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This article will be published in edited form in American Outlook(Hudson Institute,Winter 2001): Making Compassionate
Conservatism Concrete by George W. Liebmann The advent of a new administration and the creation of an
Office of Faith Based and Community Services has given hope to those concerned with the withering of civil society
and the growth of ever-larger public and private bureaucracies. If this initiative is to be effective, there is need
for clear- sightedness in its implementation. The administration"s program appears centered on two devices:
expanded federal charitable tax credits and greater use of faith- based organizations as government contractors. These
are both necessary and long-overdue measures. Their limitations, however, must be understood. Expanded
charitable deductions will benefit, in an indiscriminate way, widely varied existing nonprofits. Such credits will
not by themselves create new mechanisms of civic cooperation. Expanded contracting out to nonprofits is
a retail rather than wholesale form of activity, difficult to bring up to scale in the life of a single administration
unless concrete objectives are defined. Both initiatives run the risk of being caught up in the 'culture
wars'. These seem new, and have certainly been aggrevated in recent years by the Supreme Court's abortion decisions,
but in reality the conflict between cosmopolitans and fundammentalists is as old as the Republic. Traditionally it was
accomodated by allowing the contending factions local sovereignity in separate geographic spheres. The weakness of
French government, General de Gaulle recognized, was that "threats from outside have induced {it} to centralize
its administration to the utmost, thus making it ipso facto the target of every grievance." If
the new initiatives are to make a difference, they must seek to generate new neighborhood secular institutions, as well
as explicitly faith-based ones. The fact of local control will go a long way to insure that in their functioning the
nonprofit groupings will not outrage the sensibilities of religious belivers. This essay is an effort to focus future
efforts in areas of greatest promise, where expansion of the voluntary sector is most needed and feasible.
Robert H. Nelson has suggested that "If [residential community associations] were to become the prevailing mode of
social organization for the local community, this development could be as important as the adoption in the [nineteenth-century]
United States of the private corporate form for business property." Even smaller entities than municipalities
have a role to play now, in providing or contracting out for labor-intensive social services which collectively may
account for a large part of the national product in a service economy--police patrol, day care, care of the elderly,
elementary and much secondary education, local street maintenance and governance, neighborhood regulation of small
shops and accessory apartments, and block associations to cooperatively remove urban blight. This essay is thus a
call for re-creation of an earlier era of municipal and submunicipal creativity; a re-creation that can combat the dangers
of centralization and the withering of civil society that Tocqueville warned against. As the Secretary of
the British National Association of Parish Councils observed: "Our towns are declining into a characterless jumble
of compromises with the traffic. Children still play on the pavements while their mothers go to work. Old people still
live in lonely resignation. This multiplicity of problems of happiness is terribly important." Old age clubs
When the elderly are discussed in current American politics, it is as passive recipients of government bounty,
in the form of social security, ERISA benefits, medicare, and medicaid. The 'progressive' position is entirely defensive
in character: variations on the theme "don't let them take it away." But it is possible to do better
than this, as other countries have recognized. New neighborhood institutions hold the promise of less impersonal as
well as more economical services, and a renewed concern with fraternity as well as equality with respect to a sector
of the population conspicuous in the United States for its social isolation. The present writer has suggested elsewhere
that it is no longer appropriate, if it ever was, to have land use regulations that zone the elderly into the next county,
and that the promotion of accessory apartments and 'granny flats' may give the forgotten 'babushka' a new social function.
It is here also worth emphasizing that the old should have a role, not only in care of the young, but in care of each
other. The elderly tend to be persons of limited mobility. This is particularly true of the portion of the
elderly most in need of care. Because most old or infirm people are ill or immobile only a portion of the time, and
are in need of constructive activity, considerable scope exists for organizing the delivery of many types of social
service by the use of mutual aid groups. Among services that can be thus organized are meals on wheels , domestic
cleaning and local transportation, and services designed to periodically check on the health and welfare of the infirm
and to provide companionship. These can provide a means of avoiding, or at least drastically postponing, the need
for highly expensive institutionalization. The Japanese have carried this approach further than any other
country. These changes were a response to felt need: an unusual graying of the population resulting from Japan's
low wartime and postwar birth rate. Subsequent improvements in life expectancy have caused some to estimate that
the proportion of aged in Japan may go as high as 24% by 2025.At the same time, Japan has been beset by many of the
same disintegrating influences on family structure as the west, including greater mobility, a rising divorce rate,
and the large-scale entry of women into the labor force. The Japanese system has had two major components: use
of volunteer workers organized on a neighborhood basis and the organization of Old Age Clubs for mutual assistance.
Government response to the projected problem also has included curtailments in health care expenditures designed to
increase the already high savings rate and efforts to affirmatively promote the extended family and neighborhood institutions.
The elderly must now bear a portion of the cost of hospitalization. Tax credits are allowed to family members caring
for the elderly. The government actively promotes "a land policy aimed at pressing for three family generations
to live in the same place or for family members to live within easy reach," and provides government loans for home
remodelling in order that an elderly person may join the household. Similar policies have been pursued in the allocation
of public housing in Singapore, which gives "priority for nearby flats for members of the same family, to preserve
the extended family structure, thereby ensuring care for the elderly." The basic premise of Japanese policy
toward the elderly is that they "are expected to provide for themselves",with the aid of family members.
Government administrators have built upon two preexisting institutions: the voluntary welfare worker, or minsei-iin,
who numbered about 15,000 by 1930, and old age clubs, a development of the 1950's. As late as 1988, a five-country
study revealed that while only 3% of Americans over the age of 60 wanted to live with their children, 58% of the Japanese
expected to do so. For this reason, nursing home care, except for very short stays in acute cases for people without
relatives, is little developed in Japan and recent government spending has focused on day care centers and home health
services. As of 1980, 70% of persons over the age of 60 lived with children, as against 28% in the U.S. and 42% in Britain.
