ABSTRACT

The Routledge Handbook of Local Elections and Voting in Europe represents the standard reference text and practical resource for everybody who analyzes issues such as local electoral systems, voting behavior, or political representation in Europe.

It provides comprehensive and expert coverage of 40 European countries – organized along the respective local state traditions – and in addressing a wide range of important questions related to local elections and voting, it broadens the scope of existing analyses quantitatively as well as qualitatively. Finally, it affords a more theoretically grounded typology of local elections and voting. Each country chapter is written by a leading expert and follows a rigorous conceptual framework for cross-national comparisons, providing an overview of the local government system, details on the place of local elections within the multilevel political system, specific features of the electoral system, analysis of the main electoral outcomes in recent decades, and, finally, reflective discussion. Representative democracy is as widespread at the local as at the national level, and as the significance of local authorities in Europe has increased in recent decades, local elections represent a crucial area of study.

The Routledge Handbook of Local Elections and Voting in Europe is an authoritative and essential reference text for scholars and students interested in local electoral politics and, more broadly, European studies, public administration, and political science.

part 1|18 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|16 pages

From perennial bridesmaids to fully fledged spouses

Advancing the comparative study of local elections and voting

part 2|52 pages

The Nordic States

chapter 2|10 pages

Denmark

How two and a half parties rule within a multiparty system

chapter 3|10 pages

Finland

Local autonomy, tenacious national parties, and sovereign, but indifferent voters

chapter 4|10 pages

Iceland

Where localism prevails

chapter 5|11 pages

Norway

Local democracy by trial (and error)

chapter 6|9 pages

Sweden

Joint election day, party dominance, and extensive turnout

part 3|24 pages

The British Isles

chapter 7|11 pages

Ireland

An atypical electoral system for an atypical local government system

chapter 8|11 pages

United Kingdom

Diversity amid the Cinderella elections?

part 4|90 pages

The Rhinelandic States

chapter 9|17 pages

Austria

Strong participation across federal diversity

chapter 10|12 pages

Belgium

Between national barometer and local atmosphere

chapter 11|14 pages

Germany

A variety of local elections in a federal system

chapter 12|11 pages

Liechtenstein

Two leading parties in a direct democratic framework

chapter 13|10 pages

Luxembourg

Toward a thinner relationship between local and national elections?

chapter 14|13 pages

The Netherlands

Increasing responsibilities and nationalized elections

chapter 15|11 pages

Switzerland

Low turnout but no second-order elections

part 5|84 pages

The Southern European States

chapter 16|10 pages

Andorra

Local elections in quasi-federal institutions

chapter 17|12 pages

Cyprus

National parties' dominance and the decline of electoral participation

chapter 18|13 pages

France

Competition only in large cities

chapter 19|11 pages

Greece

Mayors in the foreground, parties behind the scenes

chapter 20|13 pages

Italy

Hard-to-decipher local elections and voting

chapter 21|12 pages

Portugal

Elections and voting in a dual-tier, local government system

chapter 22|11 pages

Spain

One main system to govern them all? Stable institutions in heterogeneous contexts

part 6|91 pages

New democracies

chapter 23|11 pages

Czech Republic

Local elections in a fragmented municipal system

chapter 24|11 pages

Estonia

The consolidation of partisan politics in a small country with small municipalities

chapter 25|10 pages

Hungary

The expansion and the limits of national politics at the local level

chapter 26|13 pages

Latvia

Electoral drama in local governments

chapter 27|11 pages

Lithuania

Between a volatile electorate and the revival of nonpartisanship

chapter 28|10 pages

Poland

A hyperlocalized system?

chapter 29|10 pages

Slovakia

A gradual weakening of political parties in a stable local electoral system

chapter 30|13 pages

Ukraine

The first experiences with voting in the amalgamated territorial communities

part 7|126 pages

New democracies

chapter 31|11 pages

Albania

The path to decentralized democratic governance

chapter 32|13 pages

Bosnia and Herzegovina

Local elections within a weak and contested state

chapter 33|9 pages

Bulgaria

More open local electoral rules

chapter 34|12 pages

Croatia

Games of local democracy in the shadow of national politics

chapter 35|11 pages

Kosovo

Local elections and ethnic ramifications

chapter 36|11 pages

Moldova

Party-shifting mayors within a nationalized local party system

chapter 37|11 pages

Montenegro

Local elections in the shadow of national politics

chapter 38|12 pages

North Macedonia

Local elections and parliamentary political dynamics

chapter 39|12 pages

Romania

A case of national parties ruling local politics

chapter 40|11 pages

Serbia

Three phases of local electoral politics after 1990

chapter 41|11 pages

Slovenia

Where strong, nonpartisan mayors are reelected many times over