Retail giants and other agents of urban sprawl have devastated small
town character and have helped produce a new wave of interest in
participatory planning. Using a compelling and dramatic local case-study,
the book analyzes the politics of land-use planning at the end of the
twentieth century and provides a timely practical and theoretical vehicle
through which scholars, community activists and policymakers alike can
understand the actual terrain and terms of contestation. In examining the
step-by-step process of environmental impact assessment in a local
context, the authors realistically assess as well the obstacles to
meaningful participatory democracy within structures established by the
logic of the present liberal capitalist order.
"Megamall on the Hudson details the drama of environmental and
land-use politics in a case study that pitted commercial 'big box'
developers against community activists and environmentalists. The authors
weave together legal and political analysis, theory and practice, from an
insider's perspective that illuminates the interplay of community
organizing and development pressures, state environmental policies and
legal tactics, media coverage and electoral politics, persistance and
personality too. Students of environmental planning, land-use development,
and democratic politics more generally will find the book richly rewarding
for years to come." John Forester, Professor of City and Regional
Planning, Cornell University and author of The Deliberative Practitioner:
Encouraging Participatory Processes and Planning in the Face of Power
"This is a Gothic tale of political intrigue: of whisperings, picket
lines, and small town Machiavellians. Here the good old boy's network meets
the dueling experts, the suited hucksters, and the world's largest retail
corporation. There are two things you should never watch being made:
sausage and legislation. Now add one more: land use decisions. Beneath the
veneer of public process are the capricious circumstances of impenetrable,
quirky judgments." Al Norman, editor of the Sprawl-Busters Alert
newsletter and web site and author of Slam-Dunking Wal-Mart! How You Can
Stop Superstore Sprawl in Your Home Town