3,287 results on '"Urban and Regional Studies Institute"'
Search Results
2. Combining mobile measurements on noise and soundscape evaluation in a University Campus after a renovation plan
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Margaritis, Efstathios, van Kann, Ferry, and Urban and Regional Studies Institute
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soundscape ,urban design - Abstract
This paper contributes on the popular topic of smartphone-based noise mapping and in general participatory sensing. It has a dual aim as on one hand it provides a methodological framework on the spatio-temporal variability of noise and soundscape and in parallel, it investigates the role of green space and water features on soundscape preference with respect to certain activities. The study was organised in Zernike University Campus in Groningen, the Netherlands around 13 predefined locations, equipped with seating facilities. A big part of the study area was recently redesigned as part of the Zernike promenade. Students, enrolled in the course of Environment and Engineering, used the ArcGIS 123 Survey and the NoiseCapture mobile applications for soundscape and noise data collection respectively. Statistical analysis and GIS tools were used to investigate the noise and soundscape variability in different time periods from morning to evening. Additionally, the effect of green space and water features on soundscape quality and users' preference is identified by exploring the links with activities related to socializing and relaxing. The contribution of the above-mentioned technologies in participatory planning and urban design interventions is discussed parallel to the educational benefit of these tools in the achievement of the course learning objectives.
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- 2023
3. Exploring Justice in the Process of Redesigning Local Development Strategies for LEADER
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Franziska Lengerer, Tialda Haartsen, Annett Steinführer, and Urban and Regional Studies Institute
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Cultural Studies ,Linguistics and Language ,History ,rural development ,LEADER ,participation ,social justice ,spatial justice ,community-led local development ,Anthropology ,Language and Linguistics - Abstract
After its first funding period from 1991 to 1994, LEADER was positively evaluated as a successful strategy to empower actors at the regional level, enable regional development and contribute to territorial cohesion within the European Union. Critical studies, however, have highlighted elitist tendencies in LEADER processes and asked whether the proclaimed goal of strengthening ‘the local’ contributes to new or other forms of social and spatial injustice. Our research focus lies in how representation, distribution, and recognition—as the three interrelated dimensions of justice according to Nancy Fraser—are featured in the discourse related to redesigning a local development strategy (LDS). During this process, which is conceived as the most open and inclusive phase in each LEADER funding period, we conducted expert interviews and participatory observations in a case study region and gathered media reports, documents, and official regulations. In our analysis of issues of representation, distribution, and recognition, we also focus on the spatial scales that are referred to and the ways in which the involved actors challenge and justify the status quo. Our analysis explicates the actors’ implicit normative understandings as well as their different perspectives and positions considering perceived injustice. Even though the LDS process provides opportunities to negotiate these positions and to work towards more just representation, distribution, and recognition, they are partly constrained by structural and individual dependencies.
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- 2023
4. The Impact of Boundary Spanning by Public Managers on Collaboration and Infrastructure Project Performance
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Shreya Anna Satheesh, Tim Busscher, Stefan Verweij, Jos Arts, Ingmar Van Meerkerk, Governance and Pluralism, and Urban and Regional Studies Institute
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Public Administration ,public–private collaboration ,Strategy and Management ,boundary spanning ,and Infrastructure ,SDG 9 - Industry, Innovation, and Infrastructure ,project performance ,Innovation ,SDG 9 - Industry ,public infrastructure projects - Abstract
The public sector is increasingly collaborating with the private sector in the development of large-scale public infrastructure projects. However, the difficulties arising due to working across organizational boundaries are often detrimental to project performance. This article argues that boundary-spanning activities can enhance the quality of collaboration and subsequently the performance of projects. Boundary spanners utilize relational governance mechanisms and undertake conscious endeavors for building interorganizational relationships by engaging in activities, such as coordination and communication with the stakeholders. The data for this study are composed of 158 survey responses from lead public managers involved in Dutch national public infrastructure projects. The data are analyzed using structural equation modeling. The study demonstrates that the quality of collaboration has a significant impact on the performance of the project during the implementation phase. Further, we find that the different boundary-spanning activities are interconnected and that they have a significant positive relationship on project performance, with a mediating effect of collaboration. The study concludes that, and shows how boundary spanners are vital to the collaborative processes through which public infrastructure projects are implemented.
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- 2023
5. 'Just as much as there is Islamophobia, there is racism'
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Sander Van Lanen, Bettina Van Hoven, Reza Shaker, and Urban and Regional Studies Institute
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Urban Studies ,encounter ,Geography, Planning and Development ,othering ,The Muslim Other ,Amsterdam ,embodiment - Abstract
Conceptualizing Othering as an intercorporeal encounter in urban space, the paper explores how Otherness is lived in the networks of everyday embodied urban living of young Muslims. We provide an in-depth understanding of the ways through which corporeal Othering is spatially organized and practised within everyday urban space felt and lived with different intensities and registered in the sensing bodies of young Muslims as part of their lived embodied urbanism in Amsterdam. We shed light on how the (re)construction of the Muslim Other is spatialized concerning intersectionality, clothing, and stereotyping.
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- 2023
6. Ethnic tourism in China
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Arie Stoffelen, Frank Vanclay, Bei Tian, and Urban and Regional Studies Institute
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Economic growth ,China ,endogenous rural development ,media_common.quotation_subject ,SOCIAL IMPACT ASSESSMENT ,COMMUNITY PARTICIPATION ,POWER ,Geography, Planning and Development ,rural tourism ,EMPOWERMENT ,Ethnic group ,Social Sciences ,tourism enclaves ,Social Sciences - Other Topics ,ECOTOURISM ,Empowerment ,media_common ,Hospitality, Leisure, Sport & Tourism ,Government ,social impacts of tourism ,community empowerment ,cultural tourism ,PERSPECTIVES ,Tourism, Leisure and Hospitality Management ,hosts and guests ,Business ,Tourism ,responsible tourism ,community-based tourism - Abstract
External tourism development organizations are frequently utilized by the various levels of the Chinese government to develop tourism and boost local economies. However, this often occurs with limited community participation. We explore the role of institutional arrangements in how people within host communities are empowered and disempowered in such situations by looking into the experiences of Fenghuang Ancient Town and two Miao villages in Hunan Province, China. In-depth interviews, participant and non-participant observation, and document analysis were undertaken. Certain community members were empowered by tourism development, especially financially. However, top-down decision-making, local elite systems, cultural habits and responses to these challenges enabled power inequality. This inequality occurred between government, tourism developer and communities, and within the communities. Only through devolution of power can social impacts from tourism development be improved but, even then, local power imbalances may influence the equity of tourism-related outcomes. ispartof: Tourism Geographies vol:25 issue:2-3 pages:1-20 status: Published online
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- 2023
7. Bats in the City
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Angelica Caiza-Villegas, Bettina van Hoven, Owain Jones, and Urban and Regional Studies Institute
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Sociology and Political Science ,Veterinary (miscellaneous) ,Anthropology ,Animal Science and Zoology ,bat advocates ,bat conservation ,urban ecologies ,actor network ,becoming-with animal ,Education - Abstract
This article explores practices of citizen bat conservation in the city through the lens of becoming-with animal. The article draws on insights gained from practices related to bat conservation efforts through interviews and participant observation with bat advocates in the city of Groningen, Netherlands. We show how becoming-with happens and why it is significant to humans and bats. We argue that becoming-with is dynamic and contingent on the elements present in different human-bat networks which comprise bodies, technologies, practices, forms of knowledge, urban spaces and places, and result in varied relations that bats and bat conservationists enter into. Equally, we observe the various outcomes of local bat conservation efforts. We argue that each of these ways of becoming-with must be considered valid, and is needed, in the big picture of bat conservation efforts in the city.
