Accountability in urban regeneration partnerships: a role for design centers

"Partnerships in urban development reflect the 'wicked' nature of regeneration efforts, often requiring attention to a range of investment and programmatic interdependencies. "Taxpayer revolts, tax and expenditure limits, cutbacks in federal grants, a deep recession, and the perv...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published inCities Vol. 71; pp. 8 - 16
Main Author Farhat, Ramzi
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published 01.02.2018
Online AccessGet full text

Cover

Loading…
More Information
Summary:"Partnerships in urban development reflect the 'wicked' nature of regeneration efforts, often requiring attention to a range of investment and programmatic interdependencies. "Taxpayer revolts, tax and expenditure limits, cutbacks in federal grants, a deep recession, and the pervasive pall of public opprobrium for things governmental", to quote Peterson (1985, p. 34), are some of the challenges that have reinforced this trend. To this end, partnerships have achieved what Hodge and Greve (2007) describe as an 'iconic status' in urban administration. Partnerships in the context of the 'entrepreneurial city' have been associated with the delivery of large scale schemes, often involving significant attention to the civic design. Investments in waterfronts, streetscapes, and public plazas are some examples. As Goldstein and Mele (2016) have however recently pointed out, a large literature on partnerships focuses on questions of motivations and outcomes, while the 'inner workings' of these arrangements are yet to be fully explored. This paper contributes to this scholarship by highlighting the utility of analytic constructs derived from a broader literature on governance, most notably so from the field of public administration. In that literature, the study of approaches to task delegation and performance monitoring defines a research agenda on the relations between principals and their agents, and is particularly insightful of how the question of accountability should be approached in the design of regeneration partnerships."
Bibliography:ObjectType-Article-1
SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1
content type line 23
ObjectType-Feature-2
ISSN:0264-2751