Spatial Problems and Spatial Policies
All exchange students registered at the Faculty of Spatial Sciences are required to take the course ‘Spatial Problems and Spatial Policies: The Dutch Experience’ (SPSP). The course gives an academic introduction to the geography and planning policies of the Netherlands, as well as to the working formats (lectures, paper assignments and so on) that are typical for the University of Groningen/Faculty of Spatial Sciences.
Course structure
This course is offered twice a year, and is worth 10 EC (European Credits), which is the equivalent of approximately 280 hours of study. The course is offered in two versions: a tutorial version (for undergraduate or Bachelor students) and a seminar version (for graduate or Master students).
Course components
The course has lectures, tutorials (for undergraduate students), seminars (for graduate students), excursions and a concluding role play session.
Course timetable
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Autumn term in 2024/2025: August 30 – December 20, 2024 ( = compulsory introduction on Friday August 30 + semester 1a + 6 weeks of semester 1b) (note that we will try to avoid scheduling course events in the week before Christmas)
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Spring term in 2024/2025: January 30 - June 13, 2024 ( = compulsory introduction Friday January 30 + semester 2a + semester 2b)
Course lectures and excursions
The course includes lectures on
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A Compact Geography of the Netherlands (introduction)
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Dutch Urban Development: The City of Groningen (introduction)
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Cultural Geography of the Netherlands
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Randstad Holland & The Green Heart
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Spatial Planning in the Netherlands
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Water Management and Climate Change
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Shaping the Dutch Landscape
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Population Dynamics in the Netherlands
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Dutch Geographies of Happiness and Well-being
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Transportation and Mobility in the Netherlands
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Rural Areas in the Netherlands
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Regional Economic Policy in the Netherlands
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Planning for Livable Neighborhoods - Dutch Policy Making in Housing and Retail
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Growth or Sustainable Tranformation? Ways towards Post-growth in Urban Planning
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Dutch Labour Markets
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Energy & Space
The course includes a series of excursions, including
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a one day bus excursion (7 hours) to and through the postwar neighbourhoods of the City of Groningen
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a walking tour (3 hours) of the inner city of the City of Groningen
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a bicycle tour (4 hours) 'Bicycle infrastructure in the Netherlands'
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a one day bus excursion (11 hours) entitled 'The Dutch Manscape: Dutch Water Management' (a tour of through the northern Netherlands: land reclamations and water defense systems, in cooperation with ESN Groningen)
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a one day bus excursion (14 hours) entitled: 'The Dutch Manscape: Randstad Holland and the Green Heart' (in cooperation with ESN Groningen)
Course philosophy
The fundamental strengths and weaknesses of the course 'Spatial Problems and Spatial Policies: The Dutch Experience' and student experiences in the course, stem from the same two intrinsic characteristics. Firstly, students bring with them a wide variety of different educational cultural backgrounds and have reached different levels of attainment in varied academic skills and disciplines. This is the case with any group of students, but is clearly particularly marked with students who come from different educational systems at varied stages in their educational career and are in Groningen for different purposes and lengths of time. Secondly, foreign students are by definition unfamiliar with the City of Groningen, The Netherlands, and possibly even Europe. The resulting 'culture shock' in all its dimensions presents students with the task of rapidly eliminating a deficit in fundamental knowledge, but equally presents them with a unique opportunity to view our situation through their own perspectives. Even more important in the long run, to use the foreignness of their experience in Groningen to place their home situation in a new context, confronting hitherto unacknowledged assumptions.
The course has been constructed not merely to bypass and accommodate these characteristics as weaknesses but equally to exploit them as strengths. The comparative approach will therefore never be far from the surface in all topics handled. The Dutch case is being used not as an end in itself, but as the common yardstick against which one can place own individual experiences.
There are many possible approaches to the study of planning, but that adopted here is problem oriented; planning is thus seen as a problem solving operation. In part this may be dictated by the two different but related types of academic disciplines represented among contributors, and the course can roughly be divided into two parts:
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The first half is dominated by geographers and demographers interested in describing spatial patterns and the processes that cause and influence them. From such patterns, problems - whether economic, social, political or demographic - can be identified and delineated.
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The second half of the course is given principally by contributors interested more directly in intervention, whether through influencing the public or private actors. This should be an analysis of solutions through policy.
Course entry requirements
The course 'Spatial Problems and Spatial Policies: The Dutch Experience' is available for two groups of students: bachelor (undergraduate) students, and master (graduate) students. In general, students are required to have completed the equivalent of at least one full year of academic studies in Geography, Planning, Urban Studies or a related programme.
Course fee
The fee for this course is € 100 per participant (2024/2025). This is not a tuition fee or a teaching fee, but a fee that covers the expenses for all compulsory course related excursions, as well as a couple of associated meals. Contrary to many other courses, there are no additional course costs for for example books or other reading materials for the SPSP course.
Course code
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in semester 1: GESPSP1 for bachelor students, GEMSPSP1 for master students
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in semester 2: GESPSP2 for bachelor students, GEMSPSP2 for master students
More information
For more information, please send an email to the course coordinator Chris Diederiks.
Last modified: | 15 March 2024 4.25 p.m. |