The Ungovernable City: Interest Groups and Local Political Institutions in the United States and Europe (TUC)
Abstract:
As nations in the developed world strive to reduce carbon dioxide emissions to counteract the effects of climate change, transitioningfrom more carbon intensive cities to greener modes of housing and transportation will become paramount challenges forgovernments throughout the 21st century. The United States, who produces about 11 percent of CO2 while accounting for just twopercent of the world’s population, presents a particular challenge. Infrastructure costs in the United States are astronomically higherthan in comparable developed nations in Europe or Asia. Further, housing construction—especially dense urban housing and itsaccompanying low carbon profile—is nearly impossible to build in almost all major American metro areas due to restrictive land usepolicies, an abundance of veto points exploited by engage local interest groups and America’s strong federalist institutions that givedeference to local governments when deciding land use policy.This project seeks to understand how interest groups in the United States capture local housing and land use policymaking and why asimilar phenomenon hasn’t evolved in many European Union nations. Studying local interest groups in a comparative setting willbetter illuminate how weaknesses in political institutions engender this behavior and lead to differing outcomes between the tworegions. Identifying these institutional deficiencies will also aid reforms in the United States crucial for modernizing that democracyand aiding the global fight against climate change. This project will also deepen understanding of how interest groups form andevolve, what motivates the transition from individual financial motivation to the formation of an interest group and how these groupscapture local political institutions.
Type:
EU
Bevillingsgiver:
Horizon Europe
Institut:
Copenhagen Business School
Status:
Igang
Startdato:
01-10-2023
Slutdato:
30-09-2025