Publication | Closed Access
Varieties of Urbanism: A Comparative View of Inequality and the Dual Dimensions of Metropolitan Fragmentation
54
Citations
26
References
2020
Year
Comparative Urban ResearchComparative ViewLawSocial SciencesUrban GovernanceUrban PoliticsUrban TheoryUrban StudiesGeopoliticsLocal GovernancePublic PolicyUrban PolicyUrban Economic DevelopmentDual DimensionsRegional PolicyStructural FeaturesUrban GeographyPolitical GeographyMetropolitan FragmentationSociologyUrban EconomicsBusinessUrban Social JusticeRegional Fiscal DisparitiesMetropolitan AreasPolitical Science
A large literature on urban politics documents the connection between metropolitan fragmentation and inequality. This article situates the United States comparatively to explore the structural features of local governance that underpin this connection. Examining five metropolitan areas in North America and Europe, the article identifies two distinct dimensions of fragmentation: (a) fragmentation through jurisdictional proliferation (dividing regions into increasing numbers of governments) and (b) fragmentation through resource hoarding (via exclusion, municipal parochialism, and fiscal competition). This research reveals how distinctive the United States is in the ways it combines institutional arrangements that facilitate metropolitan fragmentation (through jurisdictional proliferation) and those that reward such fragmentation (through resource-hoarding opportunities). Non-US cases furnish examples of policies that reduce jurisdictional proliferation or remove resource-hoarding opportunities. Mitigating the inequality-inducing effects of fragmentation is possible, but policies must be designed with an identification of the specific aspects of local governance structures that fuel inequality in the first place.
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