Under the Law Concerning Volunteer Workers, minsei-iin are appointed for three-year terms, and are assigned to
separate districts, where their task is to identify those in need of welfare services and to promote and foster community
organizations. The volunteers typically call on elderly people and inquire of neighborhood organizations and storekeepers
to identify those who have problems, and remind the elderly of the availability of free annual medical examinations
and x-rays. They arrange for attendance at day centres, and for home health care and other benefits. Old
age clubs are organized by the minsei-iin to create networks of friends who can visit each other when someone is sick,
call a doctor in time of need, and run errands. The involvement of the elderly in club activities also provides respites
for younger caretakers. Minsei-iin receive no compensation other than reimbursement of expenses, but they are regarded
as civic dignitaries and treated as such. Typically they are women in their fifties. The old age clubs, or roojinkai,
have been fostered as a matter of government policy. The percentage of persons over the age of 60 participating in
them is said to have increased from 12.8% in 1962 to 47.2% in 1973. Among their functions are the organization of
trips, social events, and hobby clubs, the maintainance of community rooms, lobbying for local improvements such as
changes in bus routes, and organizing the receipt of certain city health services, such as free medical massages, quarterly
health classes at which the elderly are instructed in diet and exercise and taught to measure blood pressure, and above
all mutual aid, particularly to those who are ill. A similar organization of mutual aid groups at block level using
social workers was carried out as a matter of government policy in Hong Kong, the number of mutual aid committees
increasing from 1214 to 3132 between 1973 and 1980. Because the minsei-iin are volunteers and there are few professional
social workers and because the old age clubs are not precluded from engaging in neighborhood advocacy, the system is not
one involving rigid top-down government control. Old age clubs receive approximately 60% of their financial support from
membership dues and contributions, roughly 20% from neighborhood associations, and roughly 20% from the city,the amounts
provided by government are exceedingly modest, perhaps $10 per member. Yet the availability of this modest subsidy
was a large inducement to the expansion of old age clubs in the 1960's and 1970's. The quid pro quo for the subsidies
was the conversion of the clubs from purely recreational entities to organizations providing health and education
classes. It would be difficult, given present Western rates of female labor force participation, to
recruit a comparable cadre of volunteers, or to give them meaningful authority and honorific positions where they
are being supervised by a large social work profession. However, it could and should be government policy to recruit
part-time assistants through the use of modest stipends and to foster the self-organization of old-age clubs. This might
be fostered in two ways 1) by widespread distribution, to millions of elderly, of guides to organization of such organizations,
including samples of by-laws, lists of possible activities, and listings of government and private organizations in
a position to provide further resources to interested clubs, particularly those relating to health maintainance and home
care and 2) by providing a very small tax deduction or credit for the first $50 or $100 in dues paid such organizations.
The cost of this would be extremely modest. Assuming 30 million elderly, 12 million of whom participated in clubs,
a $50 deduction in the United States would cost about $240 million, but would do much to foster organizations of great
social value. Playgroups Observers of a series of carefully orchestrated White House conferences
will have gained the impression that the only road to progress for pre-school children is found in central or state government
provision of institutional day care, a cause that has its partisans among feminists and public employee unions. Both these
interest groups contemplate with equanimity a condition in which 55% of mothers--as against 31% in 1970--enter the work
force while their children are still under a year old. American political rhetoric on this issue has been dominated
by demands for emulation of the French or Swedish systems of creches and day care, although Professor Barbara Babcock,
a promoter of the Swedish system, has conceded that its costs are such that the resulting taxation gives mothers no
choice but to follow the feminist agenda by entering the workforce: they must be 'forced to be free.' Although promoters
of this agenda express concern for the quality of care of children of the poor, it is noteworthy that the percentage
of female labor force participation is highest among the professional classes. A reaction against their demands has
set in, manifesting itself in the 1990 legislation providing tax credits for caretakers of small children and the more
recent family tax credit, which the Bush administration proposes to expand from $500 to $1000. Even a $1000
credit, spread over all children up to the age of 18, is insufficient to make much of a difference in the care of
pre-school children, though it does limit discrimination against families where the mother remains in the home. Recent
Norwegian legislation, successfully sponsored by a minority government led by Kjell Bondevik of the Christian Peoples'
Party, provided a greater child tax credit for children under the age of five, of a size which makes it possible for
mothers to leave the work force or work part-time during what one child psychiatrist has referred to as "The
Magic Years." Here also there is a middle way through neighborhood organization between those demanding
expanded government programs and those trusting to undisturbed private ordering. Preschool children are another local
and immobile group. The use of small, highly local entitities to deliver services to them is feasible. In Britain,
pre-school playgroups, voluntary agencies receiving small amounts of central government or local assistance, provide services
to about 40% of 3 and 4 year-olds. Once again, we are confronted with an ordinary market good in the rendition of which
neighborhood associations may have some competitive advantages: preexisting means of communication among neighbors
(newsletters, mailing lists), control of physical facilities that are possible meetingplaces, knowledge of their personnel
and confidence in their mode of governance. The alleged lack of supply of such goods exists only because of an exceptionally
rapid change in demand, fueled by changing demography and mores, including an explosion of single-parent families
and new vocational expectations on the part of women. The removal of regulatory and information barriers to cooperative
forms of provision is a more appropriate role for government than efforts to provide monopoly or near-monopoly state
services either by alteration of the compulsory education age or through increased taxation to supply private day
care for two-earner families. In 1961, the British National Association of Pre-School Playgroups (now the
Pre-School Learning Alliance) was formed by private initiative, a letter from an affected mother, Belle Tutaev, to
the Manchester Guardian soliciting the cooperation of others similarly situated. Impetus was given to
the expansion of nursery education by the Plowden Report, Children and Their Primary Schools in 1968. This recommended
replacement of the policy discouraging nursery education which had prevailed since 1933 except in wartime with a policy
favoring the establishment of half day nursery groups: "our evidence is that it is generally undesirable, except
to prevent a greater evil, to separate mother and child for a whole day in the nursery." Under this principle,
not more than 15% of nursery places would be full-time in nature, and in their allocation "mothers who cannot
satisfy the authority that they have exceptionally good reasons for working should have low priority." Charges
for nurseries were recommended by an eight - member minority including the chairman to prevent "injustices between
parents who do not choose to make use of nursery schools and those who do." The Report recommended that playgroups
be assisted as an interim measure and that the Department of Education inspect them and approve their staff training.
