Lecture 10: Policy instruments for improving spatial quality in integrated flood risk management Flashcards

1
Q

Why can the spatial turn also be associated with a ‘quest for spatial quality’?

A

More integrated and spatially embedded forms of FRM have been advocated. At the same time: different interests are competing for space. –> worries about the ‘quality of place’

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2
Q

What is the definition of spatial quality?

A

It has to clear cut definition. What it is and how it can be achieved is multi-interpretable. It describes the relation between space and the human user.

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3
Q

What are the different schools of thought about spatial quality?

A

objective
subjective
inter-subjective

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4
Q

Objective schools of thought?

A

There are elements of spatial quality which can be measured and where quality indicators have been defined. Examples:

  • Rules regarding water quality and air quality
  • percentage of green spaces in new=built areas, playgrounds
  • welstand- spatial quality plans for new residential developments.
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5
Q

spatial quality - subjective school of thought.

A

Spatial quality lies in the ‘eye of the beholder’ and can be different between different people.

It depends on:
- situational context
- personal norms/values
- zeitgeist
- culture

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6
Q

Intersubjective school of thought

A

Acknowledgement that spatial quality has a subjective and objective dimension

spatial quality = defined and evaluated in interactive process by a group of individuals. –> collective meaning-making.

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7
Q

Explain the Vitruvius triplet

A

Utilitas - utility
- functionality
- functional cohesion
- economic vitality

Venustas - beauty
- identity
-cultural recognition
- spatial recognition
- attractiveness

firmitas - firmness/robustness
- Reversability
- development potential
- multifunctional use of space
- robustness and stability

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8
Q

How is the Vitruvius triplet integrated in Dutch planning and FRM?

A
  • Utilitas –> user value
  • Firmitas –> future value
  • Venustas –> experiental value
    + ecological quality: degree to which landscape supports the existence of human/nonhuman life forms
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9
Q

Explain the Dutch flood protection programme

A

Primary defences (coast/river) –> meeting new standards in 2050

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10
Q

What are barriers for integrating spatial quality into flood risk management?

A

Urgency and flood risk challenge
* Lack of ownership for spatial quality
* Flood risk management traditionally sectorally organized,
whereas spatial quality asks for an integrated approach and strong regional collaboration > lack of expertise and networks
* Spatial quality less tangible and easy to measure than safety norms
* Spatial quality requires additional co-financing from partners because of strict labels on available budgets

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11
Q

Policy design definition.

A

the deliberate and conscious attempt to define goals and connect them to instruments or tools expected to realize those objectives.

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12
Q

Instrument-based typology of Carrots, sticks, sermons

A

Legal or regulatory policy instruments: restricting/allowing behavioral options

economic or market based: changing cost/benefit ratios of these options

communicative or informational instruments: informing about options

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13
Q

Explain the NATO framework

A

Nodality: refers to central position of the government with regard to the collection, use,
and distribution of
information

Authority: refers to the legal or official powers held by governments that can be used to regulate and
sanction actors

Treasure: refers to the use of money

Organization: refers to the resources in terms of staff (&their skills),
buildings, and technology that governments have at
their disposal

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14
Q

On which dimension of governance does the NATO framework have influence?

A

On the resources dimension

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15
Q

Examples of organization:

A

hiring consultatns, hiring spatial designers (boundary spanners), making internal project groups

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16
Q

examples of nodality:

A

Spatial scoping, design ateliers, spatial quality teams/advisors, citizens participation

17
Q

Examples of authority?

A

Spatial quality framework (welstand/welstandtoets)
Administrative agreements

18
Q

Examples of treasure?

A

Tenders and contracts
subsidies for spatial quality
co-financing for spatial quality