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Joshua Woods's avatar

Thanks so much for this article. I found my way into planning (my undergraduate degree is in business), and it wasn't until I was well on the way into my career that I picked up a planning adjacent degree (sustainable urban development).

As I've made my way through this space, I've become increasingly grateful for my nontraditional path into the field for the perspective it provides. Lately, in describing myself, I've tended to avoid "urban planner," instead opting for "urban practitioner," since so much of what makes for vibrant places is emergent. I see my job as facilitating the conditions, for life to flourish, which feels much less path dependent than planning suggests.

Keep up the great writing!

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The AI Architect's avatar

Powerful articel on the outsider paradox. What stands out is how Planning Inc. celebrates these heroes in retrospect but actively resisted them in real time. Jane Jacobs wasn't just ignored, she was activley fought by planners defending urban renewal. The pattern suggests the field's gatekeeping function might be more about protecting turf than advancing good urbanism. If Shoup pitched parking reform at an APA conference today without his econ credentials, would he even get a hearing?

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