Compact City Development and the Challenge of Environmental Policy Integration: A Multi-Level Governance Perspective
Publication date
2013
Authors
Stigt, R. van
Driessen, P.P.J.
Spit, T.J.M.
Editors
Advisors
Supervisors
Document Type
Article
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License
(c) UU Universiteit Utrecht, 2013
Abstract
Sustainable urban development entails integration of environmental interests into decisionmaking
at the local level. To achieve this, higher tiers of governmentmay compel municipalities
to explicitly consider environmental objectives or even prioritize them by demanding compliance
with national standards, thus, at least theoretically, restricting local government’s room
to manoeuvre in balancing all relevant interests. This paper explores the extent to which national
standards narrow the range of local options and what this means for sustainable urban
development. Adopting a multi-level governance perspective on three cases of inner-city
redevelopment, we find that environmental standards are either not problematically restrictive
or, if they are, sectoral policy offers ways to circumvent them. From a sustainability perspective,
this may lead to undesirable outcomes. A combination of approaches may solve this predicament.
Keywords
environmental policy integration, environmental quality standards, multi-level governance, trade-offs, urban planning