Text of the European Charter
  of Local Self-Government
  Preamble
  The member States of the Council
  of Europe, signatory hereto,
  Considering that the aim of the
  Council of Europe is to achieve a greater unity between its
  members for the purpose of safeguarding and realizing the ideals
  and principles which are their common heritage;
  Considering that one of the
  methods by which this aim is to be achieved is through agreements
  in the administrative field;
  Considering that the local
  authorities are one of the main foundations of any democratic
  regime;
  Considering that the right of
  citizens to participate in the conduct of public affairs is one
  of the democratic principles that are shared by all member States
  of the Council of Europe;
  Convinced that it is at local
  level that this right can be most directly exercised;
  Convinced that the existence of
  local authorities with real responsibilities can provide an
  administration which is both effective and close to the
  citizen;
  Aware that the safeguarding and
  reinforcement of local self-government in the different European
  countries is an important contribution to the construction of a
  Europe based on the principles of democracy and the
  decentralization of power;
  Asserting that this entails the
  existence of local authorities endowed with democratically
  constituted decision-making bodies and possessing a wide degree
  of autonomy with regard to their responsibilities, the ways and
  means by which those responsibilities are exercised and the
  resources required for their fulfillment,
  Have agreed as follows:
  Article 1
  The parties undertake to consider
  themselves bound by the following articles in the manner and to
  the extent prescribed in Article 12 of this Charter
  Part I
  Article 2
  Constitutional
  and legal foundation for local self-government
  The principle of local
  self-government shall be recognized in domestic legislation, and
  where practicable, in the constitution.
  Article 3
  Concept of local
  self-government
  1. Local self-government denotes
  the right and ability of local authorities, within the limits of
  the law, to regulate and manage a substantial proportion of
  public affairs under their own responsibility and in the
  interests of the local population.
  2. This right shall be exercised
  by councils or assemblies composed of members freely elected by
  secret ballot on the basis of direct, equal, universal suffrage,
  and which may possess executive organs responsible to them. This
  provision shall in no way affect recourse to assemblies of
  citizens, referendums or any other form of direct citizen
  participation where it is permitted by statute.
  Article 4
  Scope of local
  self-government
  1. The basic powers and
  responsibilities of local authorities shall be prescribed by the
  constitution or by statute. However, this provision shall not
  prevent the attribution to local authorities of power and
  responsibilities for specific purposes in accordance with the
  law.
  2. Local authorities shall, within
  the limits of the law, have full discretion to exercise their
  initiative with regard to any matter which is not excluded from
  their competence nor assigned to any other authority.
  3. Public responsibilities shall
  generally be exercised, in preference, by those authorities which
  are closest to the citizen. Allocation of responsibility to
  another authority should weigh up the extent and nature of the
  task and requirements of efficiency and economy.
  4. Powers given to local
  authorities shall normally be full and exclusive. They may not be
  undermined or limited by another, central or regional, authority
  except as provided for by under the law.
  5. Where powers are delegated to
  them by central or regional authority, local authorities shall,
  insofar as possible, be allowed discretion in adapting their
  exercise to local conditions.
  6. Local authorities shall be
  consulted, insofar as possible, in due time and in an appropriate
  way in the planning and decision-making processes for all matters
  which concern them directly.
  Article 5
  Protection of
  local authority boundaries
  Changes in local authority
  boundaries shall not be made without prior consultation of the
  local communities concerned, possible by means of a referendum
  where this is permitted by statute.
  Article 6
  Appropriate
  administrative structures and resources for the tasks of local
  authorities
  1. Without prejudice to more
  general statutory provisions, local authorities shall be able to
  determine their own internal administrative structures in order
  to adapt them to local needs and ensure effective management.
  2. The conditions of service of
  local government employees shall be such as to permit the
  recruitment of high-quality staff on the basis of merit and
  competence; and to this end adequate training opportunities,
  remuneration and career prospects shall be provided.
  Article 7
  Conditions under
  which responsibilities at local level are exercised
  1. The conditions of office of
  local elected representatives shall provide for free exercise of
  their functions.
  2. They shall allow for
  appropriate financial compensation for expenses incurred in the
  exercise of the office in question as well as, where appropriate,
  compensation for loss of earnings or remuneration for work done
  and corresponding social welfare protection.
