Abstract

This paper scrutinises the intersections and collisions of different development discourses in the Kemi-Tornio sub-region which lies alongside the Finnish-Swedish border within the political context of municipal reform initiated by the Finnish government in 2011–2015. By drawing on cultural political economy and institutional regional theory, this paper studies how local actors utilize different development discourses produced at (and producing) different scales to justify or contest the municipal amalgamation within the Kemi-Tornio region. In addition, the specific interest is on the how local institutional environment, and border location in particular, are mobilized and strategically used in these processes. The results, based on policy documents and qualitative interviews with key municipal actors, highlight the coexistence of three different, yet overlapping development discourses. While some municipal actors support the state-led development discourse with justification of economic reasoning, there is a strong opposing discourse emphasising the region’s history, identity and municipal self-autonomy. The latter, interestingly, resonates with the EU’s cross-border co-operation discourse; offering an alternative development strategy. Together with the path-dependent regional history, this intersection creates unbalanced power relations between municipalities both with and without a state border. Thus, this paper illustrates how different scalar discourses and institutional structures are actively utilized in municipal reform processes.

Highlights

  • European border municipalities are sites where different scalar institutional structures and political discourses meet and, often, collide

  • This paper has scrutinised the intersections and collisions of different development discourses in the Kemi-Tornio region in the political context of municipal reform led by the Finnish government

  • By applying the insights of the cultural political economy (CPE) it can be observed that the way in which the selection of different scalar development discourses operates depends both on how they resonate with municipal actors’ understanding about the premises and values of regional development, and on the institutional legacies of the place in question

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Summary

Introduction

European border municipalities are sites where different scalar institutional structures and political discourses meet and, often, collide. The research questions are: 1) How do local actors utilize different development discourses produced at (and producing) different scales to justify or contest the municipal amalgamation in the Kemi-Tornio region?, and 2) How are the local institutional environment, and border location in particular, mobilized in these processes?

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