Facebook Instagram Twitter RSS Feed PodBean Back to top on side

Strategic Planning, Regional Governance and Regional Identity Building in Prešov Region

In: Sociológia - Slovak Sociological Review, vol. 38, no. 6
Simon Smith

Details:

Year, pages: 2006, 483 - 506
Keywords:
Strategic planning; governance; regionalisation; regionalism; institutional region; social learning; endogenous development
Article type: štúdia / study
About article:
Strategic Planning, Regional Governance and Regional Identity Building in Prešov Region. This article describes how four strategic planning initiatives in Prešov region relate to regional identity building and regional governance, and to the vertical integration of strategic planning at national, regional, sub-regional and local scales. The plans are read as records of an institutionalising process, the product of which is the creation of a lasting collaborative relationship between actors. The importance of strategic planning as a governance tool was accentuated by the conjuncture of the advent of regional self-government and the accession of Slovakia to the EU, which prompted a reform (and a partial decentralisation) of regional policy. The case studies indicate that a bottom-up, endogenous approach to local and regional strategic planning has predominated, but there is little will to harmonise local and regional development perspectives. The coordinating function which regional authorities are supposed to assume has been a difficult challenge for them, as they confront a crisis of legitimacy. Alternative regionalisations and regionalisms thus coexist in the same or overlapping spaces. This could be interpreted positively, as a sign of regional identity building and adaptability, but only if a greater degree of connectivity were present could Prešov become a ‘learning region’.
Strategic Planning, Regional Governance and Regional Identity Building in Prešov Region. This article describes how four strategic planning initiatives in Prešov region relate to regional identity building and regional governance, and to the vertical integration of strategic planning at national, regional, sub-regional and local scales. The plans are read as records of an institutionalising process, the product of which is the creation of a lasting collaborative relationship between actors. The importance of strategic planning as a governance tool was accentuated by the conjuncture of the advent of regional self-government and the accession of Slovakia to the EU, which prompted a reform (and a partial decentralisation) of regional policy. The case studies indicate that a bottom-up, endogenous approach to local and regional strategic planning has predominated, but there is little will to harmonise local and regional development perspectives. The coordinating function which regional authorities are supposed to assume has been a difficult challenge for them, as they confront a crisis of legitimacy. Alternative regionalisations and regionalisms thus coexist in the same or overlapping spaces. This could be interpreted positively, as a sign of regional identity building and adaptability, but only if a greater degree of connectivity were present could Prešov become a ‘learning region’.
How to cite:
ISO 690:
Smith, S. 2006. Strategic Planning, Regional Governance and Regional Identity Building in Prešov Region. In Sociológia - Slovak Sociological Review, vol. 38, no.6, pp. 483-506. 0049-1225.

APA:
Smith, S. (2006). Strategic Planning, Regional Governance and Regional Identity Building in Prešov Region. Sociológia - Slovak Sociological Review, 38(6), 483-506. 0049-1225.