Abstract
The article analyzes the legal basis of the state support for such forms of public participation in local government as countryside headmen and community councils. The article considers conditions for the allocation offunds from the regional budget to address the problems of rural settlements, differences between countryside headmen institute and territorial public self-government are discussed, as well as some implications in the adoption of normative regional legal act to support headmen and some consequences of such an act for organization of local government in the region. Authors provide answers to a number of criticisms about experiences of state support for elders in rural areas.
Keywords
village headman, community council, rural settlement, territorial public self-government, local self-government
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