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Regional economics. --- Land use --- Planning. --- Economics --- Regional planning --- Regionalism --- Space in economics --- Planning --- Government policy
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The book aims to explore the legal and administrative aspects of spatial governance and the challenges that their interaction entails. It does this through a number of chapters focusing on case studies located in different geographical areas of Europe and beyond. By doing this, the editors shed light on a set of challenges that emerge around the world at the intersection between the legal and administrative spheres during the governance and planning of territorial phenomena. The issues addressed in the various chapters highlight how spatial planning activities continue to face serious challenges that have not yet been satisfactorily addressed. In more detail, a correlation emerges between the legal regulations that allow and shape spatial-planning activities and the socio-economic and territorial challenges that those activities should tackle. This is often a consequence of the path-dependent influence of the traditional administrative and spatial planning configuration, which presents an inertial resistance to change that is hard to overcome. A similar situation arises concerning the mismatch between the boundaries of the existing administrative units and the extent of territorial phenomena, with a system of judicial–territorial administration that does not always coincide with the boundaries of the fundamental administrative division of a country, leading to an overall deterioration of the conditions in which all actors involved in spatial development operate.
Peace studies & conflict resolution --- landscape urbanization --- metropolises --- agglomeration in Poland --- urban landscape intensity index --- local development --- local law --- budgets of local units --- financial consequences of spatial chaos --- urban sprawl --- macroeconomics --- externalities --- budget --- spatial policy --- economic policy --- urban growth management --- land use planning --- zoning --- strategic spatial planning --- institutionalism --- discourse --- Antwerp --- Flanders --- land use transition --- innovation agglomeration --- industrial pollution --- environmental protection --- innovation-driven development --- sustainable land use --- urbanization --- spatial governance and planning --- Europe --- ESPON --- SECI expansion model --- local government --- green governance --- peer behavior --- green development --- rule by law --- law-based governance --- housing price --- sensitivity --- heterogeneity --- mediating mechanism --- land economic efficiency --- environmental pollution --- carbon emissions --- sustainable cities --- eastern China --- land policy --- planning system --- land-use planning --- land development --- urban development --- legal framework --- containment --- Poland --- Germany --- Spain --- green belt --- master plan --- planning history --- planning policy --- urban containment --- urban agriculture --- Kigali --- Singapore --- land-use policy --- spatial planning --- territorial governance --- land use --- law
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The book aims to explore the legal and administrative aspects of spatial governance and the challenges that their interaction entails. It does this through a number of chapters focusing on case studies located in different geographical areas of Europe and beyond. By doing this, the editors shed light on a set of challenges that emerge around the world at the intersection between the legal and administrative spheres during the governance and planning of territorial phenomena. The issues addressed in the various chapters highlight how spatial planning activities continue to face serious challenges that have not yet been satisfactorily addressed. In more detail, a correlation emerges between the legal regulations that allow and shape spatial-planning activities and the socio-economic and territorial challenges that those activities should tackle. This is often a consequence of the path-dependent influence of the traditional administrative and spatial planning configuration, which presents an inertial resistance to change that is hard to overcome. A similar situation arises concerning the mismatch between the boundaries of the existing administrative units and the extent of territorial phenomena, with a system of judicial–territorial administration that does not always coincide with the boundaries of the fundamental administrative division of a country, leading to an overall deterioration of the conditions in which all actors involved in spatial development operate.