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- 2023
8. Symbolic mobility capital to fight the social stigma of staying
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Tialda Haartsen, Eva Mærsk, Annette Aagaard Thuesen, and Urban and Regional Studies Institute
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staying ,Sociology and Political Science ,Student life ,Social stigma ,Higher education ,business.industry ,General Social Sciences ,Identity (social science) ,Gender studies ,leaving ,student life ,Identity ,Capital (economics) ,Narrative ,peripherality ,Sociology ,Young adult ,Life-span and Life-course Studies ,business - Abstract
Although the outmigration choices of young adults from peripheral to urban regions to attend higher education have been researched extensively, young adults’ decisions to stay in, nearby, or return to, the peripheral home region have received less attention. This paper explores how young adults who are engaged in higher education re-imagine narratives related to notions of ‘leaving’ in their mobility biographies to justify their choice to stay in or return to their peripheral home region. We conducted in-depth interviews with postgraduate students in peripheral regions in Denmark and the Netherlands. Our findings confirm the existence of a mobility imperative for young adults in peripheral regions reproduced by both our participants and their social relations. However, we additionally find that young adults re-imagine narratives of ‘leaving’ which simultaneously correspond with contemporary discourses on place and residential mobility in the form of valuing (dis)connection to place, experiencing urban lifestyles, and life phase transitions, but which also open up possibilities for re-evaluating the attractiveness of often stigmatized peripheral regions. We suggest that narratives of ‘leaving’ during higher education help young adults to build what we call ‘symbolic mobility capital’ to mitigate the negative connotations related to living in a peripheral region.
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- 2023
9. Long-Term Trends in Obesity Prevalence by Socio-Economic Group in Five European Countries and the USA
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Eva Kagenaar, Wanda Monika Johanna Van Hemelrijck, Anton E. Kunst, Fanny Janssen, Public and occupational health, APH - Global Health, APH - Health Behaviors & Chronic Diseases, Netherlands Interdisciplinary Demographic Institute (NIDI), and Urban and Regional Studies Institute
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Male ,Adult ,Health (social science) ,Socio-economic inequalities ,Physiology (medical) ,Smoking ,Prevalence ,Diffusion of innovations theory ,Humans ,Educational Status ,Obesity ,Diffusion of Innovation ,Obesity trends - Abstract
Introduction: Cross-national comparison suggests that the timing of the obesity epidemic differs across socio-economic groups (SEGs). Similar to the smoking epidemic, these differences might be described by the diffusion of innovations theory, which states that health behaviours diffuse from higher to lower SEGs. However, the applicability of the diffusion of innovations theory to long-term time trends in obesity by SEG is unknown. We studied long-term trends in the obesity prevalence by SEG in England, France, Finland, Italy, Norway, and the USA and examined whether trends are described by the diffusion of innovations theory. Methods: Obesity prevalence from 1978 to 2019 by educational level, sex, and age group (25+ years) from health surveys was harmonized, age-standardized, Loess-smoothed, and visualized. Prevalence rate differences were calculated, and segmented regression was performed to obtain annual percentage changes, which were compared over time and across SEGs. Results: Obesity prevalence among lower educated groups has exceeded that of higher educated groups, except among American men, in all countries throughout the study period. A comparable increase across educational levels was observed until approximately 2000. Recently, obesity prevalence stagnated among higher educated groups in Finland, France, Italy, and Norway and lower educated groups in England and the USA. Discussion: Recent trends in obesity prevalence by SEG are mostly in line with the diffusion of innovations theory; however, no diffusion from higher to lower SEGs at the start of the epidemic was found. The stagnation among higher SEGs but not lower SEGs suggests that the latter will likely experience the greatest future burden.
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- 2022
10. Spatial mobility patterns and COVID-19 incidence
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Hinke Haisma, Bart Roelofs, Dimitris Ballas, Arjen Edzes, Urban and Regional Studies Institute, University of Groningen, and Regional labour market
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ruimtelijke analyse ,demography ,spatial analysis ,Geography, Planning and Development ,coronavirus ,COVID-19 ,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law ,Development ,mobiliteit ,demografie ,mobility - Abstract
A key policy measure introduced by governments worldwide at the beginning of the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic was to restrict travel, highlighting the importance of people's mobility as one of the key contributors to spreading severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2). However, there was little consistency regarding the geographical scale or the severity of these measures. Little use was made of commuting and travel data to inform decisions on when, where and at what level restrictions should be applied. We aim to contribute to regional policy by providing evidence that could be used to inform future policy debates on the most effective travel restrictions to impose during a pandemic. We present an analysis of the impact of mobility between municipalities on COVID-19 incidence in the Netherlands. We used multiple linear regression models and geographical information systems to gain insight into the association between mobility-related factors and demographic, socio-economic and geographical factors with COVID-19 incidence in municipalities. Our results indicate that spatial mobility patterns, when combined with COVID-19 incidence in municipalities of origin, were associated with increased COVID-19 incidence in municipalities of destination. In addition, various regional characteristics were associated with municipal incidence. By conducting our analyses over three different periods, we highlight the importance of time for COVID-19 incidence. In the light of ongoing mitigation measures (and possible future events), spatial mobility patterns should be a key factor in exploring regional mobility restrictions as an alternative for national lockdowns.
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- 2022
11. Strategic archetypes of planning processes
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Lasse Gerrits, Peter K Marks, Sofia Pagliarin, Ward Rauws, Urban and Regional Studies Institute, and Public Administration
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Urban Studies ,Geography, Planning and Development ,Architecture ,fitness landscapes ,archetypes ,strategic planning ,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law ,evolutionary planning ,complexity ,Nature and Landscape Conservation - Abstract
Complex planning processes bear the hallmarks of evolution, in that actors seek to obtain the results that serve their needs best. That is, seek to increase their fitness. As in biological evolution, there are multiple pathways toward fitness. With the rise of adaptive planning approaches, the question how such pathways can be identified in strategic planning processes becomes pivotal. To answer this question, we adapt the fitness landscape model from biology and analyze several strategic planning processes. The analysis demonstrates that one can trace how different pathways to fitness emerge, and which pathways are more successful given the circumstances. We then synthesize these pathways into six strategic archetypes of actor behavior and of interactions between actors.
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- 2022
12. Regeneration at a distance from the state
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Stephen Leitheiser, Alex Franklin, Elen-Maarja Trell, Lummina Horlings, Department of Social Sciences, and Urban and Regional Studies Institute
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Sociology and Political Science - Abstract
Modern industrial agriculture is increasingly confronted with social and environmental problems and contradictions. Glaring problems are widely acknowledged, but have not spurred a major shift towards a sustainable agricultural future. Meanwhile, many individual citizens, farmers and collective initiatives are, themselves, already busy navigating towards solutions. The role of ‘ordinary’ citizens, small-scale farmers, and alternative food networks in building food sovereignty has been widely discussed in the literature, and is acknowledged by scholars as crucial in navigating towards sustainable and agroecological food systems (Anderson et al., 2021; Duncan et al., 2020; Marsden et al., 2018; Vivero-Pol et al., 2019). Despite this potential, the practices of these individuals and groups have not yet been able to gain significant traction as part of building a broader, systemic political alternative in public discourse and policy making (Desmarais et al., 2017; IPES-Food, 2019; Marsden et al., 2018; Van der Ploeg, 2020). Instead, they have persisted in the margins with minimal support or recognition from governments and scientific institutions (Anderson, 2019; Anderson and Bruil, 2021; Vanloqueren and Baret, 2009). Mainstream political debates on the direction of food system change too often overlook these ‘seeds of change’ that are scattered all around them, dormant, and waiting for the right conditions to grow into robust alternatives. Agrarian political economy has long served as an important lens through which the com-plex processes that shape food systems can be understood (Buttel, 2001; Friedmann, 1993; Friedmann and McMichael, 1989). Traditionally, this scholarship has focused primarily on a critical analysis of the ways in which market dynamics and the modern state structure the organisation of agri-food systems (Bernstein, 2017; Tilzey, 2019). As food-system-related crises intensify, some scholars have identified a need to expand political economy scholarship beyond expert analysis to include a role of co-constructing, or ‘co-theorising’ (Carolan, 2013) alternatives, with citizens engaged in political praxis (Duncan et al., 2019; Levkoe et al., 2020). That is, in other words, a more post-structuralist agrarian political economy (and ecol-ogy), grounded in critical dialogue with social movements, civil society organizations, and citizens who are confronting norms and conventions in practice and building alternatives (Leff, 2015).Following from the need to broaden and connect such perspectives, this paper combines a ‘zoomed-out’ political economic analysis of Dutch agriculture with a more ‘zoomed-in’ em-pirical exploration of farmers working to build new food systems from the ground up. The main questions we address are: how do new entrant proto-regenerative farmers (a term which we explain below) in the Netherlands imagine and engage in the construction of regenerative socio-ecological relationships? What strategies do farmers use to carve out spaces of regenera-tion?
