12 research outputs found
Aquaculture development in Scotland:regulation as a moving equilibrium
The expanding interest in marine planning and management raises important questions for the spectrum of marine, coastal and terrestrial environments. The role of state regulation in mediating conflicts over the use and development of the marine resource has spatial implications across these domains. Governance of the marine represents a very particular challenge since it involves a highly complex mix of common, legal and customary property rights and sets of defined territorial jurisdictions. The Planning etc. (Scotland) Act 2006 and subsequent policy iterations have changed institutional and organizational relations. The legislation included provisions for the extension of statutory land use planning controls to include coastal and transitional waters (i.e. to the 12-nautical mile limit), meaning that finfish and shellfish farming are subject to the terrestrial planning regime. This represents a turn from self-regulation to arrangements for state planning controls. This paper traces this evolution in terms of a moving equilibrium as both state and market have sought to minimize the transaction costs involved
The historic environment
Includes one loose unbound sheet 'A ten point plan for our historic environment'Available from British Library Document Supply Centre-DSC:8207.035(4) / BLDSC - British Library Document Supply CentreSIGLEGBUnited Kingdo
Planning and sustainable development
SIGLEAvailable from British Library Document Supply Centre-DSC:8207.035(3) / BLDSC - British Library Document Supply CentreGBUnited Kingdo
Governance and planning policy in the marine environment:regulating aquaculture in Scotland
The 'filling in' of community-based planning in the devolved UK?
Political devolution in the UK has afforded opportunities for studying policy differences and similarities in relation to local‐level community‐based planning initiatives in England, Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland. Organised around the concepts of ‘lesson‐drawing’ and the ‘filling in’ of local governance, this paper critically considers aspects of policy design and development associated with community‐based planning within and between the devolved UK polities. In practice, policy instruments vary with respect to their institutional, scalar and organisational rationalities. A policy mobility perspective may enable a relatively more critical understanding of how local governance arrangements are being externally and internally shaped in the respective devolved nation‐regions
