Devolution and Regional Development in the United Kingdom
Redes
Devolution and Regional Development in the United Kingdom
Autor Correspondente: Danny MacKinnon | [email protected]
Palavras-chave: Desenvolvimento regional
Resumos Cadastrados
Resumo Inglês:
Since the 1970s, many different governments around the world have
sought to transfer power to sub-state governments, meaning that devolution has
become a key ‘global trend’ of recent decades (Rodriguez-Pose and Gill, 2003).
The term devolution can be defined as a form of political decentralisation,
involving a “transfer of power downwards to political authorities at immediate or
local levels†(Agranoff, 2004, p.26). Devolution has introduced in response to
pressures exerted on established states from both ‘below’ and ‘above’, referring to
demands from regions within the state for more say over their own affairs and the
effects of processes of globalisation and supra-national integration respectively
(Keating, 1997; Tomaney, 2000). Arguments for devolution have variously
stressed questions of identity in relation to the recognition of minority groups,
governance in terms of creating more effective political institutions, and the
economy by allowing regions to adapt to changes in the economic environment
and to fulfil their economic potential (Rodriguez-Pose and Sandall, 2008).