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- 2022
13. The appreciation of rural areas and their contribution to young adults’ staying expectations
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Henk Hofstede, Koen Salemink, Tialda Haartsen, and Urban and Regional Studies Institute
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Sociology and Political Science ,Geography, Planning and Development ,Development - Abstract
Decisions to live in a certain place or region are partly prompted by material and symbolic factors of that place or region. This paper focuses on the importance of these factors for rural young adults based on a household survey in three rural areas in the Netherlands, Northern Ireland and Germany. It examines how rural young adults appreciate material and symbolic factors, and to what extent they play a role in their expectations to stay in the area. The results show that the environmental characteristics of rural areas and senses of belonging to rural areas, and not so much the social network in those areas, are highly appreciated and important for expectations to stay. Symbolic factors are slightly more important than material factors, but this differs for specific geographical contexts. Furthermore, while a relatively low share felt part of their local community, a sense of community still played a major role in expecting to stay. Overall, this paper shows that some factors that play a role in staying expectations are already highly appreciated, whereas factors that show lower appreciations do not always play a role in staying expectations, and thus may be of less concern for policy makers.
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- 2022
14. Mapping institutional change: Analysing strategies for institutional design in collective infrastructure renewal
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Jos Arts, Robin Neef, Tim Busscher, Stefan Verweij, and Urban and Regional Studies Institute
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Public Administration ,Health Policy ,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law - Abstract
Actors' toolset to affect institutional change by doing institutional design is limited because criteria for effective institutional design are often too general and abstract. This paper aims to identify institutional design strategies and explore how they influence institutional change. The theoretical framework builds on Ostrom's Institutional Analysis and Development framework to map institutional change, and it identifies six institutional design strategies: framing, puzzling, powering, network composition, network outcomes, and network interaction. A comparative case study on Dutch infrastructure renewal opportunities – one case's institutional design interventions attained collective renewal, the other did not – maps institutional change in decision-making rounds through institutional directions. Key findings include that institutional change of position, boundary, choice, and information rules first is conducive to collective action. Moreover, mimicry of especially choice rules is pivotal. Furthermore, institutional design strategies have a configurational nature: microlevel strategies have mesolevel consequences, and some configurations instigate change, whereas others cause dynamic inertia.
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- 2022
15. Heel Holland Matcht
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Erik Merx, Arjen Edzes, Harm van Lieshout, Human Capital, Regionale arbeidsmarkt, and Urban and Regional Studies Institute
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person-organisation fit ,arbeidsmarkt ,skills ,Competentiemanagement ,ontwikkeling van vaardigheden ,skills development ,skills mismatch ,strategische personeelsplanning ,life long development ,Technologische ontwikkelingen ,labour market ,skills matching ,competence management ,skillsmatching ,lifelong development ,skills gaps ,matching van vaardigheden ,HR-instruments ,HR-instrumenten ,Leven Lang Ontwikkelen ,technological developments - Abstract
In de context van de zeer dynamische en steeds krapper wordende arbeidsmarkt anno 2022 pleiten verschillende organisaties voor het centraal stellen op de arbeidsmarkt van vaardigheden ofwel ‘skills’. In Nederland zijn er verschillende initiatieven gericht op het ontwikkelen van een skillsmarkt, maar van het grootschalig samenbrengen van werkzoekenden en werkgevers aan de hand van skills is voorlopig nog geen sprake. Dat komt mede omdat werkgevers de meerwaarde van skillsbenaderingen vaak nog te onduidelijk vinden. In dit artikel bespreken wij eerst de fundamentele bouwstenen van skillsmatches om vervolgens vanuit het perspectief van de werkgever de meerwaarde en vereisten van skillsmatching door te nemen. Fundamenteel aan skillsmatching is het in beeld brengen van skills. Daarvoor is het belang- rijk om skills te objectiveren, aan te tonen en te wegen. Die skills kunnen vervolgens gebruikt worden tijdens het matchingsproces om vraag en aanbod op de arbeidsmarkt op basis van skills samen te bren- gen. Dat kan lonen voor werkgevers omdat zij daarmee (1) een grotere groep van geschikte kandidaten, (2) een fijnmaziger zicht op de kwaliteit van kandidaten, (3) een verbetering van de arbeidsorganisatie en (4) een stimulans voor het leren op de werkvloer kunnen bereiken. Om dat mogelijk te maken is het van belang dat werkgevers en HR-managers hun vraag naar arbeid uitdrukken in skills, gestructureerd hun skillsmatches evalueren en in kaart welke skills zij in de toekomst verwachten nodig te hebben.
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- 2022
16. Distilling best practice principles for public participation in impact assessment follow-up
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Angus Morrison-Saunders, Jos Arts, Jenny Pope, Alan Bond, Francois Retief, and Urban and Regional Studies Institute
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adaptive management ,monitoring ,evaluation ,governance ,stakeholder engagement ,Geography, Planning and Development ,impact assessment follow-up ,Public participation ,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law ,auditing - Abstract
Building upon principles for public engagement and for impact assessment (IA) follow-up, this paper distils best practice principles specific to public participation in IA follow-up. Literature review, followed by a simple survey distributed to IA follow-up and/or public engagement practitioners, helped identify key principles and related published sources. Twelve principles for public participation in IA follow-up are presented, which relate to (1) mandatory public reporting, (2) ease of access to published material, (3) full transparency, (4) clarity about the IA follow-up process, (5) input to decision-making, (6) continuous access to IA follow-up activities and feedback, (7) independent verification, (8) two-way communication, (9) partnerships, (10) Indigenous inclusion, (11) participatory monitoring, and (12) involvement in adaptive management. They form a ladder of public engagement; the initial principles pertain mainly to information provision, with increasing levels of participation and legitimacy inherent in the latter principles. The principles are intended to provide a foundation for practitioners and community members involved in IA follow-up to enhance practice at all stages of the development life cycle, helping to achieve sustainable development.
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- 2022
17. Early-life exposure to economic stress and metabolic risks in young adulthood: the children of the reunification in East Germany
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Lara Bister, Fanny Janssen, Tobias Vogt, Urban and Regional Studies Institute, and Netherlands Interdisciplinary Demographic Institute (NIDI)
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Adult ,Adolescent ,Epidemiology ,Infant, Newborn ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Infant ,environmental health ,Body Mass Index ,Young Adult ,cohort studies ,life course epidemiology ,Child, Preschool ,Germany ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Humans ,Female ,Germany, East ,Child - Abstract
BackgroundResearch on the long-term health consequences of early-life exposure to economic crises is scarce. We examine for the first time the long-term effects of early-life exposure to an economic crisis on metabolic health risks. We study objective health measures, and exploit the quasi-experimental situation of the postreunification economic crisis in East Germany.MethodsData were drawn from two waves of the longitudinal German Health Interview and Examination Survey for Children and Adolescents (2003–2006, 2014–2017). We compared 392 East Germans who were exposed to the economic crisis in utero and at ages 0–5 with 1123 of their West German counterparts using propensity score matching on individual and family characteristics. We assessed blood pressure, cholesterol, blood fat and body mass index (BMI); both combined as above-average metabolic health risks and individually at ages 19–30.ResultsEarly-life exposure to the economic crisis significantly increased the number of above-average metabolic health risks in young adulthood by 0.1482 (95% CI 0.0169 to 0.2796), which was 5.8% higher compared with no exposure. Among individuals exposed in utero, only females showed significant effects. Early-life exposure to the economic crisis was associated with increased systolic (0.9969, 95% CI −0.2806 to 2.2743) and diastolic blood pressure (0.6786, 95% CI −0.0802 to 1.4373), and with increased BMI (0.0245, 95% CI −0.6516 to 0.7001).ConclusionThe increased metabolic health risks found for women exposed to the postreunification economic crisis in-utero are likely attributable to increased economic stress. While the observed differences are small, they may foreshadow the emergence of greater health disparities in older age.
