From Single-Use Community Facilities Support to Integrated Sustainable Development: The Aims of Inter-Municipal Cooperation in Poland, 1990–2018
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Conceptual Background
3. Materials and Methods
- Common spatial or strategic planning,
- Common interest representation or promotion (both tourist and investment promotion, lobbying of higher public authorities),
- Social or human capital development (social inclusion, education and training, support for local voluntary organisations and cultural affairs),
- Enterprise (entrepreneurship) or employment development (local product development, local services development, enhancing employment),
- Tourism or recreation (small tourist and sport infrastructure, support for agro-tourism),
- Social services or infrastructure (refurbishment of public buildings such as social welfare establishments, voluntary fire brigade buildings, pavements, playgrounds, neighbourhood schools and kindergartens, public transport services),
- Technical infrastructure or roads (water supply systems, gas and electricity networks, internet networks, car parks and roads),
- Environmental protection or ecological infrastructure (sewage systems, sewage treatment plants, thermo-modernization of public buildings, ecological waste management, nature conservation).
4. Results
5. Discussion
- In the first phase after communism, the fragmentation of local self-governments created networks that were focused on fulfilling immediate physiological needs in underdeveloped areas (water and gas supply, waste management, etc.) and, accordingly, it was primarily sectoral, Special Purpose Unions that were created (Bennet’s “early network”). The priorities were related to the main municipal functions. The extension of market relations made municipalities group together for economies of scale in management of resources, especially where natural environmental areas and economic links crossed local administrative boundaries. There were some features of bottom-up territorial development, however, the voluntary and business sectors were not included widely in the process of strategic planning and decision making. The government, even when decentralised, did not want to lose power. In that period, local government tended to regard Non-Governmental Organisations (NGOs) as rivals and a potential threat to their own influence and, at best, as not to be trusted collaborators [100]. This is perhaps not surprising as NGOs and local governments have often been on opposing sides in spatial planning conflicts [101,102]. Democratisation after 1990 gave local communities in Poland new freedoms and responsibilities, but modes of behaviour associated with the socialist system did not disappear and tended to co-exist alongside the new organisation of the state, as noted by Regulska [103] and Grosse [92]. Nonetheless, voluntary organisations did develop strong relationships with local authorities so that by the end of the 1990s local authorities had emerged as the most common supporter of NGOs [100]. However, support did not mean wide engagement in the management of municipal resources.
- When, through national administrative reform measures, new levels of self-governance were created in 1999—the districts (powiat) and regional councils (województwo)—local municipalities were mobilized to establish the regional and local associations to enhance their capacity to lobby regional and central government. The new bodies engaged more with business, tourism and social and human capital than had their predecessors. However, they remained mono-sectoral, municipal organisations with a relatively narrow list of aims and can be considered also as examples of Bennet’s “early network”.
- The last phase began after accession to the European Union, with minor changes at the beginning of EU programming periods. The creation of new forms of territorial cooperation with local municipality engagement were clearly stipulated by the EU policies and funds (Bennett’s phase of “developing trust” between collaborators, with external agency support). The new forms were created mainly at the beginning of the support programmes, which provided a powerful incentive for their organisation. Such arrangements had scarcely been established prior to funding being available, so cannot be considered as a genuine national self-organisation process, but rather as policy transfer of the concept of place-based development. It can be considered also as “Europeanisation”; in this case, a conscious process of territorial development policy transfer to post-socialist countries led by European Union policymakers [43,104]. Funds and programmes originating in Western Europe played a significant role in mobilising local stakeholders to create partnerships and provide technical assistance, funding and investment possibilities. This process was common across all new EU member post-socialist states in Central and Eastern Europe [78,105,106].
6. Conclusions
- First, the process of area-based partnership creation in post-socialist EU member states was a conscious process of place-based or neo-endogenous development policy transfer, considered as an element of the process of Europeanisation. The rapid development of territorial partnerships is self-evidently the result of special EU financial support policy (supporting the theory of rational choice [108]) and it is therefore difficult to predict the long-term durability of the sponsored organisations if this support is reduced or terminated;
- Second, the evolution of inter-municipal cooperation in transitional post-socialist Poland has more of a step character than the longer-term evolution associated with countries with longer experience of democratic local self-government. The main stages were initiated by radical legislative changes (creation of self-government in 1990, administrative reform implemented in 1999, and joining the European Union in 2004 with its consequences in terms of changed policies in their programming periods);
- Third, the territorial cross-sectoral partnerships are most frequently forms of inter-municipal cooperation that have more sustainable and integrated features of development planning than mono-sectoral forms led solely by government, and are taking more account of social and small business issues;
- Fourth, the three forms of cooperation present some features of specialisation—SPUs focus most commonly on “hard” infrastructure and waste management; MAs on “soft” actions like common municipal representation and promotion and public administration development; LAGs on social and human capital building, small business development, tourism and recreation;
- Finally, the new forms of cooperation do not replace the old ones, but can and do exist simultaneously. However, the greater potential of area-based cross-sectoral partnerships (such as LAGs) has become increasingly evident.
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
References
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SPU 1 | MA 2 | LAG 3 | Comments |
---|---|---|---|
27.7 | 35.4 | 71.9 | With “spatial or strategic planning” category |
30.3 | 37.6 | 59.6 | Without “spatial or strategic planning” category |
Period | SPU | MA | LAG | Mean—All Forms |
---|---|---|---|---|
1990–1998 | 28.7 | 37.5 | No LAGs | 33.1 |
1999–2004 | 27.8 | 37.8 | No LAGs | 32.8 |
2005–2013 | 25.3 | 36.2 | 49.7* | 37.1 |
2014–2018 | 17.5 | 32.1 | 71.9** | 40.5 |
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Furmankiewicz, M.; Campbell, A. From Single-Use Community Facilities Support to Integrated Sustainable Development: The Aims of Inter-Municipal Cooperation in Poland, 1990–2018. Sustainability 2019, 11, 5890. https://doi.org/10.3390/su11215890
Furmankiewicz M, Campbell A. From Single-Use Community Facilities Support to Integrated Sustainable Development: The Aims of Inter-Municipal Cooperation in Poland, 1990–2018. Sustainability. 2019; 11(21):5890. https://doi.org/10.3390/su11215890
Chicago/Turabian StyleFurmankiewicz, Marek, and Adrian Campbell. 2019. "From Single-Use Community Facilities Support to Integrated Sustainable Development: The Aims of Inter-Municipal Cooperation in Poland, 1990–2018" Sustainability 11, no. 21: 5890. https://doi.org/10.3390/su11215890
APA StyleFurmankiewicz, M., & Campbell, A. (2019). From Single-Use Community Facilities Support to Integrated Sustainable Development: The Aims of Inter-Municipal Cooperation in Poland, 1990–2018. Sustainability, 11(21), 5890. https://doi.org/10.3390/su11215890