Urgent need for urban planners
A heavy and onerous responsibility of drawing up detailed blueprints for the construction of new towns and cities has devolved upon professionally qualified urban planners With India’s urban population slated to increase from 377 million currently to 600 million by 2030, and the number of urban households predicted to rise from 22 million to 91 million in 20 years, urban planning has emerged as a vitally important vocation. Professional urban planners have the onerous responsibility of drawing up detailed blueprints for construction of new cities and towns and devise optimal land use strategies to accommodate the influx of rural migrants into India’s already crowded towns and cities. The minimum academic qualification required for acceptability into this esoteric profession (only 5 percent of the country’s top 21,000 civic management professionals are formally trained) is a Master’s degree in urban or regional planning from an institute accredited by the Planning Accreditation Board, Delhi. For admission into a Masters programme of an accredited institution, a bachelor’s degree in architecture/urban design/economics/or environmental design is the usual requirement. Formal study programmes in urban planning are normatively offered by architecture, design, geography and/or public policy schools. Study programmes. The School of Planning and Architecture, Delhi (estb. 1959) is widely acknowledged as the country’s premier institute for town/ urban planning studies, offering undergrad, postgrad and doctoral programmes. Another well- reputed institute is the Centre for Environmental Planning & Technology, Ahmedabad. For working professionals already employed in urban planning and development in civic and municipal organisations, the Bangalore-based Indian Institute for Human Settlements (IIHS) offers a nine-month Urban Fellows Programme and Urban Practitioners Programme. Graduates and working professionals are eligible for admission into IIHS. Promoted in 2008 as a PPP (public-private partnership) education institution, IIHS is India’s first prospective independently funded and managed inter-disciplinary national university for research and innovation. Its objective is to research civic management issues. Remuneration prospects. Employment and career development prospects are excellent both in public and private organisations. In the public sector, certified urban planning professionals are urgently required in municipal corporations, local governments, and parastatal organisations. They are also needed in civil society organisations engaged with livelihood, advocacy, and civil rights, improved urban services delivery, community empowerment and social inclusion issues. In the private sector, certified urban planning professionals find ready employment in infrastructure development, real estate, construction and consultancy companies. Given the acute shortage of qualified urban/civic planners, this is a well-paid profession. Freshers can expect Rs.25,000 per month as a start with pay packages swelling to Rs.100,000 depending on performance and experience. “There is critical need for a radical shift in urban planning policy formulation and practices to build healthy and hospitable cities of the future. This calls for a new generation of implementers, managers, advocates, activists, game-changers, leaders, and urban planning practitioners. The greatest constraint of contemporary India is the availability of a sufficient number of well-educated professionals committed to the common good to discharge these roles,” laments Dr. Gautam Bhan, associate dean, School of Human Development and senior…