Polycentric port governance

被引:21
|
作者
Monios, Jason [1 ]
机构
[1] Kedge Business Sch, Rue Antoine Bourdelle, F-13009 Marseille, France
关键词
Port governance; Policy; Maritime transport; Institutions; Polycentric; Multilevel governance; Scale; Planning; Hierarchical governance; Shipping; STAKEHOLDER MANAGEMENT; MARITIME GOVERNANCE; PATH DEPENDENCE; VINCENT OSTROM; CLIMATE-CHANGE; POLICY-MAKING; INSTITUTIONS; TRANSPORT; REFORMS; AUTHORITIES;
D O I
10.1016/j.tranpol.2019.08.005
中图分类号
F [经济];
学科分类号
02 ;
摘要
This paper applies the theory of polycentric governance to the port sector. The paper demonstrates that port governance is already polycentric, including a variety of actors at different scales with overlapping jurisdictions, but some of the established principles of effective polycentric governance such as collective choice arrangements and distribution of costs are not currently in place. This has resulted in an inability to manage current challenges, which can be broadly divided into environmental challenges (emissions and other pollution, adapting to climate change impacts such as sea level rise and storms) and port investment challenges (conflicts related to port capacity developments). Current static models of port governance exhibit an over-emphasis on hierarchy and internal, formal structures (mostly government, port authority and port terminal operator), whereas a polycentric approach favours explicitly including informal organisations (e.g. citizen and environmental groups) and external actors (e.g. carriers, shipping regulators) in a more dynamic conceptualisation. This enables an application of the known strengths and weaknesses of polycentric governance to the port sector, in order to identify where some of the known measures for successful polycentric governance should be implemented. The paper also feeds back to the theory on polycentric governance regarding the challenges of including global actors within territorial polycentric regimes.
引用
收藏
页码:26 / 36
页数:11
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] FROM POLYCENTRIC PLANNING TO POLYCENTRIC GOVERNANCE
    Lu Xiaoxuan
    [J]. LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTURE FRONTIERS, 2019, 7 (03) : 134 - 135
  • [2] Building blocks of polycentric governance
    Morrison, Tiffany H.
    Bodin, Orjan
    Cumming, Graeme S.
    Lubell, Mark
    Seppelt, Ralf
    Seppelt, Tim
    Weible, Christopher M.
    [J]. POLICY STUDIES JOURNAL, 2023, : 475 - 499
  • [3] TERRITORIAL RESCALING AND POLYCENTRIC GOVERNANCE IN ALBANIA
    Shutina, Dritan
    Toto, Rudina
    [J]. EUROPEAN SPATIAL RESEARCH AND POLICY, 2021, 28 (02) : 103 - 129
  • [4] Polycentric governance in telecoupled resource systems
    Oberlack, Christoph
    Boillat, Sebastien
    Bronnimann, Stefan
    Gerber, Jean-David
    Heinimann, Andreas
    Speranza, Chinwe Ifejika
    Messerli, Peter
    Rist, Stephan
    Wiesmann, Urs
    [J]. ECOLOGY AND SOCIETY, 2018, 23 (01):
  • [5] Institutional Conflicts under Polycentric Governance
    Liu Qing-le
    [J]. PROCEEDINGS OF 2008 INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION (4TH), VOL I, 2008, : 519 - 525
  • [6] Institutional navigation for polycentric sustainability governance
    Mark Lubell
    Tiffany H. Morrison
    [J]. Nature Sustainability, 2021, 4 : 664 - 671
  • [7] Polycentric governance of multifunctional forested landscapes
    Nagendra, Harini
    Ostrom, Elinor
    [J]. INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF THE COMMONS, 2012, 6 (02): : 104 - 133
  • [8] Institutional navigation for polycentric sustainability governance
    Lubell, Mark
    Morrison, Tiffany H.
    [J]. NATURE SUSTAINABILITY, 2021, 4 (08) : 664 - 671
  • [9] Polycentric Governance and Irrigation Reform in Kenya
    Baldwin, Elizabeth
    Washington-Ottombre, Camille
    Dell'Angelo, Jampel
    Cole, Daniel
    Evans, Tom
    [J]. GOVERNANCE-AN INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF POLICY ADMINISTRATION AND INSTITUTIONS, 2016, 29 (02): : 207 - 225
  • [10] The Origins of Conflict in Polycentric Governance Systems
    Lubell, Mark
    Mewhirter, Jack
    Berardo, Ramiro
    [J]. PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION REVIEW, 2020, 80 (02) : 222 - 233