................................... University of Pennsylvania (215) 573-5845 larice@design.upenn.edu Larsen, Kristin ................................................................... University of Florida (352) 392-0997 klarsen@ufl.edu

B- 19

Larsen, Larissa ............................................................... University of Michigan 734) 936-0234 larissal@umich.edu Lassiter, Matthew .......................................................... University of Michigan (734) 647-4618 mlassite@umich.edu Lastarria-Cornhiel, Susana............................University of Wisconsin-Madison (608) 262-0097 slastarr@wisc.edu Latimer, Stanley ................................................................ University of Florida (352) 392-9406 latimer@geoplan.ufl.edu Lauria, Mickey ................................................................... Clemson University (864) 656-0520 mlauria@clemson.edu Laurian, Lucie ........................................................................ University of Iowa (319) 335-2955 lucie-laurian@uiowa.edu Laverny-Rafter, David .......................... Minnesota State University, Mankato (507) 389-1540 david.laverny-rafter@mnsu.edu Lawhon, Larry .............................................................. Kansas State University (785) 532-5961 lawhonll@ksu.edu Lawrence, Patrick ............................................................... University of Toledo (419) 530-4128 Patrick.Lawrence@utoledo.edu Lawson, Catherine T. ................................................................. SUNY at Albany (518) 442-4775 lawsonc@albany.edu Lay, bonny ......................... California State Polytechnic University, Pomona bonny_lay@yahoo.com Layzer, Judith ..................................... Massachusetts Institute of Technology (617) 253-5196 jlayzer@mit.edu Leaf, Michael ...................................................... University of british Columbia (604) 822-6213 leaf@interchange.ubc.ca Leak, Kathryne ........................................................... Hunter College of CUNY Leavitt, Jacqueline ................................. University of California, Los Angeles (310) 825-4380 jleavitt@ucla.edu Lebleu, Charlene ................................................................. Auburn University (334) 844-0192 leblecm@auburn.edu LeClair, Daniel ....................................................................... boston University LeDuc, Andre .................................................................... University of Oregon (541) 346-5833 onhw@uoregon.edu Lee, bumsoo ............................... University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (217) 333-3601 bumsoo@illinois.edu Lee, Chanam .................................................................... Texas A&M University (979) 845-7056 clee@archone.tamu.edu Lee, Joseph A. ........................................................... Alabama A&M University (256) 372-4991 joseph.lee@aamu.edu Lee, Richard ............................................................... San Jose State University (925) 930-7100 dr.r.w.lee@pacbell.net Lee, Sugie ................................................................ Cleveland State University (216) 687-2381 s.lee56@csuohio.edu

Leete, Laura ...................................................................... University of Oregon (541) 346-0834 leete@uoregon.edu Lee, Tunney ......................................... Massachusetts Institute of Technology (617) 258-7275 tflee@mit.edu Lee, Young-Jae ........................................................... Morgan State University Lee, Yuk ............................................................ University of Colorado, Denver (303) 556-4232 yuk.lee@ucdenver.edu Leigh, Nancey Green .................................... Georgia Institute of Technology (404) 894-9839 nancey.leigh@coa.gatech.edu Leinberger, Christopher ............................................... University of Michigan (734) 764-9453 cleinber@umich.edu Leitman, Steve .............................................................. Florida State University Lejano, Raul ...................................................... University of California Irvine (949) 824-9825 lejano@uci.edu Lemberg, David ................................................... Western Michigan University (269) 387-3410 david.lemberg@wmich.edu Lentner, T. Abraham ....................................... University of Illinois at Chicago tlentn1@uic.edu Leon, Monica Ponce de ................................................. University of Michigan Leuthart, Clara .............................................................. University of Louisville (502) 852-6844 caleut01@louisville.edu Levine, Jonathan ........................................................... University of Michigan (734) 763-0039 jnthnlvn@umich.edu Levine, Julius ............................................ The Catholic University of America (202) 319-5188 levinej@cua.edu Levine, Mark ..................................................................... New York University Levinson, David ........................................................... University of Minnesota (612) 625-6354 levin031@umn.edu Levitte, Yael .......................................................................... Cornell University (607) 255-6545 yl343@cornell.edu Levy, Frank ......................................... Massachusetts Institute of Technology (617) 253-2089 flevy@mit.edu Levy, Paul ............................................................... University of Pennsylvania Lew, Alan A. ........................................................ Northern Arizona University (928) 523-6567 Alan.Lew@nau.edu Lewis, David A. .......................................................................... SUNY at Albany (518) 442-4595 dalewis@albany.edu Lewis, David .......................................................................... Cornell University (607) 255-0177 DBL2@cornell.edu Lewis, Ferdinand ................................................... University at buffalo SUNY (716) 829-2133 x234 fslewis@buffalo.edu Lewis, Jerome ................................................................ University of Delaware (302) 831-1709 jlewis@udel.edu

B-20

Lewis, Nancy ...................................................................... University of Hawaii (808) 944-7245 nlewis@hawaii.edu Liggett, Robin ......................................... University of California, Los Angeles (310) 825-6294 rliggett@ucla.edu Light, Paul ......................................................................... New York University Li, Jianling ......................................................... University of Texas, Arlington (817) 272-3367 jjli@uta.edu Li, Ming-Han ................................................................... Texas A&M University (979) 845-7571 minghan@tamu.edu Lind, Amy ..................................................................... University of Cincinnati Lindell, Michael K. ........................................................... Texas A&M University (979) 862-3969 mlindell@archone.tamu.edu Lindquist, Peter S. .............................................................. University of Toledo (419) 530-4287 Peter.Lindquist@utoledo.edu Lindsey, Greg H. ........................................................... Universityof Minnesota (612) 625-3375 linds301@umn.edu Liska, Roger W. .................................................................. Clemson University (864) 656-3878 riggor@clemson.edu Lister, Nina-Marie ................................................................ Ryerson University (416) 979-5000 ext 6769 nm.lister@ryerson.ca Listokin, David ....................................................................................... Rutgers (732) 932-3822 ext. 550 listokin@rci.rutgers.edu Liu, Rachel ................................................ New Jersey Institute of Technology (973) 596-5884 rongfang.liu@njit.edu Li, Yanmei ................................................................ Florida Atlantic University (954) 762-5037 yli22@fau.edu Lloyd, Richard E. ........................................................ Morgan State University Locke, Richard .................................... Massachusetts Institute of Technology (617) 253-4912 rlocke@mit.edu Loggins, Charles ................ California State Polytechnic University, Pomona loggins@csupomona.edu Loh, Carolyn G. ............................................................ Wayne State University (313) 577-0541 cgloh@wayne.edu Loh, Penn S. ............................................................................... Tufts University (617) 627-3394 pennloh@comcast.net Lomax, Timothy .............................................................. Texas A&M University (979) 845-9960 t-lomax@ttimail.tamu.edu London, James b. .............................................................. Clemson University (864) 656-3927 london1@clemson.edu Long, Jerrold A. ...................................................................University of Idaho (208) 885-7988 jlong@uidaho.edu Long, Judith Grant .............................................................. Harvard University (617) 495 2521 evansaun@gsd.harvard.edu

Longo, Leo ........................................................................... Ryerson University llongo@airdberlis.com Looye, Johanna W. ....................................................... University of Cincinnati (513) 556-0216 johanna.looye@uc.edu Lopez, Hilary F. ................................................................ University of Nevada hlopez@nvhousing.state.nv.us Loubert, Linda ........................................................... Morgan State University Loukaitou-Sideris, Anastasia ................ University of California, Los Angeles (310) 206-9679 sideris@ucla.edu Lowe, Jeffrey S. ............................................................ Florida State University (850) 645-1352 pkoeppel@fsu.edu Lowe, Jeffrey S. ............................................................. Florida State University (850) 644-4510 jslowe@.fsu.edu Lowe, Nichola ...................................................... University of North Carolina (919) 843-2319 nlowe@email.unc.edu Lowry, Kem ........................................................................ University of Hawaii (808) 956-6868 lowry@hawaii.edu Lowry, Michael ....................................................................University of Idaho (208) 885-0139 mlowry@uidaho.edu Lucy, William H. ................................................................ University of Virginia (434) 924-4779 whl@virginia.edu Ludwig, Sarah ................................................................... New York University Lu, Jia ........................................................ The Catholic University of America (202) 319-6682 lu@cua.edu Luka, Nik ................................................................................. McGill University (514) 398-5925 nik.luka@mcgill.ca Lund, Hollie M. ................... California State Polytechnic University, Pomona (909) 869-2710 hlund@csupomona.edu Lusk, Paul E. ............................................................... University of New Mexico Luton, Larry .................................................... Eastern Washington University (509) 358-2247 lluton@mail.ewu.edu Lutt, Frederick ............................................................. University of Cincinnati Lutzenhiser, Loren ................................................. Portland State Universityu (503) 725-8743 llutz@pdx.edu Lynch, barbara ...................................................................... Cornell University (607) 255-2186 BDL5@cornell.edu Lynch, barbara ............................................... Georgia Institute of Technology (404) 385-6884 barbara.lynch@inta.gatech.edu

B- 21

M
Macdonald, Elizabeth .................................. University of California berkeley (510) 643-3765 emacdon@berkeley.edu Macedo, Joseli ................................................................... University of Florida (352) 392-0997 joseli@ufl.edu Machado, Rodolfo ............................................................... Harvard University (617) 495-2659 rmachado@gsd.harvard.edu Machemer, Patricia L. .............................................. Michigan State University (517) 353-9047 machemer@msu.edu Macht, William .......................................................... Portland State University (503) 725-8296 macht@pdx.edu Magee, Joseph .................................................................. New York University Mahayni, Riad G. ............................................................. Iowa State University (515) 294-8524 rmahayni@iastate.edu Main, Kelly ............ California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo (805) 756-2286 kdmain@calpoly.edu Malizia, Emil ......................................................... University of North Carolina (919) 962-4759 malizia@email.unc.edu Manford, Robert ................ California State Polytechnic University, Pomona abeiku@aol.com Mankiewicz, Paul ......................................................................... Pratt Institute (718) 399-4314 paul@gaiainstituteny.org Marcotullio, Peter ....................................................... Hunter College of CUNY (212) 772-5264 peter.marcotullio@hunter.cuny.edu Marcouiller, David W...................................University of Wisconswin-Madison (608) 262-2998 wmarcou@wisc.edu Marcuse, Peter ................................................................... Columbia University pm35@columbia.edu Margerum, Richard .......................................................... University of Oregon (541) 346-2526 rdm@uoregon.edu Markusen, Ann R. .........................................................University of minnestoa (612) 625-8092 markusen@umn.edu Marshall, Alex .......................................... New Jersey Institute of Technology (212)-229-9392 alex@rpa.org Marshall, Julian D. ....................................................... University of Minnesota (612) 625-2397 julian@umn.edu Marshment, Richard ................................................... University of Oklahoma (405) 325-2399 rmarshment@ou.edu Mars, James ......................................................................... Ryerson University (416) 979-5000 ext. 6764 jmars@ryerson.ca Martin, Jonathan ......................................................................... Pratt Institute (718) 399-4314 Martin, Judith A. ......................................................... University of Minnesota (612) 626-1626 jmartin@umn.edu

