Promoting democratic local governments


Context

People want to see outward looking and responsive local government. Local government that leads its community and in the process delivers high quality services at an affordable price. Local government in partnership with the public, private and voluntary sectors so as to bring a fresh approach to service delivery. Effective partnership does not happen because government wills it. It needs both partners to recognise where the other is coming from – to understand what each has to offer and to learn to share lessons and avoid blame.

Implementation

The European Charter of Local Self-Government commits the parties to applying basic rules guaranteeing the political, administrative and financial independence of local authorities. It embodies the conviction that the degree of self-government enjoyed by local authorities may be regarded as a touchstone of genuine democracy.

The existence of the Charter, even in the absence of formal enforcement capability, may be taken to exert a degree of moral pressure upon all European governments, and it is certain that any major breach would receive extensive public attention in the World Associations of Cities and Local Authorities Coordination (LRAE), and hence in the Parliamentary Assembly and the Committee of Ministers of the Council of Europe and in the media.

The Charter sets out in ten concise articles, together comprising 30 paragraphs, the key principles of local self-government in the European context. It specifies the need for a constitutional/legal foundation for local self-government, defines the concept and establishes principles governing the nature and scope of local authorities powers. Further articles provide for due procedures to be followed regarding boundary changes, for autonomy in relation to local authorities administrative structures and access to competent staff, and for proper conditions for the holding of elective office. Further provisions aim at securing a clear legal framework for any necessary supervision of the acts of local authorities, and at ensuring that they have adequate access to resources to match the tasks assigned to them, on terms which do not impair their basic autonomy. Finally, the Charter covers the rights of local authorities to cooperate together, including internationally, and to form associations, and provides for the right of recourse to judicial remedy for the protection of local autonomy. Contracting parties are given the flexibility to consider themselves bound by at least 20 of the 30 substantive paragraphs, at least 10 of which must be drawn from a specified list of key provisions. States may thus exclude themselves from certain provisions at the time of ratification, but may subscribe to them later when the obstacles concerned have been removed. States may also limit the application of the Charter to particular levels or categories of local authorities, notably to meet the circumstances of countries with federal structures.


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