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- 2022
18. Level of congruence between household perspectives and Mexican climate policies on the issue of climate change
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González Hernández, Liliana, Meijles, Erik, van Hoven, Bettina, and Urban and Regional Studies Institute
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- 2023
19. Exploring agenda-setting of offshore energy innovations: Niche-regime interactions in Dutch Marine Spatial Planning processes
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J.E.H. Kusters, F.M.G. van Kann, C. Zuidema, and Urban and Regional Studies Institute
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Renewable Energy, Sustainability and the Environment ,North Sea ,Environmental Science (miscellaneous) ,Institutions ,Social Sciences (miscellaneous) ,Energy transition ,Agenda-setting ,Marine Spatial Planning - Abstract
The foreseen large-scale growth of offshore wind energy towards 2050 in pursuit of an energy transition obliges scholars and policymakers to start considering its integration in the wider offshore energy system. Both technological innovations and advances in spatial policy are necessary to facilitate offshore system integration. This study draws from agenda-setting theory to explore barriers and opportunities affecting the prioritization processes surrounding three offshore energy storage and transport concepts in Dutch marine spatial planning practice. The findings demonstrate that although various arenas for agenda-setting exist, they are geared to the input of established stakeholders, including the oil and gas and offshore wind sectors. Also, prioritization is hindered by a short-term (2030) governmental fixation and long-term institutional ambiguity. Therefore, supportive institutions are needed, providing regulatory certainty and reliable incentive mechanisms, whilst remaining adaptive to address imminent uncertainties, in pursuit of system integration needed for an energy transition.
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- 2023
20. Making Child-friendly Cities
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Viviana A. Cordero-Vinueza, F. (Femke) Niekerk, T. (Terry) van Dijk, and Urban and Regional Studies Institute
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Urban Studies ,Sociology and Political Science ,Tourism, Leisure and Hospitality Management ,Development - Published
- 2023
21. Timing and institutional voids as critical implementation barriers for sustainable energy transition: The case of blue energy at the Afsluitdijk in The Netherlands
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van Kann, Ferry, Verweij, Stefan, Busscher, Tim, and Urban and Regional Studies Institute
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- 2023
22. Learning and Adaptation in Polycentric Transport Governance
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Ingo Bousema, Tim Busscher, Ward Rauws, Wim Leendertse, and Urban and Regional Studies Institute
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Marketing ,learning ,Public Administration ,Sociology and Political Science ,transport ,adaptation ,polycentric governance ,adaptive capacity - Abstract
The future of urban-regional transport crucially depends on the ability of transport governance systems to adapt. Polycentric theory claims that the presence of polycentric attributes and conditions enables governance systems to learn and adapt. However, an analysis of the Dutch Brabant Accessibility Agenda shows that their presence says little about the adaptive capacity of transport governance systems because learning and adaptation are influenced by dependencies. To optimize the adaptive capacity of transport governance systems, it is therefore vital to acknowledge both the diverse ways in how they learn and adapt, and the dependencies that shape these processes.
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- 2022
23. Co-Evolution of Organizations in Infrastructure Planning
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Jos Arts, Bert De Groot, Willem Leendertse, and Urban and Regional Studies Institute
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Marketing ,community of practice ,infrastructure planning ,Public Administration ,Sociology and Political Science ,project-oriented organization ,collective learning ,co-evolution ,adaptive capacity - Abstract
Challenges in infrastructure planning require public infrastructure administrators, responsible for providing adequate infrastructure facilities, to be adaptive. These organizations evolve and interact with other organizations in a complex organizational landscape. This paper explores the contribution of inter-organizational communities of practice (CoPs) to collective learning and co-evolution of organizations in infrastructure planning. We conducted a case study of five inter-organizational CoPs in the domain of a typical public infrastructure administrator. The results suggest that inter-organizational CoPs enable, for example, policy and practice to co-evolve. Inter-organizational CoPs seem to provide a neutral ground where long-term sector benefits can overcome short-term organizational interests.
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- 2022
24. Air pollution and perception-based averting behaviour in the Jinchuan mining area, China
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Li, Zhengtao, Folmer, Henk, and Urban and Regional Studies Institute
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General Social Sciences ,General Environmental Science - Abstract
This paper presents a simultaneous equation, knowledge and perception-based averting behavior model of health risk caused by air pollution, with application to the Jinchuan mining area, China. Three types of averting behavior are distinguished: (a) purchases of purifying equipment, plants, or masks; (b) purchases of preventive or curing medication or food; and (c) adjustment of daily outdoor activities. Two types of perceived health risk are distinguished: (a) risk due to the intensity of exposure and (b) risk caused by the hazardousness of pollutants. The estimations show that an increase in perceived air pollution of two or more days a week leads to a restriction of outdoor activities of approximately 90 min per person per week. Another result is that the average annual household expenditure on air filters, foods, or medicines is 206.25 CNY (US$ 31.73) to prevent the hazardousness of air pollution. The total willingness to pay for air quality improvement is 2.95% of annual net household income. Because air quality improving investments can only be implemented in the medium or long run, daily disclosure of air quality is an adequate short-run policy handle to assist residents to take the right kind and level of risk-reducing actions.
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- 2022
25. Young Muslims’ religious identities in relation to places beyond the UK: a qualitative map-making technique in Newcastle upon Tyne
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Bettina Bock, Peter Hopkins, Laura Kapinga, Bettina Van Hoven, Department of Social Sciences, Faculty of Spatial Sciences, and Urban and Regional Studies Institute
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Religion ,Spatialities ,Sociology and Political Science ,Social Psychology ,Geography, Planning and Development ,Transnational relations ,Identities ,Map-making methods ,Muslim youth - Abstract
Transnational relations can play an important role in young people’s identity negotiations and transitions to adulthood. In this article, we explore how young British-born Muslims construct and contest their religious identities and experience their changing religious identities from their lateteens until their early-twenties. We analyse how places beyond the UK shape their religious beliefs and identities in Newcastle upon Tyne in the North East of England, and present a methodological tool to understand young people’s complex and changing (religious) identities and spatialities. We draw on in-depth interviews–including map-making methods–with a small number of young Muslims living in Newcastle upon Tyne whose parents migrated from Pakistan or Bangladesh. This article contributes to youth geographies, by illustrating that when the participants begin to negotiate ‘being Muslim’ more independently, the spatial orientation of their religious identities starts to change as well. We show that the changing meaning and importance of the places beyond the UK should be understood in relation to other spatial notions when explaining religious identity negotiations of young people. Moreover, the paper provides a methodological contribution in demonstrating how map-making can help to examine young people’s identities and changing relationships to places in a transnational context.
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- 2022
26. Local collective action for sustainability transformations: emerging narratives from local energy initiatives in The Netherlands
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Hasanov, Mustafa, Zuidema, Christian, FAH Evidence based Veterinary Medicine, Urban and Regional Studies Institute, and FAH Evidence based Veterinary Medicine
- Subjects
Planning and Development ,Global and Planetary Change ,Health (social science) ,Geography ,Monitoring ,Policy and Law ,Sociology and Political Science ,Ecology ,Geography, Planning and Development ,Business Management & Organisation ,Local energy initiatives ,The Netherlands ,Local collective action ,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law ,Sustainability transformations ,Management ,Health(social science) ,Energy transition ,Nature and Landscape Conservation - Abstract
The phrase “local collective action” is increasingly being used to describe how civil society engages with, and acts upon, sustainability transformations. While existing research has framed local collective action as an outcome of creating a shared agenda on a local level, there have been calls for exploring the diversity of ideas, motives, and ambitions people have when they join local energy initiatives. This article aims to identify the diverse attitudes towards local collective action envisioned by those who engage in local energy initiatives. We use Q methodology to analyze people’s perceptions of the local collective action they are engaged in and how those perceptions could manifest in different pathways for sustainability transformations. Forty-seven statements reflecting various approaches to local collective action were sorted by people engaged in various local energy initiatives in the northeast of the Netherlands. Based on the analysis, we distinguish four factors—Localism, Facilitation, Orchestration, and Radical Transformation—that express the diverse aspirations, motivations, and rationales associated with local collective action in local energy initiatives. The findings emphasize that for those engaged in local energy initiatives (LEIs), local collective action means navigating among different assumptions, values, and transformation processes, which often oscillate between guiding principles that emphasize “getting things done” and “creating a pleasant atmosphere”. We argue that these four factors can serve as a starting point for developing local collective action strategies to help local communities and authorities unpack possible tensions, confrontations, and conflicts concerning local energy initiatives. These findings point out that while local energy initiatives rely on people’s energy and enthusiasm, practitioners and governments should be cautious while embracing their ambitions and values.
