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Regional Integrated Strategies In Europe

Regional Integrated Strategies In Europe. RISE. Stakeholders: Birmingham City Council (Lead Stakeholder); Regional Council of Västerbotten ; Region Zealand; Randstad Region (Brussels Office) Research Partners: University of Birmingham – Department of Management

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Regional Integrated Strategies In Europe

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  1. Regional Integrated Strategies In Europe RISE

  2. Stakeholders: • Birmingham City Council (Lead Stakeholder); • Regional Council of Västerbotten; • Region Zealand; • Randstad Region (Brussels Office) Research Partners: • University of Birmingham – Department of Management • Delft University of Technology – Research Institute for Housing, Urban and Mobility Studies (OTB) • University of Copenhagen – Forest & Landscape, Denmark (FLD) • University of Umeå– Centre for Regional Science (CERUM) RISE – Regional Integrated Strategies in Europe

  3. RISE: Västerbotten (S), Randstad (NL), Zealand (DK), W. Midlands (UK)

  4. Political Change: • Change of national policy emphasis • Reactions against traditional regional level or divisions • Commitment to greater territorial and policy flexibility • Fiscal retrenchment Economic Crisis • Rebalancing of economies • Supply-side policies – taxes, regulation, flexibility • Business friendly • Support KBE and Innovation • Based upon - review, analysis, mapping, debate Context

  5. Analyse the emergence and significance of RIS in different settings: • Professional, academic, ESPON literature, • data analysis and qualitative case studies of the RIS contexts in four pilot regions • plus regional and EU wide web survey Develop typologies of Regional Integrated Strategies: • Overview of different types of RIS • Style, aims and objectives, scope, stakeholder involvement, • vertical and horizontal integration, • implementation strategies, monitoring and evaluation. Objectives

  6. Develop and test a RIS-toolkit applicable elsewhere: • Enhance integrated nature of regional strategies – horizontally and vertically • Develop Integration indicators and monitoring and evaluation indicators – ladder of integration • Describe financial models available to combine instruments (European, national, regional, local) Conclusions and recommendations: • Draw overall conclusions and recommendations for RIS • to be applied in the stakeholder regions and guidance for other localities in Europe. Objectives

  7. An overall schema for the literature review A design for the case studies A template for the Case Studies Interviews and Initial Case Studies Design of RIS toolkit – for analysis of Integration Initial Consideration of the Survey of Applicability of the RIS toolkit An initial overview of the four stakeholder regions using ‘external’ public statistics Achievements

  8. In England regional development agencies (and regional level planning) have been replaced by voluntary cooperation between municipalities within LEPs. In Denmark administrative reform in 2007 reduced regional planning almost to an advisory level, and divided metropolis and hinterland. In the Randstadt, a change of the regional structure is currently being considered, with variable geometry. In Sweden, regional strategies in a majority of counties, including Västerbotten, are being reorganised into relationally determined territories. Findings

  9. The concept of ‘region’ may be usefully be replaced by the concept of “territory”. “Integrated” should be replaced by “integrative” in order to stress that we deal with processes of integration. Delimitation of territories should be taken as part of the strategic conduct. Territorial delimitations is relational – connected by agents networking in trans-local settings – as well as functional and administrative Findings

  10. The Changing Pattern of Territorial Policy Integration: Shift from sectorallyto territorially-integrated policies Shift from rational designed to flexible territorial geometries Shift from centrally designed to locally emergent agencies and policies Shift from government-led policy making towards public/private partnerships Shift from quasi-permanent to short term integrations COMMON THEMES

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