Item Details
Skip Navigation Links
   ActiveUsers:4106Hits:20972656Skip Navigation Links
Show My Basket
Contact Us
IDSA Web Site
Ask Us
Today's News
HelpExpand Help
Advanced search

In Basket
  Journal Article   Journal Article
 

ID161687
Title ProperAirport Expansion and the British Planning System: Regime Management
LanguageENG
AuthorMarshall, Tim
Summary / Abstract (Note)The article examines the process whereby government and business elites have driven the expansion of London airports, particularly via the mode of the establishment of an ‘independent’ commission, the Davies Commission (2012–2015). It addresses the strategic framing of airports planning, including the role of National Policy Statements, and the nature of the consideration of the planning applications for consent to develop. Temporal and geographical dimensions are analysed, showing how central to the UK state project is the expansion of the southern English / Greater London core, with associated infrastructure geographies. It concludes that corporate and state power may well achieve the desired expansion of airport capacity in the London region, overriding environmental and other non‐commercial considerations. However, there are tensions in the dominant state and business model, given an apparent commitment to carbon emissions reduction and other air quality goals, as well as to minimising the costs to the public sector which airport expansion is likely to generate.
`In' analytical NotePolitical Quarterly Vol. 89, No.3; Jul-Sep 2018: p.446-56
Journal SourcePolitical Quarterly 2018-09 89, 3
Key WordsAirport Expansion ;  British Planning System ;  Regime Management