Publikationen (FIS)

Warum «kooperative Regionalplanung» leicht zu fordern, aber schwer zu praktizieren ist

Ergebnisse eines forschungsprojektes

verfasst von
Jörg Knieling, Dietrich Fürst, Rainer Danielzyk
Abstract

Cooperation and consensus-building play an important role in the discussion about the further development of society and the state. In planning theory both are seen as requirements for modern regional planning. Cooperative regional planning should orientate its sphere of influence to meet this demand. This means dealing with topics that are inter-sectoral, inter-communal, integrated, and regional. Themes that are especially important are sustainability, regional development and redevelopment, and environmental quality. Under these circumstances the instruments of regional planning dealing with informal cooperation and formal control have to be designed in a way to achieve a high level of synergy. Of main importance is the management of cooperation, because it is not natural that the actors involved, working on their own, will cooperate. This management aim of regional self-control, network-like working together, can assist with effective conflict solving and the mobilization of regional self-help. Regional planning is an ideal process for these tasks. What is missing is that politics and competing administrative authorities acknowledge the potential of cooperative regional planning.

Organisationseinheit(en)
Institut für Umweltplanung
Typ
Artikel
Journal
DISP
Band
145
Seiten
41-50
Anzahl der Seiten
10
ISSN
0251-3625
Publikationsdatum
2001
Publikationsstatus
Veröffentlicht
Peer-reviewed
Ja
ASJC Scopus Sachgebiete
Geografie, Planung und Entwicklung
Elektronische Version(en)
https://doi.org/10.1080/02513625.2001.10556773 (Zugang: Unbekannt)