Discussion Papers 2001. 
Role of the Regions in the Enlarging European Union 25-31. p.
Role of the Regions in the Enlarging European Union 
Edited by Zoltan Gal, Pecs, Centre for Regional Studies, 2001 
REGIONAL DEVELOPMENT IN THE 
CZECH REPUBLIC: TAKING 
HISTORICAL DEVELOPMENT INTO 
CONSIDERATION 
Eugenie Triitzschler v. Falkenstein 
Introduction 
Decentralisation and regionalisation would appear to be magical words in the 
last decade of the twentieth century. We have the feeling that these structures 
did not exist before, as if they are something new and unusual. The European 
Union promotes subsidiarity, which is supposed to make the policy coming 
from Brussels clear for its citizens. People are searching for a solution to their 
problems after decades of experience with central states, in particular, in former 
socialist states, in their immediate surroundings, in their home countries, in 
their regions. The continuing globalisation of our environment certainly con-
tributes to this. Practise will show whether the new regions meet the demands 
imposed upon them. These self-governing units receive support mainly thanks 
to the Charter for Communal Self-Government and the Charter for Regional 
Self-Government, which already exists in a proposed form for formulating ju-
risdiction that they will have to adapt according to the experiences gained over 
a period of time. 
In view of the fact that national aspects play an important role in the ques-
tion of decentralisation and regionalisation we will also deal with them in this 
lecture. 
Juridical and historical development in the territory 
of the Czech Republic 
The historical Lands of the Czech Crown, Bohemia, Moravia and Silesia have a 
long tradition of decentralisation. As early as in the middle of the thirteenth 
century 12 regions were created with their own penal law, police and adminis- 

Eugenie Trützschler v. Falkenstein: Regional Development in the Czech Republic: Taking Historical 
Development Into Consideration. In: Role of the Regions in the Enlarging European Union. 
Pécs, Centre for Regional Studies, 2001. 25-31. p. Discussion Papers. Special
26 
E. Triitzschler v. Falkenstein 
trative jurisdiction. Courts consisting of the nobility and regional parliaments 
supported these. 
Under pressure from the ruling house this jurisdiction was constantly re-
stricted. For example, in 1528, it was decreed that parliaments were only al-
lowed to sit if the sovereign gave approval. Later on, also, the sheriff was ap-
pointed by the ruling house and not, as before, chosen from among the mem-
bers of the parliament. From 1750 administration in this sense was finally na-
tionalised. 
The year of revolution, 1848, was supposed to bring a change with greater 
autonomy. The Minister of Internal Affairs, Count Stadion, drew up ideas con-
cerning this. Despite the fact that on 31" July 1849 Minister Bach confirmed 
the need for greater self-governing units in the regions this idea was abandoned 
in the next decade, which became known, to history as `Bach's absolutism'. In 
its place the state's interest turned to centralism, or to put it more correctly, the 
merger of various administrative bodies. As the basis of this principle a su-
preme statute was issued on 25 th  January 1853 concerning the activities of dis-
trict, regional and governors' offices and the judiciary. In order to implement 
this statute committees made up of representatives of 'political offices' and 
judicial and financial authorities were set up. The new organisation came into 
existence on 12th  May 1855. Judiciary in the regions was integrated into the 
government through this reorganisation. Not until, a law was passed on 31' 
August 1868 was the judicature separated from administration. The jurisdiction 
of the regional authorities was further curtailed. They became the 'link' be-
tween the political authorities of the land and the political office of the first 
chamber thus increasing the power of the governor. This meant that the re-
gional authorities were seen to be redundant. In Moravia they were dissolved 
on 5 th  June 1860, in Bohemia after the February Constitution in 1861 through a 
statute passed on 5 th  June 1862. After the restoration of constitutional life in the 
monarchy the apparatus for political administration was founded on the basis of 
the December constitution by law no. 44 passed on 19 th  May 1868. This law 
existed in principal until the downfall of the monarchy. It worked so well that 
the First Republic took over its structure without practically any major changes. 
The term 'political administration' meant all the jurisdiction of the land, 
which was the responsibility of the Ministries of Internal Affairs, Culture, Edu-
cation and Defence. The jurisdiction of the governor was also redefined on 19 th 
 May 1868. In administration he became the first authority in the land. He was 
responsible for matters concerning political administration, which for this pur-
pose was divided into national, district and communal areas and it was provided 
with its own statutes for this purpose. A special law regulated the influence of 
the governor in finance and trade. Instead of the regional authorities, which 
were no longer restored during the period of the monarchy, the district execu- 

Eugenie Trützschler v. Falkenstein: Regional Development in the Czech Republic: Taking Historical 
Development Into Consideration. In: Role of the Regions in the Enlarging European Union. 
