ABSTRACT

Governance of Europe's City Regions considers the changing role of the European Union in regional issues, explores how national governments have become increasingly involved at the regional scale and examines the constitutional and political contexts in which regional and local governments operate. Detailed case studies of regionals in Germany and England illustrate contrasts in European approaches to the scale of government, and the complex interactions of international, national, regional and local scales of policy intervention. The book offers a unique perspective, which links together an analysis of both regional Europe and the local economic and political factors that shape successful regions.

chapter |11 pages

Governance and planning of city regions

Introduction

chapter |24 pages

Theoretical explanations of city regions

Territory, institutions, networks

chapter |27 pages

Formal regions and regional governance in England and Germany

Centralized and decentralized regionalism

chapter |33 pages

Monocentric city regions in unitary and federal states

Experiences of regionalization in England and Germany

chapter |28 pages

Polycentric city regions

Between competitive localism and ‘marriages of convenience'