Difference between revisions of "C) Hybrid arrangements"
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According to the NATURVATION's [https://naturvation.eu/atlas NBS-Atlas] that distinguishes three categories of governance arrangements, '''hybrid arrangements''' refer to a mix of responsibilities between government and non-government actors. | According to the NATURVATION's [https://naturvation.eu/atlas NBS-Atlas] that distinguishes three categories of governance arrangements, '''hybrid arrangements''' refer to a mix of responsibilities between government and non-government actors. | ||
== | == Brief governance scenarios presenting hybrid arrangements == | ||
# [[A new take on affordable housing through community owned and developed dwellings]] | |||
# [[Envisioning and co-creating sustainable urban neighborhoods by reaching across institutional boundaries]] | |||
# [[Bringing sustainable infrastructure to all - carefully engaging in public-private partnerships]] | |||
# [[Trusting civil society and residents to co-shape regeneration projects in deprived neighborhoods]] | |||
== Detailed governance interventions presenting hybrid arrangements == | |||
The following detailed descriptions of real world experiments (mostly within EU-funded projects) have inspired and substantiated the brief governance scenarios above. | |||
# [[Community led affordable housing in Brussels]] | |||
# [[Co-creation of a sustainable neighborhood in Freiburg]] | |||
# [[Public-private partnerships for sustainability infrastructure in Athens]] | |||
# [[Regeneration of a deprived neighborhood in Rotterdam]] |
Latest revision as of 09:08, 28 July 2020
Description of the governance mode
According to the NATURVATION's NBS-Atlas that distinguishes three categories of governance arrangements, hybrid arrangements refer to a mix of responsibilities between government and non-government actors.
Brief governance scenarios presenting hybrid arrangements
- A new take on affordable housing through community owned and developed dwellings
- Envisioning and co-creating sustainable urban neighborhoods by reaching across institutional boundaries
- Bringing sustainable infrastructure to all - carefully engaging in public-private partnerships
- Trusting civil society and residents to co-shape regeneration projects in deprived neighborhoods
Detailed governance interventions presenting hybrid arrangements
The following detailed descriptions of real world experiments (mostly within EU-funded projects) have inspired and substantiated the brief governance scenarios above.