Lady Plowden was President of the PPA in 1972, declaring: "it is time for those who are planning... nursery expansion
to look at the achievments of the playgroup movement." A lone dissent by Mrs. M. Bannister recommended the
policy which was ultimately adopted for reasons of cost. She criticized nursery education as disrupting the mother,child
and sibling relationship" and urged that playgroups rather than nurseries be encouraged except in "educational
priority areas". The provision of large numbers of nursery teachers would divert talent from the nursing and
teaching professions at a time when the pool of available single women was declining. Concluding, she declared that
nursery education "does little to enable mothers to participate in the early school experiences of their children.
The mothers' loneliness and boredom are also major social problems which play centres and groups might help to solve".
Total playgroup enrollment exceeded 800,000 in 1994. Approximately 230,000 of the children attending
playgroups were from families whose incomes derived from state benefits, a result made possible by low playgroup fees.
Only about one-third of playgroups (but three-fourths of those in London) received external funding, this funding
amounting to about 10% of the budgets of the groups receiving it, or less than five percent of the national expenditure
by the groups, which totalled approximately L250 million. The PPA offered a foundation course of 120
hours with approximately 8200 students annually for playleaders stressing child development,educational play, and
group organization, and awarding an attendance certificate but not giving examinations. Shorter couses of from 10
to 25 hours were given to approximately 30,000 parents annually. More elaborate courses of from 40 to 240 hours, followed
by some local civil service examinations, were provided to about 1200 group organizers. The annual cost
of ten sessions per week in a playgroup was estimated at L420 per year in 1987, as against L1039 in a nursery class
and L1500 in nursery school. The movement has spread to several other countries, including The Netherlands,
where playgroups for two and three year olds in 1986 enrolled 132,520 children in 3,313 playgroups, or 38% of the
relevant population, and Ireland, where it is estimated that playgroup participants number about 20,000 in about 1,500
groups, 185 of them Gaelic-speaking, and enroll about 15% of the relevant cohort. The Dutch system, unlike the British,
is heavily subsidized by the government. The 1989 New Zealand budget provided for vouchers for nursery care, usable at
playgroups.Similar mechnanisms for cooperative day care known as anganwadi have been created as a matter of government
policy in India. Even in Sweden, where state nursery provision is highly developed, recent years have seen the "emergence
of parental child care cooperatives which by the end of 1992 involved about 25,000 children or some 6% of all child
care amenities. This type of care emerged in response to a shortage of child care amenities and also because parents
wanted to have a say in the organization of child care. Similar user cooperatives mainly in caring services for the
elderly and disabled are now growing up in many municipalities." Day care, and particularly cooperative
day care, is a civic amenity which lends itself to organization at the sub-local level and which is likely to call
forth the amount of resident energy necessary to become effective It is significant that a recent study negatively
assessing the amount of civic energy generated by covenant-created village boards in a 'new town' has identified day
care as the primary area in which such associations have been active. Once again, this is a service which lends itself
either to voucher funding, or funding through a central government tax credit, as already partially provided for
in the United States and more adequately provided for in Norway. The internal governance of playgroups is provided
for by model by-laws issued by the PPA and its American analogues; there is no reason for the groups to be attached
to local or sub-local governments; they probably function best as free-standing groups, with the government role confined
to vouchers and subsidies and publicity to facilitate organization. Probation In today's America,
supervision of probationers and parolees is carried on by harried bureaucrats, employees of a state or national government.
Yet in underdeveloped countries, probation services have sometimes placed offenders under the care of traditional
elders or village leaders. In developed countries, extensive use has at times been made of citizen volunteers
as probation officers, who in earlier times were frequently clergymen. In Britain, probation was originally provided
for by the Probation of First Offenders Act,1887 enacted at the instance of police court missionaries. By 1922, there
were 784 volunteer workers. A Departmental Committee reporting in that year recommended that they be superseded by
a professional service, which was accomplished by the Criminal Justice Act, 1925. Later, a reaction set in against
complete bureaucratization of the service. The reintroduction of volunteers followed the Reading report in 1967.
By 1978, volunteers were being more widely used; their expanded use was promoted by the Home Office in 1984 and 1991.
As of 1980, volunteers were being used in all regions of the British probation service and numbered more than 5,000.
In 1985, a survey indicated that there was approximately one volunteer for each probation officer in the British service.
About 56% of volunteers were women. More recently, the Conservative Government, instead of pursuing the devolution
of probation to church and community groups and parish councils, has entertained proposals for the 'contracting out'
of probation to private sector managers. The British and American use of probation volunteers is limited
compared to that in other countries, including Denmark (194 officers, 1000 volunteers,supervising 45% of the caseload);
Austria (189 officers, 579 volunteers, supervising 25% of the caseload), Sweden, and Japan. "In Sweden, for example,
Becker and Hjellemo (1976) reported an average of 92 clients and 48 volunteers for each probation officer,; [another study
indicates that 9000 volunteers handle 75% of the caseload] and Hess (1970) described the Japanese system where the
average field officer's main responsibilities surrounded coordinating the work of approximately 65 volunteers each working
with about four clients!", there being in all more than 56,000 volunteers. In France, there is less use of volunteers
(476 officers and 770 volunteers, but institutions may serve as volunteers, and use is made of chapters of the Croix
Bleue (anti- alcohol league), the Red Cross, the Secours Catholique and the Emmaus Community. At least in the former
Soviet Union, it was common to parole offenders to work units, such as factories or collective farms. In the juvenile
probation area, the only area in which probation volunteers (in so-called 'Big Brother' programs) have been extensively
used in the United States, suggestions have been made for parole of juvenile offenders to inner-city church and community
groups. Assumption of such responsibilities by community organizations should require a large supermajority, and their
powers as probation officers should be supervised either by a public probation officer, a court or both. The association
might be given the power to petition a court to revoke probation, or to request a public officer to do so. Because
of the external benefits and the concentration of the need in poorer neighborhoods, funding should probably take the
form of either a voucher for each probationer or project grants from higher levels of government, the state in the
U.S. context. The federal government, with its more limited number of probationers, is well equipped to conduct pilot
programs in this field, to design short courses for probation volunteers, and churches and community groups, and to
distribute protocols and guidelines to state and local authorities Block Reorganization
The federal government could usefully stimulate another neighborhood cooperative device: the creation of block-size
land readjustment associations for purposes of urban renewal. Americans are prone to assume that only two
methods exist for the assembly of land for purposes of urban renewal. The first of these is eminent domain,
which involves the condemnation by public authority of large tracts of land, which are then generally sold off to
private developers. Since each property-owners has a right to jury trial as to valuation, there are long delays and
unpredictable costs. While litigation proceeds, 'planning blight' descends, and constructive endeavor in the area
ceases. Dissenters must be evicted and coerced before construction begins, and few condemnees are enthusiastic about their
fate, since juries are drawn from taxpayers and are frequently parsimonious. The public authority must pay for land as
values are determined and hold it through the construction process, incurring substantial capital and carrying costs.
