Demand for Constitutional Decentralization

E. Alston
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Increasingly, decentralization has proven to be a policy fix selected by developing countries whose new governments represent a significant regime change. This analysis adds to the literature on decentralization by identifying the extent to which factors that lead to divergent policy preferences result in greater definition of decentralization in a given constitution. The principle of subsidiarity suggests that the more localities and regions vary from each other, either in terms of population, language, religion, or resource endowments, the more likely these populations’ policy preferences differ. This implies that the benefits of subsidiarity, and hence, decentralization are greater in such contexts. As a result, pressures for decentralization on constitutional drafters should increase with a country’s size, population, terrain ruggedness, number of ethnicities and religions, and regional variance in wealth. I test several aspects of this hypothesis, based upon initial data from 48 Muslim countries’ constitutions. Beyond the noteworthy conclusion that population is more important than territorial size in determining constitutional definition of subnational government, the results also suggest linguistic divides play an important role in determining the heterogeneity of policy preferences within a given nation, more so than simple ethnic diversity.
宪法分权要求
事实日益证明,权力下放是发展中国家选择的一项固定政策,这些国家的新政府代表着重大的政权变革。这一分析通过确定导致不同政策偏好的因素在多大程度上导致在特定宪法中对权力下放的更大定义,从而增加了关于权力下放的文献。辅助性原则表明,在人口、语言、宗教或资源禀赋方面,地方和地区之间的差异越大,这些人口的政策偏好就越有可能不同。这意味着,在这种情况下,辅助性和权力下放的好处更大。因此,要求宪法起草者权力下放的压力应随着一个国家的大小、人口、地形崎岖、种族和宗教的数量以及财富的地区差异而增加。根据48个穆斯林国家宪法的初步数据,我对这一假设的几个方面进行了测试。在决定地方政府的宪法定义方面,人口比领土面积更重要,这一值得注意的结论之外,研究结果还表明,在决定一个特定国家内政策偏好的异质性方面,语言差异比简单的种族多样性更重要。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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