UTFacultiesBMSEventsPhD Defence Isabel Kreiner | Industrial Parks for People and Planet - Assessing their Contribution to Sustainable Regional Development

PhD Defence Isabel Kreiner | Industrial Parks for People and Planet - Assessing their Contribution to Sustainable Regional Development

Industrial Parks for People and Planet - Assessing their Contribution to Sustainable Regional Development

The PhD Defence of Isabel Kreiner will take place in the Waaier building of the University of Twente and can be followed by a live stream.
Live Stream

Isabel Kreiner is a PhD student in the department of Governance and Technology for Sustainability. (Co)Supervisors are prof.dr. J.T.A. Bressers and dr. M.L. Franco Garcia.

The sustainable development agenda has been implemented with significant regional and national disparities and very slowly to cope with our societal challenges. Urgent change is needed at both institutional and societal levels, improving the alignment from the supra down to the local levels, where societal changes often originate. A business park or an industrial park (IP) plays a key role in delivering products and services and creating socio-economic value locally and regionally, providing a positive impact through their supply chain partners. Critics have expressed concern about how not all regional impacts are included, given the broad scope of the sustainable development concept.

Existing literature on measuring the sustainable regional impact of industrial parks is limited, especially regarding ecological and social aspects. This research aims to fill this gap by developing a framework, the Strategic Sustainability Evaluation Framework (SSEF). For its development and testing, it combined design-based research, case studies, and comparison cases. The framework examines industrial park performance, contextual conditions, and governance factors toward sustainable regional development. SSEF was tested in two cases: Guanajuato Puerto Interior (Mexico) and Suzhou Industrial Park (China), both recognized for best practices. Results showed greater progress in sustainability criteria for the Chinese park. The SSEF implementation provided insights into prioritizing sustainability areas and identifying governance-related influences. Additionally, more explanatory information was added related to cultural dimensions for analyzing their impact on the governance scores.

The framework doesn't aim for direct park-to-park comparison but encourages mutual learning. It should be implemented periodically for continuous evaluation and adjustment to adapt to changing contexts. Further research questions arise, such as the impact of governance strategies on improvement speed, stakeholder participation in decision-making, and refining indicator selection and weighing for balanced sustainability dimensions.