Do Cities and Counties Attempt to Circumvent Changes in Their Autonomy by Creating Special Districts?

Special districts
Creation

Christopher B. Goodman and Suzanne M. Leland. (2019). “Do Cities and Counties Attempt to Circumvent Changes in Their Autonomy by Creating Special Districts?,” The American Review of Public Administration 49 (2): 203-217, doi: 10.1177/0275074018804665

Authors
Affiliations

Northern Illinois University

Suzanne M. Leland

University of North Carolina at Charlotte

Published

February 2019

Doi

Abstract

This study uses forty years of data from the US Census of Governments to examine the impact of changes in local autonomy on the creation of the fastest growing form of local governments, special districts. Using fixed effects regression specified at the urban county and metropolitan statistical area level, we find that restrictions of fiscal autonomy of cities is associated with creation of new special districts. When the limits on fiscal autonomy interacts with grants of functional autonomy, amplification occurs. We find no analogous effects for county governments. These two findings are consistent with the circumvention argument made in the local autonomy literature.

Citation

BibTeX citation:
@article{goodman2019,
  author = {{Christopher B. Goodman} and {Suzanne M. Leland}},
  title = {Do Cities and Counties Attempt to Circumvent Changes in Their
    Autonomy by Creating Special Districts?},
  journal = {The American Review of Public Administration},
  volume = {49},
  number = {2},
  pages = {203 - 217},
  date = {2019},
  url = {https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/0275074018804665},
  doi = {10.1177/0275074018804665},
  langid = {en}
}