Civic Capital and the Dynamics of Intermunicipal Cooperation for Regional Economic Development

This thesis concentrates on the interplay of structural and societal factors in the development of regional governance though a comparative study of two Canadian (Toronto and Waterloo) and two German (Frankfurt and the Rhein-Neckar) city regions. It was inspired by the tendency, in both scholarship...

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Main Author: Nelles, Jen
Other Authors: Wolfe, David A.
Language:en_ca
Published: 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1807/17808
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spelling ndltd-TORONTO-oai-tspace.library.utoronto.ca-1807-178082013-11-09T04:12:38ZCivic Capital and the Dynamics of Intermunicipal Cooperation for Regional Economic DevelopmentNelles, Jenregional governanceeconomic developmentintergovernmental relationslocal government0615This thesis concentrates on the interplay of structural and societal factors in the development of regional governance though a comparative study of two Canadian (Toronto and Waterloo) and two German (Frankfurt and the Rhein-Neckar) city regions. It was inspired by the tendency, in both scholarship and practice, to turn to formal institutional reform to solve problems of regional coordination. Debates of new regionalism advocate a role for governance solutions, which encourage a broader spectrum of actors to engage in the policy process. However, the emphasis in most jurisdictions has remained on formal, institutionalized structures, imposed by senior levels of government. As a result, the construction and potential for bottom-up and collectively negotiated regional solutions are typically under-explored. This thesis builds a case for intermunicipal cooperation as an alternative approach to regional coordination, uniting the participatory concept of regional governance with functional flexibility of cooperative networks. It analyses what factors affect the emergence of these networks for governance in three areas of regional economic development: regional marketing, cultural policy and regional transportation. It argues that while regional structural, institutional and contextual variables are useful in understanding the emergence of development partnerships, they tend to have different effects in different cases. The thesis formulates and applies an innovative concept – civic capital – to capture the dynamics of building and sustaining regional governance networks. It is both a critique and extension of social capital approaches to regional development. Using the four cases the thesis argues that, where civic capital is high intermunicipal cooperation is more likely regardless of institutional and structural contexts. Consequently, the thesis makes a theoretical contribution to both literature on intermunicipal cooperation and broader debates on the dynamics of regional governance, development and social networks.Wolfe, David A.2009-062009-09-25T14:54:49ZNO_RESTRICTION2009-09-25T14:54:49Z2009-09-25T14:54:49ZThesishttp://hdl.handle.net/1807/17808en_ca
collection NDLTD
language en_ca
sources NDLTD
topic regional governance
economic development
intergovernmental relations
local government
0615
spellingShingle regional governance
economic development
intergovernmental relations
local government
0615
Nelles, Jen
Civic Capital and the Dynamics of Intermunicipal Cooperation for Regional Economic Development
description This thesis concentrates on the interplay of structural and societal factors in the development of regional governance though a comparative study of two Canadian (Toronto and Waterloo) and two German (Frankfurt and the Rhein-Neckar) city regions. It was inspired by the tendency, in both scholarship and practice, to turn to formal institutional reform to solve problems of regional coordination. Debates of new regionalism advocate a role for governance solutions, which encourage a broader spectrum of actors to engage in the policy process. However, the emphasis in most jurisdictions has remained on formal, institutionalized structures, imposed by senior levels of government. As a result, the construction and potential for bottom-up and collectively negotiated regional solutions are typically under-explored. This thesis builds a case for intermunicipal cooperation as an alternative approach to regional coordination, uniting the participatory concept of regional governance with functional flexibility of cooperative networks. It analyses what factors affect the emergence of these networks for governance in three areas of regional economic development: regional marketing, cultural policy and regional transportation. It argues that while regional structural, institutional and contextual variables are useful in understanding the emergence of development partnerships, they tend to have different effects in different cases. The thesis formulates and applies an innovative concept – civic capital – to capture the dynamics of building and sustaining regional governance networks. It is both a critique and extension of social capital approaches to regional development. Using the four cases the thesis argues that, where civic capital is high intermunicipal cooperation is more likely regardless of institutional and structural contexts. Consequently, the thesis makes a theoretical contribution to both literature on intermunicipal cooperation and broader debates on the dynamics of regional governance, development and social networks.
author2 Wolfe, David A.
author_facet Wolfe, David A.
Nelles, Jen
author Nelles, Jen
author_sort Nelles, Jen
title Civic Capital and the Dynamics of Intermunicipal Cooperation for Regional Economic Development
title_short Civic Capital and the Dynamics of Intermunicipal Cooperation for Regional Economic Development
title_full Civic Capital and the Dynamics of Intermunicipal Cooperation for Regional Economic Development
title_fullStr Civic Capital and the Dynamics of Intermunicipal Cooperation for Regional Economic Development
title_full_unstemmed Civic Capital and the Dynamics of Intermunicipal Cooperation for Regional Economic Development
title_sort civic capital and the dynamics of intermunicipal cooperation for regional economic development
publishDate 2009
url http://hdl.handle.net/1807/17808
work_keys_str_mv AT nellesjen civiccapitalandthedynamicsofintermunicipalcooperationforregionaleconomicdevelopment
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