Definitions
Coordination over policy that is shared or overlapping across levels of government; administrative and partisan channels of interaction/coordination between central and local government.
Introduction
An important element of intergovernmental relations (IGR) in modern democracies are the various channels by which different levels of government coordinate over policy that is shared or overlapping across levels. The need for greater coordination, vertically between local, national, and supranational governments, has been driven by trends affecting most states. These include an expanding welfare state, the standardization of public services across regions, increasingly interdependent and complex policy areas which cannot be exclusively dealt with by one level alone, and demands for greater policy autonomy and ownership from local governments (Bolleyer 2009; Loughlin 2007...
References
Bolleyer N (2009) Intergovernmental cooperation: rational choices in federal systems and beyond. Oxford University Press, Oxford
Bolleyer N, Swenden W, McEwen N (2014) Constitutional dynamics and partisan conflict: a comparative assessment of multi-level systems in Europe. Comp Eur Polit 12(4–5):531–555
Flanagan SC, Krauss ES, Steiner K (eds) (1980) Political opposition and local politics in Japan. Princeton University Press, Abingdon
Fukui H, Fukai SN (1996) Pork barrel politics, networks, and local economic development in contemporary Japan. Asian Surv 36(3):268–286
Harada M (2010) Chihō kyokyō dantai no kokusei sanka wo meguro giron [Debates around the partcipation of local public bodies in national politics]. Refarensu 716. 2010.9
Hijino KVL (2016) Local politics in Japan. Asian Surv 56(5):879–904
Hijino KVL (2017) Local politics and national policy: multi-level conflicts in Japan and beyond. Taylor & Francis, Abingdon
Hitomi T (2008) “Chiho jichi no kokusei sankaken sairon” [Revisiting debates on the participation of local governments in national government processes] Goi keisei to chiho jichi. Consensus formation and local self-government. Nihon Jichi Gakkai (eds) Tokyo: Keibundo:3–21.
Kanai T (2008) Kuni to chihō no kyōginoba’ no seiritsu to satetsu [The establishment and setbacks of the forum of discussions between central government and the regions]. In: Morita A, Kanai T, Taguchi K (eds) Bunkenkaikaku no dōtai (Seiji kūkan no henyō to seisaku kakushin) [The dynamics of decentralization reform: transformation of political space and policy innovation]. Tokyo daigaku shuppankai, Tokyo
Loughlin J (2007) Reconfiguring the state: trends in territorial governance in European states. Reg Fed Stud 17(4):385–403
McEwen N, Swenden W, Bolleyer N (2012) Intergovernmental relations in the UK: continuity in a time of change? Br J Polit Int Relat 14(2):323–343
Muramatsu M (1988) Chihōjichi [Local power in the Japanese state]. Tokyo daigaku shuppankai, Tokyo
Muramatsu M (2010) Seikansukuramugata riidāshippu no hōkai [Collapse of the politico-bureaucratic scrum-type leadership]. Toyo keizai shimposha, Tokyo
Narita Y (1979) Chiho kokyo dantai no kokkusei sanka (chu-1) [Particpation of local public bodies in national politics]. Jichi Kenkyu 55(11):3013
Oosaka S (2012) Kyogi no ba wa kuni to chiho no kankei wo kaetaka? [Did the forum of discussions change central-lcoal government relations]. Shisei 61:14–16
Palermo F, Wilson A (2014) The multi-level dynamics of state decentralization in Italy. Comp Eur Polit 12(4–5):510–530
Scheiner E (2006) Democracy without competition in Japan: opposition failure in a one-party dominant state. Cambridge University Press, New York
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Corresponding author
Editor information
Editors and Affiliations
Rights and permissions
Copyright information
© 2018 Springer International Publishing AG
About this entry
Cite this entry
Hijino, K.V.L. (2018). Types of Local Governments’ Intervention to National Politics/Central-Local Cooperation and Antagonism by Political Parties and Government. In: Farazmand, A. (eds) Global Encyclopedia of Public Administration, Public Policy, and Governance. Springer, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-31816-5_3266-1
Download citation
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-31816-5_3266-1
Received:
Accepted:
Published:
Publisher Name: Springer, Cham
Print ISBN: 978-3-319-31816-5
Online ISBN: 978-3-319-31816-5
eBook Packages: Springer Reference Economics and FinanceReference Module Humanities and Social SciencesReference Module Business, Economics and Social Sciences