Pécs, Centre for Regional Studies, 2001. 25-31. p. Discussion Papers. Special
Regional Development in the Czech Republic: Taking Historical Development... 
27 
tive became the main power with a sheriff at its head. In 1911 a commission 
was set up to reform state administration, which was also to deal with the re-
establishment of the regional authorities. They were supposed to begin func-
tioning again on 1s1  January 1919. 
Decentralisation and regionalisation in the First Republic 
In October 1915 the 'Cleveland Agreement' was signed between Czech and 
Slovak representatives. It consisted of five points. Point no. 2 dealt with the 
federal division of the state. For Slovakia this meant that it would have its own 
parliament and its own administration. The Cleveland Agreement was annulled 
by the Pittsburgh Agreement. Here there was no mention of federalism; in its 
place was the idea of a unified Czechoslovak nation. 
The First Czechoslovak Republic took over the structure of the lower 
authority as had existed at the end of the First World War. The Ministry of 
Internal Affairs remained the higher authority as before. The jurisdiction of the 
local authorities was regulated in the First Republic in February by the acts no. 
75 and 76 Coll. Universal, secret elections were introduced for men and 
women. The term of office for an elected representative was limited to 4 years, 
in 1933 this was prolonged to 6 years. The principle that the election of a 
mayor from among the representatives had to be confirmed either by the 
Ministry of Internal Affairs or by the district authority (Act no. 122/1933 Coll.) 
has to be seen as a restriction on autonomy. The introduction of a local 
financial committee, which had the right to control all the expenses of a 
municipality, was considered in socialist literature as a 'reactionary strike' 
against the self-government of the municipalities. 
The planned establishment of 15 regions, which was intended to remove the 
duplication of administration, did not occur as a result of the so-called district 
administration act of 29 th  February 1920. From 1 5` January 1923 they only ex-
isted in Slovakia and only in a limited form. The Czechs feared that in certain 
areas the Germans would have supremacy. 
In 1927 political administration was reorganised by the act no. 125/1927 
Coll. The body of the newly set up districts was the district authority, which 
consisted, according to the number of inhabitants, of 2/3 elected representatives 
and 1/3 experts. The district authority elected from among its members a dis-
trict committee that was presided over by a district administrator. The district 
administrator was responsible to the regional president and the Ministry of In-
ternal Affairs but not to the district authority. The district authority was given 
certain jurisdiction by law principally in economy. Among the other bodies of 
the district authority it was compulsory to have a financial committee that was 

Eugenie Trützschler v. Falkenstein: Regional Development in the Czech Republic: Taking Historical 
Development Into Consideration. In: Role of the Regions in the Enlarging European Union. 
Pécs, Centre for Regional Studies, 2001. 25-31. p. Discussion Papers. Special
28 
E. Triitzsehler v. Falkenstein 
made up equally of members of the district authority and experts. The highest 
element of self-government was regional self-government. Despite the fact that 
after the founding of the First Republic all the jurisdiction of the regional par-
liaments, which had existed up until that, time was transferred to the central 
government, four regional units, Bohemia, Moravia-Silesia, Slovakia and Sub-
Carpathia, were established by a public administration law in 1927. In each unit 
bodies were set up which corresponded to those at district level. 
`The Socialist State' 
In its manifesto published on 4 th  February 1845 the Slovak National Council 
again demanded the federalisation of the state. However, during discussions 
concerning the preparation of the Kogice programme they backed down. The 
Kogice programme talks about the autonomous statute of the Slovak bodies, the 
Slovak Council was recognised as a legislative representative of the Slovak 
people which was to be responsible for national power in Slovakia. But due to 
the fact that national bodies were also supposed to be Czech bodies at the same 
time, the Czech Republic was not on an equal footing with Slovakia. The Slo-
vaks did not achieve their aim, namely the establishment of two federal states 
with equal jurisdiction. This situation acquired the name 'asymmetrical solu-
tion' in Czechoslovakia. Through this phrase the Slovaks wanted mainly to 
express their dissatisfaction with the situation that had arisen. However, in 
comparison with the idea of Czechoslovakism, which was promoted during the 
First Republic, the Kogice programme was successful. It was followed by the 
`Prague Agreements'. In the third, on 28 th  June 1946, while the existence of 
Slovak bodies was again confirmed, the government in Prague gained practical 
control over the directive activities of the Slovak National Council. 
