Description
Implementing City Sustainability examines the structures and processes that city governments employ to pursue environmental, social, and economic well-being within their communities. As American cities adopt sustainability objectives, they are faced with the need to overcome fuzzy-boundary, coordination, and collective action challenges to achieve successful implementation.
Sustainability goals often do not fit neatly into traditional city government structures, which tend to be organized around specific functional responsibilities, such as planning, public works, parks and recreation, and community development. The authors advance a theory of Functional Collective Action and apply it to local sustainability to explain how cities can-and in some cases do-organize to successfully administer changes to achieve complex objectives that transcend these organizational separations. Implementing City Sustainability uses a mixed-method research design and original data to provide a national overview of cities' sustainability arrangements, as well as eight city case studies highlighting different means of organizing to achieve functional collective action.
By focusing not just on what cities are doing to further sustainability, but also on how they are doing it, the authors show how administrative structure enables-or inhibits-cities to overcome functional divides and achieve successful outcomes.
About the Author
Rachel M. Krause is an Associate Professor in the School of Public Affairs and Administration at the University of Kansas. Christopher V. Hawkins is an Associate Professor, School of Public Administration, University of Central Florida and co-author of Disaster Resiliency: Interdisciplinary Perspectives.
Book Information
ISBN 9781439919200
Author Rachel M. Krause
Format Hardback
Page Count 276
Imprint Temple University Press,U.S.
Publisher Temple University Press,U.S.
Dimensions(mm) 229mm * 152mm * 36mm