A second method is private land acquisition, such as that carried out by the Rouse Company preparatory to
the creation of Columbia, Maryland. This, to be successful, requires great stealth and the use of dummies and intermediaries,
and the last landowners to sell usually must be paid exorbitant prices. Once again, land acquisition money must be
fronted by the developer. The combination of cost,coercion, and planning blight have discredited American
urban renewal, and private land assembly is rarely attempted in large cities, where news of buyer interest travels
fast. It is far less costly for private developers to acquire large tracts of exurban land rather than attempting urban
redevelopment. There is, however, a third method of urban land consolidation, popularly referred to as
'Land Readjustment' , that has been in active use in almost all major countries other than the United States and England
for about a century, and has proven especially useful in reclaiming totally decayed slums and repairing war damage.
At a time when many American inner cities literally resemble war zones, with vacant lots and vandalized buildings,
use of this technique deserves exploration. Land readjustment is a scheme whereby a specified supermajority
of owners of contiguous land are permitted to establish a redevelopment area by petition approved by public authority.
When its boundaries are established, dissenting owner- occupiers have the right to be excluded from the area on request.
Other dissenters can insist that the petitioners immediately buy them out at an impartially appraised value, a remedy
like that sometimes given dissenting shareholders in corporate reorganizations. The need for even this mild coercion
of dissenters might be obviated by a mechanism which permitted landowners to bindingly commit themselves to a land
readjustment scheme conditional upon a specified percentage of landowners similarly committing themselves. The remaining
petitioners then have their properties impartially valued, and receive proportionate shares in the common enterprise.
A committee is then elected to manage redevelopment, which either funds construction by borrowing against land values
or enters into joint ventures with builders. When work is complete, each petitioner receives either a building representing
his pro rata share of the new development,together with fractional cash payments, or a pro rata share as owner in
common of it. This scheme makes it possible to redevelop with reasonable speed, since the petitioners have
a profit incentive to cooperate rather than holding out. It also makes possible redevelopment without the necessity
of raising large sums of public or private funds for land acquisition and carrying costs. So long as the scheme is
approved by public authority and provides adequate compensation for dissenters, it presents no constitutional difficulties
in the American system. Similar mechanisms have sometimes been used in America to reconsolidate lots in failed developments
of recreational land, and in connection with 'unitization' of oil fields; the legal precedents developed in the latter
context will be useful in sustaining the validity of land readjustment schemes. In Western
nations, this land readjustment system received its earliest use in Germany. Because of the lack of primogeniture and
resultant splintering of agricultural land, mechanisms were provided to consolidate it. The Burgomaster of Frankfurt,
Franz Adickes, agitated for ten years for similar measures for urban land. Under the Lex Adickes(1902), upon institution
of a scheme, prior owners received shares in the newly plotted land proportionate to their shares in land as originally
platted. Lots with buildings were restored to the owners with appropriate boundary modifications. Unavoidable differences
in value were settled in money. The Adickes plan was extensively utilized in the reconstruction of postwar continental
cities, including Kiel and Rotterdam, and variants of it accounted for more than half of reconstructed Japanese housing,
in addition to much housing in Korea and Taiwan. Its possible application in America has been discussed, and prior
to the creation of federal housing programs during the New Deal several variant schemes were put forward, which have
left some residue in the Illinois land trust system and the urban renewal laws of eight to ten states. A summary
of the principal foreign enactments follows In 1950, the principles of the Lex Adickes were extended to land containing
structures; in 1960 a system of valuation boards was introduced. The German Land Procurement Law of 1953 provided for
expropriation of vacant land, land with destroyed buildings, and land that was minimally used in relation to surrounding
land, and allowed compensation to be provided in the form of substitute land; the act was significant in that it
allowed expropriation proceedings to be begun by private entities as well as the state: 2. Japan The
first formal land readjustment enactment in Japan was the City Planning Act of 1919. The 1919 act was folllowed by enactment
of the Special City Planning Law of 1923 following the great earthquake of that year. A special Town Planning Act, focussing
on war reconstruction, was enacted in 1946, and was in turn supplanted by a comprehensive land readjustment law in 1954.
3. Korea Land readjustment on the Japanese pattern was introduced in Korea during the Japanese occupation
of 1905-45, the critical enactment being the Korean Land Readjustment Act of 1934. In 1966, a Land Readjustment Project
Act was enacted, which, while permitting readjustment by private initiative, placed greater emphasis on readjustment
initiated by local authorities. Korea is unique in its effort to use land adjustment for the purpose of creating low-income
housing by provisions in the 1980 Korean Master Plan for Public Housing Construction and National Urban Land Development.
Land readjustment will be easier to organize in a period of rising prosperity,like the present.