Martin, Sheila ........................................................... Portland State University Masilela, Calvin O. Indiana ................................... University of Pennsylvania (724) 357 2250 cmasilel@iup.edu Mason, Randy ........................................................ University of Pennsylvania (215) 898-3169 rfmason@design.upenn.edu Massey, Elton ..................................... California State University, Northridge (818) 677-2904 massey.elton@csun.edu emassey@theithacagroup.com Mastran, Shelley ................ Virginia Polytechnic Institute & State University smastran@vt.edu Mathew, Reena .......................................................... San Jose State University (408) 535-7844 Reena.Mathew@sanjoseca.gov Matsuo, Miwa ........................................................................ University of Iowa Mayer, Heike ....................... Virginia Polytechnic Institute & State University (703) 706-8122 heikem@vt.edu Mazmanian, Daniel A. .................................. University of Southern California mazmania@usc.edu Maclaren, Virginia ............................................................ University of Toronto (416) 978-1594 maclaren@geog.utoronto.ca Maingi, John ............................................................................ Miami University (513) 529-5024 maingijk@muohio.edu Malone, William .............................................................. Iowa State University Malpezzi, Stephen .........................................University of Wisconsin-Madison (608) 262-6007 smalpezzi@wisc.edu Mandarano, Lynn .................................................................. Temple University (267) 468-8304 lynn.mandarano@temple.edu Marcotullio, Peter .............................................................. Columbia University Martin, Jonathan ............................................................... Columbia University Martinez-Cosio, Maria ...................................... University of Texas, Arlington (817) 272-3302 mcosio@uta.edu Mathur, Shishir ......................................................... San Jose State University (408) 924-5875 shishir.mathur@sjsu.edu Matthew, Richard ............................................. University of California Irvine (949) 824-4852 rmatthew@uci.edu May, Diane ................................................................ Missouri State University (417) 836-6900 dmm672f@missouristate.edu Mayo, James ...................................................................... University of Kansas (785) 864-3350 jimmayo@ku.edu Mazumdar, Sanjoy ........................................... University of California Irvine (949) 824-5046 mazumdar@uci.edu McAfee, Ann ....................................................... University of british Columbia amcafee@shaw.ca McCaleb, Neal .............................................................. University of Oklahoma

B-22

McCall, Raymond ............................................. University of Colorado Denver (303) 492-7042 Mccall@colorado.edu McClure, Kirk ..................................................................... University of Kansas (785) 864-3888 mcclure@ku.edu McClure, Wendy ...................................................................University of Idaho (208) 885-6473 wmcclure@uidaho.edu McCord, Mark ................................................................. Ohio State University (614) 292-2388 mccord.2@osu.edu McCormick, Lynn ........................................................ Hunter College of CUNY (212) 772-5733 lmccormi@hunter.cuny.edu McCoy, Michael ............................................................. University of Louisville (502) 893-3550 michael.mccoy@insightbb.com McDaniels, Timothy ........................................... University of british Columbia (604) 822-9288 timmcd@interchange.ubc.ca McDonald, Mary Grace ...................................................... University of Hawaii (808) 956-7016 mcdonald@hawaii.edu McDonald, Noreen ............................................... University of North Carolina (919) 962-4781 noreen@unc.edu McDowell, Ceasar ............................... Massachusetts Institute of Technology (617) 253-7587 ceasar@mit.edu McGrath, Tod ...................................... Massachusetts Institute of Technology (617) 253-4373 McGregor, Davianna P. ..................................................... University of Hawaii (808) 956-7068 davianna@hawaii.edu McIntyre, Lionel ................................................................. Columbia University McKenzie, Meredith .......... California State Polytechnic University, Pomona meredith@arroyoseco.org McKibben, Sherry ................................................................University of Idaho (208) 364-4540 sherrym@uidaho.edu McLaren, Norma-Jean ....................................... University of british Columbia njmclaren@shaw.ca McLaughlin, Michael ............................................. San Diego State University (619) 594-5507 mikemcla43@aol.com McMillan, Tracy ................................................... Northern Arizona University McMillen, Daniel ........................ University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (217) 333-4741 mcmillen@uic.edu McMullen, John ...................................................... Frostburg State University (301) 687-3162 jmcmullen@frostburg.edu McNally, Michael .............................................. University of California Irvine McNamara, Jane ............................................................................Pratt Instittue (212) 647-7352 McNeish, Gilbert .............................................. University of Colorado Denver Meany, Judith ........................................... The Catholic University of America (202) 319-5188 meany@cua.edu

Meck, Stuart ........................................................................................... Rutgers (732) 932-3640, ext. 640 stumeck@rci.rutgers.edu Meenar, Md Mahbubur R. ..................................................... Temple University Meenar@temple.edu Megdal, Sharon ................................................................ University of Arizona (520) 792-9591 ext.21 smegdal@cals.arizona.edu Meiklejohn, Susan Turner .......................................... Hunter College of CUNY (212) 650-3679 sturn@hunter.cuny.edu Melcher, John E. ....................................................... Michigan State University (517) 353-9555 melcher@msu.edu Meltzer, Rachel .......................................................................... The New School (212) 229-5400 meltzerr@newschool.edu Mendes, Wendy.................................................. University of british Columbia wendy.mendes@utoronto.ca Menking, William ......................................................................... Pratt Institute (718) 399-4323 wmenking@pratt.edu Mensing, Scott A. ............................................................ University of Nevada smensing@unr.edu Merrill, Sam ........................................................ University of Southern Maine (207) 228-8596 smerrill@usm.maine.edu Mescher, Phil ................................................................... Iowa State University Messer, barry ............................................................ Portland State University (503) 725-5159 messerb@pdx.edu Meyer, David ..................................................... University of California Irvine Meyer, Michael D. .......................................... Georgia Institute of Technology (404) 385-2246 michael.meyer@ce.gatech.edu Michaels, Harvey ................................ Massachusetts Institute of Technology (617) 253-2084 hgm@mit.edu Michael, Vincent ............................................. University of Illinois at Chicago vmicha1@uic.edu Mikelbank, brian ..................................................... Cleveland State University b.mikelbank@csuohio.edu Milczarski, William ..................................................... Hunter College of CUNY (212) 772-5601 wmilczar@hunter.cuny.edu Miles, Rebecca ............................................................. Florida State University (850) 644-4510 rmiles@fsu.edu Miller, Anita ............................................................... University of New Mexico Miller, Charles .................................................................... University of Kansas (785) 864-4184 cmiller@hntb.com Miller, Donald............................................................ University of Washington (206) 543-7355 millerd@u.washington.edu Miller, Frank .............................................................. Missouri State University Miller, Lee .......................................................................... Columbia University

B- 23

Mills, Allan ................................................. Virginia Commonwealth University amills@vcu.edu Milroy, beth Moore ............................................................. Ryerson University bmilroy@ryerson.ca Minerbi, Luciano ............................................................... University of Hawaii (808) 956-6869 luciano@hawaii.edu Minnery, John .......................................................... University of Queensland (61) 7-3365-3880 j.minnery@uq.edu.au Miraftab, Faranak ....................... University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (217) 265-8238 faranak@illinois.edu Mirr, Ronald ........................................................................... University of Iowa (319) 430-4315 rmirr@mac.com Mitchell, Jerry V. ................ California State Polytechnic University, Pomona (909) 869-4656 jvmitchell@csupomona.edu Mitchell, Leonard ......................................... University of Southern California (213) 740-1487 mitchell@usc.edu Mitchell-Weaver, Clyde ................................................ Kansas State University (785) 532-5961 mithweav@ksu.edu Mitchell, William J. ............................. Massachusetts Institute of Technology (617) 452-3226 wjm@mit.edu Mitsova, Diana ........................................................ Florida Atlantic University (954) 762-5674 dmitsova@fau.edu Mobarak, barabara ................................................... Morgan State University Mohamed, Rayman ..................................................... Wayne State University (313) 577-3356 ar7661@wayne.edu Monchaux, John de ............................ Massachusetts Institute of Technology (617) 253-8299 demon@mit.edu Monroe, Charles ................................................................. University of Akron (330) 972-8033 monroe@uakron.edu Moomaw, Suzanne Morse ............................................... University of Virginia (434) 924-1339 swm2x@virginia.edu Moore, Jon .......................................................................... University of Akron (330) 972-6757 jmoore1@uakron.edu Morales, Alfonso ......................................... University of Wisconsin-Madison (608) 263-4848 morales@wisc.edu Moran, Ariella Rosenberg ........................................................... Pratt Institute (718) 399-4314 Moreau, David ...................................................... University of North Carolina (919) 962-4756 dmoreau@email.unc.edu Morgan, Cheryl .................................................................... Auburn University (205) 323-3592 morgace@auburn.edu Morgan, Hubert .............................................. University of Illinois at Chicago hmorgan@cmap.illinois.gov Morrison, Tiffany ...................................................... University of Queensland (61) 7-3365-6535 t.morrison@uq.edu.au

Morrow-Jones, Hazel ..................................................... Ohio State University (614) 292-1027 morrow-jones.1@osu.edu Morton, Elizabeth .............. Virginia Polytechnic Institute & State University (540)706-8111 ElizabethMorton@vt.edu Moses, Stanley ............................................................ Hunter College of CUNY (212) 772-5518 smoses@hunter.cuny.edu Moss, Mitchell ................................................................... New York University (212) 998-7400 mitchell.moss@nyu.edu Moudon, Anne Vernez .............................................. University of Washington (206) 685-4057 moudon@u.washington.edu Mower, James E. ....................................................................... SUNY at Albany (518) 442-4779 jmower@albany.edu Mugerauer, Robert ................................................... University of Washington (206) 221-4415 drbobm@u.washington.edu Mukhija, Vinit ......................................... University of California, Los Angeles (310) 794-4478 ukhija@ucla.edu Muller, brian .................................................... University of Colorado, Denver (303) 556-5967 brian.muller@ucdenver.edu Multari, Michael ... California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo (805) 756-2818 mmultari@aol.com Murray, Sylvester .................................................... Savannah State University (912) 303-1885 murraysy@savstate.edu Murray, William ..................................................... University at buffalo SUNY (716) 829-2133x222 wmmurray@buffalo.edu Musso, Juliet ................................................. University of Southern California (213) 740-7095 dowell@usc.edu Muthukumar, Subrahmanyam ..................... Georgia Institute of Technology (404) 894-0128 smuthu@coa.gatech.edu Mutunayagam, N. brito ................................. University of Nebraska-Lincoln (402) 472-9283 brito@unl.edu Myers, Dowell ............................................... University of Southern California (213) 740-7095 dowell@usc.edu

