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Local government reforms in Georgia and their impact on state-society relations
Authors:Katharina Hoffmann
Affiliation:1. School of Economics and Political Sciences, University of St. Gallen, St. Gallen, Switzerlandkatharina.hoffmann@unisg.ch
Abstract:Abstract

This paper studies how the local governance reforms carried out between 1997–2014 shape state-society relations at Georgia’s local level. Drawing on Foucault’s concept of governmentality, I analyze how the reforms shape practices and actors at the local level. Research interviews with state officials at the national and subnational levels and citizens of the Georgian district Marneuli highlight both government rationalities and how people react to them. I argue that the reforms, which have been declared to promote participation and accountability, hardly contribute to bridging the huge gap between state and society, particularly with respect to the case of the Azeri minority in Marneuli. Thus far, the newly introduced formal actors at the local level, the municipalities, lack power. Societal action in absence of the state and interaction with the state via informal networks remains dominant. The study contributes to literature on state-building and transformation in Georgia by shedding light on the often-neglected local level and to the debate on external democracy promotion and policy transfer by empirically studying the effect of a policy transfer.
Keywords:Local governance  Georgia  transition countries  Azerbaijani minority  policy transfer
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