Laura Taylor

 Laura Taylor

Laura Taylor

  • Courses2
  • Reviews8

Biography

University of Toronto St. George Campus - Geography

Associate Professor, Faculty of Environmental Studies, York University
Higher Education
Laura
Taylor
Canada
Laura Taylor is Associate Professor in the Planning Program, Faculty of Environmental Studies at York University, Toronto and a planning consultant. Her current research interest is in exurbia, studying the processes and discourses of landscape settlement and landscape conservation at the urban-rural fringe.


Experience

  • York University

    Associate Professor

    FESPLAN
    Faculty of Environmental Studies
    Environmental planning; exurbia studies; peri-urban studies; nature and land use planning

  • Laura Taylor Designs

    Principal

    Consulting in urban and regional planning, environmental design, growth management studies and public consultation.

  • Hemson Consulting Ltd.

    Senior Planner

    And I still maintain a great working relationship with Hemson, assisting with growth management and large-scale land use planning studies.

Education

  • University of Waterloo

    BES

    Urban and Regional Planning

  • York University

    Master of Environmental Studies

    Evolution and Change in City Form

  • University of Toronto

    PhD

    Cultural geography

  • Hemson Consulting Ltd.

    Senior Planner


    And I still maintain a great working relationship with Hemson, assisting with growth management and large-scale land use planning studies.

  • York University

    Associate Professor


    FESPLAN Faculty of Environmental Studies Environmental planning; exurbia studies; peri-urban studies; nature and land use planning

Publications

  • The Idea of Landscape in Planning at the City’s Edge

    The Rural-Urban Fringe in Canada: Conflict and Controversy

    This volume draws on the work of scholars from across Canada, each dealing with the rural-urban fringe in their own way. Contributors include scholars from Sociology, Geography, Planning, Recreation, Tourism and Rural Development; from senior scholars with decades of experience and younger scholars with new and exciting ideas and perspectives. Through these diverse contributions the chapters collectively address rural-urban fringe zones in Canada as areas of conflict and controversy.

  • The Idea of Landscape in Planning at the City’s Edge

    The Rural-Urban Fringe in Canada: Conflict and Controversy

    This volume draws on the work of scholars from across Canada, each dealing with the rural-urban fringe in their own way. Contributors include scholars from Sociology, Geography, Planning, Recreation, Tourism and Rural Development; from senior scholars with decades of experience and younger scholars with new and exciting ideas and perspectives. Through these diverse contributions the chapters collectively address rural-urban fringe zones in Canada as areas of conflict and controversy.

  • Landscape ideology in the Greater Golden Horseshoe Greenbelt Plan: Negotiating material landscapes and abstract ideals in the city’s countryside

    Journal of Rural Studies

    We analyze the role of landscape ideology in the recent Ontario Greater Golden Horseshoe (GGH) Greenbelt Plan. Focusing on the “Protected Countryside,” the major land-use designation in the Plan that structures the Greenbelt framework, we explore tensions between abstract ideals of countryside used by policy makers to elicit support for the Plan and people's lived experience of material landscapes of the peri-urban fringe. Approaching “countryside” from the combined perspectives of landscape studies and political ecology, we show how the abstract ideals used to build support for the protection of countryside in the high-level political arena are in tension with existing material landscapes as people experience them.

  • The Idea of Landscape in Planning at the City’s Edge

    The Rural-Urban Fringe in Canada: Conflict and Controversy

    This volume draws on the work of scholars from across Canada, each dealing with the rural-urban fringe in their own way. Contributors include scholars from Sociology, Geography, Planning, Recreation, Tourism and Rural Development; from senior scholars with decades of experience and younger scholars with new and exciting ideas and perspectives. Through these diverse contributions the chapters collectively address rural-urban fringe zones in Canada as areas of conflict and controversy.

  • Landscape ideology in the Greater Golden Horseshoe Greenbelt Plan: Negotiating material landscapes and abstract ideals in the city’s countryside

    Journal of Rural Studies

    We analyze the role of landscape ideology in the recent Ontario Greater Golden Horseshoe (GGH) Greenbelt Plan. Focusing on the “Protected Countryside,” the major land-use designation in the Plan that structures the Greenbelt framework, we explore tensions between abstract ideals of countryside used by policy makers to elicit support for the Plan and people's lived experience of material landscapes of the peri-urban fringe. Approaching “countryside” from the combined perspectives of landscape studies and political ecology, we show how the abstract ideals used to build support for the protection of countryside in the high-level political arena are in tension with existing material landscapes as people experience them.

