Academic literature on the topic 'Decentralization in government – Spain – Andalusia'

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Journal articles on the topic "Decentralization in government – Spain – Andalusia"

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Cantarero, David, and Patricio Perez. "Decentralization and regional government size in Spain." Portuguese Economic Journal 11, no. 3 (September 19, 2012): 211–37. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10258-012-0085-4.

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Segura, J. V. Sevilla. "Financial Aspects of Political Decentralization in Spain." Environment and Planning C: Government and Policy 5, no. 3 (September 1987): 287–99. http://dx.doi.org/10.1068/c050287.

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The Spanish Constitution of 1978 introduced a dramatic change into the political organization by decentralizing the existing State into seventeen regional governments with a broad range of authority. This transformation involved a ‘services transfer process’ from the central government and a simultaneous evaluation of the financial resources needed by the regional governments. The paper contains an analysis of the main features of this process, focusing on the various problems that have arisen in the estimation of the cost of the services transferred. Finally, some recommendations are offered for the future multilevel public financial system, which are in accordance with the present Spanish regulations on this subject.
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Medir, Lluís, Jaume Magre, and Mariona Tomàs. "Mayors' perceptions on local government reforms and decentralization in Spain." Revista Española de Ciencia Política, no. 45 (March 24, 2018): 129–55. http://dx.doi.org/10.21308/recp.46.06.

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Villalonga, Joan Rosselló. "Non–Institutional Federalism in Spain." Journal of Public Finance and Public Choice 18, no. 2 (October 1, 2000): 131–53. http://dx.doi.org/10.1332/251569200x15665365495113.

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Abstract Spain has advanced significantly regarding die assignment of responsibilities on public expenditure and tax powers across regional governments. However, regions do not participate significantly in the decentralization process. The lack of federal insitutions in which regions are represented motivates non-cooperative behaviours and fosters competition between all levels of government. The consequence is that the provision of public goods and services is rather inefficient.We illustrate our argument using a very simple static model with externalities in which the normative recommendation of decentralization does not guarantee the efficient provision of public goods. The adequate design of federal institutions would allow reducing such inefficiencies.Finally we try to identify die political characteristics of the Spanish regime that may explain the lack of institutional mechanisms of cooperation-coordination between governments. This type of analysis could be easily extended to the present situation in Italy.
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Enríquez, David Galadí, and Ángela Ranea-Palma. "Legal protection of the night sky in Andalusia (Western Europe)." Proceedings of the International Astronomical Union 10, H16 (August 2012): 750. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1743921314013325.

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AbstractAndalusia (Spain) houses several astronomical observatories, among them the main observational facility in continental Europe: Calar Alto Observatory. In recent years, the regional government of Andalusia has been setting up a regulation to protect the natural conditions of darkness at night all over the region. This regulation includes several outstanding features and poses specific rules to protect the influence area of Calar Alto Observatory.
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Recio Espejo, J. M., and F. Diaz Del Olmo. "Seminar «The soils as resource in the Biosphere» 25, 26 and 27/November/2015 International University of Andalusia (Huelva,Spain)." Fundamental and Applied Soil Science 16, no. 3-4 (November 30, 2015): 90–93. http://dx.doi.org/10.15421/041522.

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Course with an extension of thirty academic hours celebrated in La Rábida (Huelva, Spain), headquarter of International University of Andalucía (UNIA) with the economic supporting of Andalusia Environmental Autonomous Government, and organized by Córdoba University (Faculty of Science) and Seville University (Faculty of Geography), with the collaboration of «Nicolay Masyuk» seminar and Andalusia Quaternary Group (AEQUA-GAC). The main objective was a conceptual updating of pedology science with a new vision about the soil with an element of the ecosystem subjected to superficial dynamic and human actions. Contemplate it with fundamental elements of territory and the agricultural and natural landscape, relationship with biodiversity and geodiversity, the Natural Protected Areas and the erosion problems.
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CABEZUDO, BALTASAR, FEDERICO CASIMIRO-SORIGUER SOLANAS, and ANDRÉS V. PÉREZ-LATORRE. "Vascular flora of the Sierra de las Nieves National Park and its surroundings (Andalusia, Spain)." Phytotaxa 534, no. 1 (February 21, 2022): 1–111. http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/phytotaxa.534.1.1.

