The case for localism
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The case for localism

At the heart of the case for localism is a simple idea: that the best responses to many social problems are produced by relationships between people and the commitments they make to each other, and that this is often easiest to achieve in local communities, on a human scale. For example, systems of support for people in difficulty, and initiatives to encourage people to take action themselves to improve their own lives and that of others, are more likely to work successfully when people can build continuing personal relationships, foster associational life, and build their own sense of ‘community’.

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The limitations of localism
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The limitations of localism

Localism can have an ugly side, particularly when communities feel threatened by incomers or display intolerance to ‘faces that don’t fit’. Therefore, while local may be better than national for many purposes, some decisions will always need to be exercised at a regional or national level for the sake of a wider social good. But getting the balance right between local and national decision-making and power and maintaining the principles of ‘subsidiarity’ are difficult tasks, not helped by the tendencies of those with power to hold on to it and to centralise ever more.

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Can localism operate at scale?
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Can localism operate at scale?

Local actions are, by their very nature, small scale. Replication of a local initiative in another neighbourhood is not always successful, usually because of a lack of local ‘ownership’. So does this mean that localism cannot address the big social problems the country faces? Not necessarily.

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Barriers to localism
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Barriers to localism

Government efforts to promote localism are not always successful, in part because they tend to be driven by the desire to engage citizens in the government’s own agendas, rather than ‘letting go’ to create the conditions for genuine community empowerment, on the community’s own terms.

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Examples of localism in practice
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Examples of localism in practice

There are widespread examples of community ownership of land and buildings, community-led enterprise, neighbourhood planning, and neighbourhood community organising, and some evidence that these approaches can build a sense of community ‘belonging’ and pride, improve community services and facilities, and increase people’s willingness to take action in their neighbourhood.

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Evidence from other countries
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Evidence from other countries

There is also evidence from other countries that decentralisation can improve well-being and reduce inequality, although peer-reviewed research into the impacts of community-level localism is notable by its absence.

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