  • No boundaries: exurbia and the study of contemporary urban dispersion

    GeoJournal

    The dream of a house in the country, at the seashore, or near a ski hill, is one shared by many in North American society. But the environmental and social impacts of the realization of this dream by an increasing number of people has created crises and conflict for many communities. The concept of exurbia has traditionally been used to describe settlement patterns simultaneously dispersed from the city yet also connected to urban networks. This paper reviews scholarship across disciplines including geography, ecology, sociology, and political ecology. Exurbia is here proposed to be strengthened as a powerful conceptual approach to capture and discuss the complex processes producing this phenomenon. Previous scholarship has produced excellent but largely disconnected work on the periurban zone around cities, exurban settlement processes, tensions between exurbanites and other rural residents, environmental impacts and habitat fragmentation. Future work on exurbia holds a great deal of promise to think about cultural values supporting the processes that produce these landscapes, working across scales from local to global using interdisciplinary and multi-method study.

  • The Idea of Landscape in Planning at the City’s Edge

    The Rural-Urban Fringe in Canada: Conflict and Controversy

    This volume draws on the work of scholars from across Canada, each dealing with the rural-urban fringe in their own way. Contributors include scholars from Sociology, Geography, Planning, Recreation, Tourism and Rural Development; from senior scholars with decades of experience and younger scholars with new and exciting ideas and perspectives. Through these diverse contributions the chapters collectively address rural-urban fringe zones in Canada as areas of conflict and controversy.

  • Landscape ideology in the Greater Golden Horseshoe Greenbelt Plan: Negotiating material landscapes and abstract ideals in the city’s countryside

    Journal of Rural Studies

    We analyze the role of landscape ideology in the recent Ontario Greater Golden Horseshoe (GGH) Greenbelt Plan. Focusing on the “Protected Countryside,” the major land-use designation in the Plan that structures the Greenbelt framework, we explore tensions between abstract ideals of countryside used by policy makers to elicit support for the Plan and people's lived experience of material landscapes of the peri-urban fringe. Approaching “countryside” from the combined perspectives of landscape studies and political ecology, we show how the abstract ideals used to build support for the protection of countryside in the high-level political arena are in tension with existing material landscapes as people experience them.

  • No boundaries: exurbia and the study of contemporary urban dispersion

    GeoJournal

    The dream of a house in the country, at the seashore, or near a ski hill, is one shared by many in North American society. But the environmental and social impacts of the realization of this dream by an increasing number of people has created crises and conflict for many communities. The concept of exurbia has traditionally been used to describe settlement patterns simultaneously dispersed from the city yet also connected to urban networks. This paper reviews scholarship across disciplines including geography, ecology, sociology, and political ecology. Exurbia is here proposed to be strengthened as a powerful conceptual approach to capture and discuss the complex processes producing this phenomenon. Previous scholarship has produced excellent but largely disconnected work on the periurban zone around cities, exurban settlement processes, tensions between exurbanites and other rural residents, environmental impacts and habitat fragmentation. Future work on exurbia holds a great deal of promise to think about cultural values supporting the processes that produce these landscapes, working across scales from local to global using interdisciplinary and multi-method study.

  • Landscape and the Ideology of Nature: Green Sprawl

    Routledge

    This collection explores the significance of the ideology of nature in producing the culture and form of cities and suburbs—particularly the exurbs, where the urban extends into rural areas. Understanding society’s desire for a connection to nature may help build capacity for addressing the contemporary crisis of sprawl. This book is about the contradiction between the idea that nature should be protected from settlement for its own sake and the way that privileging nature motivates people to seek natural residential settings. This search for natural settings is an important part of the production of sprawl, as the essays in this collection discuss. Within human geography and political ecology, a vibrant discussion has been sustained in recent years about the dualism of culture and nature in modern life. We argue that the role of the desire for nature in the experience and production of landscape needs to be part of our thinking about sprawl. This collection demonstrates how ideology permeates green sprawl—from its roots in reaction to modernity to the shaping of contemporary urban, suburban, and exurban landscapes through individual choice-making, normative planning theory, and public decision-making. New insight into urban dispersion is possible through the authors’ wide range of perspectives from social sciences, humanities, planning and design disciplines concerned with addressing social and environmental problems of sprawl.

  • The Idea of Landscape in Planning at the City’s Edge

    The Rural-Urban Fringe in Canada: Conflict and Controversy

    This volume draws on the work of scholars from across Canada, each dealing with the rural-urban fringe in their own way. Contributors include scholars from Sociology, Geography, Planning, Recreation, Tourism and Rural Development; from senior scholars with decades of experience and younger scholars with new and exciting ideas and perspectives. Through these diverse contributions the chapters collectively address rural-urban fringe zones in Canada as areas of conflict and controversy.

