Describes the pioneering experience of the city of Leicester (in the UK) over the last 10 years in developing its Local Agenda 21 and other aspects of its work towards environmental improvement and sustainable development. It includes details of measures to improve public transport and to reduce congestion, traffic accidents, car use and air pollution. It also describes measures to improve housing quality for low-income households, reduce fossil fuel use, increase renewable energy use and make the city council's own operations a model of reducing resource use and waste. It also describes how this was done - the specialist working groups that sought to make partnerships work (and their strengths and limitations), the information programmes to win hearts and minds, the many measures to encourage widespread participation (and the difficulties in involving under-represented groups) and the measures to make local governments, businesses and other groups develop the ability and habit of responding to the local needs identified in participatory consultations.
CITATION STYLE
Roberts, I. (2005). Leicester environment city: learning how to make Local Agenda 21, partnerships and participation deliver. Environment and Urbanization, 12(2), 9–26. https://doi.org/10.1630/095624700101285433
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