- Published
- 2022
27. Social innovation and community-focussed civic initiatives in the context of rural depopulation: For everybody by everybody? Project Ulrum 2034
- Author
-
Bettina Bock, Tialda Haartsen, Hiska Ubels, and Urban and Regional Studies Institute
- Subjects
Sociology and Political Science ,05 social sciences ,Geography, Planning and Development ,Perspective (graphical) ,0211 other engineering and technologies ,0507 social and economic geography ,021107 urban & regional planning ,Context (language use) ,02 engineering and technology ,Development ,Public administration ,social innovation – community-focussed civic initiative – civic perspective – experimental governance – rural depopulation context ,Austerity ,Local government ,Political science ,Social innovation ,Multivariate statistical ,050703 geography - Abstract
In this paper, we apply a civic perspective and social innovation theory to examine how residents of a Dutch village experiencing rural depopulation and austerity reforms evaluate a civic initiative aimed at improving liveability, and what explains their evaluation. Using multivariate statistical analysis, we found that most residents were positive about the initiative and its contribution to local liveability. We also discovered that a substantial group knew very little about the initiative and that low-income groups, in particular, lacked the interest to identify and become engaged with it. Voluntary engagement, however, did not necessarily result in a positive evaluation. Above all, tangible outputs explained citizens’ appreciation. A perceived increase in collaboration within the village and novel forms of collaboration with the local government also proved important, but only when they were accompanied by realised tangible outputs.
- Published
- 2022
28. Learning to live with synanthropic bats: Practices of tolerance and care in domestic space
- Author
-
Caiza-Villegasa, Angelica, Ginn, Franklin, van Hoven, Bettina, Department of Social Sciences, and Urban and Regional Studies Institute
- Subjects
Cultural Studies ,Geography, Planning and Development ,bat conservation, multiespecies, animal geographies, care - Abstract
As bats adapt to anthropogenic environmental change they increasingly interact with humans and inhabit human infrastructure. This article addresses the challenge of learning to live with synanthropic bats. Building on ideas from multispecies studies, we explore the practices and accommodations that coproduce meaningful human-bat cohabitation in domestic space. Drawing on qualitative research conducted in the Netherlands, we find that domestic space is remade in small but significant ways in response to bats. The aim of our interviewees is to ensure minimal interference between human and bat domestic geographies: intimacy can be spatialized at the domestic scale but is best done in ways that maintain degrees of tolerance. Rather than help bats in general, much care-work centres around supporting the inter-generational reproductive work of bats.This sequential sense of ethical time certainly shifts conservation from a done to mode, and recasts home-dwellers as participants in the story of bat survival and intergenerational nourishment.
- Published
- 2023
29. Mapping spatial opportunities for urban climate adaptation measures in public and private spaces using a GIS-based Decision Support Model
- Author
-
Allard Hans Roest, Gerd Weitkamp, Margo van den Brink, Floris Boogaard, Water, and Urban and Regional Studies Institute
- Subjects
Renewable Energy, Sustainability and the Environment ,klimaatadaptatie ,Geography, Planning and Development ,Transportation ,climate adaptation ,gis ,urban environment ,urban planning ,teledetectie ,beslissingsondersteund model ,remote sensing ,decision support model ,stedenbouw ,stedelijke omgeving ,Civil and Structural Engineering - Abstract
Global climate change will result in more extreme heat, drought, and rainfall. The urban environment is particularly vulnerable to these effects. Adaptation to these extreme weather conditions is difficult due to the high complexity of urban land-use patterns and stakeholder configurations. The current practice in the field of urban climate adaptation mainly revolves around the assessment of climatological risks, leaving the question where measures can be implemented under-researched. This study proposes and tests a four-step GIS-based Decision Support Model (DSM) to map the spatial opportunities for adaptation measures in public and private spaces. The DSM was applied to the city of Groningen. The findings revealed that there is a relationship between urban design, climatological risks, and opportunities for adaptation measures, with higher density neighbourhoods showing more opportunities for greening private properties and permeable pavements and lower density neighbourhoods showing opportunities for the implementation of green-blue measures in public space. The application of this DSM can aid urban planners and other stakeholders in mapping spatial opportunities for climate adaptation, that is, allow for more precise site selection for adaptation efforts and for an evaluation of adaptation efforts in different neighbourhood typologies within the urban environment.
- Published
- 2023
30. Local people’s sense of place in heavily touristified protected areas
- Author
-
Jingyu Li, Arie Stoffelen, Erik Meijles, Frank Vanclay, and Urban and Regional Studies Institute
- Subjects
Urban Studies ,Public-participation GIS ,ecotourism ,Ecology ,ethnic tourism ,community-based natural resource management ,nature-based tourism ,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law ,Conservation and Tourism ,Nature and Landscape Conservation - Abstract
The place meanings (or landscape values) of local people are increasingly being considered in nature conservation plans. However, in Indigenous and ethnic minority contexts, place meanings and underlying cultures tend to be regarded as static over time. This limits the inclusiveness and appropriateness of protected area governance. Using a case study of the Wulingyuan Scenic and Historic Interest Area, a World Heritage Site in China, we found that residents’ sense of place and place meanings were diverse, varying, and were affected by changes to their livelihoods and the economy resulting from increased tourism. There was a major mismatch between the recorded ‘traditional’ place meanings of residents and their current sense of place and landscape values. The coevolution of protected areas and tourism can affect residents’ place meanings. This complicates the process of finding a balance (or synergy) between economic development, nature conservation, and local community concerns, which is necessary for sustainability. Adaptive co-management planning that pays attention to residents’ diverse and changing place meanings is essential, even though it may be difficult to implement in heavily touristified areas. ispartof: Landscape And Urban Planning vol:237 pages:1-11 status: published
- Published
- 2023
31. Spatial and relational peer effects on environmental behavioral imitation
- Author
-
Jianhua Zhang, Xiaolong Liu, Dimitris Ballas, and Urban and Regional Studies Institute
- Subjects
Economics and Econometrics ,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law ,Peer effects · Environmental behavioral imitation · Proximity · Observational learning · Social interactions - Abstract
From a behavioral perspective, this study investigates the impacts of spatial and relational peer effects on shaping individual environmental behaviors. Utilizing microdata from 53,590 residents in the Netherlands, this study explores the spatial heterogeneity of environmental behaviors at the municipal level. Regression results reveal the existence of peer effects on environmental behavioral imitation among both spatially and relationally proximate peers. The roles of social interactions and observations in reinforcing peer effects are highlighted. A key contribution of this study is its inclusion of spatial dimension in understanding environmental behavioral imitation, taking into account both spatial and relational proximity.
- Published
- 2023
32. (Zij)-instroom en behoud van personeel voor IT-functies.: Werkgeversonderzoek in het kader van Make IT Work in the North
- Author
-
Brouwer, Aleid, Ciff, Tatiana, ponsioen, Arnout, van Lieshout, Harm, SOM Onderzoekschool, and Urban and Regional Studies Institute
- Subjects
work ,schooling ,ICT - Published
- 2023
33. What happens behind doors? Exploring everyday indoor activities when ageing in place
- Author
-
Zeinab Sattari, Gerd Weitkamp, Louise Meijering, and Urban and Regional Studies Institute
- Subjects
Health (social science) ,General Arts and Humanities ,General Social Sciences ,General Medicine ,Life-span and Life-course Studies - Abstract
Engaging in social interaction and physical movement during everyday activities has a positive influence on wellbeing in later life. For older adults who age in place, the majority of activities occur indoors, yet studies typically focus on outdoors. Gender influences social and physical activities but is understudied in an ageing-in-place context. We aim to address these gaps by increasing insight into the indoor activities in later life, with a focus on gender differences in social interaction and physical movement. Through a mixed-methods approach, data were collected using global positioning system (GPS) trackers, pedometers and activity diaries. Twenty community-dwelling older adults (11 women and 9 men) who were living in Lancashire collected these data over seven days. An exploratory spatio-temporal analysis was conducted on the 820 activities they undertook. We discovered that our participants spend large amounts of time indoors. We also found that social interaction increases the duration of the activity and, conversely, decreases levels of physical movement. When zooming in to gender differences, men's activities took significantly longer than women's activities and were characterised by higher level of social interaction. Based on these results, we argue that there is a trade-off between social interaction and physical movement in everyday activities. We suggest establishing a balance between socialising and moving in everyday activities in later life, specifically because maintaining high levels of movement and social interaction at the same time seems unachievable. In conclusion, it is important to design indoor environments that facilitate choice between being active and resting, and between being social and being on one's own rather than assume they are mutually-exclusive and/or universally “good” or “bad” per se.