  • Landscape ideology in the Greater Golden Horseshoe Greenbelt Plan: Negotiating material landscapes and abstract ideals in the city’s countryside

    Journal of Rural Studies

    We analyze the role of landscape ideology in the recent Ontario Greater Golden Horseshoe (GGH) Greenbelt Plan. Focusing on the “Protected Countryside,” the major land-use designation in the Plan that structures the Greenbelt framework, we explore tensions between abstract ideals of countryside used by policy makers to elicit support for the Plan and people's lived experience of material landscapes of the peri-urban fringe. Approaching “countryside” from the combined perspectives of landscape studies and political ecology, we show how the abstract ideals used to build support for the protection of countryside in the high-level political arena are in tension with existing material landscapes as people experience them.

  • No boundaries: exurbia and the study of contemporary urban dispersion

    GeoJournal

    The dream of a house in the country, at the seashore, or near a ski hill, is one shared by many in North American society. But the environmental and social impacts of the realization of this dream by an increasing number of people has created crises and conflict for many communities. The concept of exurbia has traditionally been used to describe settlement patterns simultaneously dispersed from the city yet also connected to urban networks. This paper reviews scholarship across disciplines including geography, ecology, sociology, and political ecology. Exurbia is here proposed to be strengthened as a powerful conceptual approach to capture and discuss the complex processes producing this phenomenon. Previous scholarship has produced excellent but largely disconnected work on the periurban zone around cities, exurban settlement processes, tensions between exurbanites and other rural residents, environmental impacts and habitat fragmentation. Future work on exurbia holds a great deal of promise to think about cultural values supporting the processes that produce these landscapes, working across scales from local to global using interdisciplinary and multi-method study.

  • Landscape and the Ideology of Nature: Green Sprawl

    Routledge

    This collection explores the significance of the ideology of nature in producing the culture and form of cities and suburbs—particularly the exurbs, where the urban extends into rural areas. Understanding society’s desire for a connection to nature may help build capacity for addressing the contemporary crisis of sprawl. This book is about the contradiction between the idea that nature should be protected from settlement for its own sake and the way that privileging nature motivates people to seek natural residential settings. This search for natural settings is an important part of the production of sprawl, as the essays in this collection discuss. Within human geography and political ecology, a vibrant discussion has been sustained in recent years about the dualism of culture and nature in modern life. We argue that the role of the desire for nature in the experience and production of landscape needs to be part of our thinking about sprawl. This collection demonstrates how ideology permeates green sprawl—from its roots in reaction to modernity to the shaping of contemporary urban, suburban, and exurban landscapes through individual choice-making, normative planning theory, and public decision-making. New insight into urban dispersion is possible through the authors’ wide range of perspectives from social sciences, humanities, planning and design disciplines concerned with addressing social and environmental problems of sprawl.

  • A Comparative Political Ecology of Exurbia: Planning, Environmental Management, and Landscape Change

    Springer

    This book is about politics and planning outside of cities, where urban political economy and planning theories do not account for the resilience of places that are no longer rural and where local communities work hard to keep from ever becoming urban. By examining exurbia as a type of place that is no longer simply rural or only tied to the economies of global resources (e.g., mining, forestry, and agriculture), we explore how changing landscapes are planned and designed not to be urban, that is, to look, function, and feel different from cities and suburbs in spite of new home development and real estate speculation. The book’s authors contend that exurbia is defined by the persistence of rural economies, the conservation of rural character, and protection of natural ecological systems, all of which are critical components of the contentious local politics that seek to limit growth.

  • The Idea of Landscape in Planning at the City’s Edge

    The Rural-Urban Fringe in Canada: Conflict and Controversy

    This volume draws on the work of scholars from across Canada, each dealing with the rural-urban fringe in their own way. Contributors include scholars from Sociology, Geography, Planning, Recreation, Tourism and Rural Development; from senior scholars with decades of experience and younger scholars with new and exciting ideas and perspectives. Through these diverse contributions the chapters collectively address rural-urban fringe zones in Canada as areas of conflict and controversy.

  • Landscape ideology in the Greater Golden Horseshoe Greenbelt Plan: Negotiating material landscapes and abstract ideals in the city’s countryside

    Journal of Rural Studies

    We analyze the role of landscape ideology in the recent Ontario Greater Golden Horseshoe (GGH) Greenbelt Plan. Focusing on the “Protected Countryside,” the major land-use designation in the Plan that structures the Greenbelt framework, we explore tensions between abstract ideals of countryside used by policy makers to elicit support for the Plan and people's lived experience of material landscapes of the peri-urban fringe. Approaching “countryside” from the combined perspectives of landscape studies and political ecology, we show how the abstract ideals used to build support for the protection of countryside in the high-level political arena are in tension with existing material landscapes as people experience them.