N
Nagy, beth .................................................................... University of Cincinnati Nalbandian, M. Richard ......................................................... Temple University (267) 468-8302 richard.nalbandian@temple.edu Nam, Yunwoo .................................................. University of Nebraska-Lincoln (402) 472-9279 ynam2@unl.edu Nance, Earthea ........................................................ University of New Orleans (504) 280-4017 eanance@uno.edu Nandan, Gita ................................................................................ Pratt Institute (718) 399-4314

B-24

Nanetti, Raffaella ........................................... University of Illinois at Chicago (312) 996-2175 rnanetti@uic.edu Naphtali, Zvia S. ................................................................ New York University Nasar, Jack L. .................................................................. Ohio State University (614) 292-1457 nasar.1@osu.edu Nassar, Hala ........................................................................ Clemson University (864) 656-2499 hnassar@clemson.edu Naughton, Lisa .............................................. University of Wisconsin-Madison (608) 262-4846 lnaughto@wisc.edu Ndubisi, Forster ............................................................... Texas A&M University (979) 845-1019 fndubisi@archmail.tamu.edu Nedovic-budic, Zorica ................ University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (217) 244-5402 budic@illinois.edu Nelessen, Anton E. ................................................................................ Rutgers (732) 932-3822 ext. 726 nelessen@rci.rutgers.edu Nelis, Robert ................................................... University of Illinois at Chicago rlnelis@uic.edu Nelson, Arthur C. ................................................................... University of Utah (801) 581-8253 acnelson@utah.edu Nelson, Marla .......................................................... University of New Orleans (504) 280-3110 mnelson@uno.edu Nemeth, David J. ................................................................ University of Toledo (419) 530-4049 David.Nemeth@utoledo.edu Nmeth, Jeremy ............................................... University of Colorado Denver (303) 556-3688 jeremy.nemeth@ucdenver.edu Nettleton, John ..................................................................... Cornell University (607) 255-8210 jsn10@cornell.edu Neubauer, Deane .............................................................. University of Hawaii (808) 944-7599 deanen@hawaii.edu Neuman, Michael C. ........................................................ Texas A&M University (979) 345-7062 neuman@taz.tamu.edu Newman, Kathe ...................................................................................... Rutgers (732) 932-3822 ext. 556 knewman@rci.rutgers.edu Newmark, Gregory ................................................... San Jose State University (510) 282-8413 gnewmark@berkeley.edu Nguyen, Mai ......................................................... University of North Carolina (919) 962-4762 nguyen@unc.edu Nicholas, James ................................................................. University of Florida jcnicholas@msn.com Niehaus, John .............................................................. University of Cincinnati Nigam, Amit ...................................................................... New York University Nimz, Dale ........................................................................University of Kanasas (785) 864-4184 dnimz@sunflower.com

Nitz, Lawrence ................................................................... University of Hawaii (808) 956-8665 lnitz@hawaii.edu Nixon, Hilary ............................................................. San Jose State University (408) 924-5852 hilary.nixon@sjsu.edu Nocks, barry C. .................................................................. Clemson University (864) 656-4094 nocks2@clemson.edu Noland, Robert b. ................................................................................... Rutgers (732) 932-6812 ext. 606 rnoland@rci.rutgers.edu Northridge, Mary ............................................................... Columbia University Norton, Richard ............................................................. University of Michigan (734) 936-0197 rknorton@umich.edu Nottingham, Emily ......................................................... University of Arizona Novak, Alice ................................ University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (217) 333-3890 novak2@illinois.edu Novak, Terry .................................................... Eastern Washington University (509) 358-2261 tnovak@mail.ewu.edu Nuworsoo, Cornelius K. (805) 756-2496 ................. California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo cnuworso@calpoly.edu

O
O'brien, William Patrick .................................................. University of Arizona (520) 621-9922 obrienw@email.arizona.edu O'Connor, Christopher J. .......................................................... SUNY at Albany (518) 442-4770 co7450@albany.edu O'Connor, Kathleen ................................................................... SUNY at Albany O'Donnell, Edward ........................................................ University of Delaware (302) 831-4928 troutbum@udel.edu Ofori-Amoah, benjamin ..................................... Western Michigan University (269) 387-3415 ben.ofori@wmich.edu Ohm, brian W. ............................................... University of Wisconsin-Madison (608) 262-2098 bwohm@wisc.edu Okamura, Norman H. ........................................................ University of Hawaii (808) 956-2909 norman@tipg.net Okey, brian W. Indiana .......................................... University of Pennsylvania (724) 357 2250 bokey@iup.edu Oliveira, Euripedes De ...................... California State University, Northridge (818) 677-2904 euri@csun.edu Olpadwala, Porus .................................................................. Cornell University (607) 255-2957 pdo1@cornell.edu Olpadwala, Porus ...................................................... University of New Mexico

B- 25

Olshansky, Robert ...................... University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (217) 333-8703 robo@illinois.edu Olson, C. brad ........................................................................ Cornell University (607) 255-1114 cbo3@cornell.edu Olson, Jeffrey S. ........................................................................ SUNY at Albany (518) 442-4778 trails2k@aol.com Oluwoye, Jacob ......................................................... Alabama A&M University (256) 372-4994 jacob.oluwoye@aamu.edu Onaran, Korkut ................................................. University of Colorado Denver Oner, Asli Ceylan ..................................................... Florida Atlantic University (954) 762-5357 aoner@fau.edu Ong, Paul ................................................ University of California, Los Angeles (310) 206-2193 pmong@ucla.edu O'Regan, Katherine .......................................................... New York University (212) 998-7400 katherine.oregan@nyu.edu Okerlund, Gary ................................................................. University of Virginia (434) 924-1339 go2n@virginia.edu Olds, Kristopher .............................................University of Wisconsin-Madison (608) 262-5685 kolds@wisc.edu 261 Oretsky, Nicole ........................................................ Savannah State University (912) 303-1886 orestskyn@savstate.edu Orfield, Gary ........................................... University of California, Los Angeles (310) 267-4877 orfield@gseis.ucla.edu Orfield, Jr., Myron W. .................................................. University of Minnesota (612) 625-7976 orfield@umn.edu O'Riordan, Jon.................................................... University of british Columbia joriorda@shaw.ca ORorke, John ......................................................... Frostburg State University (301) 687-4277 jororke@frostburg.edu Orosz, Theodore ......................................................... Hunter College of CUNY Orton, barry M. ..............................................University of Wisconsin-Madison (608) 262-2394 bmorton@facstaff.wisc.edu Osterman, Paul .................................... Massachusetts Institute of Technology (617) 253-2667 osterman@mit.edu Outland, Donald ....................................................... Alabama A&M University (256) 372-4993 Deoutland@aol.com Owusu, Francis Y. ............................................................ Iowa State University (515) 294-7769 fowusu@iastate.edu Ozawa, Connie P. ...................................................... Portland State University (503) 725-5126 ozawac@pdx.edu Ozdenerol, Esra .............................................................. University of Memphis

P
Page, G. William ..................................................... University at buffalo SUNY (716) 829-2133x208 gpage@buffalo.edu Page, Mark .................................................................. Hunter College of CUNY Pallathucheril, Varkki George .... University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (217) 333-3890 varkki@illinois.edu Palmlund, Ingar ......................................................................... Tufts University (617) 627-3394 ipalmlund@aol.com Panakkal, Meenaxi ............ California State Polytechnic University, Pomona meenaxipanakkal@lsa-assoc.com Pan, Qisheng ............................................................ Texas Southern University (713) 313-7221 pan_qs@tsu.edu Papacostas, C.S. ................................................................ University of Hawaii (808) 956-6538 csp@hawaii.edu Papsidero, Vincent ......................................................... Ohio State University (614) 292-1012 Paradis, Thomas W. ............................................ Northern Arizona University Parekh, Mahendra ..................................................... Morgan State University Parker, brenda ................................................. University of Illinois at Chicago (312) 996-2167 bkparker@uic.edu Parker, Robert .................................................................. University of Oregon (541) 346-3801 rgp@uoregon.edu Park, JiYoung .......................................................... University at buffalo SUNY (716) 829-2133 x209 jp292@buffalo.edu Parker, Francis H. .............................................................. ball State University (765) 285-5870 fparker@bsu.edu Parker, Richard ....................................................... San Diego State University (619) 594-6084 parker3@mail.sdsu.edu Park, Peter ........................................................ University of Colorado Denver (303) 556-3479 park-cu@comcast.net Parmenter, barbara ................................................................... Tufts University (617) 627-3394 barbara.parmenter@tufts.edu Pascal, Erica .................................................... University of Illinois at Chicago epascal@uic.edu Paternoster, Robert ........... California State Polytechnic University, Pomona robertpaternoster@yahoo.com Patrick, Kevin J. Indiana ........................................ University of Pennsylvania (724) 357 2250 kpatrick@iup.edu Patten, Iris ........................................................................ University of Arizona (520) 621-1004 Paul, David ...........................................................................University of Idaho (208) 885-7921 dpaul@uidaho.edu

