Practicing Multilevel Governance: The Revision of the Piedmont Regional Territorial Plan
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Setting the Context: The Piedmont Regional Territorial Plan as a Meaningful Catalyst of Multilevel Governance
3. Materials and Methods
- Land redevelopment, landscape protection, and enhancement;
- Environmental sustainability and energy efficiency;
- Spatial integration of mobility, communication, and logistics infrastructures;
- Research, innovation, and economic–productive transition;
- Enhancement of human resources and institutional capacities.
- Enhancing the territory;
- Resources and primary production;
- Research, technology, and industrial production;
- Mobility, accessibility, transport, and logistics;
- Tourism;
- Territorial governance and cohesion.
- Climate change;
- Redevelopment and regeneration;
- Circular economy;
- Efficient energy systems;
- Interconnected mobility;
- Risk prevention;
- Competitiveness of the production system;
- Digitalization.
- General guidelines provided by the PTR and understood as common objectives to be targeted by each AIT;
- Specific objectives as a detailed declination of the general guidelines.
- Indicators defined by the PTR as measures of AIT performance;
- Relevance of indicators and their level of importance in each specific AIT;
- Relative AIT ranking with reference to the indicator considered;
- Correlation with the Strategic Macro-Areas of the Regional Strategy for SD aimed at identifying synergies or disconnections with the PTR;
- Directives understood as operational actions that each AIT could put in place to improve its positioning.
- Highlight correlations between the directives identified for each AIT, the 6 “sectoral themes of territorial relevance” defined by the PTR, and the 8 “cross-cutting themes”;
- Identify the key actors and propose funding channels by hypothesizing the timing of implementation;
- Define an overall intervention strategy for each AIT, verifying the correspondence to the Regional Strategy for SD.
4. Results and Discussion
4.1. The Case Study: AIT5
- The need to invest in infrastructure connections;
- The improvement of health and education services;
- The enhancement of environmental and landscape resources in the mountains;
- The enhancement of tourism;
- The deepening of productive vocation and specialization.
4.2. The Analytical Phase
- Step 1: Critical analysis of the specificities of the AITs
- Step 2: Analysis of performance against indicators
- The relevance that each indicator takes in determining the performance of the AIT under consideration using a 1–5 scale, where 1 corresponds to low relevance while 5 corresponds to maximum relevance;
- The ranking of the AIT under consideration in relation to the AITs in the region as assigned by IRES Piemonte [42].
- Step 3: Correlation with Regional Strategy indicators and Strategic Macro-Areas
- Step 4: Definition of directives for the AIT
4.3. The Strategic Phase
- Step 1: Sectoral/Cross-cutting themes correlation
- Step 2: Funding, actors, and timing
- National Recovery and Resilience Plan [45], defined by the European Union following the economic and social damage caused by the COVID-19 pandemic. This financial plan is part of the Next Generation EU program [46] and is aimed at addressing the structural weaknesses of the Italian economy, accompanying the country on a path of ecological and environmental transition;
- Partnership agreement with Italy 2021–2027 [47], related to Cohesion Policy Programming, understood as the main EU investment policy aimed at identifying measures to support economic growth, job creation, business competitiveness, sustainable development, and environmental protection. Considering such programming implies coherence with the recommendations and directions undertaken at the European level, in terms of directing available funds towards a climate-neutral economy (European Green Deal, [48]) and a just and inclusive society (Social Pillar, [49]).
- Step 3: Identification of a strategy for the AITs
- S.1: Transportation, both to connect the territory and to move to and from it in a more integrated and efficient way;
- S.2: Environment and territory, to explore the potential for the reuse, redevelopment, and protection of existing areas and biodiversity;
- S.3: Healthcare, to strengthen the network of health, welfare, and personal care services;
- S.4: Tourism and industry, both to discover new vocations for the area and to produce and share what is already present in its culture and history;
- S.5: Work and education, for the rediscovery of the area’s traditions in terms of research and the dissemination of new knowledge and innovations.
- Step 4: SWOT Analysis
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
1 | As highlighted by the results of the ESPON COMPASS project [6], this is particularly true in those countries that, due to territorial and historical reasons, are characterized by a regionalized or federal administrative structure, which features a rather independent array of regional administrative levels whose governments are directly elected by the citizens. |
2 | Despite its general non-prescriptive nature, the PTR is legally binding for the sub-regional levels, that are required to produce their spatial planning instruments coherently. Due to the proliferation of regional spatial planning laws starting from the 1970s, Regional Territorial Plans are nowadays different in form, functions, procedures, and even denominations, even if most of them retain the ‘hinge’ function discussed in this contribution. |
3 | The adoption of similar approaches, dedicated to the identification of supralocal areas as meaningful catalysts of multilevel governance, is becoming more and more common in the Italian context, for instance, through the action of the National Strategy for Inner Areas [53]. |
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Todella, E.; Abastante, F.; Cotella, G. Practicing Multilevel Governance: The Revision of the Piedmont Regional Territorial Plan. Land 2024, 13, 755. https://doi.org/10.3390/land13060755
Todella E, Abastante F, Cotella G. Practicing Multilevel Governance: The Revision of the Piedmont Regional Territorial Plan. Land. 2024; 13(6):755. https://doi.org/10.3390/land13060755
Chicago/Turabian StyleTodella, Elena, Francesca Abastante, and Giancarlo Cotella. 2024. "Practicing Multilevel Governance: The Revision of the Piedmont Regional Territorial Plan" Land 13, no. 6: 755. https://doi.org/10.3390/land13060755
APA StyleTodella, E., Abastante, F., & Cotella, G. (2024). Practicing Multilevel Governance: The Revision of the Piedmont Regional Territorial Plan. Land, 13(6), 755. https://doi.org/10.3390/land13060755