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A policy on the move? S patial planning and S tate A ctors in the post‐devolutionary UK and I reland
Author(s) -
Clifford Ben,
Morphet Janice
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
the geographical journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.071
H-Index - 64
eISSN - 1475-4959
pISSN - 0016-7398
DOI - 10.1111/geoj.12064
Subject(s) - devolution (biology) , spatial planning , public administration , restructuring , divergence (linguistics) , government (linguistics) , political science , state (computer science) , sociology , geography , environmental planning , law , linguistics , philosophy , algorithm , anthropology , computer science , human evolution
Devolution has led to a dramatic restructuring of the UK state over the last 15 years. Planning is a devolved function and a concerted process of ‘planning reform’ has been implemented by devolved (and central) government since devolution, including a move from ‘land‐use’ to ‘spatial planning’. Despite some expectations of, and pressure for, policy divergence post devolution, we draw on findings of discourse analysis to demonstrate how there are common framings and understandings of the concept of ‘spatial planning’ present in the policy documents of all the UK administrations, and in I reland. As such, we conceptualise spatial planning as what, after P eck and T heodore (2010, G eoforum 41 169–74), we might consider a ‘policy on the move’. Policy mobility is a fundamentally geographical phenomenon and its presence here raises questions about the mechanisms by which spatial planning has been mobilised. Drawing on interview data, we highlight the role of civil servants who meet through the B ritish– I rish C ouncil's workstream on spatial planning and a forum known as the ‘ F ive A dministrations’ meetings. The relational connections between these state actors suggest that they are key ‘transfer agents’ and their role helps explain some of the path dependency in planning reform post devolution.