Abstract
This chapter describes a case of collaboration between academic planning researchers and communities of the Bulkley Valley in north-western British Columbia, Canada, in which planning to promote and control amenity migration might make a substantial contribution to economic and social sustainability. The experience of Bulkley Valley indicates that bottom-up planning for amenity migration can benefit from close collaboration between community officials such as planners, administrators, politicians and agency managers, on the one hand, and academic planning researchers on the other.