Sub-National Government
In: Comparative Government and Politics, S. 181-199
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In: Comparative Government and Politics, S. 181-199
In: Parliamentary affairs: a journal of comparative politics, Band 36, Heft 1, S. 125-128
ISSN: 1460-2482
In: Schaap, L., Geurtz, J.C.H.C., Graaf, L.J. de, & Karsten, N. (2010). Innovations in sub-national government in Europe (Innovaciones en los gobiernos subnacionales europeos). Politica y Sociedad, 47 (3), pp. 145-163.
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In: Government Beyond the Centre, S. 94-119
La mejora del gobierno se encuentra arraigada con frecuencia en los niveles descentralizados. En este artículo es el cambio dentro del gobierno mismo, principalmente la emergencia de la "gobernanza" y el cambio en el tamaño administrativo. Las reformas estructurales adoptan formas diversas: el aumento del tamaño para mejorar la capacidad del sistema, el aumento del tamaño para favorecer la participación ciudadana, y la reducción del tamaño para favorecer asimismo la participación ciudadana. Además, se advierten nuevas formas de acción dentro de los mismos gobiernos: cooperación transfronteriza, cooperación intermunicipal y nuevas formas de evaluación del rendimiento y de la gestión financiera. Los autores concluyen el artículo mencionando algunos desafíos para los académicos y para los gobiernos. ; Improvement in government is often rooted in decentralised layers of government. In this article the authors discuss the recent history of innovations in sub-national government in Europe. They focus on two general trends and developments. Cases of interesting practices and developments illustrate the general trends. For each general trend a distinction is made between two kinds of innovations: structural reforms and new ways of working within existing institutional settings. The first trend concerns changing relations between government, civil society and citizens, in response to the increased contestation of the nature of traditional representative democracy. Examples of structural reforms are: increased citizen participation, the expanded use of referenda and the introduction of the directly elected mayor. New ways of working are: forms of coproduction between the public sector and the third sector. The second trend described in this article is change within government itself, mainly the rise of 'governance' and changing administrative scales. Structural reforms take several forms: scale enlargement to enhance system capacity, scale reduction to enhance system capacity, scale enlargement to enhance citizen effectiveness, and scale reduction to enhance citizen effectiveness. Next to them, new ways of working can be observed within governments: cross-boarder co-operations, inter-municipal co-operations, and new forms of performance assessment and fiscal management. The authors conclude the article with a few challenges to both academics and governments.
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In: Política y sociedad: revista de la Universidad Complutense, Facultad de Ciencias Políticas y Sociología, Band 47, Heft 3, S. 145-163
ISSN: 1130-8001
In: Restoring Public Finances, 2012 Update, S. 257-270
In: Government Beyond the Centre, S. 38-50
In: Government Beyond the Centre, S. 120-133
In: Public money & management: integrating theory and practice in public management, Band 12, Heft 4, S. 25-29
ISSN: 1467-9302
In: West European politics, Band 20, Heft 1, S. 176-193
ISSN: 0140-2382
In: West European politics, Band 20, Heft 1, S. 176-193
ISSN: 1743-9655
In: State and Local Government Reforms in France and Germany, S. 59-74
In: State and local government reforms in France and Germany: divergence and convergence, S. 59-74
In: Cowell , R , Ellis , G , Sherry-Brennan , F , Strachan , P & Toke , D 2017 , ' Sub-national government and pathways to sustainable energy ' , Environment and Planning C: Politics and Space , pp. 1-17 . https://doi.org/10.1177/2399654417730359
In an effort to understand how to promote more sustainable forms of energy provision, researchers have begun addressing the scale of political and governance processes, yet the effects of sub-national government remain neglected. At the same time, analysts of political devolution, decentralisation and independence have rarely given attention to the energy sector. Papers in this special issue seek to better understand the relationship between sub-national government and pathways to sustainable energy: examining how city-regional and devolved governments have shaped agendas for building retrofit; elucidating the importance of decentralised governance in knitting together electricity, heat and transport energy markets; mapping the complex, fuzzy spatial organisation of legal powers to direct energy policy across multi-level polities; and analysing conflicts over the allocation of energy infrastructure consenting powers between national and devolved governments. The papers highlight the interdependencies of action in different governmental arenas, and reinforce arguments for greater central-to-local reflexivity in governance styles. Analysing the interface between sub-national government and energy transition also raises new questions about the meaning of ?sovereignty?, the fragmentary nature of democratic control over energy systems, and the effects of boundaries.
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