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Planning for Higher Education Journal

Published
April 1, 1994

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Controlling the Cost of Science Facilities

From Volume 22 Number 3 | Spring 1994

Abstract: Book Review: Toward MOre Efficient Building Methods for Academic Science Facilities, by higher Education Colloquium on Sicence Facilities' Task Force on Academic Facilities Costs. Association of American Universities, 1993. 52 pages. LC 93-77023.

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Planning for Higher Education Journal

Published
April 1, 1994

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The New World of America’s Faculty

From Volume 22 Number 3 | Spring 1994

Abstract: Book Review: The Invisible Faculty: Improving the Status of part-Timers in Higher Education, by Judith Gappa and David Leslie. Jossey-Bass, 1993. 324 pages. ISBN 1-55542-517-8

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Planning for Higher Education Journal

Published
April 1, 1994

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Getting to Yes on a Merger

Planners may need to develop a novel set of procedures for the hard times ahead.

From Volume 22 Number 3 | Spring 1994

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Planning for Higher Education Journal

Published
April 1, 1994

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Have You Examined Your Facilities Lately?

From Volume 22 Number 3 | Spring 1994

Abstract: Book review: The Facilities Audit: A Process for Improving Facilities Conditions, by Harvey Kaiser. Association of Higher Eudcation Facilities Officers (Alexandria, VA.), 1993. 102 pages. ISBN 0-913359-71-8

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Planning for Higher Education Journal

Published
April 1, 1994

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Presidents, Change, and Teamwork

From Volume 22 Number 3 | Spring 1994

Abstract: Book Review: Redesign Collegiate Leadership: TEams and Teamwork in Higher Euducation, by Estela Mara Bensimon and Anna Neumann. Johns Hopskins University Press, 1993. 182 pages. ISBN 0-8018-4561-0 How Academic Leadership Works: Understanding Success and Failure in College Presidency, by Robert Birnbaum. Jossey-Bass, 1992. ISBN 1-55542-466-X.

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Planning for Higher Education Journal

Published
April 1, 1994

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Rewards for the Professors

From Volume 22 Number 3 | Spring 1994

Abstract: Book review: Recognizing faculty Work: Reward Systems for the Year 2000, edited by robert Diamond and Bronwym Adam. New Directions for Higher Education, No. 81. Jossey-Bass, 1993. 125 pages. ISBN 1-55542-691-3

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Planning for Higher Education Journal

Published
April 1, 1994

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Social Change and American Campus Design

Campus planning and design has been radically altered by powerful social forces during the past 40 years.

From Volume 22 Number 3 | Spring 1994

Abstract: American campus design over the last 40 years has experienced an evolution in which each decade is dominated by themes that reflect the social change of the time. From the postwar period through the late 1950s, unprecedented pressures brought on by massive federal spending were met with unprecedented solutions offered by modernism. During the 1960s, new space needs required tremendous change in scale, resulting in overwhelming "Brutalist" concrete architecture. During this time, entirely new institutions provided numerous new prototypes. During the 1970s, campus unrest, the environmental movement, and demand for community participation caused a crisis in facilities planning. Responses typically involved partnerships to develop land with outside parties as a source of revenue while insuring the quality of the larger immediate environment. With declining student populations in the 1980s, emphasis was not on growth but on improving the campus environment to stay competitive. This need was answered by postmodernism and its resumption of "stagecraft" in campus design. The 1990s can been seen as a continuation of this, yet financial austerity and swiftly changing technology suggested that greater flexibility be built into new facilities. Thoughout these changes, the campus remains a place where "intellectual inquiry, socialization, and day-to-day living" exist in a "finite, integrated setting," which modifies itself to the needs of each successive generation.

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Planning for Higher Education Journal

Published
April 1, 1994

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A Bibliography for Planners

From Volume 22 Number 3 | Spring 1994

Abstract: Book Review: Campus Planning and Facility Development: A Selected Bibliography, by Ira Fink and Nicole Fardet. Ira Fink & Associates (Berkley, CA.), 1992. 64 pages.

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