B-26

Paulsen, Kurt G. ............................................ University of Wisconsin-Madison (608) 262-8990 kpaulsen@wisc.edu Paulson, Darla Flint .......................................... University of Texas, Arlington (817) 272-3071 Peacock, Walter G. ........................................................... Texas A&M University (979) 845-7853 peacock@archone.tamu.edu Peak, Dana A. ............................................................ San Jose State University (408) 299-5798 dana.peak@pln.co.santa-clara.ca.us Peak, Dana A. ............................................................ San Jose State University (408) 299-5798 dana.peak@pln.co.santa-clara.ca.us Pearce, Michael .......................................................... Arizona State University (480) 965-7533 Michael.Pearce@asu.edu Pearlman, Kenneth ........................................................ Ohio State University (614) 292-1457 pearlman.1@osu.edu Pearson, Gene ............................................................... University of Memphis (901) 678-2161 gpearson@memphis.edu Peiser, Richard b. ................................................................. Harvard University (617) 495-9558 rpeiser@gsd.harvard.edu Pelletier, Pamela J. ......................................................... University of Arizona Pendall, Rolf .......................................................................... Cornell University (607) 255-5561 rip17@cornell.edu Peng, Zhong-Ren .............................................................. University of Florida (352) 392-0997 zpeng@dcp.ufl.edu Perera, M.C. Nihal ............................................................. ball State University (765) 285-8606 nperera@bsu.edu Perez, Katherine ........................................... University of Southern California perez@uli-la.org Perkinson, Dennis ........................................................... Texas A&M University (979) 862-4936 d-perkinson@rrimail.tamu.edu Perlas, Marta ...................... California State Polytechnic University, Pomona mp@mythograph.com Perlich, Pam ........................................................................... University of Utah (801) 581-3358 pam.perlich@utah.edu Perry, David .................................................... University of Illinois at Chicago (312) 996-8700 dperry@uic.edu Peterson, Ann ........................................................... University of Queensland (61) 7-3365-3979 a.peterson@uq.edu.au Petracca, Mark .................................................. University of California Irvine Peuquet, Steven ............................................................ University of Delaware (302) 831-1689 speuquet@udel.edu Phillips, David L. ............................................................... University of Virginia (434) 982-2196 dlp@virginia.edu Pijawka, David ............................................................ Arizona State University (480) 965-7167 Pijawka@asu.edu

Pincetl, Stephanie .................................. University of California, Los Angeles (310) 825-2434 spincetl@ioe.ucla.edu Pinel, Sandra ........................................................................University of Idaho (785) 885-7792 spinel@uidaho.edu Piore, Michael ..................................... Massachusetts Institute of Technology (617) 253-3377 mpiore@mit.edu Piper, Thomas ..................................... Massachusetts Institute of Technology (617) 253-8950 piper@mit.edu Pipkin, John S. .......................................................................... SUNY at Albany (518) 442-4777 j.pipkin@albany.edu Pitt, David G. ................................................................ University of Minnesota (612) 625-7370 pittx001@umn.edu Pittari, John J., Jr. ................................................................ Auburn University (334) 844-5424 pittajj@auburn.edu Pivo, Gary ......................................................................... University of Arizona (520) 621-9597 gpivo@email.arizona.edu Plazak, David J. ............................................................... Iowa State University Polakit, Kasama ....................................................... Florida Atlantic University (954) 762-5655 kpolakit@fau.edu Polenske, Karen R. ............................. Massachusetts Institute of Technology (617) 253-6881 krp@mit.edu Polese, Mario .......................................................................... McGill University (514) 499-4070 mario_polese@ucs.inrs.ca Popper, Frank J. ..................................................................................... Rutgers (732) 932-4101 ext. 689 fpopper@rci.rutgers.edu Porter, Miriam ...................................... Minnesota State University, Mankato (507) 389-5032 miriam.porter@mnsu.edu Poster, Charles Corky .................................................... University of Arizona (520) 621-1722 cposter@email.arizona.edu Poteet, Phillip ................................................................ University of Memphis (901) 678-2161 ppoteet@memphis.edu Pothukuchi, Kameshwari ............................................ Wayne State University (313) 577-4296 k.pothukuchi@wayne.edu Poulakidas, Dimitris .......... California State Polytechnic University, Pomona (909) 869-4645 dpoulakidas@csupomona.edu Powell, Gary ................................................................. University of Cincinnati Powers, Erica L. .......................................................................... SUNY at Albany Powers, Laura Wolf ................................................. University of Pennsylvania (215) 746-4263 lwpowers@design.upenn.edu Prater, Carla ..................................................................... Texas A&M University (979) 862-3970 carla@archone.tamu.edu Precht, Francis ........................................................ Frostburg State University (301) 687-4440 fprecht@frostburg.edu

B- 27

Pressley, Joyce Ann .................................................... Morgan State University (443) 885-1860 joyce.pressley@morgan.edu Preston, Steve .................... California State Polytechnic University, Pomona Prevetti, Laurel R. ..................................................... San Jose State University (408) 535-7901 laurel.prevetti@sanjoseca.gov Price, Alfred D. ....................................................... University at buffalo SUNY (716) 829-2133x213 adprice@buffalo.edu Price, V. b. ................................................................... University of New Mexico Prosperi, David ....................................................... Florida Atlantic University (954) 762 5642 prosperi@fau.edu Prudon, Theodore ........................................................................ Pratt Institute (212) 647-7532 Prytherch, David ..................................................................... Miami University (513) 529-9284 prythedl@muohio.edu Puccio, Kevin .................................................... University of Colorado Denver Pucher, John R. ...................................................................................... Rutgers (732) 932-3822 ext. 722 pucher@rci.rutgers.edu Pugh, David L. ................................................................ Texas A&M University (979) 845-1019 dpugh@tamu.edu Pullman, Lori ..................... California State Polytechnic University, Pomona llpullman@csupomona.edu Purcell, Mark ............................................................. University of Washington (206) 543-8754 mpurcell@u.washington.edu Pushchak, Ronald ............................................................... Ryerson University (416) 979-5000 ext. 7049 pushchak@ryerson.ca Pynoos, Jon .................................................. University of Southern California (213) 740-5156 pynoos@usc.edu

R
Rabenau, burkhard von ................................................. Ohio State University (614) 292-1457 nasar.1@osu.edu Racca, David .................................................................. University of Delaware (302) 831-1698 dracca@udel.edu Radke, John .................................................. University of California berkeley (510) 643-5995 ratt@berkeley.edu Raffel, Jeffrey ................................................................. University of Delaware Ragonetti, Thomas ........................................... University of Colorado Denver Raitt, Jennifer M. ................................................................... boston University Rajagopal, balakrishnan ................... Massachusetts Institute of Technology (617) 258-7721 braj@mit.edu Raja, Samina .......................................................... University at buffalo SUNY (716) 829-2133x225 sraja@buffalo.edu Ramasubramanian, Laxmi ......................................... Hunter College of CUNY (212) 772-5594 laxmi@hunter.cuny.edu Ramspott, Matthew E. ............................................ Frostburg State University (301) 687-4412 mramspott@frostburg.edu Randolph, John .................. Virginia Polytechnic Institute & State University (540) 231-6971 energy@vt.edu Rankin, Katharine ............................................................ University of Toronto (416) 978-1592 rankin@geog.utoronto.ca Rappaport, Ann ......................................................................... Tufts University (617) 627-3394 ann.rappaport@tufts.edu Rask, Walter .............................................................. San Jose State University (408) 795-1878 walterrask@yahoo.com Ratledge, Edward .......................................................... University of Delaware (302) 831-1684 ratledge@udel.edu Ratti, Carlo .......................................... Massachusetts Institute of Technology (617) 253-7926 ratti@mit.edu Ready, Keith .............................................. Virginia Commonwealth University kfready@vcu.edu Rea, Louis M. .......................................................... San Diego State University (619) 594-6083 lrea@mail.sdsu.edu Reardon, Ken ................................................................. University of Memphis (901) 678-2610 kreardon@memphis.edu Reaven, Marcia ............................................................................. Pratt Institute (212) 647-7532 mreaven@citylore.org Rechie, Nancy ................................................................. Ohio State University Redding, T. Steve ........................................................... University of Memphis (901) 678-4558 tredding@memphis.edu Reed-Morris, Herschelle ........................................... Morgan State University

Q
Qadeer, Mohammad ........................................................... Ryerson University Mq35@hotmail.com Qiu, Xiaomin ............................................................. Missouri State University Quan, Randall ............................................................ Hunter College of CUNY Quart, David ...................................................................... New York University Quercia, Roberto .................................................. University of North Carolina (919) 962-4766 quercia@email.unc.edu Quinn, Robert .................................................. Eastern Washington University (509) 359-7050 rquinn@mail.ewu.edu

B-28

Rees, William ...................................................... University of british Columbia (604) 822-2937 wrees@interchange.ubc.ca Reid, Neil ............................................................................. University of Toledo (419) 530-3591 Neil.Reid@utoledo.edu Reilly, Joseph ..................................................................... New York University Reiners, Gary ................................................................... Iowa State University Rein, Martin ........................................ Massachusetts Institute of Technology (617) 253-2047 mrein@mit.edu Renne, John L. ......................................................... University of New Orleans (504) 280-6592 jrenne@uno.edu Reppert, James E. ...................................................................... SUNY at Albany (518) 442-4770 jreppert@albany.edu Reps, John ............................................................................. Cornell University (607) 255-5391 jwr2@cornell.edu Restrepo, Carlos E. ........................................................... New York University Retsinas, Nicolas ................................................................. Harvard University (617) 496-3676 retsinas@gsd.harvard.edu Retzlaff, Rebecca ................................................................. Auburn University (334) 844-5429 rcr001@auburn.edu Rex, K.D. ....................................................................... University of Cincinnati Rhoden, Denis ................................................................ Ohio State University Richardson, James R. ................................................ University of New Mexico (505) 277-6460 jrich@unm.edu Richardson, Jesse ............... Virginia Polytechnic Institute & State University (540) 231-7508 jessej@vt.edu Richart, Monica Luecking .............................. University of Illinois at Chicago luecking@uic.edu Richert, Evan ...................................................... University of Southern Maine (207) 780-4824 erichert@usm.maine.edu Richman, Neal ........................................ University of California, Los Angeles (310) 825-0577 nrichman@ucla.edu Ring, William ....................................................... Northern Arizona University Rio, Vicente del ............................... California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo (805) 756-2572 vdelrion@calpoly.edu

