2017
Development of Public Administration by Statutory Cities – Current Situation, Problems to be Solved
ČECHÁK, Vladimír and Petr ČECHÁKBasic information
Original name
Development of Public Administration by Statutory Cities – Current Situation, Problems to be Solved
Name in Czech
Výkon veřejné správy statutárními městy – současný stav, problémy k řešení
Authors
Edition
1. vyd. Ostrava, PUBLIC ECONOMICS AND ADMINISTRATION 2017, p. 50-56, 7 pp. 2017
Publisher
VŠB – Technical University of Ostrava
Other information
Language
English
Type of outcome
Proceedings paper
Field of Study
50600 5.6 Political science
Country of publisher
Czech Republic
Confidentiality degree
is not subject to a state or trade secret
Publication form
storage medium (CD, DVD, flash disk)
Organization unit
University of Finance and Administration
ISBN
978-80-248-4131-1
ISSN
UT WoS
000533618700008
Keywords (in Czech)
územně-správní členění, městská část, městský obvod, vlastní a přenesená působnost, statutární město
Keywords in English
territorial and administrative division; city district; borough; own and delegated competence; statutory city
Tags
Tags
Reviewed
Changed: 15/7/2022 14:06, Mgr. Jitka Štruncová
V originále
The paper deals with the problem of the execution of public administration by statutory cities in the Czech Republic, both self-government and state administration in delegated competence. At present, the most striking difference of statutory cities is their option (right) of further territorial division which is used by 7 of 25 existing statutory cities. The paper pays attention to the legislative regulation of the execution of state administration by both territorially divided and undivided cities. It analyses methods and criteria of territorial division and method how the competences are defined, both own and delegated, of city districts (boroughs), as they are specified in statutes of individual cities. In the event of territorially undivided statutory cities, our analysis shows that larger cities in particular adopt such structural measures using their own internal regulation that should at least partially substitute the non-existence of their territorial and administrative division (such as provisions of "city district committees" or "settlement committees"). At the same time such measures cannot provide a viable solution in the long-run.