The rising importance of local government in the United States: Recent research and challenges for sociology |
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Authors: | Linda Lobao |
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Affiliation: | Rural Sociology, Sociology, and Geography, School of Environment and Natural Resources, The Ohio State University, Ohio, USA |
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Abstract: | Local governments have gained increasing responsibilities for public well‐being according to a variety of social science literatures. The rise of the local state is often seen as a part of a broader process of state‐rescaling or downward shift in national governance under neoliberal development. Yet attention to local government lags in political sociology, which conventionally elevates the national federal state as its object of interest. I summarize four recent bodies of literature that address the new role of local governments. Taken together, these literatures speak to different sides of the debate about whether the rise of local government is detrimental to citizens' well‐being. I explain how greater sociological attention to the local state can contribute to this debate as well as inform political sociologists' understanding of the U.S. nation‐state itself and provide directions for future research. |
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