The paper conducts a comparative analysis of the flexibility of land-use planning systems in relation to four southern European countries: Cyprus, France, Greece and Italy. It examines how their respective institutional settings and legal frameworks allow for different levels of flexibility at different stages of the local land-use planning process. After analyzing the substance of the land-use planning system in each country—including constitutional and legal provisions, the degree of local autonomy, and the nature of land-use planning instruments—the paper explores the flexibility vs. rigidity dichotomy in the practice of land-use zoning across three dimensions. The first dimension relates to land-use regulations that allow for dynamic land-use changes and flexible zoning capable of better addressing urban challenges. The second dimension concerns the ease with which land-use plans can be updated to adapt to the changing needs. The third dimension deals with the process of development control over land uses. The results of the analysis display differential flexibility among the countries under investigation, which may be imputable to the nature of the legal framework and the different administrative and planning traditions. While no one-size-fits-all local spatial planning model exists, a set of good practices are presented that aim at balancing regulatory control with flexibility in urban land-use planning in different contexts.
Gemenetzi et al. (Thu,) studied this question.