Print Email Facebook Twitter Building Castles in the (Dutch) Air: Understanding the Policy Deadlock of Amsterdam Airport Schiphol 1989 - 2009 Title Building Castles in the (Dutch) Air: Understanding the Policy Deadlock of Amsterdam Airport Schiphol 1989 - 2009 Author Huijs, M.G. Contributor van Wee, G.P. (promotor) Faculty Technology, Policy and Management Department Transport Policy & Logistics Date 2011-10-13 Abstract Ever since the 1950s, the Dutch national government has struggled intensely with the trade-off between the economic significance and environmental impact of Amsterdam Airport Schiphol, the largest airport of the Netherlands. By 2005, the ambition to combine the growth of ‘Mainport’ Schiphol with comprehensive environmental measures has resulted in a firm policy deadlock – a situation in which policy makers no longer recognise the nature of the problem, and are thus unable to generate effective solutions. This thesis provides a detailed account of the emergence and enduring persistence of the Schiphol policy deadlock, covering the period 1989 - 2009. Drawing on Michel Foucault’s genealogical approach to widely accepted discourses, we will describe, assess, and explain how the policy debate around the development of Schiphol sank into the gripping reproduction of specific ways of thinking, talking and acting. By exposing the mechanisms involved, and by reflecting on the daily practices that have hitherto been considered self-evident, the thesis aims to create the opportunity to find the strategies necessary for breaking out of the impasse. Subject Policy DeadlockFoucaultEffective HistorySchipholPower To reference this document use: http://resolver.tudelft.nl/uuid:854e4d88-a03f-4941-8b63-792d065f557f ISBN 9789053354520 Part of collection Institutional Repository Document type doctoral thesis Rights (c) 2011 Huijs, M.G. Files PDF Huijs_Thesis.pdf 10.14 MB PDF Huijs_Propositions.pdf 31.11 KB PDF Huijs_Cover.pdf 1.61 MB Close viewer /islandora/object/uuid:854e4d88-a03f-4941-8b63-792d065f557f/datastream/OBJ2/view