Abstract

The Regional Master Plan for Ile-de-France departs from traditionally hierarchical French planning objectives and methods. Private groups have contributed more to the definition of spatial policies, through a metropolitan project in which the public sector (the State and local authorities) still play a central part for collective regulation. Space is seen in terms of a territorial project, where the relations between various agents are at stake, which means strategies for development can be differentiated within cities. This paper assesses territorial regulation and the obstacles it meets.

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