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Holistic in approach, this Handbook's international range of
leading scholars present complementary perspectives, both
theoretical and empirically pertinent, to explore recent
developments in the field of local and regional governance. With a
fresh outlook on the field, this Handbook builds significantly upon
the existing literature to clarify the scope of the discipline, as
well as providing tools, information, and research questions to
better understand and further explore the field. Chapters provide
theoretical and empirical context to current debates on local and
regional governance and offer competing analytical lenses for
studying the field. Topics explored include the intersecting roles,
limits, opportunities, and influence of actors, democracy, place,
scale, and networks, with examinations of social cohesion,
intermunicipal decentralization, and emerging technologies.
Particularly close attention is paid to relationships, as the
Handbook introduces to the analysis the ways that actors, tiers of
government, institutions and multiple jurisdictions exchange
resources, coordinate action and produce decisions with collective
impact in local and regional governance. Interdisciplinary and
international in scope, this Handbook will be an invigorating read
for students and scholars looking to better understand contemporary
policy, politics and subnational governance at local and regional
levels.
This book explores sub-municipal units' (SMU) role in decision
making, decentralized institutional innovation, social innovation
and, in rural areas, service delivery. Focusing on fourteen
European countries, the book examines the impact of political
cultures, administrative traditions and local government systems on
the functioning of the SMUs. An under-explored topic in the
literature, this book provides a comprehensive, comparative
European, thematically broad, descriptive book on sub-municipal
governance.
This book sheds light on the central complexities of municipal
cooperation and examines the dynamics, experiences and drivers of
inter-municipal cooperation (IMC) in Europe. Particular attention
is given to the features of governance arrangements and
institutions created to generate and maintain collaborative
settings between different local governments in a particular
territory. The thematically grouped case studies presented here
address the dearth of comprehensive and comparative analyses in
recent scholarship. The authors provide fresh insights into the
rise of inter-municipal cooperation and its evolution during a
period of financial crisis and European Union enlargement. This
includes critical examinations of the impact of austerity policies,
the behavior and perceptions of key actors; and under-explored new
member states. Crucially, this work goes beyond the comparison of
institutional forms of IMC to address why the phenomenon so
widespread and questions whether it is successful, manageable and
democratic. This work which presents the most recent and innovative
research on inter-local collaborative arrangements will appeal to
practitioners as well as scholars of local government, public
economy, public administration and policy.
This book examines the roles of communities in the general
framework of territorial innovation, particularly in the context of
less developed regions. With a specific focus on Portugal, it
offers conceptual improvements that will be of use to other
European regions. The book will appeal to scholars and students of
regional governance and politics, from public administration to
economics, sociology, geography and political science, as well as
to practitioners.
This book develops and tests a typology of local state-society
relations. To deliver such a comparative study on institutionalized
relations between local government and societal actors at the
municipal level in Europe, the book identifies and classifies
country-specific patterns of these institutionalized governance
networks. This work explores the diversity within these
institutionalized networks, approaching it from a strong
comparative perspective that is anchored on a new typology allowing
a more robust analysis of the identifiable patterns. It is a study
with appeal to scholars and students of local government, public
administration and political science as well as to those pursuing
this debate and implementing similar agendas as practitioners.
This book focuses on local state-society relations, understood as
institutionalised relations between local municipalities across
Europe and individual, collective or corporate societal actors. It
presents a typology of local state-society relations, and applies
this to characterise the most relevant institutionalised relations
between local government and societal actors at the municipal level
in 22 European countries. The comparative volume will clarify
whether or not patterns can be detected in the makeup of different
types of networks; whether or not these patterns are
country-specific or policy-specific; and why cases exist which are
so distinct that they are not subsumable under a certain pattern.
Taken together, this book will go beyond national typologies to
emphasise the role of agency and innovation in particular policy
sectors, providing a major contribution in the study of the local
governance of Europe. It will appeal to scholars and students of
local governance, public administration, urban planning and
European studies.
This book develops and tests a typology of local state-society
relations. To deliver such a comparative study on institutionalized
relations between local government and societal actors at the
municipal level in Europe, the book identifies and classifies
country-specific patterns of these institutionalized governance
networks. This work explores the diversity within these
institutionalized networks, approaching it from a strong
comparative perspective that is anchored on a new typology allowing
a more robust analysis of the identifiable patterns. It is a study
with appeal to scholars and students of local government, public
administration and political science as well as to those pursuing
this debate and implementing similar agendas as practitioners.
This book explores sub-municipal units' (SMU) role in decision
making, decentralized institutional innovation, social innovation
and, in rural areas, service delivery. Focusing on fourteen
European countries, the book examines the impact of political
cultures, administrative traditions and local government systems on
the functioning of the SMUs. An under-explored topic in the
literature, this book provides a comprehensive, comparative
European, thematically broad, descriptive book on sub-municipal
governance.
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