The Constitution of 9 th  May 1948 guarantees democratic principles provided 
they serve the people. With regard to Slovakia, two basic rights (clause VIII 
and clause IX) and the whole of section of 5 in the Constitution were devoted to 
it. Outwardly the Slovak bodies were fully recognised. Their jurisdiction, how-
ever, was restricted by the jurisdiction of the ministerial chairman (§ 102 a § 
110). 
Regions with their own national committees were set up by act the no. 280 
of 21' December 1948 in the Czechoslovak Republic. By constitutional acts 
nos. 12, 13, 14 Coll. on national committees, passed on 3 rd  March 1954, their 
operation was extended to regional, district, municipal and local committees 
and their duties subsequently defined: 'National committees are local bodies of 
state power, they govern the economic and cultural structure of socialism ac-
cording to government guidelines and the laws of the republic. (§ 1 of constitu- 

Eugenie Trützschler v. Falkenstein: Regional Development in the Czech Republic: Taking Historical 
Development Into Consideration. In: Role of the Regions in the Enlarging European Union. 
Pécs, Centre for Regional Studies, 2001. 25-31. p. Discussion Papers. Special
Regional Development in the Czech Republic: Taking Historical Development... 
29 
tional the act no. 12 Coll. of 3 th  March 1954). The numbers of regions in what 
is today the Czech Republic were reduced from thirteen to eight by reform in 
1960. 
In 1956 it was found that in view of the socialist reforms, which had oc-
curred the state, had to decentralised. This finding resulted from the 20 th  Con-
gress of the Soviet Communist Party, which denounced the previous period as 
the period of 'personality worship'. Constitutional amendment no. 33 of 31 st 
 July 1956 gave the Slovak bodies the powers that they had had before the Con-
stitution of 9 th  May 1948 became valid. Paragraph 102 was amended in such a 
way that the government conceded its powers towards the Slovak National 
Council, its convocation, transferral or dissolution. But just three years later in 
1960 the new socialist constitution annulled these concessions. As justification 
for this it was said that the amendment had not been thought over or prepared 
sufficiently. Just as the Communist Party had claimed in the 1950's that Slova-
kia must be governed centrally so that it could be better helped, now it was 
declared that Slovakia had reached such a high level that it did not need its own 
governing bodies. Clause no. 41 (2) of 11 th  July 1960 entitled the National As-
sembly to revoke the laws, which the Slovak National Council had passed. Af-
ter the session of the central committee of the Slovak Communist Party on 3 rd
th 
-4
 April 1963 at which those Slovaks who during the fifties had been 
denounced as 'nationalists' were rehabilitated, there arose a new situation 
which forced the Slovak Communist Party to give Slovak bodies, specifically 
the Slovak National Council, greater powers. In a party document issued in 
May 1964 an expansion of powers was agreed upon between the central 
committees of the Czech and Slovak Communist parties. 
In the Czech Communist Party's resolution of 28 th  January 1968 a new con-
stitution was called for. It was to include a new solution to the relations be-
tween the Czechs and the Slovaks. The Slovak bodies were to be constructed 
according to the Kogice programme. The National Assembly reacted on 27 th 
 February 1968 with an amendment to constitutional clause no. 91. This made 
Bratislava the capital of Slovakia. 
On 27 th  March the central committee of the Slovak Communist Party issued 
a communiqué in which it promised its citizens greater rights and freedoms. 
The Communist Party promised the full use of the asymmetrical model and the 
separation of legislature from the executive in Slovak bodies. An action pro-
gramme of 5 th  April 1968 speaks openly about federalism and dualism. 
On the fiftieth anniversary of the founding of the Czechoslovak Republic 
constitutional act no. 143/1968 Coll. was revoked. This was maybe only to put 
off the decision concerning important matters of jurisdiction. It must be viewed 
in connection with the arrival of foreign troops. So an exact solution was not 
found, for example, for the division of powers between the federation and the 

Eugenie Trützschler v. Falkenstein: Regional Development in the Czech Republic: Taking Historical 
Development Into Consideration. In: Role of the Regions in the Enlarging European Union. 
Pécs, Centre for Regional Studies, 2001. 25-31. p. Discussion Papers. Special
30 
E. Triitzschler v. Falkenstein 
individual states. This situation — mainly the unwillingness to give up the lead-
ing role of the Communist Party and democratic centralism — did not give the 
federalisation of the republic any chance. 
Decentralisation and regionalisation after 1989 
During this period there were many controversial discussions about decentrali-
sation and regionalisation. Czechs and Slovaks could not come to an under-
standing regarding decentralisation. In 1993 the state divided in two. 
