专业详情
The unequal distribution of income, jobs, and welfare across cities, places, and regions is one of the defining issues of our time, and it is increasingly seen as a waste of economic potential, as well as a challenge for social cohesion and sustainable development. The MPhil in Planning, Growth and Regeneration (PGR) is the flagship programme of the University of Cambridge aiming to address issues of urban and regional planning and development.
The programme is based on renowned planning research and practice at the Department of Land Economy, with input from leading planning and relevant professionals. It provides advanced skills training to professionals involved in managing local economic growth and regeneration through place-based public policy, regulating land use, and undertaking strategic planning at different subnational scales.
The course features a multidisciplinary approach which draws from Urban and Spatial Planning, Economics, and Geography, with additional specialism in Law, Finance, and Environmental Policy. It aims to enable students to 1) understand the nature, processes and challenges of planning, growth, and regeneration in an urban/regional context, 2) develop key analytical skills for assessing and devising spatial planning solutions based on international best practice; and 3) work cooperatively with relevant professionals to develop effective and just planning policy solutions.
Core and optional modules focus on both Global North and Global South policy examples and case studies, with the goal of identifying the different spatial planning and developmental challenges and opportunities at different urban, local, and regional scales. Most teaching material draws on original cutting-edge research carried out by lecturers and international best practices, combining quantitative and qualitative research methods.
The focus of the course is applied and policy-relevant, and graduates from PGR are expected to join private (such as consultancies, real estate developers and financial professionals) and public organisations (such as civil service and NGOs) leading spatial planning and development practice at the subnational, national, and international scale. PGR is also an excellent starting point for a career in postgraduate research in local and regional planning and development, with the possibility to progress to the PhD in Land Economy.
The programme is targeted at two groups of applicants. First, those who have finished a degree in a relevant discipline and aim to gain a better understanding of urban and regional planning and development, and build up applied research skills. Second, practitioners, managers and planners who have some work experience in relevant sectors and want to widen their current knowledge in the interdisciplinary environment of Land Economy.
The MPhil in Planning, Growth and Regeneration is designed to provide students with the following competences in spatial planning and development:
- Understanding the process of and key considerations for land-use and infrastructure planning and development at various spatial levels;
- Designing efficient and effective spatial planning policies to manage transformative socio-economic, environmental and technological changes;
- Evaluating alternative approaches for the design and implementation of spatial plans, and then assessing their outcomes;
- Addressing the legal implications of planning policies for landownership, land/property law and use rights, and resources management;
- Developing an interdisciplinary and cooperative approach for understanding and managing growth and decline.
Learning Outcomes
On completion of the course, students will:
- Have gained in-depth knowledge of contemporary urban/regional planning and development topics, explored through both academic and practical policy lenses.
- Have learned to identify, critically review and synthetise large amounts of literature from a wide range of sources.
- Be able to identify the factors that lead to variations in local, urban, and regional growth and development, and the consequences of territorial imbalances for society, the economy, and the environment.
- Possess the skills to assess the scope for planning policy intervention to manage growth and decline, and identify the opportunities and constraints imposed by socio-economic, environmental, and institutional factors.
- Have developed independent research skills, for example, the ability to independently identify, critically review and synthetise a wide range of materials from multiple sources, as well as being able to identify research gaps, conduct sound empirical research designs, and develop coherent arguments in both oral and written format.