Multi-level governance in rural development - experiences from the LEADER programme
Date
2016
Authors
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Journal ISSN
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Publisher
Tartu Ülikool
Abstract
The present study uses the analytical framework of multi-level governance (MLG) to
investigate the implementation of EU’s participatory rural development (RD) policy
LEADER (Liaison Entre Actions de Développement de l'Économie Rurale" meaning
"Links between the rural economy and development actions”) in Estonia, a country
outside of the mainstream academic debates on MLG and LEADER. It provides insight
into the restrictions on autonomy faced by the local action groups (LAGs), the local
level implementers of the RD policy measure, at the doorstep of the 2014-2020
programming period of EU structural funds. Even though LEADER is well-known for
its bottom-up approach and finding solutions to local needs based on local resources and
potential, it is actually very much influenced by the MLG framework within which it
operates as well as the rules regulating its implementation, which in practice makes the
local level constrained in what it is and what it is not allowed to do.
The thesis investigates why the implementation of RD policies may diverge from
the originally devised policy at the European level. Based on MLG theory all the levels
included in the LEADER governance arrangement – the European (the European
Commission), the national (the Managing Authority and the Paying Agency) and the
local (the LAGs) – are expected to have a role to play in shaping the governance
arrangement. The study first ascertains the degree of autonomy the EU level has
intended to grant to the local level for policy implementation. As the second step it
compares the actual implementation of the LEADER programme in Estonia to the EU
level intentions and identifies a gap in-between. The study identifies that the restrictions
which are causing the constraints faced by the LAGs have been introduced by the
national level, not the EU level, and that these national level restrictions are undue.
Thus the research finally establishes that the sub-national level has less autonomy in
implementing LEADER than the EU level had initially intended because of the way the
national level is involved in the governance arrangement and the additional restrictions
it has introduced. This confirms the hypothesis that the involvement of the national
level plays the decisive role in determining the eventual form of the governance
arrangement.