body bg

Inform-Banner

Regional Development and Local Government: Three Generations of Federal Intervention

  • Year: 2009
  • Author: Kelly, Andrew H; Dollery, Brian; Grant, Bligh
  • Journal Name: Australasian Journal of Regional Studies, The
  • Journal Number: Vol. 15, No. 2
  • Country: Australia

Contemporary Australian local government faces several daunting problems, not least escalating financial un-sustainability and local infrastructure depletion. The main response of the various state and territory governments has taken the form of a series structural reform programs, with a strong emphasis on forced amalgamation. However, widespread dissatisfaction with the consequences of these compulsory consolidation programs has led to a search for alternative policy solutions based largely on shared services and various types of regional co-operation between local councils. This paper seeks to place proposed 'regional' solutions to contemporary problems in historical perspective by providing a comparative account of three distinct federal government initiatives of 'region-directed' policy in the post-world Two era: the 'nationbuilding' of the 1940s; the 'paternalism' of the 1970s; and 'self-sufficiency' of the 1990s. We argue that, not withstanding the complex relationship between historical circumstances and changing state-federal relations, important lessons for current local government policy making can be learnt from a critical assessment of these episodes of federal intervention at the regional level.

Related Items

World Development Report 2009: Reshaping Economic Geography

Places do well when they promote transformations along the dimensions of economic geography:...

Impacts and outcomes of diabetes care in a high risk remote indigenous community over time: Implications for practice

The aim of this study was to determine diabetes care processes and intermediate clinical outcomes...

Northern Australia Statistical Compendium 2009

The Northern Australia Statistical Compendium was prepared by BITRE with the assistance of the...

Share this with your friends

Footer Logo

Contact Us

Level 2, 53 Blackall Street
Barton ACT 2600
AUSTRALIA
Telephone: 02 6260 3733
or email us