Policies
As of the June 2011 revision of the plan the chapters are as follows:
Chapter | Title | Summary |
---|---|---|
1 | Context and strategy | Demography, external forces, quality of life |
2 | Places | Sub-regions, Outer London, Inner London, Central Activities Zone, opportunity areas, intensification areas, town centres |
3 | People | Health, housing, social infrastructure |
4 | Economy | Economic sectors and workspaces |
5 | Response to climate change | Climate change mitigation, climate change adaptation, waste, contaminated land |
6 | Transport | Integrating transport and development, connectivity |
7 | Living spaces and places | Place shaping, environment and landscapes, air and noise pollution, emergency planning, Blue Ribbon Network |
Read more about this topic: London Plan
Famous quotes containing the word policies:
“Modern women are squeezed between the devil and the deep blue sea, and there are no lifeboats out there in the form of public policies designed to help these women combine their roles as mothers and as workers.”
—Sylvia Ann Hewitt (20th century)
“... [Washington] is always an entertaining spectacle. Look at it now. The present President has the name of Roosevelt, marked facial resemblance to Wilson, and no perceptible aversion, to say the least, to many of the policies of Bryan. The New Deal, which at times seems more like a pack of cards thrown helter skelter, some face up, some face down, and then snatched in a free-for-all by the players, than it does like a regular deal, is going on before our interested, if puzzled eyes.”
—Alice Roosevelt Longworth (18841980)
“Give a scientist a problem and he will probably provide a solution; historians and sociologists, by contrast, can offer only opinions. Ask a dozen chemists the composition of an organic compound such as methane, and within a short time all twelve will have come up with the same solution of CH4. Ask, however, a dozen economists or sociologists to provide policies to reduce unemployment or the level of crime and twelve widely differing opinions are likely to be offered.”
—Derek Gjertsen, British scientist, author. Science and Philosophy: Past and Present, ch. 3, Penguin (1989)