  • No boundaries: exurbia and the study of contemporary urban dispersion

    GeoJournal

    The dream of a house in the country, at the seashore, or near a ski hill, is one shared by many in North American society. But the environmental and social impacts of the realization of this dream by an increasing number of people has created crises and conflict for many communities. The concept of exurbia has traditionally been used to describe settlement patterns simultaneously dispersed from the city yet also connected to urban networks. This paper reviews scholarship across disciplines including geography, ecology, sociology, and political ecology. Exurbia is here proposed to be strengthened as a powerful conceptual approach to capture and discuss the complex processes producing this phenomenon. Previous scholarship has produced excellent but largely disconnected work on the periurban zone around cities, exurban settlement processes, tensions between exurbanites and other rural residents, environmental impacts and habitat fragmentation. Future work on exurbia holds a great deal of promise to think about cultural values supporting the processes that produce these landscapes, working across scales from local to global using interdisciplinary and multi-method study.

  • Landscape and the Ideology of Nature: Green Sprawl

    Routledge

    This collection explores the significance of the ideology of nature in producing the culture and form of cities and suburbs—particularly the exurbs, where the urban extends into rural areas. Understanding society’s desire for a connection to nature may help build capacity for addressing the contemporary crisis of sprawl. This book is about the contradiction between the idea that nature should be protected from settlement for its own sake and the way that privileging nature motivates people to seek natural residential settings. This search for natural settings is an important part of the production of sprawl, as the essays in this collection discuss. Within human geography and political ecology, a vibrant discussion has been sustained in recent years about the dualism of culture and nature in modern life. We argue that the role of the desire for nature in the experience and production of landscape needs to be part of our thinking about sprawl. This collection demonstrates how ideology permeates green sprawl—from its roots in reaction to modernity to the shaping of contemporary urban, suburban, and exurban landscapes through individual choice-making, normative planning theory, and public decision-making. New insight into urban dispersion is possible through the authors’ wide range of perspectives from social sciences, humanities, planning and design disciplines concerned with addressing social and environmental problems of sprawl.

  • A Comparative Political Ecology of Exurbia: Planning, Environmental Management, and Landscape Change

    Springer

    This book is about politics and planning outside of cities, where urban political economy and planning theories do not account for the resilience of places that are no longer rural and where local communities work hard to keep from ever becoming urban. By examining exurbia as a type of place that is no longer simply rural or only tied to the economies of global resources (e.g., mining, forestry, and agriculture), we explore how changing landscapes are planned and designed not to be urban, that is, to look, function, and feel different from cities and suburbs in spite of new home development and real estate speculation. The book’s authors contend that exurbia is defined by the persistence of rural economies, the conservation of rural character, and protection of natural ecological systems, all of which are critical components of the contentious local politics that seek to limit growth.

  • From Green Belts to Green Infrastructure

    Planning Practice and Research

    Introduction to special issue on Green Belts. Green belts have been a part of the planning landscape for much of the 20th century, yet they have come under attack in recent years. The objective of this article is to inform the future of the green belt concept internationally and in the UK. We first examine recent policy changes in the UK, showing how green belts are being conceived more broadly to include the concept of green infrastructure. We then focus on Canadian green belts, and in particular that of Toronto, which exemplifies some of the challenges with integrating green belts and green infrastructure.

Positions

  • Association of American Geographers

    Member

    urn:li:fs_position:(ACoAAANco6gBly9md9hbUg05PSfCmpw1k3OG5yc,92451363)

  • Association of American Geographers

    Member

    urn:li:fs_position:(ACoAAANco6gBly9md9hbUg05PSfCmpw1k3OG5yc,92451363)

  • Ontario Professional Planners Institute/Canadian Institute of Planners

    Registered Professional Planner

    urn:li:fs_position:(ACoAAANco6gBly9md9hbUg05PSfCmpw1k3OG5yc,92451363)

  • Association of American Geographers

    Member

    urn:li:fs_position:(ACoAAANco6gBly9md9hbUg05PSfCmpw1k3OG5yc,92451363)

  • Ontario Professional Planners Institute/Canadian Institute of Planners

    Registered Professional Planner

    urn:li:fs_position:(ACoAAANco6gBly9md9hbUg05PSfCmpw1k3OG5yc,92451363)

  • Greenbelt Council

    Chair (2016) and Member

    The Greenbelt Council provides advice to the Minister of Municipal Affairs and Housing on the Greenbelt including: any matters pertaining to the Greenbelt Act or the Plan, as set out in subsection 15(3) of the Greenbelt Act, the establishment of performance measures to track the effectiveness of the Plan in achieving its goals, any proposed amendments to the Greenbelt Plan, and the ten-year review of the Greenbelt Plan.urn:li:fs_position:(ACoAAANco6gBly9md9hbUg05PSfCmpw1k3OG5yc,92451363)

