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metropolitan college
academic courses graduate
courses
city planning
| City Planning Graduate Courses |
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MET
UA 500 Environmental Problems and Policy |
| An
examination of environmental concerns such as conserving biological
diversity, maintaining atmospheric and water integrity, preservation
of human health and well-being, and sustaining adequacy of food,
energy, and natural resource supplies with emphasis on problem linkages,
interdependence of country fate with that of the world as a whole,
and the necessity for planned and cooperative future strategies
of management. Sustainable development as a global and national
strategy. (4 cr.)
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UA 501, 502 Undergraduate Directed Study |
| Limited
to a maximum of 8 credits toward degree requirements. Approval by
program director required prior to registration. Study of urban
and public affairs individually arranged between the student and
an appropriate instructor to provide training opportunities not
available elsewhere. (Variable cr.)
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UA 505 Urban Management |
| Examination
of selected cases in municipal and public management. Organization,
financial management, personnel relations, program planning and
budgeting, and issues of public and private sector relations. The
administration of municipal functions, including health, police,
schools, and housing. (4 cr.)
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UA 507 Law and Justice in the City |
| Operation
of the criminal justice system in the urban setting. Special attention
is paid to the problems of safeguarding individual rights. Examines
relationship between social and economic structure of cities and
workings of the system of justice. (4 cr.)
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UA 508 Real Estate Development |
| Various
factors affecting location, construction, financing, and marketing
of real estate in metropolitan areas. Studies the relationship of
public policy to the activities of the private sector, market analysis
techniques, evaluation of development projects, and problems of
real estate investment. (4 cr.)
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UA 509 Urban and Public Finance and Budgeting |
| Economic,
social, and political aspects of state and local government finances.
Theory of public finance; revenues, expenditures, and survey of
budgetary processes. Planning techniques in capital budgeting and
other finance activities. Selected issues: debt, user fees, property
taxes, and incentives. (4 cr.)
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UA 510 Selected Topics in Urban Affairs |
| Prereq: MET UA 301, MET
UA 701, or consent of instructor.
Program faculty selects seminar topics of current interest in the
fields of urban affairs and city planning. Consult department for
topics. (4 cr.)
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UA 515 Urban Planning |
| History,
concepts, and methods of contemporary urban and regional planning
practice. Governmental, nonprofit, and private settings of professional
planning; plans, research, and policy development; uses and implementation
of planning. Political analysis of planning issues, such as comprehensiveness,
public interest, advocacy, negotiation, and future orientation.
Case materials drawn from redevelopment, growth management, land
use conflicts, and service delivery. (4 cr.)
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UA 521 Environmental Law |
| Principles
and status of environmental law for pollution control and environmental
improvement. Impact statements, resource conservation and protection,
growth management. Emphasis on air, water, land, and hazardous waste
issues. Environmental, economic, and other policy relationships.
Case materials and court decisions. (4 cr.)
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| MET UA 533 Environmental Management and Sustainability
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| The management of environmental programs is rapidly moving toward a systematic approach that focuses on pollution prevention and promotes sustainability. This approach can better protect the environment and provide a long-term competitive advantage to an organization. The course examines current national environmental problems facing both private and nonprofit organizations from a management perspective. These problems include hazardous materials and waste, clean air, and water quality. The emphasis will be on management systems and sustainable strategies to address these complex, technical, and legal problems. We will be exploring a variety of tools and topics including formal management systems such as ISO 14001, pollution prevention techniques, compliance auditing, toxic use reduction, green purchasing, environmental dispute resolution, and risk communication. The course also explores the relationship between environmental protection and health safety issues such as indoor air quality, biosafety, and worker protection. Interactive exercises and class discussion focus on practical management techniques. Guest speakers from different perspectives will join us and there will be a field trip to tour an innovative green building. (4 cr.)
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UA 611 Community Development |
| Examination
of community development challenges in several areas, including
housing, economic development, community policing, and resident
activism. Analysis of past and present strategies for strengthening
communities through case studies, actual government and community
programs, guest lectures, and related readings. (4 cr.)
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UA 613 Designing Urban Space
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| The
role of urban design in the community development process. Examines
human behavior, aesthetic foundations of design methods, citizen/client
participation, and public policy issues. Analysis of actual community
spaces. Student design exercises. (4 cr.)
