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Gedetailleerde samenvatting van alle artikelen BBO 2: Multi-level governance $7.78   Add to cart

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Gedetailleerde samenvatting van alle artikelen BBO 2: Multi-level governance

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  • April 8, 2024
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  • 2022/2023
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Week 1, BBO II

Wat is multi-level governance?

Voorbereidend

Hooghe & Marks: Unraveling the Centra; State, but How? Types of Multi-level Governance
Draws on several literatures to distinguish 2 types of multi-level governance. One type
conceives of dispersion of authority to general-purpose, nonintersecting, and durable
jurisdictions. The second type conceives of task-specific, intersecting and flexible jurisdictions.

 Modern governance is, and should be, dispersed across multiple centers of authority;
but how should multi-level governance be organized? What are the basis
alternatives?

 The article states that the diffusion of decision making away from the central state
rase fundamental issues of design that can be conceptualized as 2 contrasting types
of governance
 Types are logically coherent + represent alternative responses to fundamental
problems of coordination

Island of theorizing
 Scholars in political science responded in different ways to unraveling central state
control

List of 5 literatures + terms scholars have generated for diffusion of authority




 European Union Studies described multi-level governance (MLG) as “system
of continuous negotiation among nested governments at several territorial
tiers - supranational, national, regional and local”

 Reconfiguring authority has been a major topic in international relations scholars
 Literature on multilateral cooperation + global governance has sought to
specify the conditions under which national governments create international
regimes

 More recent, scholars examine how globalization facilitates the diffusion of
political authority to subnational + international institutions

 Others focus on the proliferation of nongovernmental actors in international
governance

, Extensive literature on federalism examines the optimal allocation of authority across
multiple tiers of government + how governments at different levels interact
 Some benefits of decentralization (Oates, 1999) underlie in this literature

 The study of local government in the US + Western Europe bears directly on multi-
level, polycentric governance
 An influential starting point: Tiebout’s 1956 article
 Established the claim that competition among multiple local jurisdictions
leads to more efficient provision of local public services

 Debate between “2 traditions” of diffusing authority has spilled into public policy
 How can common goods be created under multi-level governance?
 Some policy analysts explore how market principles + participation on the
part of societal actors + deregulation create flexible, self-organizing, loosely
coupled, governance by networks

 MLG (should not) seen as an alternative but rather as a complement to
intergovernmental relations defined in a regulatory framework

Flexible governance
 The literatures share the idea that dispersion of governance across multiple
jurisdictions is more flexible than concertation of governance in one jurisdiction
 Efficient governance adjusts jurisdictions to the trade-off between the virtues
+ vices of centralization

 Large jurisdictions are good because
- They have the virtue of exploiting economies of scale in the provision
of public goods
- Internalizing policy externalities, allowing for more efficient taxation
- Facilitating more efficient redistribution
- Enlarging the territorial scope of security and market exchange

 Large jurisdictions are bad when
- They impose a single policy on diverse ecological systems/territorially
heterogeneous populations

 Criticism of centralized government: It is insensitive to varying scale efficiencies from
policy to policy
 Economies of scale are more likely to characterize the production of capital-
intensive public goods, instead of labor-intensive services because economies
accrue from spreading costs over larger outputs

 Efficiency requires that a policy’s full effects be internalized in decision making

,  Centralized government is not well suited to accommodate diversity
 Ecological conditions vary from area to area
 Variation in preferences of citizens
 MLG allows decision makers to adjust the scale of governance to reflect
heterogeneity

Two types
 There is consensus that flexible governance must be multi-level, but there is no
consensus about how MLG should be structured
 Designed around communities or policy problems?
 Bundle of competencies of functionally specific?
 Limited in number of should they proliferate?
 Designed to last of should they be fluid?

The 2 types of MLG drawn from the literature




 Type I: Describes jurisdictions at limited number of levels which are general purpose;
they bundle together multiple functions, including a range of policy responsibilities +
court system + representative institutions

 Type II: Composed of specialized jurisdictions, fragmented into functionally specific
pieces

Type I Governance
 Some characteristics:
 Describes jurisdictions at limited number of levels

 The jurisdictions (international, national, regional, meso, local) are general-
purpose
 They bundle together multiple functions, including policy responsibilities +
court system + representation institutions

 Membership boundaries don’t intersect

 Every citizen is located in a Russian Doll set of nested jurisdictions where
there is one and only relevant jurisdiction at any particular territorial scale
 Territorial jurisdictions are stable for periods of several decades
 Allocation of policy competencies across jurisdictional levels are flexible

,  Intellectual foundation: Federalism
 Federalism is concerned with power sharing among limited number of
governments operating at a few levels + relationship between central
government and nonintersecting subnational governments

 Framework is systemwide, functions are bundles, levels of government are multiple
but limited in number

 Characteristics
 General-purpose jurisdictions
- Decision making powers dispersed across jurisdictions, but bundled in
small number of packages
- Emphasize costs of decomposing authority into disparate packages
- Idea is strong in Europe, where local government usually eercises wide
spread of functions, reflecting the the concept of general-purpose
local authorities exercising comprehensive care for their communities”
(Norton 1991, 22)

 Nonintersecting Memberships
- Durable boundaries that are nonintersecting at any particular level
- Memberships of jurisdictions are higher + lower tiers don’t intersect

 Limited Number of Jurisdictional Levels
- Type I organizes jurisdictions at just a few levels
- It is common to distinguish local, intermediate, and central level

 Systemwide, Durable Architecture
- Systemic institutional choice
- Type I usually adopt the trias politicas structure in modern
democracies

- Type I are durable; jurisdictional reform is costly + unusual
- Institutions responsible for governance are sticky + tend to outlive
conditions that brought them into being

Type II Governance
 Some characteristics
 Composed of specialized jurisdictions
 Fragmented into functionally specific pieces
 Number of such jurisdictions is potentially huge + scale they operate vary
finely
 No great fixity in their existence
 Tend to be lean + flexible; they come and go as demands for governance
change

 Number of jurisdictions is potentially vast, rather than limited
 Don’t operate on just a few levels, but operate at numerous territorial scales

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