1. Developing Green Cities: Explaining Variation in Canadian Green Building Policies.
- Author
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Schwartz, Elizabeth
- Subjects
- *
SUSTAINABLE buildings , *URBAN planning , *ENVIRONMENTAL policy , *GREENHOUSE gas mitigation , *CLIMATE change prevention , *CITIES & towns , *GOVERNMENT policy , *BUILDINGS -- Law & legislation - Abstract
Buildings produce a large proportion of Canada's greenhouse gas emissions and municipalities control a number of policy levers that can help to reduce those emissions. This article explains variation among Canadian cities regarding policies adopted to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, with a particular focus on green building standards. By applying insights from the study of the politics of public policy to urban politics, this article finds that while electoral disincentives prevent most cities from enacting high impact green building policies, the success of some cities can be attributed to the influence of independent municipal environment departments. These departments facilitate policy learning by providing information and resources. The findings suggest that policy makers could improve the effectiveness of local climate change policy by creating municipal environment departments that have organizational capacity—funding, staff, and a cross-cutting mandate—and are insulated from interference from politicians and line departments. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2016
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