Boosting competitiveness through decentralization : subnational comparison of local development in Mexico
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Boosting competitiveness through decentralization : subnational comparison of local development in Mexico
(Cities and society / series editor, Chris Pickvance)
Ashgate, c2012
Available at / 3 libraries
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Library, Institute of Developing Economies, Japan External Trade Organization図
LCMX||711.2||B118009118
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Note
Includes bibliographical references (p. [135]-149) and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
Decentralization is accepted as one of the defining features of the third wave of democratic transitions in Latin America and commonly understood as an index and an agent of democratization. This rather optimistic perspective is inherent in the literature which is dominated by two theories. The liberal-individualist approach, especially as advocated by the World Bank, promotes decentralization policies on the premise of their efficiency, equity, and responsiveness to local demands. Similarly, the statist approach claims that decentralization can be the route to greater accountability, transparency and participation in governance; they add that this path should be guided by political elites and institutions. These dominant views nevertheless understate the extent to which certain decentralization policies have been implemented in lockstep with neoliberalization. This book examines the relationship between global economic processes and decentralization. It argues that through decentralization policies, the imperatives of neoliberal rules of competitiveness have been diffused into local governments and economies, generating different local development models. Whether decentralization produces democratic opening at the local level is contingent on how the local economy is integrated into global economic processes, and which social and economic groups are empowered, and disempowered, in that transition.
Table of Contents
- Chapter 1 Introduction, Aylin Topal
- Chapter 2 Toward a Political Economy Approach to Decentralization, Aylin Topal
- Chapter 3 Decentralization Policies in Mexico: Reshaping Forms of Interest Representation and State Intervention, Aylin Topal
- Chapter 4 Public-Private Part nership Leads Local Development: Entrepreneurialism in Chihuahua, Aylin Topal
- Chapter 5 Oil Production as the Dominant Force: Authoritarian State-Led Local Development in Tabasco, Aylin Topal
- Chapter 6 When Business Class Allies with a Strong Indigenous Peasant Movement: Contested Local Development in Guerrero, Aylin Topal
- Chapter 7 Conclusion, Aylin Topal Author's Interviews, Aylin Topal
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