Peace studies & conflict resolution --- landscape urbanization --- metropolises --- agglomeration in Poland --- urban landscape intensity index --- local development --- local law --- budgets of local units --- financial consequences of spatial chaos --- urban sprawl --- macroeconomics --- externalities --- budget --- spatial policy --- economic policy --- urban growth management --- land use planning --- zoning --- strategic spatial planning --- institutionalism --- discourse --- Antwerp --- Flanders --- land use transition --- innovation agglomeration --- industrial pollution --- environmental protection --- innovation-driven development --- sustainable land use --- urbanization --- spatial governance and planning --- Europe --- ESPON --- SECI expansion model --- local government --- green governance --- peer behavior --- green development --- rule by law --- law-based governance --- housing price --- sensitivity --- heterogeneity --- mediating mechanism --- land economic efficiency --- environmental pollution --- carbon emissions --- sustainable cities --- eastern China --- land policy --- planning system --- land-use planning --- land development --- urban development --- legal framework --- containment --- Poland --- Germany --- Spain --- green belt --- master plan --- planning history --- planning policy --- urban containment --- urban agriculture --- Kigali --- Singapore --- land-use policy --- spatial planning --- territorial governance --- land use --- law
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The book aims to explore the legal and administrative aspects of spatial governance and the challenges that their interaction entails. It does this through a number of chapters focusing on case studies located in different geographical areas of Europe and beyond. By doing this, the editors shed light on a set of challenges that emerge around the world at the intersection between the legal and administrative spheres during the governance and planning of territorial phenomena. The issues addressed in the various chapters highlight how spatial planning activities continue to face serious challenges that have not yet been satisfactorily addressed. In more detail, a correlation emerges between the legal regulations that allow and shape spatial-planning activities and the socio-economic and territorial challenges that those activities should tackle. This is often a consequence of the path-dependent influence of the traditional administrative and spatial planning configuration, which presents an inertial resistance to change that is hard to overcome. A similar situation arises concerning the mismatch between the boundaries of the existing administrative units and the extent of territorial phenomena, with a system of judicial–territorial administration that does not always coincide with the boundaries of the fundamental administrative division of a country, leading to an overall deterioration of the conditions in which all actors involved in spatial development operate.
landscape urbanization --- metropolises --- agglomeration in Poland --- urban landscape intensity index --- local development --- local law --- budgets of local units --- financial consequences of spatial chaos --- urban sprawl --- macroeconomics --- externalities --- budget --- spatial policy --- economic policy --- urban growth management --- land use planning --- zoning --- strategic spatial planning --- institutionalism --- discourse --- Antwerp --- Flanders --- land use transition --- innovation agglomeration --- industrial pollution --- environmental protection --- innovation-driven development --- sustainable land use --- urbanization --- spatial governance and planning --- Europe --- ESPON --- SECI expansion model --- local government --- green governance --- peer behavior --- green development --- rule by law --- law-based governance --- housing price --- sensitivity --- heterogeneity --- mediating mechanism --- land economic efficiency --- environmental pollution --- carbon emissions --- sustainable cities --- eastern China --- land policy --- planning system --- land-use planning --- land development --- urban development --- legal framework --- containment --- Poland --- Germany --- Spain --- green belt --- master plan --- planning history --- planning policy --- urban containment --- urban agriculture --- Kigali --- Singapore --- land-use policy --- spatial planning --- territorial governance --- land use --- law
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This book defines the dilemmas related to the interface between legal regulations and planning practice in the spatial management system. Based on specific case studies, it gives examples of possible problems and ways of solving them. It applies to Poland's standard and the determinants of spatial policy in other countries. It provides the basis for a developed international discussion and concretely suggests specific actions at local, regional and national levels.
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Regional economics. --- Land use --- Planning. --- Economics --- Regional planning --- Regionalism --- Space in economics --- Planning --- Government policy
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This book presents concise summaries of cutting-edge research and practical applications across the fields of physical, environmental, and human geography. It publishes compact refereed monographs under the editorial supervision of an international advisory board with the aim to publish 8 to 12 weeks after acceptance. Volumes are compact, 50 to 125 pages, with a clear focus. The series covers a range of content from professional to academic such as timely reports of state-of-the art analytical techniques, bridges between new research results, snapshots of hot and/or emerging topics, elaborated thesis, literature reviews, and in-depth case studies. The scope of the series spans the entire field of geography, with a view to significantly advance research. The character of the series is international and multidisciplinary and includes research areas such as GIS/cartography, remote sensing, geographical education, geospatial analysis, techniques and modeling, landscape/regional and urban planning, economic geography, housing and the built environment, and quantitative geography. Volumes in this series may analyze past, present, and/or future trends, as well as their determinants and consequences. Both solicited and unsolicited manuscripts are considered for publication in this series. This book is of interest to a wide range of individuals with interests in physical, environmental, and human geography as well as for researchers from allied disciplines.
Space. --- Urban policy. --- Human ecology --- Space Studies. --- Urban Policy. --- Environmental Studies. --- Study and teaching. --- Land use --- Planning.
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