This paper focusses on the role of iconic sites in the legitimation of policies. Traditionally the legitimation of administrations is based on national communities. The undermining of these territorial communities, through globalisation and individualisation, make iconic sites more important to anchor spatial identities and link these between groups and across scales. Traditional thick spatial identities based on a historically formed nested hierarchy of local, regional and national territorial communities are in decline. Administrations have to rely more on thinner, more forward looking identities. The spatiality of iconic sites makes them useful to communicate a consistent identity discourse linking different types and scales of spatial i...
Scale-enlargement processes have made people more conscious of the identity of their region. Profess...
Fifteen years have passed since the start of the national project New Dutch Waterline, presented as ...
This paper analyses how discourses of “new nature” have been implemented in the Dutch context – as a...
The number and importance of regions are increasing at the same time as traditional regional identit...
City branding as produced by local governments has been widely recognized as a modern version of gov...
Even though the societal and academic attention to geoparks is on the rise, there is a distinct abse...
The creation of a national identity shared by the whole population becomes increasingly difficult in...
This paper discusses the different ways in which local identities are used in two Dutch municipaliti...
Flanders distinguishes itself in Europe by its flat and dispersedly urbanized territory. If water wa...
Drawing on the case study of the Wageningse Eng, the Netherlands, this paper examines a set of spati...
In water management and in spatial planning there is a debate on the fundamental underlying discours...
Drawing on the case study of the Wageningse Eng, the Netherlands, this paper examines a set of spati...
The change in the form of cities over the last few decades into amorphous patterns classified as Zwi...
This paper analyses how discourses of “new nature” have been implemented in the Dutch context – as a...
Scale-enlargement processes have made people more conscious of the identity of their region. Profess...
Fifteen years have passed since the start of the national project New Dutch Waterline, presented as ...
This paper analyses how discourses of “new nature” have been implemented in the Dutch context – as a...
The number and importance of regions are increasing at the same time as traditional regional identit...
City branding as produced by local governments has been widely recognized as a modern version of gov...
Even though the societal and academic attention to geoparks is on the rise, there is a distinct abse...
The creation of a national identity shared by the whole population becomes increasingly difficult in...
This paper discusses the different ways in which local identities are used in two Dutch municipaliti...
Flanders distinguishes itself in Europe by its flat and dispersedly urbanized territory. If water wa...
Drawing on the case study of the Wageningse Eng, the Netherlands, this paper examines a set of spati...
In water management and in spatial planning there is a debate on the fundamental underlying discours...
Drawing on the case study of the Wageningse Eng, the Netherlands, this paper examines a set of spati...
The change in the form of cities over the last few decades into amorphous patterns classified as Zwi...
This paper analyses how discourses of “new nature” have been implemented in the Dutch context – as a...
Scale-enlargement processes have made people more conscious of the identity of their region. Profess...
Fifteen years have passed since the start of the national project New Dutch Waterline, presented as ...
This paper analyses how discourses of “new nature” have been implemented in the Dutch context – as a...