Greg Young (planner)

Dr Greg Young, MPIA, MICOMOS is an Australian specialist on culture, planning and governance whose cultural and planning models and theories are internationally influential. He was born in Hobart, Tasmania and received his BA (Hons) from the University of Tasmania, an MA from the University of Sydney, and a PhD from the University of New South Wales. He also holds a Diploma of Urban Studies from Macquarie University, Sydney. He has held academic appointments with Australian universities, senior consulting roles in the private sector and executive appointments with Australian governments as an interdisciplinary strategist, planner, historian and advocate. He is currently Adjunct Professor in the Business School, University of Technology Sydney (UTS), Australia.

Perspective and Concepts

Greg Young coined the term culturization and developed a concept and model for culturized planning first outlined in ‘The Culturization of Planning’ Planning Theory 2008 and then with illustrated global case studies in Reshaping Planning with Culture 2008. Culturized governance is outlined in his chapters in The Ashgate Research Companion to Planning and Culture for which he was Principal Editor. At its most fundamental culturization means the positive integration of culture in planning, broader governance and social uptake. The concept is encompassed by an umbrella cultural paradigm for governance and planning outlined in the same publication.

From the 1980s onwards Greg Young contributed to a number of key, pioneering strategies in Australia on culture including the NSW Government system of heritage studies, the NSW Cultural Tourism Strategy (1991), Australia’s first national cultural policy Creative Nation [1] and the Australian Government’s model for cultural mapping published as Mapping Culture – A Guide for Cultural and Economic Development in Communities.[2] His culturised model for planning is utilized in planning teaching, research and governance internationally based on a comprehensive concept of culture and holistic research using critical, creative, ethical and reflective standards, techniques and approaches.

Key Publications

Young, G. and Stevenson, D. eds. 2016. The Routledge Research Companion to Planning and Culture. Abingdon, Oxford: Routledge.

Young, G. 2016. Reshaping Planning with Culture. Abingdon, Oxford: Routledge.

Young, G. 2008. ‘The Culturisation of Planning’, Planning Theory, 7(1), 71-91.

Young, G., Clark, I. and Sutherland, J. 1995. Mapping Culture – A Guide for Cultural and Economic Development in Communities. Canberra: AGPS.

Young, G. 1984. Conservation, History and Development. Sydney: NSW GIS.

Young, G. 1984. Environmental Conservation – Towards a Philosophy. Sydney: NSW Heritage Council.

gollark: It's kind of dodecahedral to go around complaining about people not understanding you (and implying it's some failure on their part) and then refusing to try explaining it in better ways.
gollark: > oh the obvious reality is that people dont know what they dont know, and even i didnt conclude that, tho i see it now. doesnt keep me from being impatient and getting madMaybe you should try explaining better if you think you have some great insight people do not understand.
gollark: My family has a pet one, but it actually just mostly sits in a rock thing in its terrarium.
gollark: Geckos are really quite cool reptiles.
gollark: Yep!

References

  1. trove.nla.gov.au/work/16860085
  2. Mapping culture: A guide for cultural and economic development in communities. AGPS. 1995. ISBN 9780644452335.
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