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Towards a sustainable, negotiated mode of strategic regional planning: a political economy perspective
The need to give strategic direction to complex regional systems has never been greater, but reinstating a classic strategic plan model that failed to secure consistently positive impacts, or even sustain its own practice, is a mistaken route. With a mix of conceptual analysis, critical review of past experience and examination of population dynamics across England’s Wider South East and its fringes, this paper argues for a decentred form of strategic governance based on the development of a capacity for negotiated collaboration and realistic engagement with powerful market and institutional processes on a sustained basis.
Towards a sustainable, negotiated mode of strategic regional planning: a political economy perspective
The need to give strategic direction to complex regional systems has never been greater, but reinstating a classic strategic plan model that failed to secure consistently positive impacts, or even sustain its own practice, is a mistaken route. With a mix of conceptual analysis, critical review of past experience and examination of population dynamics across England’s Wider South East and its fringes, this paper argues for a decentred form of strategic governance based on the development of a capacity for negotiated collaboration and realistic engagement with powerful market and institutional processes on a sustained basis.
Towards a sustainable, negotiated mode of strategic regional planning: a political economy perspective
Gordon, Ian (author) / Champion, Tony (author)
Regional Studies ; 55 ; 115-126
2021-01-02
12 pages
Article (Journal)
Electronic Resource
Unknown
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