1st Edition

The Second Tier of Local Government in Europe Provinces, Counties, Départements and Landkreise in Comparison

Edited By Hubert Heinelt, Xavier Bertrana Copyright 2011
386 Pages 9 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

360 Pages 9 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

368 Pages 9 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

This book takes a comparative approach to local government across 14 European countries, looking at processes of decentralisation, regionalisation and reforms of local government. Examining second levels of government, such as UK Counties, French Départements, Italian and Spanish Provinces, and German Landkreise, this book reveals both the specific characteristics of particular countries,... Read more

1. Introduction Hubert Heinelt and Xavier Bertrana  2. Belgium Tony Valcke, Herwig Reynaert and Kristof Steyvers  3. Denmark Poul Erik Mouritzen  4. France Emmanuel Négrier and Fabien Nicolas  5. The United Kingdom Steve Martin  6. Germany Hubert Heinelt and Björn Egner  7. Greece Nikos Hlepas and Panagoitis Getimis  8. Hungary Gabor Soos  9. Italy Carlo Bachetti  10. Poland Pawel Swianiewicz  11. Romania Cristina Stănuş and Daniel Pop  12. Spain Xavier Bertrana, Marina Espinosa, Jaume Magre  13. Sweden Henry Bäck  14. The Netherlands Ger Arendsen 15. Turkey Korel Göymen  16. Conclusions Xavier Bertrana and Hubert Heinelt

Biography

Hubert Heinelt is Professor for Comparative Public Policy, Public Administration and Urban Studies at the Institute of Political Science, Darmstadt University of Technology.

Xavier Bertrana is the Head of the Centre for Local Innovation at the Diputació de Barcelona and Researcher at the University of Barcelona.

'A readable and informative book, particularly useful for those interested in decentralisation multi-level governance and local government reform issues. This book's originalities lie in the comparability it allows and in the comprehensive information it provides about one intermediate tier of government that - despite its relevance - has been discussed less. The book is geared both for political actors directly involved in similar debates as well as scholars.' - Filipe Teles, University of Aveiro, 2013