6533b852fe1ef96bd12aac74
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Territorial fragmentation in post-communist Romania: the not so curious case of a de-amalgamation reform
Cristina Stănușsubject
Geography (General)Post communist05 social sciences0211 other engineering and technologiesFragmentation (computing)021107 urban & regional planningRationalityContext (language use)02 engineering and technology0506 political sciencede-amalgamationPoliticsDominance (economics)territorial reformsPolitical economyCentral governmentPolitical scienceLocal government050602 political science & public administrationEarth and Planetary Sciences (miscellaneous)local governmentG1-922romaniadescription
Abstract The efficiency-driven trend towards amalgamation characterising local government reforms in Europe seems to have escaped Romania, which displays a significant increase in the number of local governments post-1989. This is the result of rural first-tier local governments splitting into smaller units. The paper examines objective factors and subjective motivations that have shaped the behaviour of both national and local actors in dealing with territorial reform. First, it explores the rationale and rationality of a central government initiative to facilitate municipal splits against a set of criteria derived from the literature. Second, it examines the municipal splits occurring between 1991 and 2018 against alternative or concurring explanations developed in the literature based on economic, socio-cultural and political elements. The paper argues that in the highly charged political context of the post-communist countries it is reasonable to expect a dominance of subjective rather than objective factors in decision-making on territorial reform.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2021-01-01 | Miscellanea Geographica: Regional Studies on Development |