  3. Any functions and activities
  which are deemed incompatible with the holding of local elective
  office shall be determined by statute or fundamental legal
  principles.
  Article 8
  Administrative
  supervision of local authorities" activities
  1. Any administrative supervision
  of local authorities may only be exercised according to such
  procedures and in such cases as are provided for by the
  constitution or statute.
  2. Any administrative supervision
  of the activities of the local authorities shall normally aim
  only at ensuring compliance with the law and with constitutional
  principles. Administrative supervision may however be exercised
  with regard to expediency by higher-level authorities in respect
  of tasks the execution of which is delegated to the local
  authorities.
  3. Administrative supervision of
  local authorities shall be exercised in such a way as to ensure
  that the intervention of the controlling authority is kept in
  proportion to the importance of the interests which it is
  intended to protect.
  Article 9
  Financial
  resources of local authorities
  1. Local authorities shall be
  entitled, within national economic policy, to adequate financial
  resources of their own, of which they may dispose freely within
  the framework of their powers.
  2. Local authorities" financial
  resources shall be commensurate with the responsibilities
  provided for by the constitution and the law.
  3. Part at least of the financial
  resources of local authorities shall derive from local taxes and
  charges of which, within the limits of statute, they have the
  power to determine the rate.
  4. The financial systems on which
  resources available to local authorities are based shall be of a
  sufficiently diversified and buoyant nature to enable them to
  keep pace as far as practicably possible with the real evolution
  of the cost of carrying out their tasks.
  5. The protection of financially
  weaker local authorities calls for the institution of financial
  equalization procedures or equivalent measures which are designed
  to correct the effects of the unequal distribution of potential
  sources of finance and of the financial burden they must support.
  Such procedures or measures shall not diminish the discretion
  local authorities may exercise within their own sphere of
  responsibility.
  6. Local authorities shall be
  consulted, in an appropriate manner, on the way in which
  redistributed resources are to be allocated to them.
  7. As far as possible, grants to
  local authorities shall not be earmarked for the financing of
  specific projects. The provision of grants shall not remove the
  basic freedom of local authorities to exercise policy discretion
  within their own jurisdiction.
  8. For the purpose of borrowing
  for capital investment, local authorities shall have access to
  the national capital market within the limits of the law.
  Article 10
  Local
  authorities' right to associate
  1. Local authorities shall be
  entitled, in exercising their powers, to cooperate and, within
  the framework of the law, to form consortia with other local
  authorities in order to carry out tasks of common interest.
  2. The entitlement of local
  authorities to belong to an association for the protection and
  promotion of their common interests and to belong to an
  international association of local authorities shall be
  recognized in each State.
  3. Local authorities shall be
  entitled, under such conditions as may be provided for by the
  law, to cooperate with their counterparts in other States.
  Article 11
  Legal protection
  of local self-government
  Local authorities shall have the
  right of recourse to a judicial remedy in order to secure free
  exercise of their powers and respect for such principles of local
  self-government as are enshrined in the constitution or domestic
  legislation.
  Part II
  Article 12
  Undertakings
  1. Each Party undertakes to
  consider itself bound by at least twenty paragraphs of Part I of
  the Charter, at least ten of which shall be selected from among
  the following paragraphs:
  - Article 2,
  - Article 3, paragraphs 1 and
  2,
  - Article 4, paragraphs 1,2 and
  4,
  - Article 5,
  - Article 7, paragraph 1,
  - Article 8, paragraph 2,
  - Article 9, paragraphs 1,2 and
  3,
  - Article 10, paragraph 1,
  - Article 11.
  2. Each Contracting State, when
  depositing its instrument of ratification, acceptance or
  approval, shall notify the Secretary General of the Council of
  Europe of the paragraphs selected in accordance with the
  provisions of paragraph 1 of this Article.
  3. Any Party may, at any later
  time, notify to the Secretary General that it considers itself
  bound by any paragraphs of this Charter which it has not already
  accepted under the terms of paragraph 1 of this Article. Such
  undertakings subsequently given shall be deemed to be an integral
  part of the ratification, acceptance or approval of the Party so
  notifying, and shall have the same effect as from the first day
  of the month following the expiration of a period of three months
  after the date of the receipt of the notification by the
  Secretary General.
