The local tackling of global issues: a governance paradox in federal states

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Ressource 1Download: Mavrot Sager 2024_Accepted Manuscript Territory Politics Governance.pdf (509.96 [Ko])
State: Public
Version: Author's accepted manuscript
License: CC BY 4.0
Serval ID
serval:BIB_A84B46688625
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
The local tackling of global issues: a governance paradox in federal states
Journal
Territory, Politics, Governance
Author(s)
Mavrot Céline, Sager Fritz
ISSN
2162-2671
2162-268X
Publication state
Published
Issued date
03/04/2024
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Pages
1-20
Language
english
Abstract
This study focuses on a paradox of federalism. In disputed policy issues, subnational government units can initiate bottom-up policy change while the federal government remains inactive. This typically occurs in public health or climate change fields, where there might be a mismatch between the required and the effective scale of action. In such cases, subnational entities bear the costs of a politically risky action to produce a higher-level public good. Based on a study of tobacco control in 14 Swiss member states, we investigate why some subnational governments take the lead, while others adopt a wait-and-see attitude. We find a set of four configurations favourable to state activism (window of opportunity effect, reallocation effect, innovative identity effect, regionalisation effect) and four unfavourable (municipal resource burden effect, diffusion of responsibility effect, local autonomy effect, economic dependency effect). These bottom-up dynamics are crucial for understanding collaborative policy processes.
Keywords
governance paradox, policy innovation, global challenges, local policies, sub-national level, public good, federalism, tobacco control
Open Access
Yes
Create date
08/04/2024 11:21
Last modification date
09/04/2024 7:23
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