"The costs of organizing voluntary co-operative arrangements will not be so great in a dynamic situation as they
will be in a static one." It will have little application in undeveloped exurban areas: "... it may be quite
rational for individuals in the older residential areas of a city to choose collective action...and at the same time it
may be irrational for owners of undeveloped units to agree." The principal necessary contribution
of higher levels of government to land adjustment would be the provision of an appropriate mechanism for incorporation
of associations, together with impartial tax assessment and mediation facilities and, in some circumstances, the deeding
of streets. At a later stage, some consideration might be given to cooperative credit mechanisms for land readjustment
groups, such as the municipal bond banks or pools offered by some states to their smaller municipalities. The internal
governance of the associations requires careful definition by statute of opt-out rights, and some provision for public
review of the organization decision to guard against externalities and the oppression of dissenters. Much work was
done on this subject in the early 1930's in the United States but was largely abated by the availability of large-scale
federal financing for urban renewal. The federal government could usefully publicize model state laws and ordinances;
through this means, zoning, soil conservation districts and residential community associations were intoduced into
American life. Street Governance The woonerf, or residential street-government regime,
is a Dutch innovation of the 1970's, although precursors of it can be found in laws in England and New York allowing
the closing of playstreets. These earlier mechanisms involved transfer of street uses from traffic to people. The
Dutch innovation rested instead on what Rodney Tolley has called the "startling and revolutionary notion that
in residential areas traffic and people should not be segregated but instead should be integrated...admitted on the residents'
terms...slowly and without superior rights." Woonerven in The Netherlands began in 1976, when a law authorized
elimination of curbs and the integration into one surface of sidewalk and road areas, giving the visual impression of
a residential yard. "Pedestrians may use the full width of the road within an area defined as a woonerf; playing
on the roadway is also permitted. Drivers within a woonerf may not drive faster than [about 8 to 12 m.p.h.]. They
must make allowance for the possible presence of pedestrians, children at play, unmarked objects...traffic approaching
from the right at whatever speed always has priority. Drivers may not impede pedestrians. Pedestrians may not unreasonably
hinder the progress of drivers." This innovation offers important benefits to the upbringing of children
, to safety, and to the creation of a sense of community in both suburban and city areas. Traffic in woonerven
is controlled by ramps, speed bumps, narrowings, changes in axis, street furniture, planters and trees. Parking is
permitted only in specially designated spaces. Woonerven in The Netherlands may be petitioned for by a 60% vote at
a meeting attended by a majority of neighborhood citizens. Because they result from local initiative , woonerven have
proven highly popular. By 1983, 2700 woonerven had been created, leading to a 50% reduction in injuries within them.
In Germany, there was a 20% reduction in accidents and a 50% reduction in severe accidents. Advocates
maintain that children and the elderly "should not have their links to the outside world severed by traffic flows
past their doors." The creation of these zones has become a major environmental cause in Germany.
The mechanism has been highly popular in Denmark. This may be due to the fact that many Danish streets in
new developments are in private ownership. "Residents, if they wish [calming], must pay for it themselves",
the cost approximating that of a new refrigerator. The popularity of woonerven on particular streets
has led to broader efforts to calm traffic in residential areas generally, through the use of 30 k.p.h.speed limits,
numerous four-way stop signs, and street narrowings, speed bumps, and other speed reducers, popularized in the United
States by Oscar Newman and others promoting concepts of "defensible space" to protect neighborhoods; HUD
has issued a pamphlet written by Secretary Cisneros sounding similar themes. If woonerven are to be used
and accepted in a country with the libertarian political traditions of the United States, they must be perceived as
being an expansion of the legal rights of property owners. This result can be achieved through use of the Dutch mechanism
for creation on neighborhood application, or by including their creation within the arsenal of powers of residential
community associations as defined by their deed covenants, or by street privatization on the St. Louis model. In the
short run, the Dutch mechanism is simplest, and has been found to result in "stronger social cohesiveness, much brought
about by the involvement of the residents themselves in a sophisticated process of planning their own surroundings."
The developers of Seaside,Florida found that in order to avoid street width and curb regulations, it was
necessary to characterize woonerven as 'parking areas'. There is a large literature on traffic-calming
beginning with the pioneer work of the late Donald Appleyard, an American, and including several books by Carmen Hass-
Klau,Annette Moudon, and Rodney Tolley. Useful surveys have appeared. The paradox is that a form of privatization
is needed for streets to fulfil the function of public property identified by Carol Rose: In the absence
of the socializing activities that take place on 'inherently public property', the public is a shapeless mob, whose
members neither trade nor converse nor play, but only fight, in a setting where life is, in Hobbes' all too famous phrase,
solitary, poor, nasty, brutish, and short." The general rule in the United States is that street closings
require the assent of a majority of abutting owners, who may be assessed for the cost of works only to the extent of benefits
conferred. Cities like Laredo, Texas engaging in closings on a large scale accord owners the right to acquire the adjacent
street beds. The benefits from closings include "Income from the sale, return of the property to the tax rolls; employment
generated both by the construction and the occupants; elimination of the municipality's liability and reduction of public
maintenance responsibilities" as well as "opportunities for additional parking [and]open space."
In St. Louis County, beds of streets were deeded to residents abutting them, subject to assessments enforceable by lien.
The several hundred resulting associations provide repairs, street lighting, traffic regulation, sweeping and tree trimming;
some provide a security patrol. Privatization is now permitted on petition of 95% of residents. "Provision by
subdivisions allows for greater variation in service bundles among neighborhoods than provision by overlying municipalities."
It has been suggested that local governments stimulate the voluntary formation of additional such associations by
offering one-time block grants or priority in allocation of municipal services as well as transfer of municipally-owned
real estate and relief from a portion of municipal taxes. A British commentator has urged that street privatization
and partial closing is complementary to the effectiveness of neighborhood security patrols. Other commentators, reviewing
the literature on 'defensible space', have noted that "for now, crime prevention efforts should focus on street
blocks rather than on neighborhoods. Block-level theories have advanced substantially in recent years. Models describing
both the resident-based and the offender-based processes linking design and crime have been specified and tested in
several cases" A bolder suggestion is that "all property-owners along streets would be considered
required members of amenity cooperatives... public subsidy could be granted depending on detailed correlation and
determination of improvements provided by and perhaps required of the amenity cooperative... Preferential treatment
to capital expenditures for approved street development, if properly rewarded, could lead to far-flung private programs
to improve street quality according to revised concepts." Some American jurisdictions, led by Montgomery
County, Maryland have provided tax abatements to residents of community associations maintaining streets. Scandinavian
neighborhood councils in larger cities are accorded jurisdiction over street closings and the location of telephone
boxes and bus stops. Thus far, residential traffic calming has made only limited progress in the United States,
notwithstanding Lewis Mumford's observation of sixty years ago that "whatever traffic filters into a neighborhood
must be that which directly subserves it, moving at a pace that respects the rights of a footwalker. Even country
villages today often lack this element of safety and freedom from anxiety." The institutions needed to popularize
it are self-organized traffic-calming or street-ownership associations at the block level, which require some form
of state or local authorizing legislation. The internal governance of these associations should involve supermajorities
to insure that neighborhood consensus exists. Financial assistance from government would appear not needed since traffic-calming
works are fundable by use of special benefit assessments; the sums involved in any case are sufficiently modest that
small subsidies for poorer neighborhoods are within the limited redistributive capacity of municipal governments.
