TY - JOUR
T1 - Challenge accepted
T2 - Sub-national government authorities and the legitimacy of co-creative redevelopment projects in fossil-industrial regions
AU - Rodhouse, T. S.G.H.
AU - Cuppen, E. H.W.J.
AU - Pesch, U.
AU - Correljé, A. F.
PY - 2025
Y1 - 2025
N2 - Regions reliant on declining fossil fuel production often grapple with upcoming deindustrialisation, economic decline, and deterioration of liveability. In attempts to address these issues proactively, local change agents, including sub-national government authorities, increasingly collaborate to develop new, more sustainable and just regional pathways. A potential yet not uncontested stepping stone towards such pathways is co-creative asset redevelopment. In this paper, we focus on the role of sub-national government authorities in co-creative redevelopment. Particularly, we zoom in on the legitimacy challenges that these authorities face and must address for co-creative redevelopment to have transformative capacity. We draw on insights from the case of GZI Next in Emmen, the Netherlands, and identify six challenges, amongst others intra-organisational conflicts of interests, accountability issues, and competing claims to the right to a just transition. We reflect on these challenges and how to overcome them and propose avenues for future research.
AB - Regions reliant on declining fossil fuel production often grapple with upcoming deindustrialisation, economic decline, and deterioration of liveability. In attempts to address these issues proactively, local change agents, including sub-national government authorities, increasingly collaborate to develop new, more sustainable and just regional pathways. A potential yet not uncontested stepping stone towards such pathways is co-creative asset redevelopment. In this paper, we focus on the role of sub-national government authorities in co-creative redevelopment. Particularly, we zoom in on the legitimacy challenges that these authorities face and must address for co-creative redevelopment to have transformative capacity. We draw on insights from the case of GZI Next in Emmen, the Netherlands, and identify six challenges, amongst others intra-organisational conflicts of interests, accountability issues, and competing claims to the right to a just transition. We reflect on these challenges and how to overcome them and propose avenues for future research.
KW - Asset redevelopment
KW - Co-creation
KW - Fossil industrial regions
KW - Government roles
KW - Just transitions
KW - Transformative change
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85215096353&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.eist.2025.100962
DO - 10.1016/j.eist.2025.100962
M3 - Review article
AN - SCOPUS:85215096353
SN - 2210-4224
VL - 55
JO - Environmental Innovation and Societal Transitions
JF - Environmental Innovation and Societal Transitions
M1 - 100962
ER -