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Exploring ad hoc regionalism

by Douglas R. Porter

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Urban issues such as environmental degradation, sprawl, social and fiscal disparity, and globalization call for action at a regional scale. But regions in the U.S. largely lack governance capacity to develop plans for these challenges. This policy focus report examines recent experiments to create such capacity that rely on augmenting existing government and regional planning councils. Frequently these initiatives involve interest groups from public, private, and nonprofit sectors operating in loose-knit, collaborative relations.… (more)
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36 p.
  BmoreMetroCouncil | Feb 9, 2017 |
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Urban issues such as environmental degradation, sprawl, social and fiscal disparity, and globalization call for action at a regional scale. But regions in the U.S. largely lack governance capacity to develop plans for these challenges. This policy focus report examines recent experiments to create such capacity that rely on augmenting existing government and regional planning councils. Frequently these initiatives involve interest groups from public, private, and nonprofit sectors operating in loose-knit, collaborative relations.

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