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A growing majority of humanity lives in sprawling, interconnected
urban regions. Diversified metropolitan geographies have replaced
the centuries-old divide between urban and rural areas, and
transformed the local sources of electoral politics. The resulting
patterns of electoral support and participation have shifted axes
of partisan competition to the right. This volume undertakes the
first international comparative analysis of metropolitan political
behaviour. The results support a powerful new thesis to explain
many recent shifts in political behaviour: the metropolitanisation
of politics.
This book undertakes the first systematic, multi-country
investigation into how regimes of place equality, consisting of
multilevel policies, institutions and governance at multiple
scales, influence spatial inequality in metropolitan regions.
Extended, diversified metropolitan regions have become the dominant
form of human settlement, and disparities among metropolitan places
figure increasingly in wider trends toward growing inequality.
Regimes of place equality are increasingly critical components of
welfare states and territorial administration. They can aggravate
disparities in services and taxes, or mitigate and compensate for
local differences. The volume examines these regimes in a global
sample of eleven democracies, including developed and developing
countries on five continents. The analyses reveal new dimensions of
efforts to grapple with growing inequality around the world, and a
variety of institutional blueprints to address one of the most
daunting challenges of twenty-first century governance.
This book offers a cross-national analysis of contemporary issues
and challenges for the governing of urban regions. The case studies
on Germany, Spain, France, Greece, The Netherlands, Finland, the
UK, Switzerland, Australia, the US and Canada, place particular
emphasis on the tensions building on metropolitan governing
capacity and democratic legitimacy. The authors develop and use an
analytical framework focused on the dynamics of place and make an
original contribution to the debates on the nature of metropolitan
governance.
This book offers a cross-national analysis of contemporary issues
and challenges for the governing of urban regions. The case studies
on Germany, Spain, France, Greece, The Netherlands, Finland, the
UK, Switzerland, Australia, the US and Canada, place particular
emphasis on the tensions building on metropolitan governing
capacity and democratic legitimacy. The authors develop and use an
analytical framework focused on the dynamics of place and make an
original contribution to the debates on the nature of metropolitan
governance.
A growing majority of humanity lives in sprawling, interconnected
urban regions. Diversified metropolitan geographies have replaced
the centuries-old divide between urban and rural areas, and
transformed the local sources of electoral politics. The resulting
patterns of electoral support and participation have shifted axes
of partisan competition to the right. This volume undertakes the
first international comparative analysis of metropolitan political
behaviour. The results support a powerful new thesis to explain
many recent shifts in political behaviour: the metropolitanisation
of politics.
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