Abstract

Research background: The direct participation of citizens in political decision-making in the state is one of the ways to implement the public relations between the political state represented by the authorities of local self-government and administration. In addition to that, the civil society on behalf of the local inhabitants of the municipalities is also part of this process. Purpose of the article: This report aims to examine which forms of direct democracy are most often applied in the system of local self-government and what is the result of them in view of the economic independence of municipalities. The comparative study covers the periods before and after the signing of the European Charter of Local Self-Government in 1995 by the Republic of Bulgaria, as well as the periods before and after the accession of our country to the EU in 2007. These two events play a key role in the impact of globalization processes on the direct participation of citizens in local political decision making. Methods: The methodological tools, used in the research, include the comparative analysis and the comparative-legal method. Findings & Value added: The contribution of the research is expressed in tracking the trend in the application of various forms of direct participation of citizens in local government in the Republic of Bulgaria, in outlining the main shortcomings of legal regulations and factors, favoring or hindering the implementation of these forms, and in formulating proposals de lege ferenda to improve existing legislation.

Highlights

  • The Republic of Bulgaria shall be an unitary State with local self-government and no autonomous territorial formations shall be allowed to exist therein (Art. 2, para. 1 of the Constitution)

  • The comparative study covers the periods before and after the signing of the European Charter of Local Self-Government in 1995 by the Republic of Bulgaria, as well as the periods before and after the accession of our country to the EU in 2007. These two events play a key role in the impact of globalization processes on the direct participation of citizens in local political decision making

  • Three categories of issues are excluded from its scope - the issues related to the municipal budget; issues pertaining to the amount of local taxes and charges; issues pertaining to the rules of internal procedure and operation of the Municipal Council

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Summary

Introduction

The Republic of Bulgaria shall be an unitary State with local self-government and no autonomous territorial formations shall be allowed to exist therein (Art. 2, para. 1 of the Constitution). Globalization is a phenomenon that affects the development of public relations at the supranational, and at the national level In this regard, in 1995 the Republic of Bulgaria signed the European Charter of Local SelfGovernment (ECLSG), adopted by the Council of Europe in 1985, committing itself to implementing in domestic law the principles of local self-government, enshrined in the Charter. Differentiated integration is generally understood as a tool to accommodate the increasing heterogeneity of preferences in an enlarging and deepening European Union [1]. These two events inevitably include our country in the so-called "globalization process", raising “the larger question of democratic rule in an era of increased globalization” [2]

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