Have Mayors Will Travel: Trends and Developments in the Direct Election of the Mayor: A Five-Nation Study

Abstract

Whether citizens should directly elect the mayor or whether only councillors should be able to indirectly choose the local political to the exclusion of the public from the process, is one of the most controversial debates around the reform of local government – at least for policy-makers and councillors. Debates about direct or indirect election of local political leaders focus on different interpretations of political concepts such as: the legitimacy to act, visibility and profile of local leaders, transparency of political decision-making processes, accountability and the role of the citizen in local representative democracy. The chapter takes five European counties selected because of their different political traditions and structures, to assess the nature of the policy debate about the selection of the local political leader. It does this to assess how far path dependent responses to reform have influenced political change or whether crisis moments provide opportunities for new considerations about the reform of local politics to emerge.

Description

Researchers from Spain, Czech republic, Slovenia, and Sweden involved in the project and publication

Keywords

elected mayors, councils, local government, local governance, political leadership

Citation

Copus, C., Iglesias, A., Hacek, M., Illner, M. and Lidstrom, A. (2016) Have Mayors Will Travel: Trends and Developments in the Direct Election of the Mayor: A Five-Nation Study. In: Khulmann and Bouckaert (eds) (ch.16) Local Public Sector Reforms in Times of Crisis: National Trajectories and International Comparisons, Palgrave Macmillan, pp. 301-315

Rights

Research Institute