Projects, participation and planning across boundaries in Göttingen

This paper explores efforts to coordinate strategies promoting sustainable development – with specific focus on mobility and transport in climate change mitigation – across administrative boundaries in the city and county of Göttingen, Germany. The paper questions the possibility to develop and alig...

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Main Authors: Paul Fenton, Fanny Paschek
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2018-01-01
Series:Regional Studies, Regional Science
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/21681376.2018.1428498
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spelling doaj-01547692a5c247bbb311939f3b5434872020-11-25T03:08:42ZengTaylor & Francis GroupRegional Studies, Regional Science2168-13762018-01-0151818910.1080/21681376.2018.14284981428498Projects, participation and planning across boundaries in GöttingenPaul Fenton0Fanny Paschek1Linköping UniversityUniversity of Greenwich, Old Royal Naval CollegeThis paper explores efforts to coordinate strategies promoting sustainable development – with specific focus on mobility and transport in climate change mitigation – across administrative boundaries in the city and county of Göttingen, Germany. The paper questions the possibility to develop and align strategic objectives and implementation across administrative boundaries when relying on short-term project funds. The experiences of key stakeholders in Göttingen are presented, with reference to empirical data from a document and interview study. Results indicate that reliance on short-term, project-based funding from external sources offers both opportunities and challenges for locally and regionally integrated strategy formulation and implementation. Five factors shaping the strategy space of actors are used to frame the analysis, with findings suggesting the need for further research on how local authorities overcome capacity and resource limitations, particularly with respect to complex challenges such as climate change.http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/21681376.2018.1428498City and county administrationscapacityclimate changesustainable mobilitytransportfundingparticipatory processes
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Paul Fenton
Fanny Paschek
spellingShingle Paul Fenton
Fanny Paschek
Projects, participation and planning across boundaries in Göttingen
Regional Studies, Regional Science
City and county administrations
capacity
climate change
sustainable mobility
transport
funding
participatory processes
author_facet Paul Fenton
Fanny Paschek
author_sort Paul Fenton
title Projects, participation and planning across boundaries in Göttingen
title_short Projects, participation and planning across boundaries in Göttingen
title_full Projects, participation and planning across boundaries in Göttingen
title_fullStr Projects, participation and planning across boundaries in Göttingen
title_full_unstemmed Projects, participation and planning across boundaries in Göttingen
title_sort projects, participation and planning across boundaries in göttingen
publisher Taylor & Francis Group
series Regional Studies, Regional Science
issn 2168-1376
publishDate 2018-01-01
description This paper explores efforts to coordinate strategies promoting sustainable development – with specific focus on mobility and transport in climate change mitigation – across administrative boundaries in the city and county of Göttingen, Germany. The paper questions the possibility to develop and align strategic objectives and implementation across administrative boundaries when relying on short-term project funds. The experiences of key stakeholders in Göttingen are presented, with reference to empirical data from a document and interview study. Results indicate that reliance on short-term, project-based funding from external sources offers both opportunities and challenges for locally and regionally integrated strategy formulation and implementation. Five factors shaping the strategy space of actors are used to frame the analysis, with findings suggesting the need for further research on how local authorities overcome capacity and resource limitations, particularly with respect to complex challenges such as climate change.
topic City and county administrations
capacity
climate change
sustainable mobility
transport
funding
participatory processes
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/21681376.2018.1428498
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