Legitimacy is widely regarded as a founding principle of ‘good’ and effective governance, yet despite intense academic debate and policy discourse, the concept remains conceptually confusing and poorly articulated in practice. To bridge this gap, this research performed an interpretive thematic analysis of academic scholarship across public administration, public policy, law, political science and geography. Three core themes were identified in relation to representative deliberation, procedural and distributive equity and justice, and socio-political acceptability, with numerous sub-themes therein. In an attempt to clarify conceptual confusion, this paper grounds these theoretical debates in the context of flood risk governance where numer...
There has been an upsurge in studies of flood risk governance (FRG): steering and decision-making by...
Diversification of flood risk management strategies can be seen as a necessary but not sufficient pr...
Stakeholder consultation and participation are often viewed as an essential component of hazards gov...
Legitimacy is widely regarded as a founding principle of ‘good’ and effective governance, yet despit...
Legitimacy is widely regarded as a founding principle of ‘good’ and effective governance, yet despit...
Legitimacy is widely regarded as a founding principle of ‘good’ and effective governance, yet despit...
The legitimacy of a governing system is at risk when actors leave projects angry, disappointed or di...
Calls to strengthen flood risk governance are echoed across Europe amidst a growing consensus that f...
Legitimacy has received comparatively less attention than societal resilience in the context of floo...
Legitimacy has received comparatively less attention than societal resilience in the context of floo...
Legitimacy is often dwarfed by preoccupations with resilience in the context of Flood Risk Governanc...
Legitimacy is often dwarfed by preoccupations with resilience in the context of Flood Risk Governanc...
There has been an upsurge in studies of flood risk governance (FRG): steering and decision-making by...
Diversification of flood risk management strategies can be seen as a necessary but not sufficient pr...
Stakeholder consultation and participation are often viewed as an essential component of hazards gov...
Legitimacy is widely regarded as a founding principle of ‘good’ and effective governance, yet despit...
Legitimacy is widely regarded as a founding principle of ‘good’ and effective governance, yet despit...
Legitimacy is widely regarded as a founding principle of ‘good’ and effective governance, yet despit...
The legitimacy of a governing system is at risk when actors leave projects angry, disappointed or di...
Calls to strengthen flood risk governance are echoed across Europe amidst a growing consensus that f...
Legitimacy has received comparatively less attention than societal resilience in the context of floo...
Legitimacy has received comparatively less attention than societal resilience in the context of floo...
Legitimacy is often dwarfed by preoccupations with resilience in the context of Flood Risk Governanc...
Legitimacy is often dwarfed by preoccupations with resilience in the context of Flood Risk Governanc...
There has been an upsurge in studies of flood risk governance (FRG): steering and decision-making by...
Diversification of flood risk management strategies can be seen as a necessary but not sufficient pr...
Stakeholder consultation and participation are often viewed as an essential component of hazards gov...