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The Sierra de las Nieves National Park, declared by the Spanish Government in July 2021, is part of the Serranía de Ronda (Western Baetic mountains), which is considered one of the main centres of biodiversity and endemicity of the southern Iberian Peninsula (Andalusia, Spain) and the Mediterranean Basin. The park and its surroundings have an important diversity of vascular plants, mainly due to the orographic, climatic and geological diversity of the area, which is divided into three biogeographical sectors: Rondeño sector (limestones, dolomites and clays), Bermejense sector (peridotites and serpentines) and Aljíbico sector (gneisses and micaschists). This contribution presents the first catalogue of the vascular flora of this national park and its surrounding area, with 1,387 taxa distributed in 104 families and 542 genera. An amount of 79 taxa are endemic to Andalusia and 57 are endangered: 4 are Critically Endangered (CR), 17 are Endangered (EN) and 36 are Vulnerable (VU).
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ARSHAD, RASYIDAH, SYAIDATUN NAZIRAH ABU ZAHRIN, and NURUL SHAHIRAH ABDUL SAMAD. "THE IMPACT OF SPANISH INQUISITION ON ISLAMIC CIVILIZATION." MALIM: JURNAL PENGAJIAN UMUM ASIA TENGGARA (SEA JOURNAL OF GENERAL STUDIES) 21, no. 1 (November 10, 2020): 199–208. http://dx.doi.org/10.17576/malim-2020-2101-16.

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The Spanish Inquisition was established as an official body blessed by the Roman Catholic Church, because the Catholic rulers Isabella and Ferdinand were determined to rid Spain of any heretics or non-Catholics. The greatest impact of the inquisition was the banishment of Islam from Spain. Spain has been a vibrant civilization for six centuries, serving as the shield of other religions. There was no divine guidance left untouched, or even a small group of believers left. It has resulted in Islam being delayed in Christian Europe for several decades. Even though Muslims have come to Europe in the last two centuries, Islam has been practiced as a personal religion of worship and prayer, but never as a government that has protected and enriched the lives of all religions, as we have seen during the Muslim rule of Andalusia. The aim of this paper is specifically to discuss the policies of the Spanish Inquisition on the Muslims in Andalusia. Muslim policies are discussed in great depth compared to other groups, because they were the majority and most resistant to policies. The analysis of the impact of the Inquisition is important to understand how Islam was eradicated from the Spanish society and later re-emerged as a significant presence in Spain.
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Alhana, Anastya Nida. "MUHAMMAD IBN ABD AL-RAHMAN (STUDI ATAS PERANANNYA DALAM PENGEMBANGAN FILSAFAT DAN SAINS DI ANDALUSIA)." Jurnal Ilmiah Mahasiswa Raushan Fikr 8, no. 1 (January 23, 2019): 1–18. http://dx.doi.org/10.24090/jimrf.v8i1.3050.

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Muhammad Ibn Abd Rahman is known as Muhammad I was the 5th emir during the reign of the Umayyad Dynasty in Spain in 852-886 AD. He was the son of Abdurrahman Bin Hakam a 4th leader of the Umayyad Dynasty in Spain. He died at the age of 65 years coinciding in 886 AD and at the end of his term of office. The beginning of Muhammad I is served as a series of domestic riots. The government shock is began with the Toledo People’s rebellion, assisted by the Leon tribal chief to rebel in 854 AD, As an emir who was an expert in the administration of his government, he is organized the Andalusian government on a regular basis and created a system of government regulations in the form of legislation. For the management of the State, he also carries out government policies that lead to the welfare of people’s lives. Like his father, one of his personalities was to love the art of beauty and science, so that during his reign he built the city by beautifying the capital city with beautiful buildings, large buildings, and monuments, and he was a supporter of the facilities for education, as well as poets and writers also got their attention. His great contribution in advancing Spanish civilization, which is someone who initiated the growth of progress in the field of Islamic Philosophy and Science in Spain, has recorded one sheet of culture in the achievement of Islamic history. The interest in Greek Philosophy and Science began to be developed in the 9th century AD during the reign of the fifth Umayyad, namely Muhammad Ibn Abd al-Rahman (832-886 AD) at the initiative of al-Hakam (961-976 AD), the scientific works, libraries and universities are able to rival Baghdad as the main center of science in the Islamic world.
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Koroleva, Alina. "Cultural policy of regional Government of Andalusia (Junta de Andalucía)." Latin-American Historical Almanac 36, no. 1 (November 19, 2022): 59–75. http://dx.doi.org/10.32608/2305-8773-2022-36-1-59-75.

