Structural reorganization of local government is an addictive habit to which British government ministers and civil servants are peculiarly prone. In the latest instance, several unitary authorities were created where two-tier systems existedpreviously. Interviews and documentary research carried out before and after the reorganization demonstrate that many of the supposed benefits of structural change have not materialized, and some local authorities are still recovering from the resulting disruption
Local government reorganization has been widespread throughout Europe in the postwar era. Three broa...
Governmental reform programs in the UK have a long history of failed attempts to end incrementalism ...
With four new unitary councils looming, Steve Leach and Colin Copus write that the process of replac...
Structural reorganization of local government is an addictive habit to which British government mini...
In a drive to make local government as interesting and popular as generations of Westminster's polit...
Organization theory suggests that structural change has disruptive effects on managerial behaviour a...
In a drive to make local government as interesting and popular as generations of Westminster's polit...
The recent local government reorganisation in England, Scotland and Wales has served to resurrect pa...
This paper uses the concept of path dependency to examine the changes to the political management st...
In the UK, local authorities are already the largest across Europe. There are moves in England and ...
Reorganizations have provided fertile ground for researchers and practitioners seeking to draw lesso...
This article examines whether greater fragmentation in local government improves efficiency. Tiebout...
Local and regional government in England is complicated. There is no uniform structure, with some p...
Local Government in Wales has undergone restructuring in the 1970s, the 1990s, and is currently unde...
Local government systems change at varying speeds. While some countries have dramatically reduced th...
Local government reorganization has been widespread throughout Europe in the postwar era. Three broa...
Governmental reform programs in the UK have a long history of failed attempts to end incrementalism ...
With four new unitary councils looming, Steve Leach and Colin Copus write that the process of replac...
Structural reorganization of local government is an addictive habit to which British government mini...
In a drive to make local government as interesting and popular as generations of Westminster's polit...
Organization theory suggests that structural change has disruptive effects on managerial behaviour a...
In a drive to make local government as interesting and popular as generations of Westminster's polit...
The recent local government reorganisation in England, Scotland and Wales has served to resurrect pa...
This paper uses the concept of path dependency to examine the changes to the political management st...
In the UK, local authorities are already the largest across Europe. There are moves in England and ...
Reorganizations have provided fertile ground for researchers and practitioners seeking to draw lesso...
This article examines whether greater fragmentation in local government improves efficiency. Tiebout...
Local and regional government in England is complicated. There is no uniform structure, with some p...
Local Government in Wales has undergone restructuring in the 1970s, the 1990s, and is currently unde...
Local government systems change at varying speeds. While some countries have dramatically reduced th...
Local government reorganization has been widespread throughout Europe in the postwar era. Three broa...
Governmental reform programs in the UK have a long history of failed attempts to end incrementalism ...
With four new unitary councils looming, Steve Leach and Colin Copus write that the process of replac...