- Published
- 2023
34. Conflict management in the extractive industries: A comparison of four mining projects in Latin America
- Author
-
Rajiv Maher, Yanina Kowszyk, Frank Vanclay, and Urban and Regional Studies Institute
- Subjects
Extractive industries and society ,Social license to operate ,Geography, Planning and Development ,Business and human rights ,Social conflict ,Economic Geology ,Extractivism ,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law ,Development ,Environmental ,Social and governance (ESG) factors ,Environmental, Social and governance (ESG) factors - Abstract
Increasing global demand for minerals has led to increasing socio-environmental conflicts in the mining sector. To understand why mining company managers (especially those in the areas of community relations, corporate affairs, social performance, and corporate social responsibility) fail to adequately manage conflict, we examined the conflict management approaches used by managers of large mining operations in Latin America. We interviewed a few managers per mine and analysed secondary data relating to the conflicts associated with the Nueva Unión (Chile), Peñasquito (Mexico), Vazante (Brazil), and Yanacocha (Peru) mines. We found that the conflict management style being used did not incorporate understandings from political ecology or environmental justice. We consider these perspectives could improve conflict management in the extractive industries, which would reduce the environmental and social impacts experienced by host communities, the cost of conflict borne by companies and communities, and would increase the social licence to operate of companies and their operations. We discuss various key issues including: worldviews and ontological differences; the distribution of costs and benefits from the extractive industries; power imbalance; corporate structure and strategy towards community and environmental issues; and the adequacy of the response of the national and international social justice systems.
- Published
- 2023
35. Toward the commoning of governance
- Author
-
Stephen Leitheiser, Ina Horlings, Elen-Maarja Trell, Alex Franklin, and Urban and Regional Studies Institute
- Subjects
Public Administration ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Geography, Planning and Development ,0211 other engineering and technologies ,0507 social and economic geography ,02 engineering and technology ,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law ,Environmental Science (miscellaneous) ,Politics ,State (polity) ,Political science ,Commoning ,Citizenship ,Law and economics ,media_common ,Ideal (set theory) ,Corporate governance ,05 social sciences ,021107 urban & regional planning ,Democracy ,Commons ,Dilemma ,Food ,050703 geography - Abstract
Conventional political thought and practice continue to be stifled by a dilemma of choosing between the ideal imaginaries of State and/or Market solutions. Widely presupposed as the only valid possibilities in both theory and practice, this stale dilemma covers up a real multitude of actually existing alternative approaches to governance practiced in civil society. State/Market approaches are identical in the way that they construct a ‘spectator’ role for communities, who are left to choose between their preferred set of rules and norms developed elsewhere. The concept of commoning governance offers an opportunity to break free of this stalemate. It creates a new role for citizens and their communities as ‘sparring partners’; who although they operate within the limits of current State/Market institutions, create new norms and rules against and beyond them. In the paper, we first expand on our understanding of commoning governance: re-designing governance arrangements to serve the common good. That is here understood in terms of (radical) democracy, solidarity and sustainable ecological relationships. Second, we illustrate how commoning efforts on the ground contribute to the reclaiming of the democratic imaginary as a political arena by zooming in to a case study of the three cities involved in civic-led network of German Food Policy Councils. Finally, we reflect on the empirical barriers that communities of commoning endure, and call on policymakers, planners and scholars to interrogate their own normative understandings of citizenship and democracy, and begin to recognize theoretical and latent possibilities by enabling commoning with new or re-designed institutions of governance.
- Published
- 2022
36. Mechanisms for protecting returns on private investments in public infrastructure projects
- Author
-
Hatice Cigdem Demirel, Wim Leendertse, Leentje Volker, Urban and Regional Studies Institute, Construction Management and Engineering, Integrated Project Delivery, and Digital Society Institute
- Subjects
Governance ,Infrastructure projects ,Public private partnerships ,Management of Technology and Innovation ,Return protection ,UT-Hybrid-D ,Control mechanisms ,Project finance ,Business and International Management - Abstract
Despite the widespread attention for the private financing of infrastructure projects, actual empirical work on financing public-private partnerships remains limited. Especially the topics of return on equity and lenders’ cash flow control in relation to uncertainty are under-researched. The aim of this paper is to investigate and discuss the mechanisms applied by private financiers of infrastructure projects to protect their returns on investment. Using semi-structured interviews, the qualitative viewpoints of infrastructure financiers and their consultants on infrastructure investment are examined. The findings identify nine control mechanisms that financiers apply, including a range of asset and risk diversification portfolio strategies for their infrastructure investments, and reveal that they depend on governance mechanisms relating to the project environment, relations, knowledge and expertise. Hence, this study provides a better understanding of the actions and mechanisms applied to protect a return on infrastructure investments that leverage partnering strategies between public authorities and private investors in public infrastructure projects. This contributes to the debate on project financing under uncertainty and its implications for project governance in public private partnerships.
- Published
- 2022
37. To participate, or not to participate – That is the question. (Non-)participation of older residents in rural communities
- Author
-
Annett Steinführer, Tialda Haartsen, Franziska Lengerer, and Urban and Regional Studies Institute
- Subjects
Mixed methods ,Sociology and Political Science ,Local participation ,Germany ,Geography, Planning and Development ,Residential histories ,Life course approach ,Development - Abstract
In recent years, rural residents' participation within their local communities has attracted attention within scientific and political debates that focus on sustaining or improving the quality of life in villages. Retired older people feature centrally in these discussions, as they are perceived to have the time and life experience to participate in various local activities. This paper contributes to the existing literature through an examination of older villagers’ participation and non-participation within their communities in a strongly ageing rural area in Germany. Applying mixed methods and using survey data compiled for older residents, we identified six groups differentiated according to four types of participative practices and two main rationales for non-participation within villages in this region, thus introducing nuances and complexity to both sides of the participation/non-participation dichotomy. Our comparison of these six groups, considering their socio-economic characteristics and residential histories, revealed that women were underrepresented in positions of responsibility and that poor health and advanced age were primary reasons for non-participation. There were minor differences in the participation of village stayers and incomers, who accounted for a larger share of non-participants. As strategies to sustain or improve local quality of life should accommodate the interests of all residents, we advocate raising awareness regarding non-participant groups within research and policy contexts.
- Published
- 2022
38. The urban political never sleeps: A framework for tracing emergent counter-responses to depoliticisation
- Author
-
Saleh, Mohamed, Rauws, Ward, and Urban and Regional Studies Institute
- Subjects
Public Administration ,Geography, Planning and Development ,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law ,Environmental Science (miscellaneous) - Abstract
Responding to contemporary mechanisms of depoliticisation, some marginalised groups create political arenas independent from the State. The paper analyses how these groups utilise ‘cracks’ in the political landscape to forge counter-publics which transform unequal power structures. Positing that depoliticisation is always incomplete, an analytical framework is presented for understanding how ‘the political’ emerges and evolves in unexpected spaces of everyday life. The framework serves as a means to overcome some of the limitations of Rancière’s political ontology to operationalise in empirical research through integrating his notions with an understanding of self-organisation based on complexity science. Drawing on empirical research in Egypt, the paper demonstrates how the fusion between public spaces and online networks created a precondition for counter-publics to gradually revitalise local urban politics. The paper concludes with analytical considerations for inclusive city-makers who aim to engage productively with the transformative potential of such emergent counter-publics.
