Title: Territorial Performance Monitoring
1- Territorial Performance Monitoring
- (ESPON TPM project)
- Loris Servillo
- ASRO KU Leuven
- 14/06/2012
2Outline
General approach Aim Structure quantitative
qualitative analysis Mind map Road map General
(methodological) considerations
3Stakeholders
- ESPON priority 2
- Five regions
- Flanders (lead stakeholder)
- North Rhine-Westphalia
- Navarre
- Catalunia
- Greatest Dublin Area
4Project team
- Lead Partner IGEAT - Institut de Gestion de
l'Environnement et d'Aménagement du Territoire -
ULB - Research partner for each region
- Catalunia Institut d'Estudis Territorial
- Navarra Navarra de Suelo Residencial
- Greater Dublin Region National Institute for
Regional and Spatial Analysis University
Maynooth - Nordrhein-Westfalen Institut für Landes- und
Stadtentwicklungsforschung - Flanders Planning Development Research group,
ASRO KULeuven ( coordination of qualitative
analysis)
5ESPON TPM project
- The ESPON Territorial Performance Monitoring
(TPM) project addressed two main lines of work -
- a general assessment and development of tools for
regional monitoring of challenges defined at
other scales - the practical application of the tools and ideas
for monitoring the five stakeholder regions
involved in the project
6ESPON TPM project
- The aim of this project
- (not to provide some form of Dummy's guide to
monitoring) - a reflection on the issue of translating European
challenges into regional realities - a mean to assess the current monitoring practices
in regions - an exchange of best practices between stakeholder
regions based on their monitoring experience - a laboratory to elaborate and test different
techniques and tools for monitoring - A particular issue brought forward by the
stakeholders was the integration of qualitative
information into a fields generally dominated by
quantitative measurement.
7Challenges
- Perception and levers identified in stakeholder
regions - Demography
- manage impacts of external immigration and ageing
- Climate change
- technically managing impacts of climate change
- New energy paradigm
- objectives determined at European level and on
policies implemented at national level - Globalisation
- most regions quite autonomous to include relevant
policies
8Methods
Quantitative Generalisation/coverage Major
differences Statistical relationships generalisabl
e results Limited set of questions Simplification
of reality hard, objective, numeric
data Objectivity Statistically sound
methods Objective data sets allow generalisations
Qualitative Exploration/depth Restict data
collection more in-depth examination less
generalisable (based on a smaller group of
involved persons) Complexity informal approaches
to capture differences - holistic
approach Interpretation Interpretation
processes Risk of being just a bit more than
organised common sense
9Combined methodology
- Quantitative measures
- Simple benchmarking with or without comparison
with the EU - (ESPON 5-level approach)
- interpretation, contextualization, ...
- Qualitative assessment
- Based on expertise, surveys, delphi, focus groups
... - Possibly elaboration of pseudo-quantitative
indicators
10Mind Map
Global challenges
Demography
Globalisation
Energy
Climate change
11General structure of the project
12Qualitative analysis appraisal questions
- Awareness of the challenge (per challenge)
- Explicitly/implicitly addressed
- Discourses, forcasting capacity
- Planning context and resilience of the Planning
System - Strategic capacity (vision and implementation)
- Coordination, cooperation participation
- Monitoring capacity
- Effectiveness of policy approach(es)
- Policy bundles
- Encompassing strategy? Whose competences? (policy
level) - Coordination capacities
- Threats Opportunities
13Structure of the qualitative analysis
- Desktop analysis done by the different project
partners - Two-step procedure of involvement of
stakeholders - questionnaire / semi-structured interviews
- feedback on first outcomes. Different techniques
can be tested (focus group, or simple singular
feedback from the stakeholders, ranking
technique, etc)
Researchers
Stakeholders
Analysis of documents
Questionnaire and / or semi-structured interviews
Identification of crucial and contradicting
aspects
Second round of stakeholders involvement
Final Reports (Set of ranked items)
quantitative analysis
14From the mind map to a tailor-made set of
indicatorsDiscussion with each
stakeholderIdentification of specific
indicatorsConfrontation about the regional
perception of the challenges
Toward tailor-made tools
15EU-wide quantitative benchmarking HyperAtlas
16EU-wide quantitative benchmarking TPM Tools
17Indicators
- indicators reflecting a situation and its
evolution, but on which the territorial level
considered here mostly the regions has no
influence - indicators reflecting supra-regional constraints
for which the regions may have to implement
policies established on a larger scale, sometimes
even at the expense of their own short-term
interests - another version of the previous type consists in
indicators reflecting constraints and policies
present on supra-regional scales, for which a
measurement on the regional scale is not
necessarily relevant, but which can reflect the
pursuit of other objectives - indicators reflecting regional situations on
which regional authorities can actually have some
influence through their own policies. - indicators that do not reflect regional
realities, but rather the implementation of
policies
18Outcome and general recommendations
19Regional monitoring tools
- Regions that have adopted the TPM indicators
- Regions that have embedded the TPM experience in
their own monitoring activity/activities and
adapted to the regional characteristics/needs - Regions that have implemented the monitoring
activities at lower level (differences within the
regions)
20Methodological recommendations
Ideal (technocratic) model
21Methodological recommendations
- Conditions of success of monitoring in regional
policy making - integration of monitoring system into
clear/explicit vision - clearly defined procedures on how to react to
findings of the monitoring system - sufficient resources for continuous update and
maintenance - shared ownership
- a continuous surveillance of European policy
discussions and documents - relative political neutrality of monitoring
system - long-term commitment to the monitoring process
- permanent fora of contact with relevant experts
22Methodological recommendations
- What can ESPON do to support monitoring efforts
in regions ? - Thematic research, including elaboration of
innovative indicators and typologies - Continuous development of tools such as the ESPON
Database and the ESPON HyperAtlas - Sustained maintenance of datasets, tailored to
specific challenges, and specific European
objectives
23 Thank you loris.servillo_at_asro.kuleuven.be