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4 - Plurality of expert knowledge: public planners’experience with urban contractualism inAmsterdam

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  30 April 2022

Mike Raco
Affiliation:
University College London
Federico Savini
Affiliation:
Universiteit van Amsterdam
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Summary

Introduction

Focusing on the Dutch planning experience, which istraditionally highly institutionalised andconsensus-oriented, we aim in this chapter tounderstand how planners, as government actors, learnto deal with contracts in complex partnerships withprivate sector actors. We do so in order to questionthe technocratic logics of contemporary public–private partnerships (PPPs) focusing on aninstitutional context where public governments stillretain a major leading role in planning for urbandevelopment but increasingly operate by devisingfinancial agreements with the private sector. To doso, we specifically look at the use of ‘contracts’in urban development. Consensus building in theNetherlands is the key approach in anydecision-making process, implemented through the‘polder model’, which is defined as harmoniouspatterns of interaction between social partners(Glasbergen, 2002; Needham, 2005; Terhorst and Vander Ven, 1998; Van der Valk, 2002). The Dutchexperience demonstrates very clearly that the waysof deal making, and the mechanism of checks andbalances in this process, are very dynamic andreflect the changing dynamics of urban governance.This also means that public planners, veryconsciously, try to reposition themselves tosafeguard the public interest.

Dutch planning has diverse forms of contracting forurban development embedded in the polder model ofpolicy implementation, which is defined asharmonious patterns of interaction and negotiationbetween social partners (Glasbergen, 2002; Needham,2005; Terhorst and Van der Ven, 1998; Van der Valk,2002). Although the overall system isinstitutionalised through top-down regulation, thissystem has been decentralised in recent yearsthrough the development and adoption of new laws andregulations. The decentralisation of planningregulation explicitly aims to decrease bureaucracyin order to ease private sector involvement forlarge-scale projects. Under these conditions, publicplanners in Amsterdam (a central magnet forbusinesses and speculation in the Netherlands) aremore likely to become project contractors given thestress involved in land deals. However, our studyargues that this picture is ambiguous, as plannershave a diversity of positions to deal with in acomplex set of contracts. Moreover, planners workwith certain safeguarding mechanisms based onexperience from the long-standing tradition ofcontracting private sector companies to developprojects on publicly owned land. All theseexperiences, as we display later in the chapter, addto the new plural forms of knowledge which thepublic planner accumulates and uses.

Type
Chapter
Information
Planning and Knowledge
How New Forms of Technocracy Are Shaping Contemporary Cities
, pp. 47 - 58
Publisher: Bristol University Press
Print publication year: 2019

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