- Published
- 2022
39. Managing people’s (in)ability to be mobile
- Author
-
Arie Stoffelen and Urban and Regional Studies Institute
- Subjects
citizenship ,Mobilities ,Status quo ,media_common.quotation_subject ,mobilities ,Geography, Planning and Development ,critical geopolitics ,politics of scale ,Geopolitics ,Competition (economics) ,Cultural political economy ,Sovereignty ,Critical geopolitics ,Political science ,Political economy ,bordering ,media_common.cataloged_instance ,European union ,Tourism ,Earth-Surface Processes ,media_common - Abstract
The currently globalising society is characterised by a tension between increasingly intensive transnational mobility of people and continuous territorial regulation of these flows. This situation has led to the increasingly selective opening and closing of borders, providing territorial access to some while keeping out others. In this paper, I reflect on how such management of people’s (in)ability to cross borders has become a geopolitical instrument. I particularly focus on how mobility inequalities are confirmed within the European Union (EU) to protect the geopolitical and political-economic status quo of the EU itself, but also how this EU-level process regarding people’s (im)mobility fuelled internal discussions regarding the relation between nation-state sovereignty and EU-level decision-making. I first reflect on the citizenship of people and the Cultural Political Economy framework for explaining this (re-)constructed selectivity of borders and border-crossings. Subsequently, I apply these perspectives to the geopolitical construction of two types of border-crossings in the EU, namely irregular(ised) migration and tourism, to reflect on how EU-level and national actors selectively utilise structural-institutional arrangements and semiotic strategies to position themselves within the European framework. By doing so, the paper illustrates the contradictions engrained in the neoliberal system along two lines: (1) generally, the continued territorial logic in the regulation of space in a world increasingly characterised by global economic and human flows, resulting in the blocking of the mobility of some while stimulating the mobility of others in what are supposedly ‘open’ economies; (2) specifically, the explicit (cf. irregular migration) and implicit (cf. tourism) competition between places as to what is the ‘right’, ‘legitimate’ or ‘sovereign’ spatial unit to regulate these flows, resulting in the mobilisation of competing political-economic imaginaries to institutionalise one over the other. ispartof: Transactions Of The Institute Of British Geographers vol:47 issue:1 pages:1-14 status: Published online
- Published
- 2022
40. Spatiotemporal high-resolution prediction and mapping: methodology and application to dengue disease
- Author
-
I. Gede Nyoman Mindra Jaya, Henk Folmer, and Urban and Regional Studies Institute
- Subjects
Relative risk ,Problem ,Economics and Econometrics ,Dengue disease ,Geography, Planning and Development ,Fusion area-cell generalized geoadditive-Gaussian Markov random field model ,Bayesian statistics ,“Big n ,Bottom-up approach - Abstract
Dengue disease has become a major public health problem. Accurate and precise identification, prediction and mapping of high-risk areas are crucial elements of an effective and efficient early warning system in countering the spread of dengue disease. In this paper, we present the fusion area-cell spatiotemporal generalized geoadditive-Gaussian Markov random field (FGG-GMRF) framework for joint estimation of an area-cell model, involving temporally varying coefficients, spatially and temporally structured and unstructured random effects, and spatiotemporal interaction of the random effects. The spatiotemporal Gaussian field is applied to determine the unobserved relative risk at cell level. It is transformed to a Gaussian Markov random field using the finite element method and the linear stochastic partial differential equation approach to solve the “big n” problem. Sub-area relative risk estimates are obtained as block averages of the cell outcomes within each sub-area boundary. The FGG-GMRF model is estimated by applying Bayesian Integrated Nested Laplace Approximation. In the application to Bandung city, Indonesia, we combine low-resolution area level (district) spatiotemporal data on population at risk and incidence and high-resolution cell level data on weather variables to obtain predictions of relative risk at subdistrict level. The predicted dengue relative risk at subdistrict level suggests significant fine-scale heterogeneities which are not apparent when examining the area level. The relative risk varies considerably across subdistricts and time, with the latter showing an increase in the period January–July and a decrease in the period August–December.
- Published
- 2022
41. Private management of public networks? Unpacking the relationship between network management strategies in infrastructure implementation
- Author
-
Margo Van den Brink, Tim Busscher, Stefan Verweij, and Urban and Regional Studies Institute
- Subjects
Marketing ,Public Administration ,Sociology and Political Science - Abstract
With the aim to successfully implement infrastructure, implementation arrangements increasingly assign responsibilities for network management to private actors. In the literature, two types of network management strategies are distinguished: process design and institutional design. To date, research has focused on either of these strategies. Moreover, while private actors aim to use the institutional capital built in the network before the private actor was introduced, the role of institutional capital in network management is often overlooked. Taking these research gaps together, we aim to explore the relationship between the two network management strategies and the intermediating role of institutional capital. We compare three cases of infrastructure implementation from the Netherlands. We find that institutional design strategies, through setting the network rules in the implementation arrangement, can ignite a virtuous or a vicious circle, respectively, hindering or enhancing opportunities for network management through process design.
- Published
- 2022
42. Learning across teams in project-oriented organisations
- Author
-
Wim Leendertse, Jos Arts, Bert de Groot, and Urban and Regional Studies Institute
- Subjects
Learning culture ,Organizational Behavior and Human Resource Management ,Infrastructure planning ,Knowledge management ,business.industry ,Program management ,Collective learning ,Collaborative learning ,Programme management ,Affect (psychology) ,Education ,Project-oriented organisation ,Team learning ,ACROSS Project ,Sociology ,business - Abstract
Purpose Learning across teams and organisational levels enables organisations to deal with challenges that arise from changing contexts. Project-oriented organisations increasingly use programme management to cope with such challenges and improve performance. This paper aims to find out how different programme configurations affect learning across project teams and between project teams and their parent organisation in project-oriented organisations. Design/methodology/approach A case study of a project-oriented organisation involved in five infrastructure programmes was performed. Findings The studied programmes linked learning processes at group and organisational levels by creating relationships across project teams and their parent organisation and acting as a knowledge centre. Team learning benefits from the learning culture and stable environment that programmes create for project teams. This study indicates that a programme’s features and focus strongly determines whether a programme predominantly enhances learning across project teams or learning between project teams and their parent organisation. Originality/value Although programme management is increasingly used by project-oriented organisations, there are few studies relating to learning in programmes. This study provides new insights into learning across teams through programmes.
- Published
- 2022
43. Teachers’ personal experiences of sexual initiation motivating their sexuality education messages in secondary schools in Kampala, Uganda
- Author
-
Billie de Haas, Inge Hutter, Urban and Regional Studies Institute, and International Institute of Social Studies
- Subjects
Sexuality education ,Cultural schema theory ,Sexual initiation ,education ,Personal experience ,Psychology ,Sex education ,Social Sciences (miscellaneous) ,Education ,Developmental psychology - Abstract
Little is known about how teachers’ personal sexual experiences influence their motivations and practices when teaching sexuality education. Cultural schema theory was used to explore teachers’ personal experience of the onset of sexual activity and explain how sexuality education teaching is influenced by such experiences. In-depth interviews were conducted with 40 secondary school teachers in Kampala, Uganda. The interviews were transcribed verbatim and analysed using principles of grounded theory. Findings show that while teachers’ personal experience of sexual initiation did not directly align with the content of their messages, due to the centrality and evocative function of these schemas these experiences strengthened teachers’ motivation to teach sexuality education because they enabled them to empathise with students. The study concludes that teachers’ personal experiences of sexual initiation provide intrinsic motivation for teaching sexuality education. The inclusion of dialogues and activities which encourage self-reflexivity in teacher education and training may improve the delivery of sex, sexuality and relationships education.
- Published
- 2022
44. Does local planning culture influence the effectiveness of impact assessments?
- Author
-
Patrick Patiwael, Peter Groote, Frank Vanclay, and Urban and Regional Studies Institute
- Subjects
impact assessment effectiveness ,heritage management ,Geography, Planning and Development ,consensus decision making ,Cultural World Heritage sites ,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law ,cultural heritage ,Stelling van Amsterdam - Abstract
We explore whether local planning culture influences the effectiveness of heritage impact assessment (HIA) and we discuss the legitimacy of ICOMOS, the international advisory body to UNESCO on cultural heritage. We examined the HIA processes for two proposed infrastructure projects that potentially could affect the Defence Line of Amsterdam World Heritage site in the Netherlands. We interviewed key stakeholders involved in decision-making about these projects, and found that the Dutch planning culture positively influenced the effectiveness of the HIA processes. The interviewees predominantly discussed the substantive and transactive effectiveness of the HIA processes in that they praised the practitioner for facilitating a clear, inclusive and transparent process and having a solution-oriented mindset, which is common practice in the Dutch planning culture. However, in contrast to the Dutch planning culture, the role of ICOMOS was perceived as opaque and a ‘black box’, although this did not decrease its legitimacy among the key stakeholders.