Self-government is guaranteed by clause no. 8 of the Constitution of 16 th 
 December 1992. In section VII the concept, powers and rights of self-governing 
units are defined. The Czech Republic is divided into regions, districts and 
municipalities. 
In 1990 an act was passed on municipalities in the territory of what is today 
the Czech Republic (Act no. 367/1990 Coll., 4 th  September 1990), the model 
for which was the Charter for Communal Self-Government. According to this 
act 6,590 municipalities act independently in their tasks, among which are the 
economic, social and cultural development of the municipality (clause no. 13 of 
the act). Municipalities can unite with other municipalities in a larger forma-
tion. So, for example, they can become members of cross-border communal 
working groups such as Euroregion Egrensis. It is important for municipalities 
that they can collect taxes independently, on the other hand they are supported 
by the state. 
The national committees in the regions were dissolved in 1991. Since then 
there has been a lot of discussion about the territorial and administrative divi-
sion of the republic. The government, which was elected on 27 th  June 1996, 
pointed out the need in a government declaration for the introduction of re-
gional autonomy (see part of the coalition agreement of 28 th  June 1996 S. 3. 
Part 7, State administration and self-government). For the first time a separate 
department was set up for the development of regions, towns and municipali-
ties. The Ministry for Local Development began functioning on 1S t  November 
1996. 
On  23 rd  October 1997 parliament passed a constitutional act on the creation 
of higher territorial units and an amendment to the constitutional act of the 
Czech National Council no. 1/1993 Coll., the constitution of the Czech Repub-
lic (see Constitutional Act no. 347/1997 Coll., of  3rd  December 1997). Accord-
ing to this act 14 regions should be formed with effect from 1 st  January 2000. 
Their powers should be allocated by the appropriate laws. Until that time all 
powers, which are not within the exclusive jurisdiction of, the municipalities 

Eugenie Trützschler v. Falkenstein: Regional Development in the Czech Republic: Taking Historical 
Development Into Consideration. In: Role of the Regions in the Enlarging European Union. 
Pécs, Centre for Regional Studies, 2001. 25-31. p. Discussion Papers. Special
Regional Development in the Czech Republic: Taking Historical Development... 
31 
(see the Municipalities Act) come under state administration (see Czech Na-
tional Council act no. 425 Coll., of 9th  October 1990 on district authorities). 
Powers exist which can bring communal self-government under the supervi-
sion of district authorities. In these cases the district authority takes over the 
controlling function (clause no. 5 of the District Authorities Act). District 
authorities can double-check a municipality's financial situation if a munici-
pality requests it (see the District Authorities Act, clause no. 5 and clause no. 
20 on municipal self-government). 
Amongst other things, district authorities are responsible for health, culture, 
sport, local transport, roads, education (as far as the buildings are concerned). 
The head of a district authority is appointed according to the suggestion made 
by the Minister for Internal Affairs (see clause no. 8 of the District Authorities 
Act, identical regulation also exists in Slovakia). 
A district assembly that must be convened within 60 days of local elections 
can be considered a self-governing body (see part 6 of the District Authorities 
Act). The district authority must determine the number of members within 10 
days of the elections. Members are voted for in secret elections. A district as-
sembly can approve the distribution of funds to individual municipalities, and 
approve and control the budgets of district authorities, but it does not the right 
to alter the amount of funds (§ 18b). Because an assembly has the right (§ 18c) 
to issue tasks within its authorisation to the head of the district authority, it has 
an influence, for example, on the number of personnel in a district authority and 
the amount of individual material and staffing expenditures (§ 16). In this way 
the head of the district authority is answerable to the assembly even though he 
or she is appointed by the central state. 
Understandably (according to the Charter for European regions) self-
governing powers can be held primarily by those regions, which are of a certain 
size both in terms of area and number of inhabitants. According to the EU the 
regions formed by the constitutional act of 3 rd  December 1997 are not 
particularly suitable. For this reason the European Union has asked the Czech 
Republic to form regional structures which correspond to the needs of 
recallable operational units (NUTS II) necessary for 'Regional Funds'. In the 
Czech government resolution no. 417 of 17 th  June 1998 the decision was taken 
to create a pilot project in the Ustecko and Karlovarsko regions. On this basis 
(NUTS II) the country would be divided into eight regions, not fourteen. 
Because the constitutional act of  3rd  December 1997 is still valid and the 
necessary acts for its implementation still have to be drawn up, at the moment 
there exist and should continue to exist two types of region, 'EU regions' and 
`national' regions.