Reshaping local borders in Europe today. A critical reflection founded on an analysis of the case of Finland

In Europe, the amalgamation of local authorities is currently used to optimize public resources. Although amalgamation involves several advantages, it needs to fulfil three conditions to be considered successful. First, address local preferences and needs; second, be fair, transparent and accessible...

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Main Authors: Xavier Albacete, Joan Tort
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Sciendo 2017-03-01
Series:Miscellanea Geographica: Regional Studies on Development
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1515/mgrsd-2017-0001
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spelling doaj-db7c302a47534a648332ee768a2b09342021-09-06T19:20:22ZengSciendoMiscellanea Geographica: Regional Studies on Development2084-61182017-03-01211192410.1515/mgrsd-2017-0001mgrsd-2017-0001Reshaping local borders in Europe today. A critical reflection founded on an analysis of the case of FinlandXavier Albacete0Joan Tort1Department of Environmental and Biological Sciences, Environmental Informatics Research Group, University of Eastern Finland, FinlandDepartment of Geography, University of Barcelona, SpainIn Europe, the amalgamation of local authorities is currently used to optimize public resources. Although amalgamation involves several advantages, it needs to fulfil three conditions to be considered successful. First, address local preferences and needs; second, be fair, transparent and accessible to citizens; and third, be a compromise between central and local political elites. In the current paper the fulfilling of these three conditions is analysed using the comprehensive, bottom-up, Finnish reform introduced during the period of 2008-2013. The findings conclude that while the Finnish local reform plan has been successful in reaching a compromise between local and central governments, it has failed insofar as it has not fulfilled the condition of making the process fair, transparent and accessible to citizens. Furthermore, whether the amalgamation has allowed local government to address citizens’ preferences and needs in a meaningful and responsive way has yet to be demonstrated.https://doi.org/10.1515/mgrsd-2017-0001amalgamationlocal reformfinnish local administrationlocal policy
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Xavier Albacete
Joan Tort
spellingShingle Xavier Albacete
Joan Tort
Reshaping local borders in Europe today. A critical reflection founded on an analysis of the case of Finland
Miscellanea Geographica: Regional Studies on Development
amalgamation
local reform
finnish local administration
local policy
author_facet Xavier Albacete
Joan Tort
author_sort Xavier Albacete
title Reshaping local borders in Europe today. A critical reflection founded on an analysis of the case of Finland
title_short Reshaping local borders in Europe today. A critical reflection founded on an analysis of the case of Finland
title_full Reshaping local borders in Europe today. A critical reflection founded on an analysis of the case of Finland
title_fullStr Reshaping local borders in Europe today. A critical reflection founded on an analysis of the case of Finland
title_full_unstemmed Reshaping local borders in Europe today. A critical reflection founded on an analysis of the case of Finland
title_sort reshaping local borders in europe today. a critical reflection founded on an analysis of the case of finland
publisher Sciendo
series Miscellanea Geographica: Regional Studies on Development
issn 2084-6118
publishDate 2017-03-01
description In Europe, the amalgamation of local authorities is currently used to optimize public resources. Although amalgamation involves several advantages, it needs to fulfil three conditions to be considered successful. First, address local preferences and needs; second, be fair, transparent and accessible to citizens; and third, be a compromise between central and local political elites. In the current paper the fulfilling of these three conditions is analysed using the comprehensive, bottom-up, Finnish reform introduced during the period of 2008-2013. The findings conclude that while the Finnish local reform plan has been successful in reaching a compromise between local and central governments, it has failed insofar as it has not fulfilled the condition of making the process fair, transparent and accessible to citizens. Furthermore, whether the amalgamation has allowed local government to address citizens’ preferences and needs in a meaningful and responsive way has yet to be demonstrated.
topic amalgamation
local reform
finnish local administration
local policy
url https://doi.org/10.1515/mgrsd-2017-0001
work_keys_str_mv AT xavieralbacete reshapinglocalbordersineuropetodayacriticalreflectionfoundedonananalysisofthecaseoffinland
AT joantort reshapinglocalbordersineuropetodayacriticalreflectionfoundedonananalysisofthecaseoffinland
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