Municipality size, political efficacy and political participation: A systematic review
By: McDonnell, Joshua
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BookPublisher: Local Government Studies Description: 46(3), Jun, 2020: p.331-350.Subject(s): Local government, Amalgamation, Political participation, Political efficacy, systematic review, Political| Item type | Current location | Call number | Vol info | Status | Date due | Barcode |
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Indian Institute of Public Administration | 46(3), Jun, 2020: p.331-350 | Available | AR125281 |
It is an old adage that local government is a training ground for democracy. Its human scale means that political amateurs can contribute effectively and meaningfully to the politics of a state. But in a political climate seemingly driven to consolidate local government into ever larger units, can a not so local local government still elicit an efficacious and participatory citizenry? This paper explores the effect of municipality population size on two important aspects of democratic culture: political efficacy and political participation. Via a two-part systematic review, the paper examines how extant empirical literature bears on the relationship between size and both of these aspects, hypothesising that political efficacy plays a mediating role between size and participation. The findings are unequivocal: citizens of smaller municipalities feel a greater sense of political efficacy and participate to a greater degree in local politics. – Reproduced


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