Not only do cities, towns and counties cooperate with each other across borders and through transnational networks and partnerships, but by mobilising formally and informally, local actors participate in and influence European governance and contribute to the future trajectories of European integration, thereby completing the integration cycle.
Marius Guderjan is a Lecturer and Researcher in British Politics at the Centre for British Studies at the Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin, Germany.Tom Verhelst is an Assistant Professor in Local Politics at the Centre for Local Politics at Ghent University, Belgium, and a Postdoctoral Research Fellow in Local Governance at the Department of Political Sciences at Maastricht University, the Netherlands.
Chapter 1. Introduction: Studying European Integration of Local Government.- Chapter 2. The Integration Cycle: Theorising European Integration of Local Government.- Chapter 3. The Top-Down Perspective: Legislative and Policy Impact.- Chapter 4. The Internal Perspective: Awareness, Attitudes and Adaptation.- Chapter 5. The Horizontal Perspective: Twinning, Networks and Territorial Cooperation.- Chapter 6. The Formal Bottom-Up Perspective: Constitutional Status and Institutionalised Participation.- Chapter 7. The Informal Bottom-Up Perspective: Mobilisation and Interest Representation.- Chapter 8. Closing the Cycle: The Impact of Formal and Informal Mobilisation.- Chapter 9. Conclusion: Reflections on European Integration of Local Government./