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decentralization
(redirected from Decentralist)

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decentralization

The dispersion of a population or industry away from a central point. A common form is counter-urbanization (in developed countries, the movement of industries and people away from cities). Examples in the UK include the move of the Department of Social Security to Newcastle and the DVLA to Swansea.

decentralization

Of a business or organization, reorganizing into smaller units, often on separate sites. For many businesses, decentralization involves decision-making by individuals or groups throughout an organization rather than at the centre or headquarters. Decision-making is therefore ‘devolved’ throughout the business, dispersing authority away from the centre of the organization. Decentralization provides certain advantages, such as quick decision-making, empowerment of line managers, and corporate flexibility at a local level.



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The more Kauffman read and experienced, the more he developed an affinity for various schools of thought, not all of them mutually consistent: Jeffersonian agrarian distributist, Catholic Worker pacifist, traditional Old Right conservative, transcendentalist, decentralist, anarchist.
The New Agrarian Mind: The Movement Toward Decentralist Thought in Twentieth-Century America, by Allan Carlson, New Brunswick, N.
In order to set the context for the historical study of the British Columbia system, a review was conducted of the pertinent literature from the United States and Canada on coordination and collaboration versus competition in higher education systems and centralist versus decentralist approaches to governance of these systems.
 
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