- Published
- 2022
45. Tackling societal challenges together
- Author
-
Peter Meister Broekema, Lummina G. Horlings, Elles Bulder, Urban and Regional Studies Institute, and Living Environment in Transition
- Subjects
fondsen ,Public Administration ,Health Policy ,funds ,eu policy ,sociale innovatie ,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law ,social innovation ,strategieën ,Horizon2020 ,strategies ,co-creatie ,co-creation ,eu beleid - Abstract
The last decade we saw an increasing academic, policy, and professional interest in the use of co-creation to tackle societal challenges. Most research focused on qualitative analysis of case studies. This led to an understanding that co-creation is essential for social innovation. We started this paper by analyzing co-creation strategies ex ante to understand how EU-funded consortia intend to tackle societal challenges. By quantitatively analyzing 300 EU projects and qualitatively analyzing the Horizon2020 “co-creation for growth and inclusion” call, our research revealed four different types of consortia. We characterized these types by the coordinators and dubbed them, respectively, as research led, government led, enterprise led, and other led. These consortia were quite different in terms of diversity and preferred partners. We also distinguished three distinct co-creation strategies that are focused on inclusion of stakeholders, the outcome, or tool development. We discovered that these strategies are not linked to types of consortia or projects, but only to the call text. We therefore conclude that the policy design of Horizon2020 led to a program that aims to stimulate innovation, but has become too rigid to be able to do so.
- Published
- 2022
46. Understanding the value of co-creation for social innovation interpretations of social innovation and co-creation in European policy-related documents between 1995 and 2018
- Author
-
Peter Meister Broekema, Lummina Horlings, Elisabeth Bulder, Urban and Regional Studies Institute, and Living Environment in Transition
- Subjects
Organizational Behavior and Human Resource Management ,Strategy and Management ,Geography, Planning and Development ,sociale innovatie ,social innovation ,Management of Technology and Innovation ,Political science ,0502 economics and business ,050602 political science & public administration ,Co-creation ,media_common.cataloged_instance ,European union ,european union ,media_common ,maatschappelijke impact ,05 social sciences ,eu policy ,societal impact ,0506 political science ,europese unie ,European policy ,Value (economics) ,Social innovation ,Economic system ,co-creatie ,050203 business & management ,eu beleid ,co-creation - Abstract
Social innovation and co-creation have been discussed in academic literature for the last twenty years. However, the interrelatedness and application of these concepts in European Union policy deserves more attention. In our study, we focus on this relationship and application, by analysing the value of co-creation for social innovation. By analysing a large EU dataset, we showed that social innovation and co-creation were used more and more widely and that their use took off after 2010 and 2015 respectively. By applying a contextual analysis, we also revealed that both concepts became connected in EU policy on research and innovation. Our analysis also shows that co-creation became an indicator for successful social innovation in the Horizon Europe Framework programme. These results show the importance of co-creation in policies, but because the concept has not been defined properly, this carries the risk of simplifying co-creation into a box-ticking exercise.
- Published
- 2022
47. 'It All Starts with Family'
- Author
-
Sander Van Lanen, Erik Merx, Arjen Edzes, Sanne Visser, Regional labour market, Human Capital, and Urban and Regional Studies Institute
- Subjects
mechanisms ,Sociology and Political Science ,gezinsperspectief ,families’ perspectives ,mechanismen ,family habitus ,intergenerationele armoede ,Intergenerational poverty ,Demography - Abstract
Mechanisms that drive the intergenerational transmission of poverty have been studied widely, but to understand how these mechanisms are at work in real life we require studies on perspectives of families who themselves are living in poverty. In this study, we combine the perspectives of multiple generations of family households in a rural area in the Netherlands. We want to understand from their own perspective what prevents these families from escaping poverty. Twenty-three family households participated in intergenerational interviews. Results show that recurrent mechanisms were often perceived to relate to rearing practices, norm-setting and geographical mechanisms (immobility and perceived place-based stigma). Family habitus structures the mechanisms that prolong and perpetuate poverty.
- Published
- 2022
48. Music and tourism
- Author
-
Bolderman, Leonieke, Stahl, Geoff, Percival, Marc, and Urban and Regional Studies Institute
- Abstract
Popular music scholars have long been interested in the connection between place and music. This collection brings together a number of key scholars in order to introduce readers to concepts and theories used to explore the relationships between place and music. An interdisciplinary volume, drawing from sociology, geography, ethnomusicology, media, cultural, and communication studies, this book covers a wide-range of topics germane to the production and consumption of place in popular music. Through considerations of changes in technology and the mediascape that have shaped the experience of popular music (vinyl, iPods, social media), the role of social difference and how it shapes sociomusical encounters (queer spaces, gendered and racialised spaces), as well as the construction and representations of place (musical tourism, city branding, urban mythologies), this is an up-to-the-moment overview of central discussions about place and music. The contributors explore a range of contexts, moving from the studio to the stage, the city to the suburb, the bedroom to festival, from nightclub to museum, with each entry highlighting the diverse and complex ways in which music and place are mutually constitutive.
- Published
- 2022
49. The Performance of Public–Private Partnerships
- Author
-
Joop Koppenjan, Erik-Hans Klijn, Stefan Verweij, Mike Duijn, Ingmar van Meerkerk, Samantha Metselaar, Rianne Warsen, Public Administration, Sociology, University of Groningen, PharmacoTherapy, -Epidemiology and -Economics, Groningen Research Institute of Pharmacy, and Urban and Regional Studies Institute
- Subjects
infrastructure governance ,evaluation ,Public Administration ,Strategy and Management ,Design-build-finance-maintain (DBFM) ,The Netherlands ,public–private partnership (PPP) ,performance - Abstract
This article presents an ex-post evaluation of the performance of Dutch Design-Build-Finance-Maintain (DBFM) infrastructure projects compared to Design and Construct (D&C) contracts, which uses quantitative (financial project data and survey) and qualitative (interviews) data. Drawing on institutional theory, notably the economic institutionalism inspired-contractual perspective and the sociological institutionalism-oriented collaborative perspective, the evaluation focuses on four performance indicators—cost, time, quality, and innovation—and five public–private partnership (PPP) performance drivers—private financing, performance-dependent payments, bundling (i.e., the integrated nature of contracts), risk transfer, and collaboration. It was found that the DBFM projects performed similarly to, or better than, the D&C contracts. The impact of bundling on innovation was positive, while its impact on quality was inconclusive. The collaboration proved to be a strong driver for performance and innovation but was not stronger in DBFM projects compared to D&C projects. Over time, collaboration and performance improved suggesting that besides project characteristics, PPP performance is influenced by the way actors deal with contracts and by the gradual process by which they learn to do so. Theoretically, this means that historical institutionalism is part of the explanation of PPP performance.
- Published
- 2022
50. Boundary thinking in landscape architecture and boundary-spanning roles of landscape architects
- Author
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Margo van den Brink, Adri van den Brink, Diedrich Bruns, and Urban and Regional Studies Institute
- Subjects
WIMEK ,Landschapsarchitectuur en Ruimtelijke Planning ,Geography, Planning and Development ,boundary spanning ,role performance ,WASS ,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law ,Landscape Architecture and Spatial Planning ,transforming narratives ,landscape architecture ,boundary thinking ,Nature and Landscape Conservation ,General Environmental Science ,professional capacities - Abstract
Landscape architects play important roles in addressing societal challenges. To successfully address these challenges, this essay argues that they need to expand their understanding of boundaries and engage in boundary thinking. Distinguishing between physical, mental and socially constructed boundaries, we characterise boundary thinking as a creative process and productive motive in designing landscapes. Subsequently, we present four types of boundary-spanning roles for landscape architects to perform—the subject-based designer, the visionary narrator, the process-based designer, and the design-led entrepreneur—and point to the cognitive and social capacities needed to play any of these roles. We propose for landscape architecture to consider boundary thinking in agenda setting discourses and to include boundary spanning into practice. We suggest three avenues to pursue in realising professional opportunities: exploring the roles landscape architects play, understanding the environment that enables boundary-spanning work, and developing boundary theory in landscape architectural research.
- Published
- 2022
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