Governance from below: a theory of local government with two empirical tests
I examine decentralization through the lens of the local dynamics that it unleashes. The national effects of decentralization are simply the sum of its local-level effects. Hence to understand decentralization we must first understand how local government works. This paper proposes a theory of local government as the confluence of two quasi-markets and one organizational dynamic. Good government results when these three elements - political, economic and civil - are in rough balance, and actors in one cannot distort the others. Specific types of imbalance map into specific forms of government failure. I use comparative analysis to test the theory's predictions with qualitative and quantitative evidence from Bolivia. The combined methodology provides a higher-order empirical rigor than either approach can alone. The theory proves robust.
| Item Type | Working paper |
|---|---|
| Keywords | Local government,civil society,democratic theory,good governance,decentralization,Q2 (Q-squared),Bolivia. |
| Departments |
STICERD International Development |
| Date Deposited | 17 Nov 2005 |
| URI | https://researchonline.lse.ac.uk/id/eprint/475 |