  • Association of American Geographers

    Member

    urn:li:fs_position:(ACoAAANco6gBly9md9hbUg05PSfCmpw1k3OG5yc,92451363)

  • Ontario Professional Planners Institute/Canadian Institute of Planners

    Registered Professional Planner

    urn:li:fs_position:(ACoAAANco6gBly9md9hbUg05PSfCmpw1k3OG5yc,92451363)

  • Greenbelt Council

    Chair (2016) and Member

    The Greenbelt Council provides advice to the Minister of Municipal Affairs and Housing on the Greenbelt including: any matters pertaining to the Greenbelt Act or the Plan, as set out in subsection 15(3) of the Greenbelt Act, the establishment of performance measures to track the effectiveness of the Plan in achieving its goals, any proposed amendments to the Greenbelt Plan, and the ten-year review of the Greenbelt Plan.urn:li:fs_position:(ACoAAANco6gBly9md9hbUg05PSfCmpw1k3OG5yc,92451363)

  • Lambda Alpha International

    Member

    urn:li:fs_position:(ACoAAANco6gBly9md9hbUg05PSfCmpw1k3OG5yc,92451363)

  • Association of American Geographers

    Member

    urn:li:fs_position:(ACoAAANco6gBly9md9hbUg05PSfCmpw1k3OG5yc,92451363)

  • Ontario Professional Planners Institute/Canadian Institute of Planners

    Registered Professional Planner

    urn:li:fs_position:(ACoAAANco6gBly9md9hbUg05PSfCmpw1k3OG5yc,92451363)

  • Greenbelt Council

    Chair (2016) and Member

    The Greenbelt Council provides advice to the Minister of Municipal Affairs and Housing on the Greenbelt including: any matters pertaining to the Greenbelt Act or the Plan, as set out in subsection 15(3) of the Greenbelt Act, the establishment of performance measures to track the effectiveness of the Plan in achieving its goals, any proposed amendments to the Greenbelt Plan, and the ten-year review of the Greenbelt Plan.urn:li:fs_position:(ACoAAANco6gBly9md9hbUg05PSfCmpw1k3OG5yc,92451363)

  • Lambda Alpha International

    Member

    urn:li:fs_position:(ACoAAANco6gBly9md9hbUg05PSfCmpw1k3OG5yc,92451363)

  • Canadian Urban Institute

    Member

    urn:li:fs_position:(ACoAAANco6gBly9md9hbUg05PSfCmpw1k3OG5yc,92451363)

  • Association of American Geographers

    Member

    urn:li:fs_position:(ACoAAANco6gBly9md9hbUg05PSfCmpw1k3OG5yc,92451363)

  • Ontario Professional Planners Institute/Canadian Institute of Planners

    Registered Professional Planner

    urn:li:fs_position:(ACoAAANco6gBly9md9hbUg05PSfCmpw1k3OG5yc,92451363)

  • Greenbelt Council

    Chair (2016) and Member

    The Greenbelt Council provides advice to the Minister of Municipal Affairs and Housing on the Greenbelt including: any matters pertaining to the Greenbelt Act or the Plan, as set out in subsection 15(3) of the Greenbelt Act, the establishment of performance measures to track the effectiveness of the Plan in achieving its goals, any proposed amendments to the Greenbelt Plan, and the ten-year review of the Greenbelt Plan.urn:li:fs_position:(ACoAAANco6gBly9md9hbUg05PSfCmpw1k3OG5yc,92451363)

  • Lambda Alpha International

    Member

    urn:li:fs_position:(ACoAAANco6gBly9md9hbUg05PSfCmpw1k3OG5yc,92451363)

  • Canadian Urban Institute

    Member

    urn:li:fs_position:(ACoAAANco6gBly9md9hbUg05PSfCmpw1k3OG5yc,92451363)

  • American Planning Association

    Member

    urn:li:fs_position:(ACoAAANco6gBly9md9hbUg05PSfCmpw1k3OG5yc,92451363)

  • Association of American Geographers

    Member

    urn:li:fs_position:(ACoAAANco6gBly9md9hbUg05PSfCmpw1k3OG5yc,92451363)

  • Ontario Professional Planners Institute/Canadian Institute of Planners

    Registered Professional Planner

    urn:li:fs_position:(ACoAAANco6gBly9md9hbUg05PSfCmpw1k3OG5yc,92451363)

  • Greenbelt Council

    Chair (2016) and Member

    The Greenbelt Council provides advice to the Minister of Municipal Affairs and Housing on the Greenbelt including: any matters pertaining to the Greenbelt Act or the Plan, as set out in subsection 15(3) of the Greenbelt Act, the establishment of performance measures to track the effectiveness of the Plan in achieving its goals, any proposed amendments to the Greenbelt Plan, and the ten-year review of the Greenbelt Plan.urn:li:fs_position:(ACoAAANco6gBly9md9hbUg05PSfCmpw1k3OG5yc,92451363)

