Lokal centralisering:En model for offentlige serviceydelser på landet ; Local centralization:A model for public services in rural areas

In the Nordic welfare states (Island, Norway, Sweden, Finland, Denmark), an important principle has hitherto been to allow all citizens access to the same high-quality public services - independent of whether they live in urban or rural areas. In Denmark, however, this principle is gradually being abandoned. One outcome has been closings of schools in peripheral rural areas. This evidently contributes to exacerbate depopulation in these areas. To stop this tendency, we need new models for high-quality, cost-effective public services in remote areas as those we find in Denmark. This report intr... Mehr ...

Verfasser: Svendsen, Gunnar Lind Haase
Dokumenttyp: Buch
Erscheinungsdatum: 2008
Verlag/Hrsg.: Syddansk Universitet. Institut for Forskning og Udvikling i Landdistrikter
Schlagwörter: Multifunktionelle centre / Brobyggende social kapital / Landdistrikter / Danmark / Holland / Multi-functional centres / Bridging social capital / Rural areas / Denmark
Sprache: Danish
Permalink: https://search.fid-benelux.de/Record/base-27495075
Datenquelle: BASE; Originalkatalog
Powered By: BASE
Link(s) : https://portal.findresearcher.sdu.dk/da/publications/7a7bcc60-cd9f-11dc-8674-000ea68e967b

In the Nordic welfare states (Island, Norway, Sweden, Finland, Denmark), an important principle has hitherto been to allow all citizens access to the same high-quality public services - independent of whether they live in urban or rural areas. In Denmark, however, this principle is gradually being abandoned. One outcome has been closings of schools in peripheral rural areas. This evidently contributes to exacerbate depopulation in these areas. To stop this tendency, we need new models for high-quality, cost-effective public services in remote areas as those we find in Denmark. This report introduces such a model, termed: Local centralization. This involves establishment of multifunctional centres in marginal rural areas. The overall aim is to identify advantages and problems with establishing such centres, in order to formulate policy recommendations. First, I argue that governments should actively invest in rural areas rather than practising laissez-faire. Second, drawing on cases from the Netherlands and Denmark I suggest that public and private donors should invest in multifunctional centres in which the local school is the dynamo. This in order to facilitate creation of both social and human capital. Ideally, such centres should contain both public services such as school and health care, enterprises as banks, and facilities for local associations as sports halls. The centres should be designed to secure both economies of scale and geographic proximity. Empirical evidence indicates that such large meeting places facilitate formation of physical and social cohesion. And that the stock of beneficial bridging social capital thus created actually contributes to attract newcomers and thus counteract depopulation.