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Bigger but not always better: Size and democracy in Israeli amalgamated local governments

Zeedan, Rami
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Abstract
This study discusses the amalgamation of local governments as a method of creating larger and more effective local governments that place fewer burdens on central government budgets. Beyond economies of scale, our findings from a case study of Israel’s 2003 amalgamation plan support the democracy claim. This study reveals that amalgamation reduces local democracy in terms of voter turnout and representation. The likelihood of having a greater level of local democracy increases in smaller local governments, in terms of population. The new efficiency and democracy approach suggests that a new amalgamated local government must be sufficiently small to maximize local democracy. At the same time, new amalgamated local governments need to be sufficiently large to maximize economies of scale. This study uses field research with in-depth interviews to enhance the findings of the empirical analysis.
Description
This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis in Journal of Urban Affairs on 17 Jan 2017, available at: http://www.tandfonline.com/10.1080/07352166.2016.1262701.
Date
2017-01-17
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Publisher
Urban Affairs Association
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Keywords
Local government, Amalgamation, Israel, Local democracy
Citation
Rami Zeedan (2017) Bigger but not always better: Size and democracy in Israeli amalgamated local governments, Journal of Urban Affairs, 39:5, 711-728, DOI: 10.1080/07352166.2016.1262701
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