Assessing the 'Governance Grip' of Combined Authorities for Integrated Infrastructure Provision in the UK
Publikation: Bidrag til bog/antologi/rapport › Konferencebidrag i proceedings › Forskning
Standard
Assessing the 'Governance Grip' of Combined Authorities for Integrated Infrastructure Provision in the UK. / Honeybone, Paul; Steenmans, Katrien; Acuto, Michele.
Selected Conference Proceedings: 3rd International Conference on Urban Sustainability and Resilience. 2018.Publikation: Bidrag til bog/antologi/rapport › Konferencebidrag i proceedings › Forskning
Harvard
APA
Vancouver
Author
Bibtex
}
RIS
TY - GEN
T1 - Assessing the 'Governance Grip' of Combined Authorities for Integrated Infrastructure Provision in the UK
AU - Honeybone, Paul
AU - Steenmans, Katrien
AU - Acuto, Michele
PY - 2018/11/28
Y1 - 2018/11/28
N2 - While the positive benefits of integrated infrastructure development and management are theoretically understood, many global city-regions do not havegovernance arrangements designed to operationalise integration. Despite thecriticality of ‘nexus’ provision and high degrees of interdependence in city-regions, the organisation of governance mechanisms to ensure collaborative and symbiotic relationships remains an incomplete aspect of business as usual. A preliminary assessment was conducted of the governability of critical infrastructure domains (water, energy, food, and waste) in select UK city-regions. To establish a systematic approach for further research, a Governance Framework was produced and piloted.The paper also reports on preliminary investigations and confirms insights that agovernance deficit exists. We note that integrated infrastructure issues were notappearing systematically as high-level strategic governance priorities for the newly established Combined Authorities. We conclude the ‘governance grip’ discernable for overseeing integrated infrastructure outcomes is relatively weak.
AB - While the positive benefits of integrated infrastructure development and management are theoretically understood, many global city-regions do not havegovernance arrangements designed to operationalise integration. Despite thecriticality of ‘nexus’ provision and high degrees of interdependence in city-regions, the organisation of governance mechanisms to ensure collaborative and symbiotic relationships remains an incomplete aspect of business as usual. A preliminary assessment was conducted of the governability of critical infrastructure domains (water, energy, food, and waste) in select UK city-regions. To establish a systematic approach for further research, a Governance Framework was produced and piloted.The paper also reports on preliminary investigations and confirms insights that agovernance deficit exists. We note that integrated infrastructure issues were notappearing systematically as high-level strategic governance priorities for the newly established Combined Authorities. We conclude the ‘governance grip’ discernable for overseeing integrated infrastructure outcomes is relatively weak.
UR - https://pureportal.coventry.ac.uk/en/publications/assessing-the-governance-grip-of-combined-authorities-for-integrated-infrastructure-provision-in-the-uk(124ce7b3-e895-44cc-8e72-4218039639d4).html
M3 - Article in proceedings
BT - Selected Conference Proceedings: 3rd International Conference on Urban Sustainability and Resilience
ER -
ID: 338782285