Environmental governance: participatory, multi-level - and effective? / Jens Newig and Oliver Fritsch. Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research, UFZ

cbs.date.changed2021-07-26
cbs.date.creation2009-07-11
cbs.picatypeOa
cbs.publication.displayformLeipzig : Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research - UFZ, 2008
dc.contributor.authorNewig, Jens
dc.contributor.authorFritsch, Oliver
dc.date.accessioned2025-05-29T14:49:06Z
dc.date.issued2008
dc.description.abstractCurrent international and European Union environmental policies increasingly promote collaborative and participatory decision-making on appropriate and multiple governance levels as a means to attain more sustainable policies and a more effective and lasting policy implementation. The entailed shifts of geographical scale of governance can be exemplified by the EU Water Framework Directive in that higher-level policies are devolved not only to the member states but to local collaborative decision-making bodies on natural as opposed to territorial scales. To date, empirical evidence and theoretical considerations have remained ambiguous about the environmental outcomes of such modes of governance. At the same time, the relationship between multi-level governance and non-state actor involvement remains a largely uncharted terrain. Accordingly, a twofold research agenda is mapped out: How does public participation work in different governance contexts? And what potential do multi-level governance environments have to foster the effectiveness of participatory governance? Drawing on scholarly literature on multi-level governance, policy implementation, public participation and complex systems, we develop five sets of hypotheses on how the number of policy levels and geographical rescaling affect citizen participation, actor interests and policy outcomes. We present empirical results based on a comparative meta-analysis of 47 case studies in environmental governance in North America and the EU, combining qualitative and quantitative methods. -- Civic participation ; multi-level governance ; re-scaling ; policy implementation ; institutional fit ; meta-analysis ; case surveyde
dc.description.noteParallel als Druckausg. erschienen
dc.format.extentOnline-Ressource (PDF-Datei: 26 S., 0,46 MB)
dc.genrebook
dc.identifier.ppn604559410
dc.identifier.urihttps://epflicht.bibliothek.uni-halle.de/handle/123456789/5242
dc.identifier.urnurn:nbn:de:gbv:3:2-78214
dc.identifier.vl-id2611106
dc.language.isoeng
dc.publisherHelmholtz Centre for Environmental Research - UFZ
dc.relation.ispartofseriesUFZ-Diskussionspapiere ; 15/2008 ppn:635135833
dc.rights.urihttp://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/
dc.subject.ddc330
dc.titleEnvironmental governance: participatory, multi-level - and effective? / Jens Newig and Oliver Fritsch. Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research, UFZ
dc.typeBook
dspace.entity.typeMonograph
local.accessrights.itemAnonymous
local.openaccesstrue

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Environmental governance: participatory, multi-level - and effective?
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