1st Edition

Metropolitan Governance and Spatial Planning Comparative Case Studies of European City-Regions

Edited By Anton Kreukels, Willem Salet, Andy Thornley Copyright 2003
424 Pages
by Routledge

424 Pages
by Routledge

424 Pages
by Routledge

Metropolitan Governance and Spatial Planning explores the relationship between metropolitan decision-making and strategies to co-ordinate spatial policy. This relationship is examined across 20 cities of Europe and the similarities and differences analysed. Cities are having to formulate their urban policies in a very complex and turbulent environment. They are faced with numerous new pressures... Read more
Part One: General Introduction

1. Institutional and spatial coordination in European metropolitan regions
2. Metropolitan regions in the face of the European dimension

Part Two: London, Birmingham, Cardiff/Wales, Stockholm

3. London: Institutional turbulence but enduring nation-state control
4. The Birmingham case
5. The experience of Cardiff and Wales
6. The Stockholm region: metropolitan governance and spatial policy


Part Three: Berlin, Frankfurt, Hannover, Stuttgart, Amsterdam, Rotterdam

7. Berlin
8. The Frankfurt Rhine-Main Region
9. The Hanover Metropolitan Region
10. Governance in the Stuttgart metropolitan region
11. Amsterdam and the North Wing of the Randstad
12. Rotterdam and the South Wing of the Randstad


Part Four: Prague, Vienna, Venice, Milan

13. The Prague metropolitan region
14. Metropolitan governance and regional planning in Vienna
15. Venice
16. The region of Milan

Part Five: Paris, Bruxelles, Marseilles-Aix, Barcelona, Madrid

17. Paris
18. Brussels: a superimposition of social, cultural and spatial layers
19. Marseilles-Aix Metropolitan Region (1981-2000)
20. The case of Barcelona
21. Metropolitan government and development strategies in Madrid

Part Six: Concluding part: the problem of coordination in fragmented metropolises

22. Practices of Metropolitan Governance in Europe: Experiences and Lessons

Biography

Andy Thornley is Director of Planning Studies at the London School of Economics and Political Science.Anton Kreukels.>