Opportunities and Threats of Digitalization in the Governance of
Agglomerations
Revekka Vulfovich
a
Department of Public Administration, North-West Institute of RANEPA,
Srednij pr. of Vassil’ev Island 57, Saint Petersburg, Russian Federation
Keywords: The Agglomeration, Governance System, Digitalization, Integration, Authorities’ Instrument, Political Deci-
sions, Quality of Life Dependence, IKT Development.
Abstract: The article connects two complicated problems of the 21st century. The agglomeration governance systems
organization and their efficient functioning in large urban regions called often also metropolitan regions and
the digitalization in these areas implemented for integration of territories including multiple entities with state
and municipal governance powers. The analysis of 7 agglomerations from different countries allows the au-
thor to make a far-reaching conclusion that digitalization is only the instrument which the authorities can use
for solving the most important matters of city-life. But the implication of this tool depends on the state and
municipal political decisions, the resources volume in the region, and its influence on the quality-of-life pa-
rameters and their uniformity throughout the territory is not so strong as it is sometimes evaluated. In central-
ized authoritarian systems (e. g. China and Russia) the IKT technologies develop and are used more effective
and spread more rapidly.
1 INTRODUCTION
Agglomerations are at the time the largest urbanized
areas in the world. We find such areas with millions
of people living in a very densely populated areas all
over the worl (Loibl et al., 2018). The structure of the
settlement system in such areas is very complicated,
the quality of life and the population density uneven.
The main research question is if the digital technol-
ogy creates more possibilities for agglomerations’
governance or it is a new threat for stability and effi-
cient governance on the territories. The problem is
more complicated because of the absence of a formal
political and legal status for a whole territory of an
agglomeration as a unit. It is also the hurdle in digi-
talization process: many jurisdictions exist nearby but
function separate from others. Through the enlarging
of the area, it is crossing administrative and political
borders. modified.
.
a
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-1303-9057
2 METHODS AND MATERIALS
Optimal trustworthy results of the research can be
gotten based on collaboration of geography, history,
sociology, political science, urban studies, economy,
and computer science. The geography of urban re-
gions is one of the most crucial frame conditions of
the settlement system structure, economic develop-
ment level and many others. Large territory and une-
ven parameters of quality-of-life require new integra-
tion mechanisms and better communication between
economic subjects, political actors, administrative au-
thorities, and the people (Bolter and Robey, 2020).
The representatives of computer science and of
the new digital technologies are convinced that digi-
talization is a straight way to more effective govern-
ance in large urban areas. But the results of empirical
research do not always confirm the conclusions. Ag-
glomerations try to find out the opportunities of
“smart cities” in their areas to create better quality-of-
life parameters in all parts of the agglomeration. In
this context we think the subjective quality-of-life
(the opinion of population) and the views of munici-
pal servants in the area are more important than the
730
Vulfovich, R.
Opportunities and Threats of Digitalization in the Governance of Agglomerations.
DOI: 10.5220/0012044300003612
In Proceedings of the 3rd International Symposium on Automation, Information and Computing (ISAIC 2022), pages 730-738
ISBN: 978-989-758-622-4; ISSN: 2975-9463
Copyright
c
2023 by SCITEPRESS Science and Technology Publications, Lda. Under CC license (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0)
objective quality-of-life data. (Kuhlmann and Heu-
berger, 2021).
The research objects are two largest agglomera-
tions of Russia (Moscow and Saint Petersburg) and
comparable areas: the agglomeration around Beijing
(China), three European agglomerations – London
(Great Britain), Métropole du Grand Paris (France),
the Capital Region Berlin – Brandenburg (Germany),
and the so called Tri-State-New York (United States).
The methodological basis is the comparative struc-
tural and functional analyses of seven complex ag-
glomeration systems from the point of view of the ef-
fectiveness of their governance systems in connection
with the main parameters influencing the quality-of-
life. It is made with qualitative and quantitative meth-
ods. The structural complexity and the unevenness of
the development and of quality-of-life level, the role
of the central state government in political and admin-
istrative decisions, the problem solution in the more
decentralized systems, the rate of municipal auton-
omy under conditions of democracy and federalism
are the research questions as well as the possibilities
to level out the common problems of integrating the
region into social and economic unit with the intro-
duction of IKT-technologies as an instrument of ag-
glomerations’ governance.
Table 1.
N
N
ame of the ag-
glomeration
Territory Population /
density
Population
change
p
atterns
1. Beijing-Tianjin-He-
bei Metropolitan Area,
China (Jing-Jin-Ji,
‘Jing’ for Beijing,
‘Jin’ for Tianjin and
‘Ji’ for the Hebei
Province)
217,156 km
2
(about 2.2% of the
total land area in
China)
112mln /
515760/ km
2
Unbalanced
growth
2. Berlin -Brandenburg
Metropolregion,
Germany
Agglomeration
Berlin (radius 60 km)
Core capital area
(Kernraum)
30.546 km²
3.743,21 km²
6mln / 200/
km²
4.469mln
Redistribution
1.194/km²
3. Métropole du Grand
Paris, France
814 km
2
7,2mln /
8598/km²
Slight growth
4. London
Metropolitan Area, UK
8,382 km
2
12,653mln /
1510/ km²
Slight growth,
more rapid behind
the Green Bel
t
5.
