Think tanks and the pressures for planning reform in England
Resource type
Authors/contributors
- Haughton, Graham (Author)
- Allmendinger, Phil (Author)
Title
Think tanks and the pressures for planning reform in England
Abstract
This article examines how advocacy think tanks have sought to influence the remaking of the English planning system. Pressure for planning reform has come particularly though not exclusively from the political right, which has sought to portray planning as a form of bureaucratic regulation, out of touch with the needs of modern, global economies and the needs of society. This research involved 27 interviewees, the majority of whom have worked in think tanks, whilst others worked in government or in advocacy and professional groups. We explore how despite years of critique and many reforms to the planning system, it is still portrayed as failing. Drawing on ideas around the experimental state, we seek to develop a better understanding of the dynamics behind the process of continuous calls for planning reform before turning to some of the implications for both planning and our understanding of how think tanks seek to influence policy.
Publication
Environment & Planning C: Government & Policy
Volume
34
Issue
8
Pages
1676-1692
Date
December 2016
Journal Abbr
Environment & Planning C: Government & Policy
Language
English
ISSN
0263774X
Library Catalog
EBSCOhost
Citation
Haughton, Graham, and Phil Allmendinger. 2016. “Think Tanks and the Pressures for Planning Reform in England.” Environment & Planning C: Government & Policy 34 (8): 1676–92. DOI: 10.1177/0263774X16629677.
Discipline
Publication year
Keywords
- advocacy groups
- environmental protection planning
- experimental state
- markets
- planning reform
- political reform
- research institutes
- think tanks
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