Urban Transformations (Apr 2023)

The networked micro-decision context: a new lens on transformative urban governance

  • Le Anh Nguyen Long,
  • Rachel M. Krause,
  • Gwen Arnold,
  • Ryan Swanson,
  • S. Mohsen Fatemi

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s42854-023-00054-y
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 5, no. 1
pp. 1 – 13

Abstract

Read online

Abstract Recent large-scale societal disruptions, from the COVID-19 pandemic to intensifying wildfires and weather events, reveal the importance of transforming governance systems so they can address complex, transboundary, and rapidly evolving crises. Yet current knowledge of the decision-making dynamics that yield transformative governance remains scant. Studies typically focus on the aggregate outputs of government decisions, while overlooking their micro-level underpinnings. This is a key oversight because drivers of policy change, such as learning or competition, are prosecuted by people rather than organizations. We respond to this knowledge gap by introducing a new analytical lens for understanding policymaking, aimed at uncovering how characteristics of decision-makers and the structure of their relationships affect their likelihood of effectuating transformative policy responses. This perspective emphasizes the need for a more dynamic and relational view on urban governance in the context of transformation.

Keywords