Abstract

The spatial planning system in Denmark has traditionally been known for its ‘comprehensive-integrated’
 appeal characterized by a ‘formal’ rationality embedded within its systematic hierarchy of plans and
 institutions from national to local levels. In Europe, the purpose of planning systems of this kind has been to
 achieve ‘spatial coherence’ between levels of government and across territorial scales through the
 coordination and integration of policy sectors (horizontally) as well as jurisdictions and planning policies
 (vertically) shaping the management and articulation of spatial change. However, the Danish spatial planning
 system has been exposed to profound reorientations in recent years, as illustrated by the radical modification
 of its scope, its structure as well as its institutional and policy mechanisms. In the case of Denmark, a
 structural reform implemented in 2007 that changed the country’s political geography and its existing
 intergovernmental arrangements hence led to: i) the downward rescaling (from regional to municipal levels)
 of most functions and responsibilities related to spatial planning; ii) the upward rescaling (from metropolitan
 to national level) of spatial planning functions associated with the Metropolitan Region of Copenhagen; and
 iii) the revocation of regional planning as well as the institutional dismantling of the metropolitan level.
 Based on these series of changes, this paper aims at elucidating how different governments in power over
 the last 20 years have interpreted the planning system based on the adoption and adaptation of specific
 strategies (legal and/or spatial) that seek to articulate the different levels that comprise the planning system
 in one way or another. The impact that stems from the implementation of these strategies (whether they also
 remain as speculations or intentions) is that there is an increasing tendency to indirectly redefine
 conventional territorial scales. In order to depict such redefinition, this paper attempts to carry out an analysis
 of: i) the strategic spatial role attributed to each level of planning; ii) how each territorial scale is redefined as
 a result of the changing spatial relationships occurring between the planning levels.

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