Agua, planificación y desarrollo urbanístico
Main Article Content
The relationship between water policy and urban planning has always been marked by the way in which the former can be at the service of other policies such as urban planning, when the management of a scarce resource as water, it could be conditions urban developments that demand new water resources. This study will address this question from several perspectives. The first will address the evolution of the main objectives of hydrological policy from an offer model, to assuming objectives fundamentally linked to the protection of water quality and biodiversity that, in the context of a climate crisis, could come into conflict with the needs of other policies such as urban planning. On the other hand, the study will analyze the disastrous legislative policy carried out by the state legislator related to the report foreseen to articulate the coordination between urban plans and the availability of new water demands. In this regard, a review will be made of the enormous importance that the Supreme Court has had in correcting the legislator's inability to rule these matters. Finally, the issue of coordination will be addressed from a strictly legal-administrative perspective in formal aspects: organizational and procedural. This last part will be eminently propositive, suggesting new coordination mechanisms.