期刊
JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL PLANNING AND MANAGEMENT
卷 66, 期 10, 页码 2051-2070出版社
ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/09640568.2022.2060806
关键词
land use; planning conflicts; land management; typology; local governance
This paper explores local land use conflicts, which arise from conflicting planning policies and local societal conceptions. Through a typology framework, the paper reveals the complex nature of land use conflicts resulting from successive planning decisions. The study finds that conflicts arise due to the sequence of past planning decisions.
With immensely growing pressure on land and its scarcity, conflicting societal expectations concerning land use increasingly result in land use conflicts (LUCs). In this paper, we explore local LUCs, which we define as the complex situations, where fragmented planning policies encounter place-based societal conceptions and perceptions of site-specific developmental priorities. The paper adopts a dynamic approach and introduces a theory-driven typology of potentially conflicting planning decisions. The typology is employed as an analytic framework to reveal the open-ended successive planning decisions that lead to complex local LUCs. Two case studies from Central Europe are explored to narrate the evolutionary complexity of LUCs. Our results show that local LUCs emerged as the past planning decisions lined-up into a sequence creating lock-in situations, where different planning policies can be hardly reconciled. Finally, we discuss applicability, transferability and limits of the proposed typology as an analytic framework advancing management of planning conflicts.
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