The deeding without consideration of street-beds might be considered in many places, since its effect may be to relieve
municipalities of maintenance expenses and restore property to the tax rolls. What is most needed is model enabling
legislation expanding the rights of abutting property-owners, together with publicity relating to the safety and social
benefits and the less well-known techniques, such as narrowing of roadways, use of planters, creation of separated
bicycle paths, and use of varying road surfaces. Law enforcement American discussions of law enforcement
generally resolve themselves into a dialogue in which one faction urges national government social programs to combat
the alleged causes of crime, while the other seeks more police and harsher laws and sentences. There is, however,
a third tradition, seeking to revive past localized institutions, that complements if it does not supplant the other
two. Today nearly 30% of the American population lives in residential community associations with elected officers,
a large percentage of which have assumed some security functions. The systematic publicizing of crimes and wanted
persons, once confined to the halfhearted posting of wanted posters in post offices, now extends to popular television
programs, the sides of shopping bags, and the regular publication of police blotters in neighborhood and metropolitan
newspapers. 'Neighborhood watch' groups have appeared in many communities. The ever-more widespread private ownership
of firearms for purposes of individual self-defense revives a militia, albeit not a 'well regulated' one. Law enforcement
might benefit, without peril to liberty, from a more self-conscious organization and exploitation of these tendancies.
The programs have their limits: "[w]e cannot rely too much on voluntary citizen 'self-help', given the
difficulty of controlling citizen use of force and the virtual absence of residents from many neighborhoods during
working hours." Moreover, "voluntary association cannot easily be initiated or sustained in poorer, high-crime
areas." The increased emphasis on the social organization of housing projects, on concierge systems and concepts
of 'defensible space' indicates that the relevance of this concept is not confined to the 12th century.
In its initial form, the hue and cry had as its object the organization of what Jane Austen called "a neighborhood
of voluntary spies." and involved shouting, the blowing of horns, and the ringing of church bells. With the
advent of the press, these primitive mechanisms for organizing the general chase of an offender were replaced by printed
warning and reward notices and directories of wanted criminals of the type outlined in Sir John Fielding's General
Prevention Plan of 1772-73. The best-known publications were John Fielding's own broadsheet the Hue and Cry and Henry
Fielding's Covent Garden Journal. Lord Mansfield declared in 1783: "how are felons in general taken up ? From descriptions
of them circulated in handbills." One of the critics of Peel's police bill observed in 1829, in terms
that have continuing resonance: "complete and speedy publicity of all acts of delinquency would effect far more good
without a police than a police could effect without publicity." It has been observed that "during the second
half of the nineteenth century, the circulation of information about criminal offenders and offences increasingly
became internalized within the police--narrowcasting to an audience of officials... the police have used the new technology
of the telegraph, radio and computer in pursuit of the mirage of instant apprehension of criminals and at the expense
of information-based activities directed at prevention of crime or delayed apprehension." A great
deal has changed since Tocqueville's observation that "the criminal police of the United States cannot be compared
with those of France; the magistrates and public agents are not numerous. Yet... in no country does crime more rarely
elude punishment. The reason is that everyone conceives himself to be interested in furnishing evidence of the crime
and in seizing the delinquent... in America he is looked upon as an enemy of the human race, and the whole of mankind
is against him." The advent of new means of information transmission such as the television set
and the fax machine has not given rise to significant expansion of use of wanted posters and publications by the police.
Yet the public hunger for this sort of information is attested by the fact that virtually all neighborhood newspapers
now publish discouragingly long lists of offenses, unaccompanied by any information that would assist in solving them.
The publication on shopping bags of pictures of missing children and the advent of television programs depicting wanted
criminals is entirely a product of private enterprise. "Privately funded reward policing is probably stronger now
than it has been since the nineteenth century." Critics of these programs allege that they constitute private
distortion of fears about crime, but this comes about by reason of the failure of public authorities to systematize
similar measures. It is hard to escape the conclusion that a revival of Fielding's Hue and Cry would
be a useful and beneficial contribution to law enforcement, particularly in the inner-city areas where clearance rates
are lowest, the crime problem is greatest, and policing cannot succeed without public participation. Indeed, the
mere existence of such a newspaper- type collection of wanted notices might have a significant deterrent effect.
Local transportation The social isolation of the elderly and of many housewives and young people has not been
a matter exciting great political interest in the United States: lives of quiet desperation are just that. There have
been expensive federal programs aimed at providing public transportation for the elderly and disabled; the problems
of the young are incautiously addressed by widespread ownership of private automobiles and a low driving age, notwithstanding
the ensuing accident rates. Here too neighborhood organizations have a role to play. Although
a number of American residential community associations in communities made up of the elderly have begun providing
demand-response and other local transportation services to their members, the use of amenity cooperatives or special assessment
districts for the purpose of providing such services has been little tried. Jitney transport, by cab or bus operators
not operating on fixed routes, is in use in many foreign cities but has been outlawed in most American cities since
the 1920's, with narrow exceptions relating to sharing of licensed taxicabs. Several studies have found that substantial
savings can result from the privatization, and thus the devolution to small units, of both public transportation and
school bus services. The economic problems of American central cities are in substantial part ascribable to the lack
of transportation necessary to commute to available jobs.The organization and provision of such transportation facilities
is an appropriate activity of sub-local governments and neighborhood community associations, as well as of a more
deregulated private sector; their financing should appropriately come from user charges, or modest special assessments
on propertyowners. Some British parishes have initiated ventures of this type, with government support, and the 1997
Local Government and Rating Act confers express authority on parish councils to do so. Community Schools
Recent political dialogue about American education has involved a contest between those advocating ever-greater national
government funding and control of the curriculum, on the one hand, and those advocating vouchers and privatization,
on the other. The last prescription for privatization is in part a counsel of despair, founded on the view that public
schools are so beset by union rules, grievance procedures, federal interference with school discipline, busing orders,
mandates relating to special and bilingual education and legal restrictions on the hiring of competent teachers that
they are beyond repair. Here also a case can be made for a measure short of or at least complementary to vouchers
and privatization: radical decentralization of public school governance. In the United States, schools have traditionally
been governed on a territorial basis by school district boards. These originally encompassed only one or two schools.