  • Lambda Alpha International

    Member

    urn:li:fs_position:(ACoAAANco6gBly9md9hbUg05PSfCmpw1k3OG5yc,92451363)

  • Canadian Urban Institute

    Member

    urn:li:fs_position:(ACoAAANco6gBly9md9hbUg05PSfCmpw1k3OG5yc,92451363)

  • American Planning Association

    Member

    urn:li:fs_position:(ACoAAANco6gBly9md9hbUg05PSfCmpw1k3OG5yc,92451363)

  • Canadian Association of Geographers

    Member

    urn:li:fs_position:(ACoAAANco6gBly9md9hbUg05PSfCmpw1k3OG5yc,92451363)

  • Association of American Geographers

    Member

    urn:li:fs_position:(ACoAAANco6gBly9md9hbUg05PSfCmpw1k3OG5yc,92451363)

  • Ontario Professional Planners Institute/Canadian Institute of Planners

    Registered Professional Planner

    urn:li:fs_position:(ACoAAANco6gBly9md9hbUg05PSfCmpw1k3OG5yc,92451363)

  • Greenbelt Council

    Chair (2016) and Member

    The Greenbelt Council provides advice to the Minister of Municipal Affairs and Housing on the Greenbelt including: any matters pertaining to the Greenbelt Act or the Plan, as set out in subsection 15(3) of the Greenbelt Act, the establishment of performance measures to track the effectiveness of the Plan in achieving its goals, any proposed amendments to the Greenbelt Plan, and the ten-year review of the Greenbelt Plan.urn:li:fs_position:(ACoAAANco6gBly9md9hbUg05PSfCmpw1k3OG5yc,92451363)

  • Lambda Alpha International

    Member

    urn:li:fs_position:(ACoAAANco6gBly9md9hbUg05PSfCmpw1k3OG5yc,92451363)

  • Canadian Urban Institute

    Member

    urn:li:fs_position:(ACoAAANco6gBly9md9hbUg05PSfCmpw1k3OG5yc,92451363)

  • American Planning Association

    Member

    urn:li:fs_position:(ACoAAANco6gBly9md9hbUg05PSfCmpw1k3OG5yc,92451363)

  • Canadian Association of Geographers

    Member

    urn:li:fs_position:(ACoAAANco6gBly9md9hbUg05PSfCmpw1k3OG5yc,92451363)

  • Association of American Geographers

    Member

    urn:li:fs_position:(ACoAAANco6gBly9md9hbUg05PSfCmpw1k3OG5yc,92451363)

  • Ontario Professional Planners Institute/Canadian Institute of Planners

    Registered Professional Planner

    urn:li:fs_position:(ACoAAANco6gBly9md9hbUg05PSfCmpw1k3OG5yc,92451363)

  • Greenbelt Council

    Chair (2016) and Member

    The Greenbelt Council provides advice to the Minister of Municipal Affairs and Housing on the Greenbelt including: any matters pertaining to the Greenbelt Act or the Plan, as set out in subsection 15(3) of the Greenbelt Act, the establishment of performance measures to track the effectiveness of the Plan in achieving its goals, any proposed amendments to the Greenbelt Plan, and the ten-year review of the Greenbelt Plan.urn:li:fs_position:(ACoAAANco6gBly9md9hbUg05PSfCmpw1k3OG5yc,92451363)

  • Lambda Alpha International

    Member

    urn:li:fs_position:(ACoAAANco6gBly9md9hbUg05PSfCmpw1k3OG5yc,92451363)

  • Canadian Urban Institute

    Member

    urn:li:fs_position:(ACoAAANco6gBly9md9hbUg05PSfCmpw1k3OG5yc,92451363)

  • American Planning Association

    Member

    urn:li:fs_position:(ACoAAANco6gBly9md9hbUg05PSfCmpw1k3OG5yc,92451363)

  • Canadian Association of Geographers

    Member

    urn:li:fs_position:(ACoAAANco6gBly9md9hbUg05PSfCmpw1k3OG5yc,92451363)

  • Association of American Geographers

    Member

    urn:li:fs_position:(ACoAAANco6gBly9md9hbUg05PSfCmpw1k3OG5yc,92451363)

  • Ontario Professional Planners Institute/Canadian Institute of Planners

    Registered Professional Planner

    urn:li:fs_position:(ACoAAANco6gBly9md9hbUg05PSfCmpw1k3OG5yc,92451363)

