Land Use Law and Disability
In Land Use Law and Disability, Robin Paul Malloy argues that our communities need better planning to be safely and easily navigated by people with mobility impairment and to facilitate intergenerational aging in place. To achieve this, communities will need to think of mobility impairment and inclusive design as land use and planning issues, in addition to understanding them as matters of civil and constitutional rights. Although much has been written about the rights of people with disabilities, little has been said about the interplay between disability and land use regulation. This book undertakes to explain mobility impairment, as one type of disability, in terms of planning and zoning. The goal is to advance our understanding of disability in terms of planning and zoning to facilitate cooperative engagement between disability rights advocates and land use professionals. This in turn should lead to improved community planning for accessibility and aging in place.
- Offers a totally new look at disability from a planning and zoning perspective under the police power rather than from the standard perspective of civil rights
- Challenges current approaches to planning for people with disability as being planning by litigation rather than by intention
- Distinguishes between accessible design guidelines, as in universal design, and the process of regulating land use
Product details
October 2014Hardback
9780521193931
264 pages
235 × 158 × 20 mm
0.57kg
Available
Table of Contents
- 1. Inclusion by design: thinking beyond a civil rights paradigm
- 2. Planning and zoning under the police power
- 3. Regulating inclusive design
- 4. Inclusive design in a market context
- 5. Additional zoning concepts for inclusive design
- 6. Conclusion.