Print Email Facebook Twitter Deadlocks and breakthroughs in urban renewal: A network analysis in Amsterdam Title Deadlocks and breakthroughs in urban renewal: A network analysis in Amsterdam Author Haffner, M.E.A. Elsinga, M. Faculty OTB Research Institute Date 2009-12-31 Abstract Urban renewal in the Netherlands has become a matter of ‘networking’. Housing associations, Dutch social landlords, became financially independent in the 1990s and have a responsibility in urban renewal. It is a joint responsibility in which local authority, social landlord and tenants are dependent on each other. This situation is rather new and needs some getting used to, as the two case studies show. The paper concludes that taking account of the complexity of networks could improve the chances of gaining support for problem definitions and solutions. This would result in agreement about goals and win–win package deals for actors, and ultimately in ‘more’ progress in urban renewal. Subject Complex networksGovernance networksHousing associationsNetworksThe NetherlandsUrban renewal To reference this document use: http://resolver.tudelft.nl/uuid:336987fe-46e7-40a1-891a-ac21d4ddcfb7 ISSN 1566-4910 Source Journal of housing and the built environment 24(2), 147-165. (2009) Part of collection Institutional Repository Document type journal article Rights (c) 2009 Haffner, M.E.A.; Elsinga, M. Files PDF 233700.pdf 184.71 KB Close viewer /islandora/object/uuid:336987fe-46e7-40a1-891a-ac21d4ddcfb7/datastream/OBJ/view