Robins, Martin E. .................................................................................... Rutgers (732) 932-6812 ext. 697 merobins@rci.rutgers.edu Robinson, Pamela ............................................................... Ryerson University (416) 979-5000 ext. 6762 pamela.robinson@ryerson.ca Rodriguez, Alejandro ....................................... University of Texas, Arlington (817) 272-3357 aro@uta.edu Rodriguez, Daniel ................................................ University of North Carolina (919) 962-4763 danrod@email.unc.edu Rofe, Matthew ..................................................... University of South Australia +61 8 8302 2297 matthew.rofe@unisa.edu.au Rogers, George O. ........................................................... Texas A&M University (979) 845-7284 rogers@archone.tamu.edu Rohe, William ........................................................ University of North Carolina (919) 962-4769 rohe@email.unc.edu Rolfe, George ............................................................ University of Washington (206) 543-6918 rolfe@u.washington.edu Rolland, Richard ............................................. Eastern Washington University Rolley, Stephanie ........................................................ Kansas State University (785) 532-5961 srolley@ksu.edu Rollinson, Paul .......................................................... Missouri State University (417) 836-5688 paulrollinson@missouristate.edu Rom, Alan Jay ............................................................................ Tufts University Romanos, Michael C. ................................................... University of Cincinnati (513) 293-8156 michael.romanos@uc.edu Romeo, Leonardo ............................................................. New York University Ronderos, Nicolas ................................... New Jersey Institute of Technology (212) 253-2727 Ext. 318 nicolas@rpa.org Rosenberg, Robert ..................................................... Hunter College of CUNY Rosenbloom, Sandra ....................................................... University of Arizona (520) 626-2821 rosenblo@email.arizona.edu Rose, Shanna .................................................................... New York University Rosener, Judith ................................................. University of California Irvine Ross, Catherine L. .......................................... Georgia Institute of Technology (404) 385-5133 catherine.ross@coa.gatech.edu Rost, Craig ................................... University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (217) 333-3890 rostcr@illinois.edu Roth, Peter .......................................... Massachusetts Institute of Technology (617) 253-4373 Rottle, Nancy ............................................................ University of Washington (206)543-7897 nrottle@u.washington.edu Rowe, Peter G. ..................................................................... Harvard University (617) 495-4237 mmoran@gsd.harvard.edu

Rivasplata, Charles R. ............................................... San Jose State University (415) 897-6929 c_rivasplata@hotmail.com Rivera, Jos A. ........................................................... University of New Mexico (505) 277-0599 jrivera@unm.edu Rivers, Robert .......................................................... University of New Orleans (504) 280-6277 Roakes, Susan ................................................................ University of Memphis (901) 678-4560 sroakes@memphis.edu

B- 29

Roy, Ananya .................................................. University of California berkeley (510) 642-4938 ananya@berkeley.edu Ruane, Michael ................................................. University of California Irvine Rubenstein, James M. ............................................................ Miami University (513) 529-5025 rubensjm@muohio.edu Rubin, Julia Sass .................................................................................... Rutgers (732) 932-3133 ext. 546 lahr@rci.rutgers.edu Rubin, Roberta ......................................................................... Tufts University Ruddick, Susan ................................................................. University of Toronto (416) 978-1589 ruddick@geog.utoronto.ca Rufolo, Anthony ....................................................... Portland State University (503) 725-4049 rufoloa@pdx.edu Rukmana, Deden .................................................... Savannah State University (912) 356-2983 rukmanad@savstate.edu Ruopp, Rebecca ................................................................ University of Arizona Rebecca.Ruopp@tucsonaz.gov Russell, Francis Penrose .............................................. University of Cincinnati (513)556-3283 russelfp@ucemail.uc.edu Russell, Robert .......................................................................... Tufts University (617) 627-3394 rustynet@comcast.net Rutherford, G. Scott ................................................. University of Washington (206) 685-2481 scottrut@u.washington.edu Ryan, brent ......................................... Massachusetts Institute of Technology Ryan, Dennis ............................................................. University of Washington (206) 543-8293 frango@u.washington.edu Ryan, Sherry .......................................................... San Diego State University (619) 594-5037 sryan@mail.sdsu.edu

Salling, Mark ........................................................... Cleveland State University (216) 687-3716 m.salling@csuohio.edu Salo, Ken ..................................... University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (217) 244-0285 kensalo@illinois.edu Salsich, Jr., Peter W. ........................................................ Saint Louis University (314) 977-2770 salsichp@slu.edu Saltzman, Sidney .................................................................. Cornell University (607) 255-4271 ss47@cornell.edu Salvo, Joseph J. ........................................................... Hunter College of CUNY Salvucci, Frederick ............................. Massachusetts Institute of Technology (617) 253-5378 salvucci@mit.edu Sancar, Fahriye ................................................. University of Colorado Denver (303) 492-7497 sancar@colorado.edu Sanchez, Arturo .................................................................... Cornell University (607) 255-6226 as875@cornell.edu Sanchez, Thomas W. .............................................................. University of Utah (801)-585-9354 tom.sanchez@utah.edu Sandercock, Leonie ........................................... University of british Columbia (604) 822-0225 leonies@interchange.ubc.ca Sander, Elliot .................................................................... New York University Sanders, Welford........................................University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee (414) 229-2992 welford@uwm.edu Sandoval, Gerardo .......................................................... Iowa State University (515) 294-6764 gsandoval@iastate.edu Sanger, M. bryna ....................................................................... The New School (212) 229-5400 x1411 sanger@newschool.edu Santiago, Victoria ........................................................ Hunter College of CUNY Santo, Charles ............................................................... University of Memphis (901) 678-3566 csanto@memphis.edu Santos, Adle Naud ......................... Massachusetts Institute of Technology (617) 253-4402 ansantos@mit.edu Sanyal, Nick ..........................................................................University of Idaho (208) 885-7528 nsanyal@uidaho.edu Saphores, Jean-Daniel ..................................... University of California Irvine Sarkis, A. Hashim ................................................................ Harvard University (617) 496-0330 hsarkis@gsd.harvard.edu Saunders, Melissa ........................................................ Florida State University (850) 644-4510 msaunders@fsu.edu Savar, Nina ...................................................... University of Illinois at Chicago (312) 413-96 Savitch, H. V. ................................................................... University of Louisville (502) 852-7929 hvsavi01@louisville.edu

S
Sadono, Regina ................................. California State University, Northridge (818) 677-2904 regina.sadono@csun.edu rsadono@alum.calarts.edu Sahd, brian .................................................................. Hunter College of CUNY Saka, Anthony A. ....................................................... Morgan State University Saku, James C. ........................................................ Frostburg State University (301) 687-4724 jsaku@frostburg.edu Salazar, David .................... California State Polytechnic University, Pomona davidsalazar@csupomona.edu Salazar, Dayana M. ................................................... San Jose State University (408) 924-5854 dayana.salazar@sjsu.edu Salkin, Patricia E. ....................................................................... SUNY at Albany (518) 445-2351 psalk@albanylaw.edu

B-30

Sawicki, David S. ........................................... Georgia Institute of Technology (404) 894-0569 david.sawicki@coa.gatech.edu Saxenian, AnnaLee ....................................... University of California berkeley (510) 642-3256 anno@ischool.berkeley.edu Scally, Corianne P. ..................................................................... SUNY at Albany (518) 591-8561 cscally@albany.edu Scheer, brenda Case .............................................................. University of Utah (801) 581-8254 scheer@arch.utah.edu Schell, Kent .................................................................. University of Oklahoma Scherer, Andrew................................................................. Columbia University Schilling, Joe ....................... Virginia Polytechnic Institute & State University (703) 706-8111 jms33@vt.edu Schinn, Laura .................................................................. Ohio State University Schirmer, Paul .............................................................. University of Cincinnati Schively, Carissa .......................................................... University of Minnesota (612) 626-3193 schiv005@umn.edu Schlemper, Mary beth ....................................................... University of Toledo (419) 530-5492 mschlem@utnet.utoledo.edu Schlickman, Stephen ..................................... University of Illinois at Chicago schlickmans@rtachicago.org Schlossberg, Marc ............................................................ University of Oregon (541) 346-2046 schlossb@uoregon.edu Schmidt, Stephen .................................................................. Cornell University (607) 254-4846 sjs962@cornell.edu Schneemann, Margaret ................................. University of Illinois at Chicago mschne9@uic.edu Schneider, Daniel ....................... University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (217) 244-7681 ddws@illinois.edu Schneider, Richard ............................................................ University of Florida (352) 392-0997 rschnei@ufl.edu Schoen, David A. .............................................................. ball State University (765) 285-5871 dschoen@bsu.edu Scholz, Gordon ............................................... University of Nebraska-Lincoln (402) 472-9284 gscholz1@unl.edu Schott, Jeffrey ....................................................................... University of Iowa (319) 335-0032 jeff-schott@uiowa.edu Schreibman, Lisa.......................................................... Hunter College of CUNY Schroeppel, Ken .............................................. University of Colorado Denver Schurch, Tom ............................................................... University of Oklahoma (405) 325-0358 schurch@ou.edu Schwab, Jim ........................................................................... University of Iowa (319) 335-0032 jschwab@planning.org

Schwartz, Alex ........................................................................... The New School (212) 229-5400, x1415 Schwartz@newschool.edu Schweitzer, John ...................................................... Michigan State University (517) 353-9144 schweit1@msu.edu Schweitzer, Lisa ............................................ University of Southern California (213) 740-3866 lschweit@usc.edu Sclar, Elliott ........................................................................ Columbia University eds2@columbia.edu Searle, Glen .............................................................. University of Queensland Sechrist, Robert P. ................................................. University of Pennsylvania (724) 357 2250 rpsecrst@iup.edu Seidel, Andrew ................................................................ Texas A&M University (979) 845-6584 a-seidel@tamu.edu Seidman, Karl .................................... Massachusetts Institute of Technology (617) 253-3964 seidman@mit.edu Selfridge, OJ ................................................................ Kansas State University (785) 532-1120 ojs@ksu.edu Seligson, Ted .............................................. University of Missouri-Kansas City Sell, James L. ....................................................... Northern Arizona University Seltzer, Ethan P. ........................................................ Portland State University (503) 725-4045 seltzere@pdx.edu Senbel, Maged ................................................... University of british Columbia (604) 822-9158 senbel@interchange.ubc.ca Sender, Darin .............................................................. Arizona State University (480) 965-7533 Sen, Lalita ................................................................. Texas Southern University (713) 313-7448 sen_lx@tsu.edu Sennett, Richard ................................ Massachusetts Institute of Technology Sen, Siddhartha ......................................................... Morgan State University (443) 885-1864 siddhartha.sen@morgan.edu Seneca, Joseph J. .................................................................................... Rutgers (732) 932-5475 ext. 757 seneca@rci.rutgers.edu Serda, Daniel ..................................................................... University of Kansas (785) 864-3178 dserda@ku.edu Servon, Lisa J. ............................................................................ The New School (212) 229-5400 x1618 servonl@newschool.edu Shandas, Vivek ......................................................... Portland State University (503) 725-5222 vshandas@pdx.edu Shapiro, John ............................................................................... Pratt Institute (718) 399-4391 jshapiro@ppsaplanning.com Sharp, John .................................................................. University of Oklahoma Shatkin, Gavin ............................................................... University of Michigan (734) 763-2075 shatkin@umich.edu

