Paris and the Provinces
The Politics of Local Government Reform in France
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Taylor & Francis Ltd
Published:14th Feb '23
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
First published in 1980, Paris and the Provinces explores why reforms of central-local relations in France have been so ineffectual. Professor Gourevitch discovers the cause in party politics and personal rivalries. The struggle for dominance among different parties (Gaullists, Communists, Socialists, Christian Democrats, Independents and others) and individuals (De Gaulle, Giscard, Chirac, Mitterand, Marchais, etc.) has influenced virtually every aspect of institutional reform, from the creation of the regional administration and delineation of its powers to the delegation of specific responsibilities to cities and towns.
Conflict over the mechanisms that link local life to the national government is by no means limited to France. This book closely examines comparable events in Italy and analyses the factors that differentiate the strength of ‘ethnically’ based challenges to central authority in Britain, Spain, Belgium, Yugoslavia and Canada, from the relative weakness of such challenges in France, Italy and Germany. By evaluating the territorial distribution between the capital and the countryside as both an influence on and an object of policy, Paris and the Provinces contributes significantly to understanding the connections between party politics and policy formation and will be of interest to students of political science, government, and public policy.
'A fine book. It will be a distinguished addition to the field and will make more than one specialist envious of Gourevitch's ability to explain so much about French politics without recourse to either simplistic cultural "explain-alls" or complicated models of organisational behaviour.' - Sidney G. Tarrow
ISBN: 9781032357713
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: 540g
268 pages