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The Andalusian Culture and public cultural policy in the last 40 years was hold as a construction of the autonomous community in the context of the transition to democracy and the construction a new cultural administration. Under the cul-tural policy of the Junta of Andalusia, the infrastructural ac-tivities of the autonomous community in the field of culture and art, expressed in the form of protection and stimulation of the development of the cultural sector in the region by providing guarantees and creating favorable framework socio-political conditions for them, are considered. The cultural policy in Andalusia over the past forty years is not difficult to describe. As in all of Spain, culture was included in the con-struction of the Andalusian autonomy. At the same time, this was due to the urgent need to create a cultural administration that would contribute to the creation of the Andalusian cultur-al system. All this, moreover, had to be done quickly. Two directions of cultural policy were formed, as it were: trans-versal and sectoral. The transversal direction began to take shape from the very beginning, as it was necessary to form a new generation of civil servants, managers in the field of cul-ture, focused on the political aspects of cultural policy, the task was to attract different social groups to the field of culture, access to which was previously limited. The second direction was a response to the external challenges of subsequent years, associated with the growth of cultural activity provoked by the Junta and the building of public-private partnerships in the industry.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Decentralization in government – Spain – Andalusia"

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Hayward, Blakeslee Jennifer. "Consuming illegality : the political demography of migrant farm labor in California and Andalucia, 1985-2005." Phd thesis, 2010. http://hdl.handle.net/1885/150476.

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The expansion of fruit, vegetable and horticultural (FVH) production in California and Andalucia has been contemporaneous with a decline in 'native' farm labor and restrictions on lower-skilled migration. Resulting increases in the populations of unauthorized farmworkers have contributed to mounting tension over the rights and numbers of migrants in Spain and the United States. Yet, the similarities in farm labor outcomes contrast with the distinct geographical, temporal, sociocultural and institutional conditions in which these labor markets have evolved. Using Californian and andaluz FVH as exemplars, the dissertation explores the problem and problematization of unauthorized migration in the United States and Spain from 1985 through 2005. Four primary themes -uncovered in interviews with migration researchers, advocates, union representatives, employers and migrants -guide assessment of the relationship between the reproduction of illegality and the regulation of migration and FVH production: the (1) recruitment and (2) retention of unauthorized farmworkers and the role of (3) interest groups and (4) the state in migration and farm labor policymaking. Legislation, mass media and US and Spanish census and survey data illustrate demographic, economic and political shifts over this period. The study illuminates the primary, but not always direct, role of policies and politics in the magnitude and composition of migration and settlement patterns in both countries. Laissez faire regulation and symbolic enforcement have shaped the ethnic, legal and gender composition of the farm labor market. Political and structural constraints, as well as economic pressures, have institutionalized illegality in FVH agriculture, subverting the cost of human rights to the price of food. Coupled with economic growth, this outsourcing in situ has spurred labor market intermediation and fostered poverty in rural communities; agreement on a farm labor fix has been limited, although not eclipsed, by public contestation over illegal migration.
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Books on the topic "Decentralization in government – Spain – Andalusia"

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Cancela, Diego Caro. Diccionario biográfico de parlamentarios de Andalucía: 1810-1869. Sevilla: Fundación Pública Andaluza Centro de Estudios Andaluces, 2010.

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Cancela, Diego Caro. Diccionario biográfico de parlamentarios de Andalucía: 1810-1869. Sevilla: Fundación Pública Andaluza Centro de Estudios Andaluces, 2010.

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Rovi, María José Ramos. Diccionario biográfico de parlamentarios andaluces (1876-1923). Sevilla: Universidad de Sevilla, Secretariado de Publicaciones, 2013.

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Núria, Bosch, and Durán José María, eds. Fiscal federalism and political decentralization: Lessons from Spain, Germany, and Canada. Cheltenham, UK: Edward Elgar, 2008.

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al- Athar al-siyāsī lil-ʻulamāʾ fī ʻAṣr al-Murābiṭīn. Jiddah: Dār al-Andalus al-Khaḍrāʾ, 2000.

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Muḥammad Maḥmūd ʻAbd Allāh Ibn Bīyah. al- Athar al-siyāsī lil-ʻulamāʾ fī ʻAṣr al-Murābiṭīn. Jiddah: Dār al-Andalus al-Khaḍrāʾ, 2000.

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Rosell, Francisco. Treinta años de nada: Anatomía del régimen andaluz. [Córdoba]: Editorial Almuzara, 2008.

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Rosell, Francisco. Treinta años de nada: Anatomía del régimen andaluz. [Córdoba]: Editorial Almuzara, 2008.

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Peace by design: Managing intrastate conflict through decentralization. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2009.

