ABSTRACT

Ideal for students and practitioners working in spatial planning, the Europeanization of planning agendas and regional policy in general Spatial Planning Systems and Practices in Europe develops a systematic methodological framework to analyze changes in planning systems throughout Europe. The main aim of the book is to delineate the coexistence of continuity and change and of convergence and divergence with regard to planning practices across Europe.

Based on the work of experts on spatial planning from twelve European countries the authors underline the specific and context-dependent variety and disparateness of planning transformation, focusing on

  • the main objectives of the changes,
  • the driving forces behind them and the main phases and turning points,
  • the main agenda setting actors, and
  • the different planning modes and tools reflected in the different "policy and planning styles".

Along with a methodological framework the book includes twelve country case studies and the comparative conclusions covering a variety of planning systems of EU member states. According to the four "ideal types" of planning systems identified in the EU Compendium, at least two countries have been selected from each of the four different planning traditions:

  1. regional-economic (France, Germany),
  2. Urbanism (Greece, Italy),
  3. comprehensive/integrated (Denmark ,Finland, Netherlands, Germany),
  4. "land use planning" (UK, Czech Republic, Belgium/Flanders),

along with two additional case studies focusing on the recent developments in eastern European countries by looking at Poland and in southern Europe looking at Turkey.

chapter 2|21 pages

The Danish Planning System 1990–2010

Continuity and decay

chapter 3|19 pages

The Recent Development of the Finnish Planning System

The city of Vantaa as an executor, fighter and independent actor

chapter 5|26 pages

Spatial Planning in Germany

Institutional inertia and new challenges

chapter 8|20 pages

The Evolution Of Spatial Planning In Greece After The 1990s

Drivers, directions and agents of change

chapter 9|20 pages

Spatial Planning in Flanders

Serving a bypassed capitalism?

chapter 12|19 pages

Spatial and Strategic Planning in Turkey

Institutional change and new challenges

chapter 14|28 pages

Conclusion

Multiple trends of continuity and change