  Article 13
  Authorities to
  which the Charter applies
  The principles of local
  self-government contained in the present Charter apply to all the
  categories of local authorities existing within the territory of
  the Party. However, each Party may, when depositing its
  instrument of ratification, acceptance or approval, specify the
  categories of local or regional authorities to which it intends
  to confine the scope of the Charter or which it intends to
  exclude from its scope. It may also include further categories of
  local or regional authorities within the scope of the Charter by
  subsequent notification to the Secretary General of the Council
  of Europe.
  Article 14
  Provision of
  information
  Each Party shall forward to the
  Secretary General of the Council of Europe all relevant
  information concerning legislative provisions and other measures
  taken by it for the purposes of complying with the terms of this
  Charter.
  Part III
  Article 15
  Signature,
  ratification and entry into force
  1. This Charter shall be open for
  signature by the member States of the Council of Europe. It is
  subject to ratification, acceptance or approval. Instruments of
  ratification, acceptance or approval shall be deposited with the
  Secretary General of the Council of Europe.
  2. This Charter shall enter into
  force on the first day of the month following the expiration of a
  period of three months after the date on which four member States
  of the Council of Europe have expressed their consent to be bound
  by the Charter in accordance with the provisions of the preceding
  paragraph.
  3. In respect of any member State
  which subsequently expresses its consent to be bound by it, the
  Charter shall enter into force on the first day of the month
  following the expiration of a period of three months after the
  date of the deposit of the instrument of ratification, acceptance
  or approval.
  Article 16
  Territorial
  clause
  1. Any State may, at the time of
  signature or when depositing its instrument of ratification,
  acceptance, approval or accession, specify the territory or
  territories to which this Charter shall apply.
  2. Any State may at any later
  date, by a declaration addressed to the Secretary General of the
  Council of Europe, extend the application of this Charter to any
  other territory specified in the declaration. In respect of such
  territory the Charter shall enter into force on the first day of
  the month following the expiration of a period of three months
  after the date of receipt of such declaration by the Secretary
  General.
  3. Any declaration made under the
  two preceding paragraphs may, in respect of any territory
  specified in such declaration, be withdrawn by a notification
  addressed to the Secretary General. The withdrawal shall become
  effective on the first day of the month following the expiration
  of a period of six months after the date of receipt of such
  notification by the Secretary General.
  Article 17
  Denunciation
  1. Any Party may denounce this
  Charter at any time after the expiration of a period of five
  years from the date on which the Charter entered into force for
  it. Six monthsķ notice shall be given to the Secretary General of
  the Council of Europe. Such denunciation shall not affect the
  validity of the Charter in respect of the other Parties provided
  that at all times there are not less than four such Parties.
  2. Any Party may, in accordance
  with the provisions set out in the preceding paragraph, denounce
  any paragraph of Part I of the Charter accepted by it provided
  that the Party remains bound by the number and type of paragraphs
  stipulated in Article 12, paragraph 1. Any Party which, upon
  denouncing a paragraph, no longer meets the requirements of
  Article 12, paragraph 1, shall be considered as also having
  denounced the Charter itself.
  Article 18
  
  Notifications
  The Secretary General of the
  Council of Europe shall notify the member States of the Council
  of Europe of:
  a) any signature;
  b) the deposit of any instrument
  of ratification, acceptance or approval;
  c) any date of entry into force of
  this Charter in accordance with Article 15;
  d) any notification received in
  application of the provisions of Article 12, paragraphs 2 and
  3;
  e) any notification received in
  application of the provisions of Article 13;
  f) any other act, notification or
  communication relating to this Charter.
  In witness whereof the
  undersigned, being duly authorized thereto, have signed this
  Charter.
  Done at Strasbourg, this 15th day
  of October, 1985 in English and French, both texts being equally
  authentic, in a single copy which shall be deposited in the
  archives of the Council of Europe. The Secretary General of the
  Council of Europe shall transmit certified copies to each member
  State of the Council of Europe.
  (The remaining paragraphs 2 and 3 and
  Articles 13 to 18 deal with procedural matters.)
  States which have
  signed the Charter
  Austria
  Belgium
  Bulgaria
  Cyprus
  Denmark
  Estonia
  Finland
  France
  Germany
  Greece
  Hungary
  Iceland
  Italy
  Liechtenstein
  Luxembourg
  Malta
  Netherlands
  Norway
  Poland
  Portugal
  Slovenia
  Spain
  Sweden
  Turkey