izpis_h1_title_alt

Pomen javnega interesa v odnosu do zasebnega v novi prostorski zakonodaji Republike Slovenije
ID Česnik, Klavdija (Author), ID Uršič, Matjaž (Mentor) More about this mentor... This link opens in a new window

.pdfPDF - Presentation file, Download (358,04 KB)
MD5: 705A18066295D3439087554A209DCF9C

Abstract
Pričujoče diplomsko delo se osredotoča na analizo odnosa med javnim in zasebnim interesom v načrtovalskih politikah v prostoru, predstavljenih in prikazanih v Zakonu o urejanju prostora, ki ga je sprejel Državni zbor Republike Slovenije na seji dne 24. oktobra 2017 in se je začel uporabljati dne 1. junija 2018. Diplomsko delo obravnava dojemanje odnosa javno-zasebno skozi oči akterjev, prisotnih v prostorskem načrtovanju. Osnovni namen dela je prikazati percepcijo različnih akterjev v prostoru na usklajevanje javnih in zasebnih interesov ter predstaviti diskrepance med zakonodajnimi težnjami in dejansko situacijo, v kateri so se znašli akterji v prostorskih politikah. Akterji na področju politik urejanja prostora v pravno-formalnem dometu so pristojna ministrstva, organi lokalnih skupnosti, izvajalci javnih služb ter nosilci javnih pooblastil – na državni in lokalni ravni, ki imajo na tem področju nosilno funkcijo. Nadalje gre za zasebna podjetja, ki se ukvarjajo s svetovanjem, vodenjem projektov in realizacijo v prostorskem načrtovanju, organizacije, zainteresirane za prostorska vprašanja, ki so največkrat posrednik med državnimi, torej nosilnimi silami pri urejanju prostora in civilno družbo, organizirano v različne civilne iniciative in pobude, ki predstavljajo še enega od akterjev v prostorskem načrtovanju. Prav te civilne iniciative, ki delujejo na področju prostora so navadno organizirane s strani aktivistov, zainteresiranih za pereča prostorska in okoljska vprašanja in zoperstavljanje po zakonu sodeč sicer enakopravnim, a vendar "močnejšim" udeležencem pri urejanju prostora.

Language:Slovenian
Keywords:javni interesi, zasebni interesi, prostorska zakonodaja, prostorsko načrtovanje, neoliberalizem
Work type:Bachelor thesis/paper
Organization:FDV - Faculty of Social Sciences
Year:2018
PID:20.500.12556/RUL-103312 This link opens in a new window
COBISS.SI-ID:35914589 This link opens in a new window
Publication date in RUL:16.09.2018
Views:980
Downloads:256
Metadata:XML RDF-CHPDL DC-XML DC-RDF
:
Copy citation
Share:Bookmark and Share

Secondary language

Language:English
Title:The significance of the public in relation to the private in the recent Slovene spatial legislation
Abstract:
The bachelor thesis is focused on the relation of public and private policies within space which are presented in the latest Slovene space legislation, adopted on October 24, 2018. It discusses the means of law on one hand and the encounter as well as the perception of the relation in concrete, daily life situations on the other hand, sourcing from the interviews of the space-producing actors. The main goal of the thesis is to reveal the discrepancy between the law-oriented aspirations and the current situation in the space-organizing domain. Public actors of the space-organizing domain are ministries, local self-government bodies, executants of public services and holders of public authorizations. The actors of space-production are private companies in charge of consultancy, project-leadership and accomplishment of the spatial planning practices, but also a variety of space-interested organizations which often serve as mediators between the state partners and the civil-society initiatives. Additionally, according to the space-organization hierarchy, the space-interested civil-society initiatives represent the civil-society sphere as the last actor of the space-organization. They are formed by space-interested activists who disapprove of particular actions of other space actors who have more power in spatial planning.

Keywords:public interests, private interests, national spatial legislation, spatial planning, neoliberalism

Similar documents

Similar works from RUL:
Similar works from other Slovenian collections:

Back