B- 31

Shaw, George ........................................................................ University of Utah (801) 568-7261 gshaw@sjc.utah.gov Shaw, George ........................................................................ University of Utah (801) 568-7261 gshaw@sjc.utah.edu Sheffer, Ethel ...................................................................... Columbia University Shen, Guoqiang .......................................................... University of Oklahoma (405) 325-1698 guoqiangs@ou.edu Shen, Qing ............................................ University of Maryland, College Park (301) 405-6797 qshen@umd.edu Shen, Qing ................................................................. University of Washington (206) 685-3937 qs@u.washington.edu Sheppard, Rebecca ....................................................... University of Delaware (302) 831-3625 rjshep@udel.edu Shetty, Sujata ..................................................................... University of Toledo (419) 530-2567 sshetty4@utnet.utoledo.edu Shibley, Robert G. ................................................. University at buffalo SUNY Shiffman, Ronald ......................................................................... Pratt Institute (718) 399-4314 ronyvette@mac.com Shipp, Sigmund .......................................................... Hunter College of CUNY (212) 650-5591 sshipp@hunter.cuny.edu Shoup, Donald ........................................ University of California, Los Angeles (310) 825-5705 shoup@ucla.edu Shrestha, Manoj ...................................................................University of Idaho (208) 885-0530 mks@uidaho.edu Shriar, Avrum J. ....................................... Virginia Commonwealth University (804) 827-0788 ajshriar@vcu.edu Siebert, Loren ..................................................................... University of Akron Siembieda, William J. (805) 756-5805 ..................... California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo wsiembie@calpoly.edu

Silverman, Robert M. ............................................ University at buffalo SUNY (716) 829-2133x227 rms35@buffalo.edu Simons, Robert ........................................................ Cleveland State University (216) 687-5258 r.simons@csuohio.edu Simpson, David M. ......................................................... University of Louisville (502) 852-8019 dave.simpson@louisville.edu Simpson, Ed ............................................. Virginia Commonwealth University ewsimpson@vcu.edu Sinclair, Robert ............................................................ Wayne State University (313) 577-0542 r.sinclair@wayne.edu Singh, Anika ................................................................................. Pratt Institute (718) 399-4314 anika.singh@gmail.com Siry, Jack .......................................................................... University of Arizona Sloane, David ............................................... University of Southern California (213) 740-5768 dsloane@usc.edu Smalley, Marcy .................................................................. University of Kansas (785) 864-4184 msmalley@kc.rr.com Small, Kenneth ................................................. University of California Irvine Smith, Christopher J. ................................................................ SUNY at Albany (518) 442-3249 cjsmith@albany.edu Smith, Daniel .................................................................... New York University Smith, David ..................................................... University of California Irvine Smith, Glenn .............................................................. Morgan State University Smith-Heimer, Michael ................................ University of California berkeley (510) 642-3256 mash2@ix.netcom.com Smith, Janet .................................................... University of Illinois at Chicago (312) 996-5083 janets@uic.edu Smith Jr, Frank C. ................................................................... boston University Smith, Megan E. ............................................................... University of Oregon (541) 346-3881 smith@uoregon.edu Smith, Phillip ............................................................ University of Queensland (61) 7-3365-3916 phillip.smith@uq.edu.au Smith, Sheri ................................................................. Kansas State University (785) 532-5961 kcsheri@ksu.edu Smith, Sheri .............................................................. Texas Southern University smithsh@tsu.edu Smith, Thomas ................................................ University of Illinois at Chicago tpsmith101@aol.com Smoke, Paul ...................................................................... New York University (212) 998-7400 paul.smoke@nyu.edu Soja, Edward ........................................... University of California, Los Angeles (310) 825-4335 esoja@ucla.edu

Siembieda, William J. ................................................ University of New Mexico Siemiatycki, Matti ............................................................ University of Toronto (416) 946-5145 siemiatycki@geog.utoronto.ca Siksna, Arnis .............................................................. University of Queensland (61)-7-3365-6455 a.siksna@uq.edu.au Silberberg-Robinson, Susan ............. Massachusetts Institute of Technology (617) 253-2027 scsilber@mit.edu Silbey, Susan ...................................... Massachusetts Institute of Technology (617) 253-6952 ssilbey@mit.edu Silva, Enrique R. .................................................................... boston University (617) 358-3264 ersilva@bu.edu Silver, Christopher ........................................................... University of Florida (352) 392-4836 silver2@dcp.ufl.edu

B-32

Sokoloff, Harris ...................................................... University of Pennsylvania Sokolowsky, Heidi .................................................... San Jose State University (415) 864-2954 sokolowsky@earthlink.net Solitare, Laura .......................................................... Texas Southern University (713) 313-7772 solitarelg@tsu.edu Sollohub, Darius ...................................... New Jersey Institute of Technology (973) 596-5574 sollohub@njit.edu Song, Yan .............................................................. University of North Carolina (919) 962-4761 ys@email.unc.edu Southard, Michael ....................................................... University of Oklahoma Southworth, Michael ................................... University of California berkeley (480) 965-7167 msouthw@berkeley.edu Spain, Daphne .................................................................. University of Virginia (434) 924-6430 spain@virginia.edu Spencer, James .................................................................. University of Hawaii (808) 956-8928 jhs@hawaii.edu Spensley, James .............................................. University of Colorado Denver Sperry, Stephen L. ............................................................. Clemson University (864) 656-3635 sperrys@clemson.edu Spicer, Michael ....................................................... Cleveland State University (216) 687-3571 m.spicer@csuohio.edu Spinella, Susan ..................................................................... Temple University Spirn, Anne Whiston .......................... Massachusetts Institute of Technology (617) 452-2602 spirn@mit.edu Springer, Joseph H. ............................................................. Ryerson University (416) 979-5000 ext. 6766 springer@ryerson.ca Srinivas, Smita ................................................................... Columbia University ss3079@columbia.edu Stainbrook, Steven ........................................................... New York University Stanislaus, Mathy ......................................................................... Pratt Institute (718) 399-4314 mstanislaus@allegianceresources.com Starnes, Earl ....................................................................... University of Florida estarnes@ufl.edu Starrs, Paul F. ................................................................... University of Nevada starrs@unr.edu Steinberg, Harris .................................................... University of Pennsylvania Steiner, Ruth ...................................................................... University of Florida (352) 392-0997 rsteiner@ufl.edu Stein, Stuart W. ..................................................................... Cornell University (607) 255-4331 sws8@cornell.edu Stephenson, Max O. ............ Virginia Polytechnic Institute & State University (540) 231-7340 mstephen@vt.edu

ternberg, Ernest .................................................... University at buffalo SUNY (716) 829-2133x224 ezs@buffalo.edu Stern, Ira ....................................................................................... Pratt Institute (718) 399-4314 istern@pratt.edu Stevens, Mark .................................................... University of british Columbia (604) 822-1602 xstevens@interchange.ubc.ca Stevenson, Gelvin ........................................................................ Pratt Institute (718) 399-4314 gelvin@optonline.net Stewart, Ruth Ann ............................................................ New York University Stieglitz, Orit ..................................... California State University, Northridge (818) 677-2904 orit@ucla.edu Stiftel, bruce ................................................................ Florida State University (850) 644-4510 glthompson@fsu.edu Stiftel, bruce .................................................. Georgia Institute of Technology (404) 894-2350 bruce.stiftel@coa.gatech.edu Stimson, Robert ....................................................... University of Queensland (61) 7-3365-6307 r.stimson@uq.edu.au Stockard, James .................................................................. Harvard University (617) 495-5988 stockard@gsd.harvard.edu Stoecker, Randy .............................................University of Wisconsin-Madison (608) 890-0764 rstoecker@wisc.edu Stokes, Robert ............................................................. Kansas State University (785) 532-1595 drbobb@ksu.edu Stokols, Daniel .................................................. University of California Irvine (949) 824-5294 dstokols@uci.edu Stoll, Michael .......................................... University of California, Los Angeles (310) 206-4774 mstoll@ucla.edu Stoltz, Ronald ................................................................... University of Arizona (520) 626-7730 rstoltz@u.arizona.edu Stone, Jr., brian .............................................. Georgia Institute of Technology (404) 894-6488 brian.stone@coa.gatech.edu Stoner, James ........................................................................ University of Iowa (319) 335-5664 james-stoner@uiowa.edu Storey, Donovan ...................................................... University of Queensland (61) 7-3365-6707 d.storey@uq.edu.au Storper, Michael ..................................... University of California, Los Angeles (310) 825-2718 storper@ucla.edu Strammiello, Daniel ........................................ University of Colorado Denver Strathman, James .................................................... Portland State University (503) 725-4069 strathmanj@pdx.edu Strauss, Eric J. ........................................................... Michigan State University (517) 353-8715 strausse@msu.edu Streatfield, David ...................................................... University of Washington (206) 543-1157 buzzz@u.washington.edu

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Stroh, brady .......................................................................... Temple University Stuckey, James .................................................................. New York University

T
Taebel, Delbert A. ............................................. University of Texas, Arlington

