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Cecília Mezei

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Understanding Challenges for New Ways of Governance

Journal article (2019) - Andreas Obersteg, Alessandro Arlati, Marcin Wójcik, Jörg Knieling, Arianne Acke, Gilda Berruti, Konrad Czapiewski , Marcin Dabrowski, Erwin Heurkens, Cecília Mezei, Maria Federica Palestino, Viktor Varju
Urban areas account for around 50% of global solid waste generation. In the last decade, the European Union has supported numerous initiatives aiming at reducing waste generation by promoting shifts towards Circular Economy (CE) approaches. Governing this process has become imperative. This article focuses on the results of a governance analysis of six urban regions in Europe involved in the Horizon 2020 project REPAiR. By means of semi-structured interviews, document analysis and workshops with local stakeholders, for each urban area a list of governance challenges which hinder the necessary shift to circularity was drafted. In order to compare the six cases, the various challenges have been categorized using the PESTEL-O method. Results highlight a significant variation in policy contexts and the need for these to evolve by adapting stakeholders’ and policy-makers’ engagement and diffusing knowledge on CE. Common challenges among the six regions include a lack of an integrated guiding framework (both political and legal), limited awareness among citizens, and technological barriers. All these elements call for a multi-faceted governance approach able to embrace the complexity of the process and comprehensively address the various challenges to completing the shift towards circularity in cities. ...
Report (2018) - Vincent Nadin, Ana Maria Fernandez Maldonado, Umberto Janin Rivolin, Alys Solly, Erblin Berisha, Elena Pede, Bianca Maria Seardo, Tomasz Komornicki, Katarzyna Goch, Maria Bednarek-Szczepańska, Bożena Degórska, Barbara Szejgiec-Kolenda, Wil Zonneveld, Przemysław Śleszyński, Christian Lüer, Kai Böhme, Zoriica Nedovic-Budic, Brendan Williams, Johanna Varghese, Natasa Colic, Gerrit Knaap, László Csák, László Faragó, Dominic Stead, Cecília Mezei, Ilona Pálné, Zoltán Pámer, Mario Reimer, Angelika Münter, Marcin Dabrowski, Kasia Piskorek, Alankrita Sarkar, Peter Schmitt, Lukas Smas, Giancarlo Cotella
The objective of the COMPASS project was to provide an authoritative comparative report on changes in territorial governance and spatial planning systems in Europe from 2000 to 2016. This Final Report presents the main findings, conclusions and policy recommendations. The COMPASS project compares territorial governance and spatial planning in 32 European countries (the 28 EU member states plus four ESPON partner countries). COMPASS differs from previous studies in that the accent is not on a snapshot comparison of national systems, but on identifying trends in reforms from 2000 to 2016. It also seeks to give reasons for these changes with particular reference to EU directives and policies, and to identify good practices for the cross-fertilisation of spatial development policies with EU Cohesion Policy. The research is based on expert knowledge with reference wherever possible to authoritative sources. Experts with in-depth experience of each national system were appointed to contribute to the study. The research design involved primarily collection of data from the 32 countries through questionnaires and five in-depth case studies of the interaction of EU Cohesion Policy and other sectoral policies with spatial planning and territorial governance. ...