Abstract
This paper analyses urban waste systems to explore how local authorities can resolve challenges related to climate change, urbanization and resource depletion. The paper investigates how different public governance regimes affect local authorities’ ability to move upwards in the waste hierarchy. It identifies three different governance regimes – traditional bureaucracy, new public management and networked governance – and uses the insights from innovation in urban waste in three Norwegian city regions – Oslo, Drammen and Bergen – to illuminate how these regimes possess both strengths and weaknesses in how they affect system optimization and system change. The observed working practices signal that the issue of urban waste systems is perceived as a challenge of system optimization rather than system change. Viewing this as a challenge requiring system change would probably have ensured a stronger directionality and a broader anchoring of actors. Such an approach is likely to have arrived at a waste prevention mode earlier than the step-by-step-solutions implemented so far. The paper concludes that there is not one best governance regime, but a need to acknowledge their co-existence and carefully consider the characteristics of the respective regimes in order to arrange urban waste systems for long-term dynamic and sustainable city regions.
Highlights
More than half of the world’s population lives in urban areas, and this proportion is increasing (Frantzeskaki and Kabisch, 2016)
The paper aims to answer the following research question: How do different public governance regimes affect the dynamics across system optimization and system change in urban waste systems?
To investigate how the three governance regimes affect the potential for effectiveness, innovation and sustainability, the paper presents insights from an analysis of three urban waste systems in different city regions in Norway: Oslo, Drammen and Bergen
Summary
More than half of the world’s population lives in urban areas, and this proportion is increasing (Frantzeskaki and Kabisch, 2016). This paper analyses innovation and sustainability in urban waste systems through the lens of public governance regimes. It identifies three governance regimes – traditional bureaucracy, new public management and networked governance – that influence how decisions, activities and involvement related to urban waste are made and carried out by local authorities. The paper aims to answer the following research question: How do different public governance regimes affect the dynamics across system optimization and system change in urban waste systems?. To investigate how the three governance regimes affect the potential for effectiveness, innovation and sustainability, the paper presents insights from an analysis of three urban waste systems in different city regions in Norway: Oslo, Drammen and Bergen.
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