Synopses & Reviews
Synopsis
This book considers local autonomy, measured as a multidimensional concept, from a cross-country comparative perspective, and examines how variations can be explained and what their consequences are. It fills a gap in the literature by providing a comprehensive study of the different components of local autonomy across a large number of countries, over time. It offers a theoretically saturated concept to measure local autonomy and applies it to 39 countries, including all 28 EU member states together with Albania, Georgia, Iceland, Liechtenstein, Macedonia, Moldova, Norway, Serbia, Switzerland Turkey and Ukraine, over a period of 25 years (1990-2014).
Synopsis
Part I: Assessing and Measuring Local AutonomyChapter 1: What is local autonomy?Chapter 2: Measuring local autonomyPart II: Towards the Local Autonomy IndexChapter 3: Legal foundationsChapter 4: Functional responsibilitiesChapter 5: Financial controlChapter 6: Organisational choiceChapter 7: Administrative supervisionChapter 8: Vertical accessChapter 9: The Local Autonomy Index (LAI)Part III: The Local Autonomy Index as tool for comparative analysisChapter 10: A new typology of local government? Beyond North-South and East-WestChapter 11: Who governs? Patterns of responsiveness and accountabilityChapter 12: Roadmap to local autonomy? Drivers of variationChapter 13: Blessings of local autonomy? Does it matter? For what? How?Chapter 14: Conclusions: Local Autonomy - patterns, dynamics and ambiguities