Abstract

The academic discourse considers the regional scale as an important planning level to provide for spatial objectives that transcend the boundaries of local authorities. Nonetheless, the problem-solving capacity of the regional planning level is still questioned by both academics and practitioners. This paper studies the tension between formal and informal regional governance and its practical challenges for two cases of Dutch provinces struggling with their position in regional governance networks. These cases entail pan-European development (Trans-European Transport Networks – TEN-T) and regional land development (Bloemendalerpolder). It was found that at the metropolitan scale, formal regional planning powers tend to overrule socially produced regional governance arrangements. Simultaneously, regional planning powers lack support of these socially produced arrangements for their interventions. At the same time, at the supra-regional scale, provinces are a logical stakeholder to fulfil a prominent role in regional governance, but often lack the institutional capacity to act as such. We therefore argue that regional planning authorities need to be granted the power and capacity to take up a more centripetal, intermediate role in governance arrangements. This would provide them more capacity to act in disentangling the difficult practical challenges of scalar problems that many regional governance arrangements currently face.

Highlights

  • This paper studies the tension between formal and informal regional governance and its practical challenges for two cases of Dutch provinces struggling with their position in regional governance networks

  • The regional scale is seen as an important planning level to deliver spatial objectives transcending local authority boundaries ( Janssen-Jansen & Hutton, 2011)

  • We focus on the role of the formal regional planning authority within the network between market–civil society–government (Driessen, Dieperink, Laerhoven, Runhaar, & Vermeulen, 2012)

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

The regional scale is seen as an important planning level to deliver spatial objectives transcending local authority boundaries ( Janssen-Jansen & Hutton, 2011). Even where planning processes are intentionally designed to aid informal priority implementation, formal authorities often augment rules during the planning process to (forcefully) frame informal implementation (Moroni, 2015; Van Straalen et al, 2017), undermining these informal arrangements capacities to act effectively (Danson & Lloyd, 2012; Van Straalen et al, 2017) This suggests that the main drivers of tensions between formal and informal arrangements are caused by (1) lack of transparency in communication and cooperation, (2) (unequal) power relations, (3) formal rules and (4) formal authorities’ accountability and legitimacy requirements

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