1. The essence and transformation of local self-government in Western Europe.
Part I. The essence of local self-government
2. The future of local democracy: A somewhat dystopian view.
3. Beyond Charter and Index: Reassessing local autonomy.
4. Redefining local self-government: Finnish municipalities seeking their essence.
5. Local autonomy in the Nordic countries: Between a rock and a hard place.
6. Local self-government and the choice for local governance arrangements in nine Swiss municipal tasks
7. Chasing the creative class: What works, and what doesn't? Recruitment strategies in Norwegian local government.
Part II. Challenges and transformations: Digitalisation, marketisation, amalgamation.
8. The digitalisation of local public services: evidence from the German case.
9. Challenges of digital service provision for local governments from the citizens' view: comparing citizens' expectations and their experience of digital service provision
10. The resistance threshold to the amalgamation of jurisdictions: MPs' attitudes about budget control and social identification in the Swiss cantons.
11. Country size and county council mandate: decreasing motivation due to longer distances?
12. Where is municipal marketisation heading? Experiences from England and Scandinavia
Part III. Changing intergovernmental relations: supervisions and subnational policy-making
13. Decentralisation and reconfiguration of multilevel research policy: the case of Sweden
14. The impact of local autonomy on land-use planning. A qualitative comparative analysis of two Swiss municipalities.
15. City-regional governance in Flanders: the potential of mobility as a critical juncture.
16. Strategic policy planning at the local level: A Flemish performance starring regional government.
17. State supervisions of local budgets: from forbearance to no concession.
18. New ways of limiting local government debt: an empirical assessment of the German case.
19. Reforms of school supervision in the German Länder: converging school supervisions structures?
Part IV. Future outlook and scenarios
20. Future outlook and scenarios
Tomas Bergström is Associate Professor in the Department of Political Science at Lund University, Sweden.
Jochen Franzke is Professor of Administrative Science at the University of Potsdam, Germany.
Sabine Kuhlmann is Professor of Political Sciences, Administration and Organization at the University of Potsdam in Germany. She also is the Vice-Chair of the German National Regulatory Control Council at the German Federal Chancellery and she serves as the Vice-President for Western Europe of the IIAS and the Vice-President of EGPA.
Ellen Wayenberg is Professor at the Faculty of Economics and Business Administration, Ghent University, Belgium.
This book presents new research results on the challenges of local politics in different European countries, including Germany, the Netherlands, the Nordic countries and Switzerland, together with theoretical considerations on the further development and strengthening of local self-government. It focuses on analyses of the most recent developments in local democracy and administration.
“Most ‘local government’ books are written by believers. This book is different for its realistic visions of futures of local government. It shows how autonomy, digitalization, marketization, and amalgamation could be functional or dysfunctional, and also how this is affected by links to politics, and impacted by intergovernmental relations. This is a must read for all believers in local government.”
—Geert Bouckaert, KU Leuven Public Governance Institute, Belguim
“The twenty chapters of this book provide a timely and thought-provoking addition to our understanding of local self-governance in eight countries in Northern and Central Europe. This book was completed shortly before the Corona-crisis crashed in. But the lessons to be learned from this volume will doubtlessly prove important in fully exploiting local government’s potential in facing the challenges of the difficult times ahead.”
—Bas Denters, Professor of Public Administration, University of Twente, Netherlands
“Very inspiring book that covers the most important aspects of local self-government within a comparative framework. As we might have expected, there is no general trend, no single best model but a variety of functionally equivalent settings and patterns. The book gives insight into the diversity and richness of local government, its very essence, actual challenges and transformations, and puts subnational policy making in a multi-level perspective of governance.”
—Andreas Ladner, Professor for Political Institutions and Public Administration at the IDHEAP, University of Lausanne, Switzerland
“Covering eight countries, this ambitious volume compares developments in local governments across Europe. Local governments are on the front-line when it comes to responding to wicked issues like climate change and migration, yet face major challenges in terms of financial and human resources. Using rich empirical evidence, the volume presents a nuanced analysis of trends. No one direction emerges for Europe’s local governments, but a rich seam of innovation is revealed covering political participation and public administration alike. Local governments have the potential to engage citizens in meaningful ways and deliver effective and responsive services, but this requires clear local leadership and support rather direction from the centre.”
—Vivien Lowndes, Professor of Public Policy, University of Birmingham, UK
Tomas Bergström is Associate Professor in the Department of Political Science at Lund University, Sweden.
Jochen Franzke is Professor of Administrative Science at the University of Potsdam, Germany.
Sabine Kuhlmann is Professor of Political Sciences, Administration and Organization at the University of Potsdam in Germany. She also is the Vice-Chair of the German National Regulatory Control Council at the German Federal Chancellery and she serves as the Vice-President for Western Europe of the IIAS and the Vice-President of EGPA.
Ellen Wayenberg is Professor at the Faculty of Economics and Business Administration, Ghent University, Belgium.