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| MET UA 619 Urban Transportation Policy and Planning |
| Basic theory for understanding and resolving transportation issues. Application of microeconomic techniques of analysis. Topics include routing, pricing of congestion, improving utilization, project impact evaluation, and investment analysis. Development of transportation planning and policy analysis skills. (4 cr.)
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UA 620 Urban and Regional Land Use Policy and Planning |
| Techniques
of land use planning, including socioeconomic studies, market analysis
and needs forecasting, mapping, environment and service impacts,
and transportation/land use coordination. Policies for achieving
land use objectives: planned unit development, zoning, development
corporations, new towns, and land preservation. (4 cr.)
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UA 623 Regional and Metropolitan Development Planning |
| Analysis
of regional planning as applied to land use, economic development,
infrastructure systems, and other topics. Cases and class projects
selected from metropolitan and substate regions, including regional
approaches and organizations, economic base, comparative advantage,
and growth centers. (4 cr.)
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UA 629 Urbanization and the Environment |
| Interrelationships
between physical environment and processes of urbanization. Case
studies develop historical perspective on social, economic, and
physical aspects of the quality of urban life. Special attention
to the preparation of environmental impact statements and assessment
of urban environmental quality. (4 cr.)
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UA 701 Urban Problems and Policy Process |
| Major
problems confronting urban areas and the process of policy formulation
and implementation. Emphasis on problem interdependence and systems
characteristics. Analysis of problem definitions (housing, crime,
poverty, etc.), goals, public/private responsibilities, existing
programs, and policy options. Analysis of selected comparative international
experience. (4 cr.)
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UA 702 Analytical Methods |
| Use
and analysis of quantitative data in public policy development and
planning. Basic skills of organization and presentation of numerical
information. Introduction to descriptive statistics, hypothesis
testing, correlation, and regression; computer use. Math review.
(4 cr.)
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UA 703 Research Methods |
| Examines
research techniques useful for urban policy research. Emphasis on
survey research techniques, including sampling, survey organization,
questionnaire development, and interviewing. Participant observation
techniques. Field data collection and analysis. (4 cr.)
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UA 704 Urban Economic Issues and Analysis |
| Basic
economic concepts and techniques of analysis necessary for urban
public policy development. Analysis of the economic bases of selected
current urban problems and evaluation of several policy solutions
to common urban problems. (4 cr.)
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UA 751 Introduction to Urban Planning and Decision Theory |
| The
role and process of planning in terms of theory and historical development.
Tradition of rational/comprehensive and incremental decision theory:
roles and functions, organization, participation, political relationships,
and time and information use. Relationships between planning, ideology,
ethics, social change, and implementation. (4 cr.)
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UA 761 Planning Thesis |
| Prereq:
approval of program director.
Topic must be approved by designated instructor or advisor. For
MCP students only. Application of program coursework and independent
research to a selected topic individually arranged. (4 cr.)
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UA 801, 802 Graduate Directed Study in Urban Affairs and Planning
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Limited to a maximum of 8 credits toward the degree requirements.
Approval by program director required prior to registration. Study
of urban and public affairs and planning individually arranged between
student and instructor to provide training opportunities not available
elsewhere. (Variable cr.)
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MET
UA 803 Special Project |
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For MUA students only. Approval by program director and project advisor required
prior to registration. Students prepare an independent project demonstrating
application of previous program coursework to a problem situation
or policy issue within their area of specialization. (4 cr.)
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UA 804 Supervised Fieldwork |
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Limited to a maximum of four credits toward the degree requirements. Approval
by program director required prior to registration. Students spend
a minimum of 12 hours working with public agencies, community groups,
or private organizations. Seminar participation. (4 cr.)
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| MET UA 805 The Boston Urban Symposium |
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The Boston-based Urban Symposium will be a thematic spring symposium required for students in the Urban Affairs and City Planning programs. The class meetings will weave together the interdisciplinary nature of the urban planning and city planning professions. While the symposium topics will change each spring, professionals and industry leaders will be invited to lecture on their experiences, contemporary challenges to the professions, and major problems confronting the public and private sectors. Recognizing the unique and diverse characteristics of the Boston urban environment, the symposium themes will be drawn from topical issues that involve the greater Boston metropolitan area. The course features a combination of guest speakers and academic case studies that emphasize the interdisciplinary nature of urban planning. (4 cr.)
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