Public Interest, Private Property

Law and Planning Policy in Canada

Edited by Anneke Smit & Marcia Valiante
Categories: Urban Studies, Planning & Architecture, Planning (urban & Regional), Law & Legal Studies, Environmental & Nature Studies
Publisher: UBC Press
Hardcover : 9780774829311, 334 pages, December 2015
Paperback : 9780774829328, 334 pages, July 2016
Ebook (PDF) : 9780774829335, 334 pages, December 2015
Ebook (EPUB) : 9780774829342, 334 pages, December 2015
Ebook (MobiPocket) : 9780774829922, 334 pages, December 2016

Table of contents

Introduction / Marcia Valiante and Anneke Smit

 

Part 1: Contextualizing Canadian Private Property and Public Planning

 

1 Private Property in Historical and Global Contexts and Its Lessons for Planning / Harvey M. Jacobs

 

2 Bumble Bees Cannot Fly, and Restrictive Covenants Cannot Run / Bruce Ziff

 

Part 2: Public Interest, Participation, and Planning Law

 

3 The Disappearance of Planning Law in Ontario / Stanley M. Makuch

 

4 In Search of the “Public Interest” in Ontario Planning Decisions / Marcia Valiante

 

Part 3: Recent Shifts in Canadian Urban Planning and Private Property

 

5 Transforming Toronto: Implementation and Impacts of Metropolitan-Scale Plans / Pierre Filion and Anna Kramer

 

6 Green Development: New Entanglements of Property, Planning, and the Public Interest / Deborah Curran

 

Part 4: Private Property, Natural Resources, and Planning

 

7 Private Tree Protection Bylaws: In the Public Interest? / Eran S. Kaplinsky

 

8 Planning for Potable Water: Public Interest and Property Rights / Jane Matthews Glenn

 

Part 5: Issues in Canadian Expropriation Law and Practice

 

9 Expropriation: The Raw Edge of the Conflict between Public and Private Interests / Stephen F. Waqué and Ian Mathany

 

10 Making Up for the Loss of “Home”: Compensation in Residential Property Expropriation / Anneke Smit

 

Index

Through selected case studies, this volume explores the complex interplay between the public interest and private property rights in Canadian urban-planning policy.

Description

When it comes to urban planning, to what extent and under what conditions should the community’s interest prevail over the rights of private property owners? Public Interest, Private Property addresses this question at a time when pollution, urban sprawl, and condo booms are forcing municipal governments to adopt prescriptive laws and regulations. Case studies focus on spheres in which public values and private property rights collide – expropriation law, natural resources regulation, green development, and water provision – laying the groundwork for more active debates on the issues currently shaping our cities.