  • Greenbelt Council

    Chair (2016) and Member

    The Greenbelt Council provides advice to the Minister of Municipal Affairs and Housing on the Greenbelt including: any matters pertaining to the Greenbelt Act or the Plan, as set out in subsection 15(3) of the Greenbelt Act, the establishment of performance measures to track the effectiveness of the Plan in achieving its goals, any proposed amendments to the Greenbelt Plan, and the ten-year review of the Greenbelt Plan.urn:li:fs_position:(ACoAAANco6gBly9md9hbUg05PSfCmpw1k3OG5yc,92451363)

  • Lambda Alpha International

    Member

    urn:li:fs_position:(ACoAAANco6gBly9md9hbUg05PSfCmpw1k3OG5yc,92451363)

  • Canadian Urban Institute

    Member

    urn:li:fs_position:(ACoAAANco6gBly9md9hbUg05PSfCmpw1k3OG5yc,92451363)

  • American Planning Association

    Member

    urn:li:fs_position:(ACoAAANco6gBly9md9hbUg05PSfCmpw1k3OG5yc,92451363)

  • Canadian Association of Geographers

    Member

    urn:li:fs_position:(ACoAAANco6gBly9md9hbUg05PSfCmpw1k3OG5yc,92451363)

  • Association of American Geographers

    Member

    urn:li:fs_position:(ACoAAANco6gBly9md9hbUg05PSfCmpw1k3OG5yc,92451363)

  • Ontario Professional Planners Institute/Canadian Institute of Planners

    Registered Professional Planner

    urn:li:fs_position:(ACoAAANco6gBly9md9hbUg05PSfCmpw1k3OG5yc,92451363)

  • Greenbelt Council

    Chair (2016) and Member

    The Greenbelt Council provides advice to the Minister of Municipal Affairs and Housing on the Greenbelt including: any matters pertaining to the Greenbelt Act or the Plan, as set out in subsection 15(3) of the Greenbelt Act, the establishment of performance measures to track the effectiveness of the Plan in achieving its goals, any proposed amendments to the Greenbelt Plan, and the ten-year review of the Greenbelt Plan.urn:li:fs_position:(ACoAAANco6gBly9md9hbUg05PSfCmpw1k3OG5yc,92451363)

  • Lambda Alpha International

    Member

    urn:li:fs_position:(ACoAAANco6gBly9md9hbUg05PSfCmpw1k3OG5yc,92451363)

  • Canadian Urban Institute

    Member

    urn:li:fs_position:(ACoAAANco6gBly9md9hbUg05PSfCmpw1k3OG5yc,92451363)

  • American Planning Association

    Member

    urn:li:fs_position:(ACoAAANco6gBly9md9hbUg05PSfCmpw1k3OG5yc,92451363)

  • Canadian Association of Geographers

    Member

    urn:li:fs_position:(ACoAAANco6gBly9md9hbUg05PSfCmpw1k3OG5yc,92451363)

  • Association of American Geographers

    Member

    urn:li:fs_position:(ACoAAANco6gBly9md9hbUg05PSfCmpw1k3OG5yc,92451363)

  • Ontario Professional Planners Institute/Canadian Institute of Planners

    Registered Professional Planner

    urn:li:fs_position:(ACoAAANco6gBly9md9hbUg05PSfCmpw1k3OG5yc,92451363)

  • Greenbelt Council

    Chair (2016) and Member

    The Greenbelt Council provides advice to the Minister of Municipal Affairs and Housing on the Greenbelt including: any matters pertaining to the Greenbelt Act or the Plan, as set out in subsection 15(3) of the Greenbelt Act, the establishment of performance measures to track the effectiveness of the Plan in achieving its goals, any proposed amendments to the Greenbelt Plan, and the ten-year review of the Greenbelt Plan.urn:li:fs_position:(ACoAAANco6gBly9md9hbUg05PSfCmpw1k3OG5yc,92451363)

  • Lambda Alpha International

    Member

    urn:li:fs_position:(ACoAAANco6gBly9md9hbUg05PSfCmpw1k3OG5yc,92451363)

  • Canadian Urban Institute

    Member

    urn:li:fs_position:(ACoAAANco6gBly9md9hbUg05PSfCmpw1k3OG5yc,92451363)

  • American Planning Association

    Member

    urn:li:fs_position:(ACoAAANco6gBly9md9hbUg05PSfCmpw1k3OG5yc,92451363)

  • Canadian Association of Geographers

    Member

    urn:li:fs_position:(ACoAAANco6gBly9md9hbUg05PSfCmpw1k3OG5yc,92451363)

  • Association of American Geographers

    Member

    urn:li:fs_position:(ACoAAANco6gBly9md9hbUg05PSfCmpw1k3OG5yc,92451363)

