Logo image
Between regulatory field structuring and organizational roles: Intermediation in the field of sustainable urban development
Journal article   Peer reviewed

Between regulatory field structuring and organizational roles: Intermediation in the field of sustainable urban development

Joel Bothello and Afshin Mehrpouya
Regulation & Governance, Vol.13(2), pp.177-196
01/06/2019

Abstract

governance intermediation rule‐intermediary Sustainability Sustainable Development
Recent contributions in the domains of governance and regulation elucidate the importance of rule‐intermediation (RI), the role that organizations adopt to bridge actors with regulatory or “rulemaking” roles and those with target or “rule‐taking” roles. Intermediation not only enables the diffusion and translation of regulatory norms, but also allows for the representation of different actors in policymaking arenas. While prior studies have explored the roles that such RIs adopt to facilitate their intermediation functions, we have yet to consider how field‐level structuring processes influence (and are influenced by) the various and changing roles adopted by RI. In this study we focus on the mutually constitutive relations between field‐level change processes and the evolving roles of RIs by studying the rise of the International Council for Local Environmental Initiatives (ICLEI)/Local Governments for Sustainability, an RI serving as a bridge for sustainable urban development policies between the United Nations and local authorities. Using ICLEI as an illustrative case, we theorize four different processes of regulatory field structuration: problematization, role specialization, marketization, and orchestrated decentralization. We discuss their implications for RI roles in the field and further theorize the changing dynamics of trickle‐up intermediation processes as an RI gains power and influence.
pdf
RG_Between regulatory field structuring and organizational roles_2019321.77 kB
Restricted Access

Metrics

1 Record Views

Details

UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)

Contributed to the advancement of the following goal(s):

#9 Industry, Innovation and Infrastructure

Source: InCites

InCites Highlights

These are selected metrics from InCites Benchmarking & Analytics tool, related to this contribution

Collaboration types
Domestic collaboration
International collaboration
Citation topics
6 Social Sciences
6.3 Management
6.3.385 Corporate Social Responsibility
Web of Science research areas
Law
Political Science
Public Administration
Logo image