In recent years, converting office buildings to residential use became a high-profile issue in the UK and in the Netherlands. There has, however, been differentiation in the policy response between England and Scotland (planning policy being devolved within the UK), and the Netherlands. We conceptualize this differentiation through the lens of variegated neoliberalism in the forms of hard, soft and thin governance spaces. England, where planning deregulation is more strongly adopted, represents a thin governance space. Scotland, where there has been little policy change, illustrates a hard governance space. The Netherlands represents a soft governance space, where proactive partnerships between government and developers predominate. This pa...
The British system of land use planning is one of the most restrictive in the world. It substantiall...
Exploration of how neighbourhoods and others have responded to the UK government’s localism agenda i...
This data is a summary of classroom surveys conducted in the UK, Netherlands and Norway. Participan...
Land policies governing individual and institutional rights to buildings and land are shaped by the ...
In England, it has been possible since 2013 to convert an office building into residential use witho...
In England, it has been possible since May 2013 to convert a building from being an office into resi...
Faced with acute housing crises, some governments are inclined to strip away the ‘bureaucracy’ of pl...
© 2016 IBF, The Institute for Housing and Urban ResearchThe devolution of governance to communities ...
The global rhetoric surrounding the role of private markets in the provision of new housing masks a ...
In this paper I explore how the culture of land-use planning in Scotland has been targeted as an ob...
The UK has been engaged in an ongoing process of constitutional reform since the late 1990s, when de...
This paper analyses contemporary experiments of building governance capacity in new soft spaces in D...
Increasing the density of existing urban areas can support urban regeneration and environmental sust...
This article examines the impact of the National Planning Policy Framework’s requirement that all lo...
This paper draws from research into the evolution of plans to create significant new ‘sustainable’ r...
The British system of land use planning is one of the most restrictive in the world. It substantiall...
Exploration of how neighbourhoods and others have responded to the UK government’s localism agenda i...
This data is a summary of classroom surveys conducted in the UK, Netherlands and Norway. Participan...
Land policies governing individual and institutional rights to buildings and land are shaped by the ...
In England, it has been possible since 2013 to convert an office building into residential use witho...
In England, it has been possible since May 2013 to convert a building from being an office into resi...
Faced with acute housing crises, some governments are inclined to strip away the ‘bureaucracy’ of pl...
© 2016 IBF, The Institute for Housing and Urban ResearchThe devolution of governance to communities ...
The global rhetoric surrounding the role of private markets in the provision of new housing masks a ...
In this paper I explore how the culture of land-use planning in Scotland has been targeted as an ob...
The UK has been engaged in an ongoing process of constitutional reform since the late 1990s, when de...
This paper analyses contemporary experiments of building governance capacity in new soft spaces in D...
Increasing the density of existing urban areas can support urban regeneration and environmental sust...
This article examines the impact of the National Planning Policy Framework’s requirement that all lo...
This paper draws from research into the evolution of plans to create significant new ‘sustainable’ r...
The British system of land use planning is one of the most restrictive in the world. It substantiall...
Exploration of how neighbourhoods and others have responded to the UK government’s localism agenda i...
This data is a summary of classroom surveys conducted in the UK, Netherlands and Norway. Participan...