Skip to content
Cliff Hague
Urbanisation and Planning
Cliff HagueCliff Hague
  • Home
  • Blogs
    • Original Blogs by CliffHague.com
    • Blogs and small towns work for Built Environment Forum Scotland
    • Guest Blog
    • Flashback to Cliff Hague’s Planning Magazine Columns
    • ICN Blog 2015
  • News Items
  • Books
  • Video & Podcast
    • Film Reviews
  • Consultancy
    • COMMONWEALTH, INTERNATIONAL AND GLOBAL PROJECTS
    • EUROPEAN OBSERVATION NETWORK FOR TERRITORIAL COHESION AND DEVELOPMENT
    • OTHER EUROPEAN PROJECTS
    • UK Projects
  • Contact
Search:
  • Home
  • Blogs
    • Original Blogs by CliffHague.com
    • Blogs and small towns work for Built Environment Forum Scotland
    • Guest Blog
    • Flashback to Cliff Hague’s Planning Magazine Columns
    • ICN Blog 2015
  • News Items
  • Books
  • Video & Podcast
    • Film Reviews
  • Consultancy
    • COMMONWEALTH, INTERNATIONAL AND GLOBAL PROJECTS
    • EUROPEAN OBSERVATION NETWORK FOR TERRITORIAL COHESION AND DEVELOPMENT
    • OTHER EUROPEAN PROJECTS
    • UK Projects
  • Contact

Author Archives: Cliff Hague

Effective strategic planning

Original Blogs CliffHague.comBy Cliff Hague20. January 2023Leave a comment

This item was first published in 2015. Passion for strategic spatial planning has too rarely endured, thus undermining precisely what it needs, which is a long term perspective. So often startegic planning is disregarded or under-resourced, but used effectively it could provide a means of delivering inclusive and sustainable development. Therefore research by a practising…

Rethinking the role of museums and public galleries

Original Blogs CliffHague.comBy Cliff Hague20. January 2023Leave a comment

Here in UK, and particularly in the North of England, museums and public galleries are being closed down as councils struggle to cope with real reductions in income forced by the UK government’s austerity programme. In USA it is a different story. Many towns and cities created public galleries and museums in the nineteenth century or early…

Grid-based plans for urban extensions

Original Blogs CliffHague.comBy Cliff Hague20. January 2023Leave a comment

This blog was first posted in 2016. A simple grid plan for urban extensions should be the basis for managing rapid urbanisation says a new UN-Habitat report. The value of a grid as an organising structure for new development is demonstrated through historic and contemporary examples from different continents. UN-Habitat’s report concludes that “The main virtue of…

New post as Chair of leading urban conservation and planning body

News Items, Pre-2020By Cliff Hague20. January 2023Leave a comment

This item was posted in May 2016. I am pleased to confirm that I will become Chair of the Cockburn Association in June, when the present Chair, Lord Brodie, steps down. The Cockburn Association is one of the oldest urban conservation and planning organisations in the world. It was formed in 1875 and has a distinguished history…

Why civic trust is draining away

News Items, Pre-2020By Cliff Hague20. January 2023Leave a comment

This blog was published in March 2016. Civic pride and civic trust are important for community cohesion and well-being, but are being eroded by austerity and a centralised system of planning and local government. This was a central theme of the  inaugural Scottish Civic Trust Annual Lecture which I delivered in Edinburgh on 2 March.…

Inauguration speech as RTPI President 1996

Flashback to Cliff's Planning columnsBy Cliff Hague20. January 2023Leave a comment

This was first posted in 2016. Twenty years ago I became RTPI President. Here is the text of the speech I gave to RTPI Council on my inauguration. It ends by reaffirming the manifesto published in 1975 by the Radical Institute Group, of which I was one of the founders. After thanking the RTPI, my…

New Zealand’s planning system faces change

News Items, Pre-2020By Cliff Hague20. January 2023Leave a comment

This was first posted in 2016. New Zealand’s right-wing minority government is amending the legislation that defines the planning system, to address what it calls problems with “cumbersome planning processes”. The Minister, Dr Nick Smith called it “a moderate reform Bill that will reduce the cost and delays for homeowners and businesses”. He introduced the…

How China’s economic woes might impact on local government

Original Blogs CliffHague.comBy Cliff Hague20. January 2023Leave a comment

This ws first published in 2015. China’s slowing growth and rising debts have sent tremors through global markets. Urbanisation has been integral to the near double digit annual growth over recent years, so what does the slow down mean for regional and local development within China, and in particular for the local authorities? When I…

Afghanistan’s urban population to double in 15 years

News Items, Pre-2020By Cliff Hague20. January 2023Leave a comment

This was first posted in 2015. Around 8 million live in Afghanistan’s cities today, but that number is expected to double by 2030.Yet, like many other rapidly urbanising countries, it has no national urban policy, no housing policy, and local planning is weak. The country remains predominantly rural, with only 1 in 4 living in…

A critical decade for cities

Original Blogs CliffHague.comBy Cliff Hague20. January 2023Leave a comment

This blog was first posted in June 2015. There will be another 2 billion people living in urban areas by 2030. With a billion people now living in slums,and over 100,000 homeless people in Delhi, for example, it is no exaggeration to say that this is a critical decade for cities and the practice of…

←1
234567
…89101112…
13141516171819202122232425262728
29→
Cliff Hague
This website is operated by Brandenburg Business Media
  • Home
  • Blogs
  • News Items
  • Contact
Useful Links

All rights reserved - 2023

Go to Top