Planning literature information service

The application of zone-design methodology in the 2001 UK Census, by David Martin, Abigail Nolan & Mark Tranmer, 33(11), November 2001, p. 1949 (EPA). Testing for sample-selection bias due to location in the labour-market behaviour of respondents from the British Household Panel Survey, by Rob Crouchley & Gholamreza Oskrochi, 33(11), November 2001, p. 1963 (EPA). Public participation using web-based GIS, by Steve Carver, 28(6), November 2001, Special edition, p. 80 (EPB). Supporting imageability on the World Wide Web: Lynch’s Ž ve elements of the city in community planning, by Kheir Al-Kodmany, 28(6), November 2001, Special edition, p. 805 (EPB). Learning through visual systems to enhance the urban planning process, by Andy Hamilton, Nigel Trodd, Xiaonan Zhang, Terry Fernando & Karl Watson, 28(6), November 2001, Special edition, p. 833 (EPB). Argumentation maps: GIS-based discussion support for on-line planning, by Claus Rinner, 28(6), November 2001, Special edition, p. 847 (EPB). The Gulf of Maine Environmental Information Exchange: participation, observation, conversation, by P.C. Schroeder, P.R. Boudreau, C.E.W. Brehme, A.M. Boyce, A.J. Evans & A. Rahmanib, 28(6), November 2001, Special edition, p. 865 (EPB). Internet GIS for public participation, by ZhongRen Peng, 28(6), November 2001, Special edition, p. 889 (EPB). Public participation, GIS, and cyberdemocracy: evaluating on-line spatial decision support systems, by Steve Carver, Andrew Evans, Richard Kingston & Ian Turton, 28(6), November 2001, Special edition, p. 907 (EPB). Using GIS-based continuous methods for assessing agricultural land-use potential in sloping areas, by Sumbangan Baja, David M. Chapman & Deirdre Dragovich, 29(1), January 2002, p. 3 (EPB). Participatory planning and GIS: a PSS to bridge the gap, by Stan Geertman, 29(1), January 2002, p. 21 (EPB). Valuing locational externalities: a GIS and multilevel modelling approach, by Scott Orford, 29(1), January 2002, p. 105 (EPB). Bridging urban digital divides? Urban polarisation and information and communication technologies (ICTs), by Stephen Graham, 39(1), January 2002, p. 33 (US).