Studer, Raymond G. ......................................... University of Colorado Denver Tajbakhsh, Kian ................................................................. Columbia University Suarez-Villa, Luis .............................................. University of California Irvine (949) 824-6323 lsuarez@uci.edu Sudy, Jason ..................................................................... Ohio State University Suen, I-Shian (Ivan) ................................. Virginia Commonwealth University (804) 828-2721 isuen@vcu.edu Sugar, Keith A. .......................................................... San Jose State University (831) 336-9566 sugarangel@cruzio.com Sullivan, Edward ...................................................... Portland State University (503) 725-4045 esullivan@gsblaw.com Suryanata, Krisna .............................................................. University of Hawaii (808) 956-7384 krisnawa@hawaii.edu Susskind, Lawrence ........................... Massachusetts Institute of Technology (617) 253-2026 susskind@mit.edu Sussman, Gerald ...................................................... Portland State University (503) 725-5176 sussmang@pdx.edu Sussman, Joseph ................................ Massachusetts Institute of Technology (617) 253-4430 sussman@mit.edu Sutton, Sharon .......................................................... University of Washington (206) 685-3361 sesut@u.washington.edu Sutton, Stacey .................................................................... Columbia University ss3115@columbia.edu Swallow, Joy .............................................. University of Missouri-Kansas City (816) 235-2998 swallowj@umkc.edu Swanston, Samara ....................................................................... Pratt Institute (718) 399-4314 fotlah@earthlink.net Swartzendruber, Dan .......................................................... University of Iowa (319) 335-0032 dan.swartzendruber@linncounty.org Sweeney, Donald A. ........................................................ Texas A&M University (979) 845-7888 dsweeney@archone.tamu.edu Sweet, Elizabeth Louis ............... University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (217) 333-9069 esweet1@illinois.edu Swenson, David .............................................................. Iowa State University (515) 294-7458 dswenson@iastate.edu Swenson, David ..................................................................... University of Iowa (319) 335-0032 dswenson@iastate.edu Szold, Terry ......................................... Massachusetts Institute of Technology (617) 253-7419 tsszold@mit.edu Szuster, brian .................................................................... University of Hawaii (808) 956-7345 szuster@hawaii.edu Takahashi, Lois........................................ University of California, Los Angeles (310) 429-8641 takahash@spa.ucla.edu Talen, Emily ................................................................. Arizona State University Tallerico, benjamin ..................................................... Wayne State University (313) 577-2701 Ab9405@wayne.edu Tang, Zhenghong ............................................ University of Nebraska-Lincoln (402) 472-9281 ztang2@unl.edu Tassonyi, Almos Thomas .................................................... Ryerson University almos.tassonyi@ontario.ca Taylor, brian ............................................ University of California, Los Angeles (310) 903-3228 btaylor@ucla.edu Taylor, Gary D. ................................................................ Iowa State University (515) 294-2973 gtaylor@iastate.edu Taylor, Jr., Henry Louis .......................................... University at buffalo SUNY (716) 829-2133x212 htaylor@buffalo.edu Taylor, Tom ................................................................... Florida State University Teelucksingh, Cheryl .......................................................... Ryerson University (416) 979-5000 Ext. 6213 teeluck@ryerson.ca Tees, David W. .................................................... University of Texas, Arlington (817) 272-3304 tees@uta.edu Tendler, Judith ................................... Massachusetts Institute of Technology (617) 253-0249 tendler@mit.edu Tewari, Meenu ...................................................... University of North Carolina (919) 962-4758 mtewari@email.unc.edu Thacher, David .............................................................. University of Michigan (734) 615-4074 dthacher@umich.edu Thakuriah, Piyushimita ................................. University of Illinois at Chicago (312) 355-0447 vonu-pt@uic.edu Theken, Patrice ................................................................... University of Akron (330) 972-2490 ptheken@medinaco.org Theodore, Georgeen ............................... New Jersey Institute of Technology (973) 596-3095 georgeen.theodore@njit.edu Theodore, Nik ................................................. University of Illinois at Chicago (312) 355-1340 theodore@uic.edu Thering, Susan A. ...........................................University of Wisconsin-Madison (608) 263-6506 sathering@facstaff.wisc.edu Thibodeaux, Elrhei .................................................. University of New Orleans (504) 280-6277 Thomas, June Manning ................................................ University of Michigan

B-34

Thomas, Ward .................................... California State University, Northridge (818) 677-7247 ward.thomas@csun.edu Thompson, Allen ................................................................ Clemson University (864) 656-2380 athomp6@clemson.edu Thompson, J. Philip ........................... Massachusetts Institute of Technology (617) 452-2813 jt71@mit.edu Thompson, Michelle M. .......................................... University of New Orleans Throgmorton, James A. ........................................................ University of Iowa (319) 335-0037 james-throgmorton@uiowa.edu Thyagarajan, S. .......................................................................... SUNY at Albany (518) 442-4770 thyag@energyanswers.com Till, Karen ............................ Virginia Polytechnic Institute & State University (540) 231-1109 ktill@vt.edu Tilly, Chris ............................................... University of California, Los Angeles tilly@ucla.edu Tiwari, Abhishek ................................ California State University, Northridge (818) 677-2904 tiwari.abhishek@csun.edu abhishek@vtaengineering.com Tiwari, Abishek .................. California State Polytechnic University, Pomona Toker, Umut ......... California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo (805) 756-1592 utoker@calpoly.edu Toker, Zeynep .................................... California State University, Northridge (818) 677-2872 zeynep.toker@csun.edu Tomalty, Ray ............................................................................ McGill University (514) 847-9259 ray.tomalty@magill.ca Tomey, E. Allan ............................................................... Saint Louis University (314) 977-3934 tomeya@slu.edu Tomlan, Michael .................................................................... Cornell University (607) 255-7261 mat4@cornell.edu Tomlin, Dana .......................................................... University of Pennsylvania Toor, Will ........................................................... University of Colorado Denver Topping, Kenneth (805) 927-7773 California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo KenTopping@aol.com

Trawick, John I. .............................................................. University of Louisville (502) 589-0343 jackt@centerforneighborhoods.org Trelstad, Graham ............................................................... Columbia University Triantafillou, Menelaos ............................................... University of Cincinnati (513) 556-4212 menelaos.triantafillou@uc.edu Trousdale, William ............................................. University of british Columbia william@ecoplan.ca Truex, Scott I. ..................................................................... ball State University (765) 285-5188 struex@bsu.edu Turbeville, Daniel ............................................ Eastern Washington University (509) 359-2270 dturbeville@mail.ewu.edu Turnbull, Katherine ......................................................... Texas A&M University (979) 845-6005 k-turnbull@tamu.edu Turshen, Meredeth ................................................................................ Rutgers (732) 932-4101 ext. 681 trushen@rci.rutgers.edu

U
Umemoto, Karen ............................................................... University of Hawaii (808) 956-7383 kumemoto@hawaii.edu Upton, James N. ............................................................. Ohio State University (614) 292-1012 Urban, beth ..................................................................... Ohio State University Urey, Gwendolyn H. .......... California State Polytechnic University, Pomona (909) 869-2725 gurey@csupomona.edu

V
Vale, Lawrence J. ................................ Massachusetts Institute of Technology (617) 253-0561 ljvale@mit.edu

Valencia, Francisco Lara .............................................. Arizona State University (480) 965-7167 Francisco.Lara@asu.edu Valenzuela, Abel .................................... University of California, Los Angeles (310) 206-8224 abel@ucla.edu Vance, Eric .......................................................... University of british Columbia ecvance@shaw.ca Varady, David P. ........................................................... University of Cincinnati (513) 405-3602 david.varady@uc.edu 164 Varni, James W. ............................................................... Texas A&M University (979) 862-1095 jvarni@archmail.tamu.edu Vasquez, David A. ..................................................... San Jose State University (415) 722-7167 dvasquez@aol.com

Torres, Deborah ........................................... University of Southern California (310) 809-7970 datorres@excite.com Torres, Rodolfo ................................................. University of California Irvine (949) 824-7680 rodolfo@uci.edu Toulan, Nohan A. ...................................................... Portland State University (503) 725-5143 toulann@pdx.edu Trabalzi, Ferruccio .......................................................... Iowa State University (515) 294-8393 trabalzi@iastate.edu Trancik, Roger ....................................................................... Cornell University (607) 255-6229 rtt2@cornell.edu

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Vzquez, M. Teresa ............................ California State University, Northridge (818) 677-2027 tere@csun.edu Vengoechea, Pablo ..................................................... Hunter College of CUNY Ventura, Stephen J. .......................................University of Wisconsin-Madison (608) 262-6416 ventura@facstaff.wisc.edu Verderber, Stephen ............................................................ Clemson University (864) 656-3902 sverder@clemson.edu Verma, Niraj ........................................................... University at buffalo SUNY (716) 829-2133x109 nverma@ap.buffalo.edu Vidal, Avis C. ................................................................ Wayne State University (313) 577-8842 a.vidal@wayne.edu Vidyarthi, Sanjeev .......................................... University of Illinois at Chicago (312) 355-0447 svidy@uic.edu Vietorisz, Thomas ................................................................. Cornell University (607) 255-2333 tv12@cornell.edu Vigar, Sandra ............................................................ University of Queensland Vigeant, Paul ............................................................... Wayne State University (313) 577-0539 ad6795@wayne.edu Villavaso, Steve ....................................................... University of New Orleans (504) 280-6029 svillavaso1@cox.net Viteritti, Joseph .......................................................... Hunter College of CUNY (212) 772-5597 joseph.viteritti@hunter.cuny.edu Vitiello, Domenic ..................................................... University of Pennsylvania Viton, Phillip A. ............................................................... Ohio State University (614) 292-5427 viton.1@osu.edu Vliet, Willem Van .............................................University of Colorado Ddenver (303) 492-5015 willem@colorado.edu Vojnovic, Igor Z. ....................................................... Michigan State University vojnovic@msu.edu Voos, Paul .................................................................. Morgan State University Vos, Jaap ................................................................. Florida Atlantic University (954) 762-5653 jvos@fau.edu Vrat, Dev ............................................ California State University, Northridge (818) 677-2904 dev.vrat@csun.edu Dev_Vrat@URSCorp.com Vuchic, Vukan ........................................................ University of Pennsylvania

W
Wachter, Susan ...................................................... University of Pennsylvania Wack, Paul ........... California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo (805) 756-6331 pwack@calpoly.edu Waddell, Paul ................................................ University of California berkeley waddell@berkeley.edu Wadley, David .......................................................... University of Queensland (61) 7-3365-6535 d.wadley@uq.edu.au Wagner, Frederick ..................................................... University of Washington (206) 543-7459 fwagner@u.washington.edu Wagner, Jacob ........................................... University of Missouri-Kansas City (816) 235-6053 wagnerjaco@umkc.edu Wahington, Val ............................................................................. Pratt Institute (718) 399-4314 Wah, Tatiana .............................................................................. The New School (212) 229-5400 x1413 waht@newschool.edu Walke, Jennifer ............................................................ University of Cincinnati Walker, Joanne .................................................................... Temple University Walsh, Elaine .............................................................. Hunter College of CUNY (212) 772-5595 ewalsh@hunter.cuny.edu Wang, Qiushi ..................................................... University of Texas, Arlington (817) 272-3071 Wang, Rui ................................................ University of California, Los Angeles (310) 367-3738 ruiwang@ucla.edu Wang, Xinhao .............................................................. University of Cincinnati (513) 556-0497 xinhao.wang@uc.edu Wang, Young-Doo ......................................................... University of Delaware (302) 831-1706 youngdoo@udel.edu Wang, Zhifang ................................................................ Texas A&M University (979) 458-4121 zhifangw@neo.tamu.edu Warfield, Marjorie Erickson ..................................................... Tufts University Warner, Mildred .................................................................... Cornell University (607) 255-6816 mew15@cornell.edu Warner, Sam bass ............................... Massachusetts Institute of Technology (617) 253-5115 sambass@mit.edu Warner, Tyson ................................................. University of Illinois at Chicago twarner@cmap.illinois.gov Warnken, Charles ........................................................ University of Oklahoma (405) 325-3871 cwarnken@ou.edu Warren, Robert .............................................................. University of Delaware (302) 831-1686 rwarren@udel.edu

