- American Planning Association
The largest membership organization of professional planners and planning resources available Your leading authority on making great communities for all!
- What Is Planning?
Planning is elected leaders' most effective tool for managing growth, navigating change, and making tough decisions facing communities, like where to invest in transportation, housing, and parks Powered by community planners' data-driven insights, expertise, and sense of residents' needs, the planning process helps communities define their
- Knowledge Center - American Planning Association
Explore the most comprehensive body of knowledge in the planning profession to keep you inspired, informed, and innovative
- What Is Planning?
The goal of planning is to maximize the health, safety, and economic well-being of residents in ways that reflect the unique needs, desires, and culture of those who live and work within the community
- 2025 Trend Report for Planners - planning. org
The 2025 Trend Report features a list of over 100 existing, emerging, and potential future trends that the APA Foresight team and our Trend Scouting Foresight Community identified as relevant to planning
- AICP - American Planning Association
The American Institute of Certified Planners is APA's professional institute and the recognized leader in certifying professional planners and promoting ethical planning, professional development, planning education, and standards of practice
- Disaster-Proof Your Planning: Using Emergency Management Phases to . . .
If your planning work intersects in any way with hazard mitigation or disaster recovery, you are probably familiar with the phases of emergency management This well-established framework is utilized to mitigate risk and actively prepare for disasters, emergencies, and various threats
- How to Use Social Media to Build Your Planning Entourage
The work typically has been narrowly focused on addressing the task at hand, like current planning issues and responding to applying a zoning code, but it was not necessarily hitting the higher-level themes of equity, diversity, and inclusion, as well as housing policy or transportation policy
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