2002
DOI: 10.1080/14649350220150053
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Innovation in Urban Policy: The Experience of Italian Urban Time Policies

Abstract: Urban time policies are public policies that intervene in the time schedules and time organization that regulate human relationships at the urban level. Urban time policies were launched in Italy at the end of the 1980s. Within a span of 10 to 15 years, 170 municipalities have been involved in time-oriented projects or timetable plans, or in studies of urban social time. There has also been a diffusion into several countries of the European Union, especially in Germany and France. Now the diffusion is starting… Show more

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Cited by 39 publications
(24 citation statements)
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“…However, they have not yet been adopted in urban planning, except for time planning 1 which also includes the design of services, for example in Bergamo, Italy (Boulin 2009). 1 Urban time policies refer to those public policies and planning interventions which affect the time schedules and time/space organisations that regulate human relationships at the local, regional and even national or European level (Mareggi, 2002). In practice, time policy is implemented through time planning which deals with…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, they have not yet been adopted in urban planning, except for time planning 1 which also includes the design of services, for example in Bergamo, Italy (Boulin 2009). 1 Urban time policies refer to those public policies and planning interventions which affect the time schedules and time/space organisations that regulate human relationships at the local, regional and even national or European level (Mareggi, 2002). In practice, time policy is implemented through time planning which deals with…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…European cities, local authorities are currently re-examining the historically emerged opening hours of their municipal services in order to better attune these to the temporal needs and desires of the citizens, especially those who have multiple competing claims on their time (Boulin, 2006;Mareggi, 2002). This paper contributes to these lines of inquiry by providing additional insights into how (equity of) individual accessibility can be improved by amendments to the temporal structure of urban systems.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 97%
“…Such recent changes in the "new life" of the "old centre" (Rio Fernandes & Sposito, 2013) are also expressed in the temporalities of the city, with spatially temporal complexification and diverse forms of coexistence of fast and slow times and rhythms. The individualization of schedules throughout the day, week and month, motivated by the specialization of careers (increasingly individual) and flexibility/precariousness of work, increased mobility and longer lifetime after retirement allows for a greater variation in the demand for goods, services and experiences, in opposition/complement to the still prevailing regular "working hours", extending and complexifying the uses of the city (Fernandes & Chamusca, 2014;Mareggi, 2002;Mückenberger, 2011).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%