The continuous rescaling of metropolitan governance has been a prominent feature of the neoliberal state. Metropolitan coalitions are one variant of governance in which disparate actors are brought together around a common agenda or platform. Drawing upon the example of Australia’s Committees for Cities and Regions (CCRs), this article applies urban governance theory to better understand the effectiveness of networked metropolitan governance coalitions. We find that such coalitions derive political legitimacy from the externalities produced by their network relations, which we theorize as a three-dimensional nexus of vertical (between levels of government), horizontal (between local actors), and diagonal (with CCR counterparts) components. ...
For the first time in history, more people in the world live in urban areas than in rural areas. Alm...
Metropolitan decision-making in flexible policy networks based on voluntary cooperation is present i...
City-region theory — fuzzy as the boundaries of such a theory may be — centres on the claim that the...
This paper questions the routes to knowledge of metropolitan governance elsewhere in the world and t...
This paper traces key policy challenges facing Australia\u27s metropolitan cities as a result of mul...
This article is an invitation to critically analyze “metropolitan governance” from the point of view...
Local government in New South Wales (NSW) Australia presently faces the prospect radical consolidati...
The state of New South Wales (NSW) in Australia experienced council amalgamations from 2014 to 2017,...
This paper looks at the dynamics of urban coalition building in the context of re-scaling of the sta...
A metropolitan region does not have formal institutional structures such as nations, states, and cit...
With the fundamental rescaling of socio-economic relationships, the mega-city region (MCR) has emerg...
In this commentary, we argue that augmented concepts and research methods are needed to comprehend h...
To complement Zack Taylor’s paper on Regionalism from Above: Metro Governance in Canada, the journal...
This paper argues that neoliberalism should be viewed not as a unified coherent project but as a ser...
Most states worldwide possess two or three levels of government, from national to provincial and loc...
For the first time in history, more people in the world live in urban areas than in rural areas. Alm...
Metropolitan decision-making in flexible policy networks based on voluntary cooperation is present i...
City-region theory — fuzzy as the boundaries of such a theory may be — centres on the claim that the...
This paper questions the routes to knowledge of metropolitan governance elsewhere in the world and t...
This paper traces key policy challenges facing Australia\u27s metropolitan cities as a result of mul...
This article is an invitation to critically analyze “metropolitan governance” from the point of view...
Local government in New South Wales (NSW) Australia presently faces the prospect radical consolidati...
The state of New South Wales (NSW) in Australia experienced council amalgamations from 2014 to 2017,...
This paper looks at the dynamics of urban coalition building in the context of re-scaling of the sta...
A metropolitan region does not have formal institutional structures such as nations, states, and cit...
With the fundamental rescaling of socio-economic relationships, the mega-city region (MCR) has emerg...
In this commentary, we argue that augmented concepts and research methods are needed to comprehend h...
To complement Zack Taylor’s paper on Regionalism from Above: Metro Governance in Canada, the journal...
This paper argues that neoliberalism should be viewed not as a unified coherent project but as a ser...
Most states worldwide possess two or three levels of government, from national to provincial and loc...
For the first time in history, more people in the world live in urban areas than in rural areas. Alm...
Metropolitan decision-making in flexible policy networks based on voluntary cooperation is present i...
City-region theory — fuzzy as the boundaries of such a theory may be — centres on the claim that the...