Metropolia a region – problemy ustrojowe i polityczne
Streszczenie
In the context of territorial governance, a metropolis is not a single city within its 
administrative boundaries but a wider functional area comprising several municipal 
units. All attempts to create formalized institutions for such areas lead to the problem of 
establishing  political  and  organizational  relations  between  the  metropolitan  and  the 
regional authorities. Achieving a balance of power between them is not an easy task and 
is sometimes even more difficult due to the political and partisan rivalry between the 
opposing sides. 
In this paper experiences of West European countries are presented and confronted 
with the recent discussion about statutory metropolitan areas in Poland. Four types of 
relations between the metropolitan and the regional level are distinguished: patronage, 
insignificant, conflict-provoking, and internalized. The essential conclusion of the paper 
is  that  strengthening  the  regional  and  metropolitan  governments  at  the  same  time 
inevitably leads to institutional and political conflicts. This is especially true when both 
the  regional  and  metropolitan  authorities  feel  that  their  position  is  not  fixed  and 
grounded within the administrative system of the state. 
The latest draft of the so-called Metropolitan Act in Poland is most likely to lead to 
the conflict-provoking model of political relations between the metropolitan and regional 
governments. Introducing a strong metropolitan level of territorial governance seems to 
be very controversial because it breaks the current status quo. However, another scenario 
– an institutional void between the local and the regional government – is much worse 
for the development of Poland’s largest metropolitan areas.
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