Abstract
“Borderlands: The Journal of Spatial Planning” is Ireland ICLRD’s informative annual journal. The publication featured articles on cross-border and inter-jurisdictional cooperation on the island of Ireland – and beyond.
John Driscoll of I2UD and Caroline Creamer of Maynooth University co-edited the first four editions of Borderlands, out of five issues published from January 2011 to 2016. Additionally, François Vigier and Christa Lee-Chuvala contributed an article to a sister organization’s annual publication The Journal of Cross Border Studies in Ireland.
See related I2UD projects below
Project Year: | 2011-2013 |
Project Type: | ICLRD Project |
Geographic Regions: | Ireland / Northern Ireland / Basel Metropolitan Area (Switzerland, France, and Germany) |
Reports: | |
Authors: | François Vigier; John Driscoll; Christa Lee-Chuvala; |
Sponsors: | CroSPlaN (European Union: INTERREG IVA and INTERREG IIIA); |
Categories: | Reconciliation and Development |
ID: | 2011_00_001 |
Related I2UD Projects
Related by – Directed by the International Centre for Local and Regional Development (ICLRD)
ICLRD: Annual Conference Reports on Urban Planning for the Island of Ireland, with CroSPlaN, INTERREG IVA and InterTradeIreland, 2004-2017
ICLRD: Spatial Strategies for Peace and Reconciliation on the Island of Ireland – Collected Research Reports by the International Centre for Local & Regional Development, 2006-2013
“The Atlas of the Island of Ireland: Mapping Social and Economic Change,” Publication by ICLRD, 2008 and 2015
“Shaping and Managing Cross-Border Development,” ICLRD Executive Training Program Materials, for Irish Border Cities: Newry-Dundalk Twin City Region & Northwest Region, Ireland, 2010-2014
ICLRD: Urban Reconciliation Case Studies for Public Housing Estates in Ireland and Northern Ireland, with Study Profile on the Basel Metropolitan Area, 2010-2012
“Borderlands: The Journal of Spatial Planning in Ireland,” ICLRD Publication, 2011, 2013
ICLRD Briefing Papers 2012-2016: “Implementation of River Basin Management Plans” and “Applying the Functional Territories Concept: Planning Beyond Borders