Many developing countries have a history of highly centralized
governments. Since the late 1980s, a large number of these governments
have introduced decentralization to increase democracy and improve
services, especially in small communities far from capital cities. In
Going Local, an unprecedented study of the effects of decentralization
on thirty Mexican municipalities, Merilee Grindle describes how local
governments respond when they are assigned new responsibilities and
resources under decentralization policies. She explains why
decentralization leads to better local governments in some cases--and
why it fails to in others. Combining quantitative and qualitative
methods, Grindle examines data based on a random sample of Mexican
municipalities--and ventures into town halls to follow public
officials as they seek to manage a variety of tasks amid conflicting
pressures and new expectations. Decentralization, she discovers, is a
double-edged sword. While it allows public leaders to make significant
reforms quickly, institutional weaknesses undermine the durability of
change, and legacies of the past continue to affect how public
problems are addressed. Citizens participate, but they are more
successful at extracting resources from government than in holding
local officials and agencies accountable for their actions. The
benefits of decentralization regularly predicted by economists,
political scientists, and management specialists are not inevitable,
she argues. Rather, they are strongly influenced by the quality of
local leadership and politics.
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Decentralization, Democratization, and the Promise of Good Governance
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781400830350
Publisert
2013
Utgiver
Princeton University Press
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Antall sider
256
Forfatter