However, with the growth of population and the fashionable movement for consolidation of school districts, these political
entities have become progressively larger and more bureaucratic; the impersonality of the systems, particularly since
the Second World War, has fostered the organization of teachers' unions, which have generated problems of their own.
The teachers' unions have induced the states to employ an array of techniques to force consolidation upon school districts,
including fiscal incentives, county-wide rather than district approval of consolidations, prohibition of incorporation
of new districts, aid formulas discriminating against small districts, and direct mandating of consolidations. The
number of school districts decreased from 108,579 in 1942 to 34,678 in 1962,to approximately 15,000 in 1996. There
is some evidence that the size of districts is inversely related to student accomplishment. At the same time, the
governance of schools has increasingly become a professional monopoly. Teachers are required by state law to have taken
large numbers of education courses, which characteristically involve indoctrination in professional ideology rather
than deepening of knowledge about subject-matter. Principals in many places are required to have doctorates from colleges
of education. Union contracts render it virtually impossible to remove or transfer inadequate teachers and require
that replacements be hired from seniority lists rather than be 'handpicked' in accordance with local needs.
In France, by contrast, there has been a more modest decline in the number of primary schools because of
consolidations , rural depopulation, and a decline between 1960 and 1982 of about ten percent in the numbers of children
in the age group in question. However the proportion of single class schools to total primary schools has remained
constant. Of the 74,268 primary schools in 1960,19,010 were single-class schools; of the 43,778 primary schools in
1982, 10,778 were single-class schools "proof... of the realization by small rural communities that their future
depends upon the retention of the local school and of their determination to resist its loss."
All major European countries, in contrast to the United States, have in recent years significantly decentralized school
governance and have sought to end the professional monopoly over it. Their varied efforts to extend the parental role
in education are expressly referenced in Article 126 of the Maastricht Treaty, which calls for "cross-cultural
cooperative research in the field of parents in education." As a result of reforms enacted by the
Giscard government in 1975,which had been partly implemented in 1968 following the student disturbances of that year,
each French college(12-15 year old age group) and lycee(15-18) was given a School Council . This committee votes
the school budget and the various school rules, and a committee of it reviews disciplinary recommendations for expulsion,
together with the school social worker and guidance counsellor. The council also reviews the bursar's accounts and
may comment on the teaching. The rules relate to such matters as safety, attendance, promptness, marking system, school
records, transport, dress,smoking, permission to leave the premises, and library rules and those relating to student activities
and publications. "The Haby Reform ruled out any formal parental influence on instruction, the form or content of
curriculum, grading, or homework. The classroom itself remained untouched by the parent committees." It has
been said of the Catholic system, state-subsidized since 1959, that: "one of its main attractions has been school
autonomy: a Catholic head differs crucially from his state counterpart in being able to recruit his own staff and
thus build up a team and a school ethos." German schools have elaborate provisions for parent participation.
'these include class councils, school councils and provincial councils as well as officially-recognized parents' associations
at all levels, culminating in a federal parents organization." Britain similarly vested control
of its state- maintained schools in large Local Education Authorities. However the existence of separate boards for
each school continued since an act of 1870, and was carried forward by sections 17-22 of the Education Act of 1944.
"The general principle tends to be that the L.E.A.settles 'the general educational character of the school and
its place in the local system' while the governors have 'general direction of the conduct and curriculum of the school."
Finally, the Education Reform Act,1988,sec.40 provided for drastic decentralization of the control of education. The
boards of Local Authority schools are to be composed of specified portions of parents, teachers, local authority governors
and co-opted governors . The governors now receive an automatic budget share and authority "to spend any sum as
they think fit for the purposes of the school", and to appoint and dismiss staff. They control some 87% of school
budgets as well as, to a limited degree, admissions policy. These changes, though prompted by central government-local
authority conflict, are said to "have enfranchised parents and created a quarter million army of school governors."
Similar legislation has been adopted in New Zealand and in all Australian states.
The developments in Western Europe and Australasia (with the possible exception of those in England, the work of the Thatcher
government) had their inception in the concerns for participatory democracy characteristic of the late '60s student
movements. This is true even though the French reforms were sponsored by the government of Charles de Gaulle; the
disorders in Paris in 1968 were preceded, not followed, by his famous speech in March 1968 at Lyon declaring that
the need for centralization in France had ended. They had little influence in the United States where the student
movement, one of 'rebels without a program' in George Kennan's words, was concerned with an end to the Vietnam War, personal
emancipation from social restraints, and centralization in the cause of civil rights. Michael Walzer has observed that
"the civil rights and antiwar agitations...turned out to be evanescent, leaving behind no organizational residue,
no basis for an ongoing participatory politics." The legacy of the American civil rights and student movements,
unlike their foreign counterparts, was a centralization of power in the national government and the federal courts.
Even blacks now suffer from this; in Walzer's words:"political power must always be twice won. It must be won
first with the help of the state or through the creation of parallel bureaucracies against established local or corporate
elites. Then it must be won again by new popular forces against the state." The funding mechanism
for self-governing schools is a critical issue. In Britain, opt-out schools receive pro rata portions of the block
education grant to local authorities, which in turn rests on an inverse-wealth formula, with some positive discrimination
in favor of inner-city schools. In the United States, the funding mechanism used for Title I federal aid to public
schools might be used; this ties aid to particular schools to the social composition of their student body rather than
the average-wealth characteristics of the subdivision and closely approaches a voucher system. The federal contribution
to American primary and secondary education is sufficiently modest that it could be completely voucherized and made
available to both public and private schools while still being earmarked for noninstructional expenses, thus avoiding
any possible church- state problem. The use of vouchers allows aid to be focussed on needy students rather than needy
subdivisions, and is equivalent to an income transfer which can only be spent on public goods. The competence of
boards in poorer neighborhoods might be enhanced, as in England, by requiring the co-optation as well as election
of governors, by additionally requiring the presence of governors with special skills in construction, accounting, and
higher education, and by providing for state assistance in the recruitment and training of governors.
