Localism and Regionalism

IF 0.6 4区 社会学 Q2 LAW
Richard Briffault
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引用次数: 42

Abstract

Localism and regionalism are normally seen as conflicting, conceptions of metropolitan area governance. Localism is the belief that the existing system of a large number of relatively small governments wielding power over such critical matters as land use regulation, local taxation, and the financing of local public services ought to be preserved. Regionalism would move some power to institutions, organizations or procedures with a larger territorial scope and more population than existing local governments. Regionalism appears to be a step towards centralization, and the antithesis of the decentralization represented by localism. Yet, in the metropolitan areas that dominate America at the end of the twentieth century, regionalism is not just the enemy of localism: It is also localism's logical extension. Localism is based on a set of arguments concerning the role of local governments in promoting governmental efficiency, democracy, and community. But in contemporary metropolitan areas, the economically, socially, and ecologically relevant local area is often the region. In these areas, concerns about efficiency, democracy, and community ought to lead to a shift in power from existing localities to new processes, structures, or organizations that can promote decision-making on behalf of the region. Regionalism is, thus, localism for metropolitan areas. Localists, however, do not become regionalists when they live in metropolitan areas. Indeed, resistance to regionalism is intense in many metropolitan areas. Localism is not simply a theory intended to advance certain normative goals. It is also a means of protecting the interests of those who receive advantages from the existing governance structure. Local self-interest, rather than the political values localism is said to advance, plays a central role in the opposition to regionalism. This essay explores the relationship between localism and regionalism. It considers the meaning of regionalism in contemporary urban policy debates and the reasons why regionalism currently enjoys so much attention from academics, urbanists and policy analysts. It reviews the arguments for localism, and explains how, despite the asserted conflict between localism and regionalism, the theories underlying localism actually make a case for regionalism in contemporary metropolitan areas. Finally, it examines the role of local self-interest in the resistance to regionalism, and the efforts of regionalists to respond by making the case for regionalism in terms of local self-interest as well.
地方主义和地区主义
地方主义和地区主义通常被视为相互冲突的都市治理概念。地方主义是一种信念,认为现有的由许多相对较小的政府在土地使用监管、地方税收和地方公共服务融资等关键问题上行使权力的制度应该得到保留。地方主义将把一些权力移交给比现有地方政府拥有更大领土范围和更多人口的机构、组织或程序。区域主义似乎是走向中央集权的一步,与以地方主义为代表的权力下放相对立。然而,在20世纪末主导美国的大都市地区,地区主义不仅是地方主义的敌人,也是地方主义的逻辑延伸。地方主义基于一系列关于地方政府在促进政府效率、民主和社区方面的作用的论点。但在当代都市圈中,经济、社会和生态相关的地方往往是区域。在这些领域,对效率、民主和社区的关注应该导致权力从现有的地方转移到新的程序、结构或组织,以促进代表该地区的决策。因此,地区主义是大都市地区的地方主义。但是,地方主义者如果住在首都地区,就不会变成地方主义者。事实上,在许多大都市地区,对地方主义的抵制非常强烈。地方主义不仅仅是一种旨在推进某些规范目标的理论。它也是保护那些从现有治理结构中获益的人的利益的一种手段。在反对地方主义的过程中,地方自身利益,而不是地方主义所提倡的政治价值,发挥着核心作用。本文探讨了地方主义与地域主义的关系。它考虑了地域主义在当代城市政策辩论中的意义,以及地域主义目前受到学者、城市学家和政策分析师如此关注的原因。它回顾了地方主义的争论,并解释了尽管地方主义和地区主义之间断言存在冲突,但地方主义的理论实际上为当代大都市地区主义提供了理由。最后,它考察了地方自身利益在抵制地方主义中的作用,以及地方主义者通过从地方自身利益的角度出发,为地方主义做出回应的努力。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.80
自引率
0.00%
发文量
22
期刊介绍: Founded in 1951, the Buffalo Law Review is a generalist law review that publishes articles by practitioners, professors, and students in all areas of the law. The Buffalo Law Review has a subscription base of well over 600 institutions and individuals. The Buffalo Law Review currently publishes five issues per year with each issue containing approximately four articles and one member-written comment per issue.
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