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Brancati, Dawn. Peace by design: Managing intrastate conflict through decentralization. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2009.

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Book chapters on the topic "Decentralization in government – Spain – Andalusia"

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Colmenero-Ruiz, Maria-Jesús, and Belén Pérez-Lorenzo. "Institutional Policies for Digital Inclusion in Spain." In Advances in Electronic Government, Digital Divide, and Regional Development, 287–314. IGI Global, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-4666-8740-0.ch018.

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This chapter describes the evolution and results of the Spanish Policies of digital inclusion, since its inception in 2000 in the framework of the EU Lisbon Strategy (eEurope 2002) to the present, with special emphasis on cases of greater relevance. It reviews the different plans implemented at the country successively during that period of time. As a result of the Spanish political organization into Autonomous Communities, the direct application of these policies has corresponded to each of them, which adapted the outline to their interests and needs. So, it analyzes the situation in three of the Autonomous Communities, Catalonia, Andalusia and Extremadura, with different demographic and economic characteristics, providing recent indicators and the programs that are in development just now.
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Vaillancourt, Francois, and Richard M. Bird. "Decentralization in European and MENA Countries." In Advances in Electronic Government, Digital Divide, and Regional Development, 1–27. IGI Global, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-4666-9601-3.ch001.

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The question considered in this chapter is whether decentralization is likely to hurt or help national unity in “countries at risk.” We begin with a literature review, focusing on three particular questions: the size and number of nations; the determinants of decentralization; and, finally, and bearing most directly on our topic, the links between decentralization and political outcomes. We next set out in capsule form some of the very mixed stories of linkages between decentralization and national unity found in Europe and the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) region, before considering more closely the ongoing discussions of secession in three European countries – Belgium, Spain and the United Kingdom. We conclude that the impact of decentralization on national unity is so complex and context-sensitive that no general answers to our initial question emerge: in some instances, decentralization may be an inducement for regions to stay in a country; in others, however, it may prove to be only a way station on the road to the exit.
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Noferini, Andrea, and David Sancho. "Policy analysis and regional governments." In Policy Analysis in Spain, 83–101. Policy Press, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1332/policypress/9781447353744.003.0005.

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As democratically elected institutions responsible for nearly half of total public expenditure, Spanish regional governments participate in the policy analysis process and generate their own information and technical knowledge about policy problems. In this chapter, we focus on Spanish regional governments as policy analysts in a context of increasing state intervention, greater decentralization and growing policy complexity. The chapter analyses this greater demand for policy analysis at the regional level in the light of the territorial distribution of powers between the center and the periphery; the historical and administrative legacy of the Spanish administrative system; the role of regional government in some basic policy areas of welfare, and the localization of the 2030 Agenda in two regions: Catalonia and the Basque Countries.
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Sánchez-Labella Martín, Inmaculada. "The Use and Management of Public Information in Social Media." In Research Anthology on Social Media's Influence on Government, Politics, and Social Movements, 384–99. IGI Global, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-6684-7472-3.ch017.

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The increase of political disaffection in Spain, as is occurring in many western democracies across the world, coincides with a growing vindication of democracy on the part of the citizenry, which translates to a demand for more governmental transparency and access to information. With this in mind, this chapter explores the availability of information in local public administrations on social media. The study analyses the presence of town and city councils throughout Andalusia on Twitter, Facebook, and YouTube, examining how these media are managed and their effects, by studying the content and resources provided to the citizens for interacting with the institutions. The results revealed that although the selected councils tried to adopt these new information channels, they are still far from taking full advantage of the possibilities the new technologies could provide.
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Fernandez, Rosa. "The Effects of the International Economic Crisis on Spain’s Environmental Policy." In The Impact of the Economic Crisis on European Environmental Policy, 152–74. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198826958.003.0008.

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This chapter employs qualitative analysis to apply the Index of Policy Activity (IPA) to renewables, biodiversity, energy efficiency, and climate change in Spain. These four policy areas are compared, in order to outline differences in policy approaches and factors shaping policy change. The analysis reveals that the economic crisis of 2007–8 has had a profound effect upon Spanish environmental policy, reversing Spain’s progress from being an environmental leader to transforming it into a laggard, especially in relation to renewable energy technologies. A lack of resources has forced the government to abandon its once-praised support schemes and instead to adopt measures that penalize the development of renewable energy. The chapter identifies structural barriers as the main cause of recent policy reversals. Political preferences and issues related to the decentralization of the Spanish government system emerge as central explanatory variables for environmental policy implementation and change.
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