The benefits of local governance are manifold: the market discipline imposed on teachers and the greater vocational choice
allowed them by the ability of schools to hire and fire freely; the ability of school principals to assemble compatible
teams; greater parental and community support of public schools; the ability of schools, at least at the secondary
level, to differentiate themselves and specialize and select students, thereby creating centers of excellence; defusing
of controversies over social and moral issues which result when higher levels of government are the source of rules
governing student behavior and discipline. PROLIFERATING INITIATIVE: Circulars, Enabling Laws, Tax Credits,
Model Legislation Circulars In the unfashionable discussion of federalism in the last chapter
of his Essay on Liberty and also in chapter 15 of Representative Government, Mill asserted the view that the appropriate
role of the national government generally should involve education, not coercion. "The principal business of the
central authority should be to give instruction, of the local authority to apply it. Power may be localized, but knowledge,
to be most useful, should be centralized.""The mischief begins when, instead of calling forth the activities
and powers of individuals and bodies,[a government]substitutes its own activities for theirs; when, instead of informing,
advising, and upon occasion, denouncing, it makes them work in fetters...A State that dwarfs its men...will find that
with small men no great thing can really be accomplished." The value of such publicity may be particularly great
when directed at small-scale units of provision and their prospective members: as noted by Dennis Mueller: "voluntary
compliance with behavioral sanctions or provision of public goods is more likely in small communities than in large...Small
stable communities may elicit voluntary compliance and contributions for collective decisions by merely publicizing
them." The creation on a large scale of residential community associations in the United
States came about as a result of this sort of activity: "The publication of Planned Unit Development with a Homes
Association was a watershed event in the history of CID's... Forty to fifty thousand copies of the publication were circulated,
and it was a major factor in the PUD boom that followed... the document was distributed at the NAHB [National Association
of Home Builders] meeting. Its impact was enormous...'The industry grabbed the idea, and local government accepted
it, and FHA insured it, and the concept took off like wildfire.'" Similarly, the Federal Housing Administration in
1961 distributed model condominium legislation, variants of which had been adopted in all 50 states by 1967, even
though previously condominiums had been familiar only in Puerto Rico. The Department of Commerce in the 1920's used
a similar method to propagate zoning ordinances; its publication including model ordinances sold tens of thousands
of copies.The creation by state governments of thousands of soil conservation districts with coercive powers in the
1930s was also ascribable to the distribution of model state legislation by the Roosevelt administration.
The constitutional permissibility of this sort of government activity seems well established. As Laurence Tribe has written:
"if government expends public funds to subsidize flag production, the fact that some people object to this expenditure
of their tax money to propagate the state's patriotic message is likely to be deemed irrelevant, either in a challenge
to the expenditure itself or in a challenge to the payment of the full amount of the tax." The federal government
has made extensive, though limited, use of 'public service' broadcasting. Typically, broadcasters run government announcements
"in blocks of time in low demand by advertisers who pay for the opportunity to reach mass audiences."About
ten advertising campaigns a year are run by government agencies in cooperation with the private Advertising Council;
the campaigns are supported with both government funding and private contribtions and "White House clearance
is the sine qua non for a governmental agency hopeful of becoming one of the major campaigns of the Council,"
Either the national government, or associations of state governments, or private law reform organizations
or foundations might widely distribute, to both community organizations and households, information, including suggested
by-laws and lists of resource sources, to facilitate the organization of pre-school playgroups and old age clubs,
adapting the available British and Japanese materials respectively. Land readjustment and traffic calming might be
promoted in the same fashion. Tax credits Dues of American residential community associations are not
deductible for federal income tax purposes. It seems disingenuous to equate expenditures for characteristic public
goods such as trash collection and roads with private luxury expenses. Similarly, it may be in order to provide
small federal tax credits to facilitate the organization of old age clubs. Devolution to BIDs and
RCAs has proven popular because it combines the benefits of political devolution (enhanced voice, local responsiveness)
with the economies and personal independence resulting from reliance on competitive market providers, avoiding the
condition described by Tocqueville: "to acquire a place a man no longer pays down his money, he goes one better,
he sells himself.". Enabling laws and model legislation Circulation, under either federal
or private auspices, of legislation authorizing and regulating land readjustment organizations and private street
associations and its enactment in the states, or by cities with home rule powers, would seem necessary if such organizations,
with their reliance on public land assessment and mild coercion of dissenters, are to be organized. There is precedent
for such legislation in laws providing for reconsolidation of recreational lots and for oil field unitization.
Likewise, state or local legislation is desirable to define the rights of neighbors to request or require
traffic calming,and to provide for the organization of and possible assistance to old age clubs (although this can
be accomplished under existing nonprofit corporation laws). Amendments to the Uniform Probation Act to authorize participation
of churches and community groups as probation officers might likewise be disseminated to both legislatures and appropriate
voluntary associations. A similar course might be followed with respect to legislation converting all existing schools
in a state to self-governing schools; here models are available in the legislation of Great Britain, Australia, New
Zealand, and Ireland. If sub-local entities are to be enabled to remedy local transportation deficits
in metropolitan areas, amendment of state or local laws regulating and licensing bus and taxicab service should take
place. Increasing the utility of RCAs and other sub-local general- purpose entities in the zoning process
would seem to require the enactment of amendments to state zoning enabling laws allowing them to waive restrictions
against accessory apartments, convenience stores,day care centers, demand response transportation and other like uses.Federal
tax credits for accessory apartments would encoiurage localities to liberalize zoning laws to permit them. The writer
has elsewhere furnished draft legislation to this end; circulation of some variant of this as model legislation by
the National Conference of Commissioners on Uniform State Laws or the Department of Housing and Community Development,
or even a private organization like the National Association of Home Builders would be useful. Maryland legislation
relating to day care centers in residential areas furnishes another possible model. All these promotional
measures, however, like those in pre- revolutionary France described by Tocqueville, are useless if central government
overly taxes and regulates the resultant institutions: "it would have been more to the point to have lightened
the weight and to have lessened the inequality of the burdens." ------- The ideas in this
essay are elaborated upon and documented in Solving Problems Without Large Government: Devolution, Fairness and Equality
(Praeger,2000), available from internet,national and independent booksellers.
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