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Elazar, Daniel J. – Phylon, 1975
Argues that the question for those concerned with education and politics is to determine the possibilities, limits and likely consequences of community control of the schools or its alternatives, and that by taking particular political decisions it will be possible to shape extra-political factors so as to either to enhance or to limit the…
Descriptors: Community Characteristics, Community Control, Decentralization, Educational Finance
Shalala, Donna E. – 1971
This paper presents the idea of formal neighborhood government as a beginning to discussion and debate. Only by clearing away the confusion over what changes are being asked for by the proponents of decentralization can the neighborhood government movement be placed in historical perspective. The justification for neighborhood government,…
Descriptors: Administrative Organization, Community Control, Governance, Governing Boards
Cibulka, James G. – 1975
This paper examines whether suburban communities can provide any useful conceptual tools for the examination of the prospects for community control in cities. Several propositions are advanced: First it is argued that the relevance of suburban community control to the poor in the cities is not diminished by the finding that those of high social…
Descriptors: Citizen Participation, Community Characteristics, Community Control, Community Involvement
Parker, Jonathan – 1995
This paper examines the determinants of systemic education reform in the American states. Socioeconomic, political, and cultural variables are all found to affect the level of systemic education policy in each state. Unlike many studies of policy determinants, urbanization is negatively associated with this particular policy. The political factors…
Descriptors: Community Control, Educational Change, Educational Policy, Elementary Secondary Education
Scott, Robert E.; And Others – 1974
This discussion is organized into four sections. In an introductory section, it is pointed out that the word "decentralization" appears to have many meanings. There is a need to clarify definitions, and to examine decentralization in a practical, working context. In Part 1, "Background and Issues", some of the major issues…
Descriptors: Administrative Organization, Boards of Education, Community Control, Community Involvement
Fantini, Mario D.; Gittell, Marilyn – 1973
Demands for urban decentralization and community control are indexes of the inaccessibility, irresponsibility, and unresponsiveness of the institutions of urban government in the 1970's. How and why these institutions have become the focus of such widespread dissatisfaction can be understood only in the total context of urban politics in America,…
Descriptors: Administrative Organization, Case Studies, Change Strategies, City Government
Yin, Robert K.; Yates, Douglas – 1974
The purpose of the study reported here was to assess the various decentralization efforts as they occurred in different services and in different cities. The study reviewed decentralization's record in terms of five outcomes: (1) Increases in the flow of information between servers and served; (2) Improvements in service officials attitudes; (3)…
Descriptors: Agency Role, Case Studies, Change Strategies, City Government
Cheng, Charles W. – 1976
The major focus of this study is on altering the current structure of collective bargaining in public education to provide for adequate community participation. Concentrating on big city school systems where minorities and the poor have historically been apart from the educational policy-making process, the study finds that the scope of bargaining…
Descriptors: Boards of Education, Citizen Participation, Collective Bargaining, Community Control