- Provides a user-friendly guide to planning law and procedure, covering topics such as development, planning permission, environmental impact assessment and enforcement
- Concise and comprehensive coverage of this notoriously difficult area of law
New to this edition
- Offers detailed explanation of all significant legislative reforms, including the Localism Act 2011
- Includes expert analysis of recent case law, including Save Britain's Heritage v SSCLG (2011) on demolition and Morge v Hampshire CC (2011) on habitat protection
- Includes a new chapter on neighbourhood planning and detailed coverage of the new National Planning Policy Framework
Telling & Duxbury's Planning Law and Procedure covers the fundamental principles of planning law in England and Wales. Now in its fifteenth edition, this guide to the complexities of planning law has been fully updated to take account of significant developments in legislation and case law since the previous edition.
The book comprehensively covers all aspects of planning law, with chapters on central and local administration, development, planning permission, environmental impact assessment, conservation, and review by the courts and ombudsmen. This edition looks closely at the far-reaching changes to planning law which were brought about by the Localism Act 2011, as well as the continuing repercussions of the Planning Act 2008. The book examines the effects of all recent legislative reforms, including the amendments to the General Permitted Development Order 1995 and the introduction of the Habitats and Species Regulations 2010. The new edition also contains expanded treatment of infrastructure planning, taking account of the 2008 planning reforms and their subsequent amendments.
Written in a concise and user-friendly style, this book is an ideal resource for lawyers specialising in planning law, planning professionals, and students studying planning law, surveying, town planning, architecture, and environmental law.
Readership: Planning solicitors and barristers; planning officers in local government authorities; students of planning law on undergraduate and vocational courses, environmental management, town planning, and architecture courses; developers.