The bottom-up approach is teetering : when sustainability does not match public participation : the case of an urban re-greening project in small town in a northern Italy
129-157 p.
Local sustainable development projects can be fostered by public participation involving citizens and local organizations as stakeholders. On one hand multi-stakeholder approaches can increase acceptability of a project guaranteeing long term benefits to local society. On the other hand, diverging interests and percep-tions of different stakeholders (involved or not) can hinder implementation of sus-tainability projects. This paper analyzes a real case study of an innovative sustainability project in Northern Italy which fail in its participatory purposes. The project "Cantieri Rinverditi" has been a Re-Greening Vacant Urban Space project developed in San Rocco al Porto a small town in the Po valley in Lombardy, which is the highest region for soil loss due to urbanization in Italy.
Through a qualitative analysis based on semi-structured interviews and participant observation I highlight the main difficulties and barriers which caused the lack of local citizens' par-ticipation to the project. [Publisher's text].
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Rivista di studi sulla sostenibilità : X, 1, 2020-
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Code DOI : 10.3280/RISS2020-001008
ISSN: 2239-1959
KEYWORDS
- Participative Sustainability projects, Re-Greening Vacant Urban Space, Multi-Stakeholder Processes, Societal Transition Governance