Michael Mattingly (2012)

Michael Mattingly (2012)

|
Michael Mattingly (2012)


You Can't Always Get What You Want (Michael Mattingly)

|

A response by Michael Mattingly to the terms of reference provided by an international organisation for the design and delivery of an integrated training package on land governance, gender, and grassroots mechanisms.

Goodbye to Natural Resource Based Livelihoods? Crossing the Rural/Urban Divide (Michael Mattingly)

|

Continuing to manage natural resources helps peri-urban people to shift from rural to city-based livelihoods. Natural resource management can continue to be important to rural people while an expanding city or town engulfs them. Michael Mattingly and Pam Gregory present this message in the October 2009 issue of Local Environment (Vol. 4, No. 9). The article arose out of Gregory's analysis and synthesis of 10 years of research on peri-urban livelihoods that was financed by the Natural Resources Systems Programme of the UK's Department for International Development and monitored by Michael Mattingly on behalf of the DPU.

Making land work for the losers: policy responses to the urbanisation of rural livelihoods (Michael Mattingly)

|

In International Development Planning Review (vol 31, no 1), Michael Mattingly has speculated on how land policy might reduce the negative impacts of cities on the livelihoods of peri-urban farmers who tend to be poor and especially vulnerable to change. Using the findings of 10 years of research on peri-urban livelihoods in developing countries, financed by the Natural Resources Systems Programme of the UK Government Department for International Development which he advised, he assembled evidence of how land can figure in the changes to rural livelihoods.

Successful land delivery for low income housing in Iran (Michael Mattingly)

|

Michael Mattingly, Hamid Majedi (DPU PhD 1996) and Ramin Keivani (DPU PhD 1993) have recently published an account in Urban Studies of Iran's little-known experience in improving access to land for housing through large scale public land banking. Using the research of Hamid Majedi, the article examines the first 10 years of the implementation of a policy that adds to the debate surrounding the widely accepted notion of market-enabling in order to improve low-income housing provision in developing countries. This action of the Government of Iran effectively provided an alternative to land markets that have hitherto failed to serve low-income and even lower middle income households.

Making the project research: doing-by-learning with expertise (Michael Mattingly)

Michael Mattingly hopes to generate a debate by arguing in the latest issue of Public Administration and Development that, if a development project is destined to reach only a selection of its intended beneficiaries or to give them only momentary or uncertain benefits, there is a strong rationale for making it recasting it as a research project from which lessons can be learnt from the impact that it may not otherwise have.

Michael MATTINGLY

|
After 14 years of international experience as an urban planner in government and consultant organisations, Michael Mattingly gave 29 years to to post-graduate teaching, consultancy, and research at the Development Planning Unit, University College London. He has worked in over 20 countries of Africa, Asia, North and South America, and Europe. His interests now focus on:
  • urban land planning and urban land management that is innovative;
  • urban development management; and