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Warren, Stacy ................................................. Eastern Washington University (509) 359-7962 swarren@mail.ewu.edu Warrick, Dawn ............................................................... University of Louisville (502) 574-5178 dawn.warrick@louisvilleky.gov Watson, Philip .....................................................................University of Idaho (208) 885-6934 pwatson@uidaho.edu Watts, D. Whit ........................................... Indiana University of Pennsylvania (724) 357 2250 whit@iup.edu Webber, Steven ................................................................... Ryerson University (416) 979-5000 ext. 6772 swebber@ryerson.ca Weber, Rachel ................................................. University of Illinois at Chicago (312) 355-0307 rachelw@uic.edu Webster, Douglas ....................................................... Arizona State University (480) 965-7533 Douglas.Webster@asu.edu Weiler, Ernest D. ....................................................................Temple University Weinberger, Rachel ................................................ University of Pennsylvania (215) 746-4263 rrw@design.upenn.edu Weinberg, Philip ............................................................... New York University Weinel, Eleanor ........................................................... University of Oklahoma (405) 325-2276 eweinel@ou.edu Weiner, Vicki ................................................................................ Pratt Institute (718) 636-3486 ext 6464 vweiner@pratt.edu Wein, Frank b. ............................................... University of Southern California (213) 996-2413 frank.wein@ursccorp.com Weinstein, Alan ...................................................... Cleveland State Univeristy (216) 687-3758 alan.weinstein@law.csuohio.edu Weintraub, David .............................. California State University, Northridge (818) 677-2904 david.weintraub@csun.edu David.Weintraub@lacity.org Weisenburger, Ray ...................................................... Kansas State University (785) 532-5961 rbw@ksu.edu Weis, John ................................................................. San Jose State University (408) 795-1894 john.weis@sbcglobal.net Weissman, Seth .............................................. Georgia Institute of Technology seth.wnclaw.com. Weisz, Claire ...................................................................... New York University Weitz, John ..................................................... Georgia Institute of Technology jweitz@bellsouth.net Wernstedt, Kris ................... Virginia Polytechnic Institute & State University (703) 706-8132 krisw@vt.edu Wescoat, James Jr. .............................. Massachusetts Institute of Technology (617) 253-1400 wescoat@mit.edu Westerlund, Frank .................................................... University of Washington (206) 543-4912 fwest@u.washington.edu

Wetterqvist, Orjan .............................................................University of Florida Wetzel, Richard ......................................... University of Missouri-Kansas City Wheaton, William ............................... Massachusetts Institute of Technology (617) 253-1723 wheaton@mit.edu Whitaker, Ana Maria ......... California State Polytechnic University, Pomona amcwhitaker@csupomona.edu White, Sammis ...........................................University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee (414) 229-6086 sbwhite@uwm.edu White, Stacey S. ................................................................. University of Kansas (785) 864-3530 sswhite@ku.edu Whittaker, Garfield ............................ California State University, Northridge (818) 677-2904 garfield.whittaker@csun.edu Shugapro@aol.com Whittington, Dale ................................................ University of North Carolina (919) 962-4755 dale.whittington@unc.edu Whittington, Jan ....................................................... University of Washington (206) 221-9629 janwhit@u.washington.edu Wieters, Meghan ........................................................ University of Oklahoma (405) 325-3857 mwieters@ou.edu Wigfall, La barbara ...................................................... Kansas State University (785) 532-5961 lbjw@ksu.edu Wiggins, Lyna ........................................................................................ Rutgers (732) 932-3822 ext. 568 lyna@rci.rutgers.edu Wikstrom, Nelson ..................................... Virginia Commonwealth University nwikstro@vcu.edu Wilder, Margaret ........................................................... University of Delaware (302) 831-6294 mwilder@udel.edu Wilhm, John ................................................................. Kansas State University Willey, Claude .................................... California State University, Northridge (818) 677-2904 claude.willey@csun.edu claudewilley@sbcglobal.net Williams, Clarence .............................. Massachusetts Institute of Technology (617) 253-5446 cgwm@mit.edu Williams, Sarah .................................................................. Columbia University Williams, Terrance .................................... The Catholic University of America (202) 319-5565 williams@cua.edu Willis, Mark ........................................................................ New York University Willson, Richard W. ............ California State Polytechnic University, Pomona (909) 869-2701 rwwillson@csupomona.edu Wilson, bev ................................. University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (217) 333-3890 bevwilso@illinois.edu Wilson, Constance .................................................... Alabama A&M University (256) 372-4992 cwilson93@aol.com Wilson, Mark I. .......................................................... Michigan State University (517) 353-9056 wilsonmm@msu.edu

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Wilson, Nigel ...................................... Massachusetts Institute of Technology (617) 253-5046 nhmw@mit.edu Wilson, Patrick ......................................................................University of Idaho (208) 885-7911 pwilson@uidaho.edu Winchell, Dick ................................................. Eastern Washington University (509) 358-2214 dwinchell@mail.ewu.edu Winder, David ................................................................... New York University Winkle, Curtis ................................................. University of Illinois at Chicago (312) 996-2155 cwinkle@uic.edu Winston, Edward Perry ................................................................ Pratt Institute (718) 399-4314 ewinston@pratt.edu Wise, Lisa .............. California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo (805) 595-1345 lisa@lisawiseconsulting.com Witten, Jon ................................................................................ Tufts University (617) 627-3394 jon@daleyandwitten.com Wolch, Jennifer ............................................. University of California berkeley wolch@berkeley.edu Wolfe, Jeanne M. ..................................................................... McGill University (514) 398-2255 jeanne.wolfe@mcgill.ca Wolfe, Kevin .................................................................................. Pratt Institute (212) 647-7532 Wolff, Goetz ............................................ University of California, Los Angeles (310) 369-0900 gwolff@ucla.edu Wollenberg, Jay ................................................. University of british Columbia jay@coriolis.ca Wong, Jack L. ................................................ University of Southern California (310) 347-6310 jacklwong@msn.com Wong, Sidney ............................................................. Morgan State University (443) 885-3208 sidney.wong@morgan.edu Wood, Perry .......................................... Minnesota State University, Mankato (507) 389-6949 perry.wood@mnsu.edu Woodside, James Clare ............................................... University of Oklahoma Woods, Wilbur ............................................................. Hunter College of CUNY Worzala, Elaine ................................................................... Clemson University (864) 656-3925 eworzal@clemson.edu Wridt, Pamela ................................................... University of Colorado Denver (303) 556-3472 pamela.wridt@ucdenver.edu Wu, Weiping ............................................. Virginia Commonwealth University (804) 827-3413 wwu@vcu.edu Wuerstle, Margaret ..................................................... University of Cincinnati Wunneburger, Douglas F. ............................................... Texas A&M University Wyman, Sherman M. ......................................... University of Texas, Arlington (817) 272-3359 wyman@uta.edu

X
Xiao, Yu ............................................................................ Texas A&M University

Y
Yabes, Ruth .................................................................. Arizona State University (480) 965-7167 Ruth.Yabes@asu.edu Yamada, Seiji ..................................................................... University of Hawaii (808) 692-1069 seiji@hawaii.edu Yang, Jiawen .................................................. Georgia Institute of Technology (404) 385-7215 jiawen.yang@coa.gatech.edu Yang, Li ................................................................. Western Michigan University (269) 387-3415 li.1.yang@wmich.edu Yang, Perry Pei-Ju .......................................... Georgia Institute of Technology (404) 894-2076 perry.yang@coa.gatech.edu Yang, Yizhao ..................................................................... University of Oregon (541) 346-0833 yizhao@uoregon.edu Yanich, Danilo ................................................................University of Delaware (302) 831-1710 dyanich@udel.edu Yaro, Robert ............................................................ University of Pennsylvania yaro@rpa.org Yeboah, Ian, ............................................................................. Miami University (513) 529-5013 yeboahie@muohio.edu Yeh, Raymond ................................................................... University of Hawaii (808) 956-3469 yeh@hawaii.edu Yilmaz, Umit ....................................................................... Clemson University (864) 656-7349 uyilmaz@clemson.edu Yin, Jordan ........................................................... Western Michigan University (269) 387-3484 jordan.yin@wmich.edu Yin, Li ...................................................................... University at buffalo SUNY (716) 829-2133x229 liyin@buffalo.edu Yonder, Ayse ................................................................................. Pratt Institute (718) 399-4323 ayonder@pratt.edu Yool, Stephen R. ............................................................... University of Arizona Young, Raymond ............................................... University of british Columbia reyoung@shaw.ca Young, Robert F. ............................................................... University of Oregon (541) 346-1950 ryoung@uoregon.edu

B-38

Z
Zahm, Diane L. .................... Virginia Polytechnic Institute & State University (540) 231-7503 dzahm@vt.edu Zandt, Shannon Van ....................................................... Texas A&M University Zapata, Marisa ............................................................ University of Cincinnati marisa.zapata@uc.edu Zegras, P. Christopher ........................ Massachusetts Institute of Technology (617) 452-2433 czegras@mit.edu Zellner, Moira ................................................. University of Illinois at Chicago (312) 996-2149 mzellner@uic.edu Zerin, Ferhat ................................................... University of Illinois at Chicago fzerin@ginkgoplanning.com Zerkin, Allen ..................................................................... New York University Zhang, Sumei ................................................................ University of Louisville (502) 852-7915 sumei.zhang@louisville.edu Zhang, Ting Wei .............................................. University of Illinois at Chicago (312) 355-0303 tzhang@uic.edu Zhang, Yang ......................... Virginia Polytechnic Institute & State University (540) 231-1128 yz@vt.edu Zhou, Min ................................................ University of California, Los Angeles (310) 825-3532 mzhou@soc.ucla.edu Zhuang, Zhixi Cecilia .......................................................... Ryerson University (416) 979-5000 ext. 6806 Zidar, Catherine ........................................................................... Pratt Institute (718) 399-4314 czidar@pratt.edu Zimmer, Richard J. ............. California State Polytechnic University, Pomona (909) 869-4943 rzimmer@csupomona.edu Zizzi, Donald .......................................................................... boston University Zimmerman, Rae .............................................................. New York University (212) 998-7400 rae.zimmerman@nyu.edu Zinke, Robert ................................................... Eastern Washington University Zonta, Michela ......................................... Virginia Commonwealth University (804) 827-0787 mmzonta2@vcu.edu Zovanyi, Gabor ............................................... Eastern Washington University (509) 358-2228 gzovanyi@mail.ewu.edu Zwick, Paul ..........................................................................University of Florida (352) 392-0997 pdzwick@ufl.edu

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GET YOUR COPY OF THE GUIDE!

Guide to Undergraduate and Graduate Education in

Urban and Regional Planning


15th Edition - 2009

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