  • Ontario Professional Planners Institute/Canadian Institute of Planners

    Registered Professional Planner

    urn:li:fs_position:(ACoAAANco6gBly9md9hbUg05PSfCmpw1k3OG5yc,92451363)

  • Greenbelt Council

    Chair (2016) and Member

    The Greenbelt Council provides advice to the Minister of Municipal Affairs and Housing on the Greenbelt including: any matters pertaining to the Greenbelt Act or the Plan, as set out in subsection 15(3) of the Greenbelt Act, the establishment of performance measures to track the effectiveness of the Plan in achieving its goals, any proposed amendments to the Greenbelt Plan, and the ten-year review of the Greenbelt Plan.urn:li:fs_position:(ACoAAANco6gBly9md9hbUg05PSfCmpw1k3OG5yc,92451363)

  • Lambda Alpha International

    Member

    urn:li:fs_position:(ACoAAANco6gBly9md9hbUg05PSfCmpw1k3OG5yc,92451363)

  • Canadian Urban Institute

    Member

    urn:li:fs_position:(ACoAAANco6gBly9md9hbUg05PSfCmpw1k3OG5yc,92451363)

  • American Planning Association

    Member

    urn:li:fs_position:(ACoAAANco6gBly9md9hbUg05PSfCmpw1k3OG5yc,92451363)

  • Canadian Association of Geographers

    Member

    urn:li:fs_position:(ACoAAANco6gBly9md9hbUg05PSfCmpw1k3OG5yc,92451363)

  • Association of American Geographers

    Member

    urn:li:fs_position:(ACoAAANco6gBly9md9hbUg05PSfCmpw1k3OG5yc,92451363)

  • Ontario Professional Planners Institute/Canadian Institute of Planners

    Registered Professional Planner

    urn:li:fs_position:(ACoAAANco6gBly9md9hbUg05PSfCmpw1k3OG5yc,92451363)

  • Greenbelt Council

    Chair (2016) and Member

    The Greenbelt Council provides advice to the Minister of Municipal Affairs and Housing on the Greenbelt including: any matters pertaining to the Greenbelt Act or the Plan, as set out in subsection 15(3) of the Greenbelt Act, the establishment of performance measures to track the effectiveness of the Plan in achieving its goals, any proposed amendments to the Greenbelt Plan, and the ten-year review of the Greenbelt Plan.urn:li:fs_position:(ACoAAANco6gBly9md9hbUg05PSfCmpw1k3OG5yc,92451363)

  • Lambda Alpha International

    Member

    urn:li:fs_position:(ACoAAANco6gBly9md9hbUg05PSfCmpw1k3OG5yc,92451363)

  • Canadian Urban Institute

    Member

    urn:li:fs_position:(ACoAAANco6gBly9md9hbUg05PSfCmpw1k3OG5yc,92451363)

  • American Planning Association

    Member

    urn:li:fs_position:(ACoAAANco6gBly9md9hbUg05PSfCmpw1k3OG5yc,92451363)

  • Canadian Association of Geographers

    Member

    urn:li:fs_position:(ACoAAANco6gBly9md9hbUg05PSfCmpw1k3OG5yc,92451363)

  • Association of American Geographers

    Member

    urn:li:fs_position:(ACoAAANco6gBly9md9hbUg05PSfCmpw1k3OG5yc,92451363)

  • Ontario Professional Planners Institute/Canadian Institute of Planners

    Registered Professional Planner

    urn:li:fs_position:(ACoAAANco6gBly9md9hbUg05PSfCmpw1k3OG5yc,92451363)

  • Greenbelt Council

    Chair (2016) and Member

    The Greenbelt Council provides advice to the Minister of Municipal Affairs and Housing on the Greenbelt including: any matters pertaining to the Greenbelt Act or the Plan, as set out in subsection 15(3) of the Greenbelt Act, the establishment of performance measures to track the effectiveness of the Plan in achieving its goals, any proposed amendments to the Greenbelt Plan, and the ten-year review of the Greenbelt Plan.urn:li:fs_position:(ACoAAANco6gBly9md9hbUg05PSfCmpw1k3OG5yc,92451363)

  • Lambda Alpha International

    Member

    urn:li:fs_position:(ACoAAANco6gBly9md9hbUg05PSfCmpw1k3OG5yc,92451363)

  • Canadian Urban Institute

    Member

    urn:li:fs_position:(ACoAAANco6gBly9md9hbUg05PSfCmpw1k3OG5yc,92451363)

  • American Planning Association

    Member

    urn:li:fs_position:(ACoAAANco6gBly9md9hbUg05PSfCmpw1k3OG5yc,92451363)

  • Canadian Association of Geographers

    Member

    urn:li:fs_position:(ACoAAANco6gBly9md9hbUg05PSfCmpw1k3OG5yc,92451363)

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