Michael Mattingly - publications

forthcoming
Impacts of privatization of customary land rights in Zambia: A comparative study of rural and peri-urban locations. International Journal of Urban and Rural Research, (with Ng’ombe, A., Keivani, R, Stubbs, M).
2014
Secure property rights and development: Economic growth and household welfare property rights evidence paper. Department for International Development, Government of the U K, London, with Anna Locke and Giles Henley of the Overseas Development Institute, April 2014, available at: http://www.odi.org/publications/7694-literature-review-property-rights-development#downloads
2013
Ethnicity, corruption and violence in urban land conflict in Kenya. Urban Studies (with Obala, L.), available at: http://usj.sagepub.com/content/early/2013/12/23/0042098013513650.abstract
2012
Participatory approaches to land policy reform in Zambia: potentials and challenges. Environment and Planning A, (44), pp.1785-1800, (with Ng’ombe, A., Keivani, R, Stubbs, M).
2009
Goodbye to natural resource-based livelihoods? Crossing the rural/urban divide. Local Environment: the International Journal of Justice and Sustainability, vol. 14, no. 9, pp. 879- 890, Taylor and Francis (with Pam Gregory).
Making land work for the losers. Policy responses to the urbanisation of rural livelihoods. International Development Planning Review, vol. 31, no. 1, pp. 37-64.
2008
Public management of urban land, enabling markets and low income housing provision: the overlooked experience of Iran. Urban Studies, vol. 45, no. 9, pp 1825-1853, Sage (with Keivani, R and Majedi, H.)
Prospect lost: when a pilot project does not look to learn. Public Administration and Development, Vol 28, pp 1–9. Wiley, Chichester
2007
The Interface of Globalization and Peripheral Land in the Cities of the South: Implications for Urban Governance and Local Economic Development. International Journal of Urban and Regional Research, Blackwell Publishing, Oxford. Volume 31.2 June. With Ramin Keivani.
2005
The Peri-Urban Interface: Intervening to Improve Livelihoods, Natural Resources Systems Programme, HTSPE/Department for International Development, London, with P Gregory
Housing for the Poor in Sub-Saharan African Cities: Neo-Customary Land Delivery Systems, in Urban Innovations, Hamdi, N. (ed.), Intermediate Technology Press, with A Durand-Lasserve
2002
Spatial Planning in the Programming of Urban Investments: the Experience of Indonesia’s Integrated Urban Infrastructure Investment Programme, International Development Planning Review, vol 24, no 2, with H Winarso
2001
Living Between Urban and Rural Areas: Guidelines for Strategic Environmental Planning and Management of the Peri-Urban Interface (3 volumes), Development Planning Unit, University College London, London, with A Allen
Spatial Planning for Urban Infrastructure Investment: a Guide to Training and Practice, Development Planning Unit, University College London, London
2000
Institutional Structures and Processes for Environmental Planning and Management of the Peri-Urban Interface, in Direito e Governanca: Novas Tendencias da Gestao Urbano-Ambiental e a Reforma do Setor Publico, Fundacao Joao Pinheiro, Escola de Governo, Belo Horizonte, Brazil
1999
The Role of the Government of Urban Areas in the Creation of Urban Poverty, in African Urban Poverty, Nelson, N. and Jones, S, (eds), ITDG Press, Rugby, UK
Management of the Urban Environment, in The Challenge of Environmental Management in Urban Areas, Atkinson, A, Dávila, J., Fernandes, E., and Mattingly, M. (eds), Ashgate, Aldershot, UK
1995
Private Development and Public Management of Urban Land: a Case Study of Nepal, in Land Use Policy, April, Oxford
1994
Meaning of Urban Management, Cities, May, Oxford
1993
Urban Management Intervention in Land Markets, in Managing Fast Growing Cities, Devas, N and C Rakodi (editors), Longman, Harlow, U K
1991
Urban Land Markets in Developing Countries: Do Planners Know Enough About Them? , Urban Land Policy, Vol 8, No 2, April
1989
Implementing Planning with Teaching: Using Training to Make It Happen, Third World Planning Review, Nov
1988
From Town Planning to Development Planning: A Transition through Training, Habitat International, Vol 12
Self-Help Training for Planning Urban Development: an Innovation in On-the-Job Learning in Nigeria, Public Administration and Development, Vol 8

Michael MATTINGLY

|

m.mattingly@dpu-associates.net

Specialisation
Urban land planning and urban land management and capacity building, including training.
Country experience
Vietnam, India, Nepal, Indonesia, China, Taiwan, Malaysia; Egypt, Jordan; Ethiopia, Ghana, Nigeria, Kenya, Uganda, Tanzania, Zambia, Zimbabwe, South Africa, Namibia; Trinidad and Tobago, Mexico, Brazil, Argentina, Chile; Poland, USA, UK
Languages
English, French (reading only)
Educational and professional qualifications
1961
BS Civil Engineering
1963
MA City Planning
1965-2005
American Institute of Planners, American Institute of Certified Planners


Syndicate content