《Governance assessment of a blue-green infrastructure project in a small size city in Belgium. The potential of Herentals for a leapfrog to water sensitive》

打印
作者
Cesar Casiano Flores;Vera Vikolainen;Joep Crompvoets
来源
CITIES,Vol.117,Issue1,Article 103331
语言
英文
关键字
Water governance;Leapfrogging;Small size city;Urban water transition;Blue-green infrastructure
作者单位
Public Governance Institute, Parkstraat 45 - box 3609, KU Leuven, 3000 Leuven, Belgium;European Parliamentary Research Service, European Parliament, Square de Meeus 8, 1050 Brussels, Belgium;Public Governance Institute, Parkstraat 45 - box 3609, KU Leuven, 3000 Leuven, Belgium;European Parliamentary Research Service, European Parliament, Square de Meeus 8, 1050 Brussels, Belgium
摘要
Climate change, population growth and land-use change have increased the risk of urban floods. Urban floods cause severe damages to cities and their inhabitants, and they are expected to increase over time. Consequently, urban adaptation is required to shift from traditional infrastructure to Blue-Green Infrastructure (BGI). Until recently, studies on BGI implementation have centred around large cities in developed countries. Meanwhile, medium and small size cities have received less attention. According to the Urban Water Management Transition Framework (UWMTF), cities can leapfrog towards more ‘water sensitive’ practices. Although leapfrogging is context-dependent, our understanding of how governance factors support leapfrogging remains embryonic. This paper contributes to the scholarly understanding of the governance factors that support and limit leapfrogging. By applying the Governance Assessment Tool (GAT) and considering three catalytic factors that underpin leapfrogging, this research assessed the process to implement the BGI project named Olympiadelaan in Herentals, Belgium. Overall, the governance context support was assessed as moderate. The regional and provincial governments play a key role in reaching this moderate level of support. This moderate support helps the city level to speed up its urban water management transition, but it is not enough to skip the states in the UWMTF.