N
ew York, NY-
NJ
-
PA Metropolitan Area,
USA
11,880 km
2
21,045mln /
1,711/km
2
Unbalanced
Growth
5. Moscow
Agglomeration, RF
26,000 km
2
20,0mln /3100
/ km²
Rapid Growth,
more rapid in the
“New Moscow”
7. Saint Petersburg
Agglomeration, RF
SPb 1439 km²
(city) + Leningrad
Oblast
84,500 km
2
5, 427mln /
3,708 /km² +
1,847mln / 20
km
2
Very slight
growth
Opportunities and Threats of Digitalization in the Governance of Agglomerations
731
3 RESULTS
First, we analyse the basic parameters of the physical
and social space of agglomerations to find out some
general and special features important for integration
and usage of digital instruments for it. The general
information is shown in table 1 and characterizes the
extreme diversity in numbers.
It seems that numbers are not so important, but
they explain many of constraints on the way of
digitalization and the factors which will level out the
positive digitalization effects in the case the
integration does not happen, and the fragmentation of
the agglomeration space stay on the high level. The
administrative fragmentation level we can evaluate
with the data in table 2. In all systems national
governments play an important role not only in policy
area but also developing programmes for quality-of-
life parameters improvement and the introduction of
IKT into the structure and process. The subnational
entities have more powers in federal states and in
France (autonomous regions). Municipal autonomy
exists in all systems but differs according to the
former historical development and national law.
In the 21st century agglomerations must learn to
use digitalisation for creating new socio-economic
spaces to use the cooperation, coordination, and
collaboration instruments for quality-of-life
parameters improvement. “Learning regions” is a
concept developed in last decades. In all chosen
agglomerations many digitalisation projects are
developed and implemented, but most of them are
initiatives of municipalities (cities, districts). Rare
examples we find in city-states (table 3) (Glaeser et
al., 2021).
Table 2: Structure of agglomerations, governance instruments General information (created by the author).
N
ame of the
a
lomeration
Types of territorial
entities
N
umber of
g
overnance levels
Instruments
1. Beijing-Tianjin-
Hebei
Metropolitan Area,
China (Jing-Jin-Ji,
‘Jing’ for
Beijing, ‘Jin’
for Tianjin and ‘Ji’
for the Hebei
Province)
Province Hebei, Beijing,
Tianjin province-level shi
(municipality), central
cities.
8 Major Prefectural Cities
(municipalities) of the
Hebei Province, rural
localities
3: Central (People's
Republic of China’
authorities) regional
(province, central city
– province +
municipality),
municipality
Regional cooperation
and administrative
decentralisation.
Relocation of the
Beijing’s municipal
governance functions
to other entities
2. Berlin -
Brandenburg
Metropolregion,
Germany
Berlin - city-state,
(Stadtstaat), Brandenburg
– state (Land). 5 cities,
109 towns, 314 rural
settlements. 3 structural
spaces: Berlin,
surrounding area of
Berlin, further
Metropolitan area.
2 urban districts, 49 cities
and rural settlements.
4 levels: national
(federal), subnational
(federal states),
intermediate municipal
(urban districts,
districts), municipal
(towns and rural
settlements)
Economic
collaboration,
intensive commuting.
The division of
functions and
collaboration in the
most important fields.
Unification of the
public transport
system.
3. Métropole du
Grand Paris,
France
Métropole du Grand Paris
– the intermunicipal
entity. The City of Paris,
123 settlements of the des
Hauts-de-Seine, de la
Seine-Saint-Denis and du
Val-de-Marne districts
(départements) and 7
settlements de l'Essonne
et du Val d'Oise districts.
5: 4 levels: national,
subnational
(Metropolitan region),
intermediate municipal
(départements),
municipal (communes)
Intermunicipal
cooperation and
coordination in many
function fields. The
eleven territorial
public institutions
defined by decrees.
4. London
Metropolitan Area,
UK
The London Metropolitan
Region / London
Commuter Belt. Greater
3: National,
subnational,
M
arket forces,
political
ramifications: more
ISAIC 2022 - International Symposium on Automation, Information and Computing
732
London, Southeast
region, part of the East of
England region: 6 coun-
ties 168 towns.
intermediate municipal,
municipal
social and affordable
housing in new
towns. Collaboration
of the Greater London
Authority and author-
ities in outer parts.
5.
N
ew York, NY-
NJ-PA Metropoli-
tan Area, USA
N
ew York, NY-
NJ
-PA
Metropolitan Area – New
York City, 3 counties in
the state of New York;
the five largest cities in
New Jersey, and their vi-
cinities; and six of the
seven largest cities in
Connecticut and their vi-
cinities
4 levels: national (fed-
eral), subnational (fed-
eral subjects - states),
intermediate municipal
(subregions with coun-
ties), municipal (mu-
nicipalities, special dis-
tricts).
Reform of the Re-
gional Transport Au-
thority and reducing
of the transport pro-
jects costs.
Using of the efficient
approaches of other
regions.
6. Moscow Agglom-
eration, RF
Moscow Metropolitan
Area (agglomeration).
Moscow Federal city
(since the 1
st
of July 2012
including the so-called
New Moscow - with 3
cities and 334 rural settle-
ments), parts of Moscow
oblast 5 cities annexed to
it and administered
within), 4 large nearby
towns with population of
over 100,000 citizens
(Reutov,
Zheleznodorozhny, Po-
dolsk and Lubertsy). By
several definitions – the
whole Moscow oblast:
5990 urban and rural set-
tlements
4 levels: national (fed-
eral), subnational (fed-
eral subjects), interme-
diate (districts + inter-
city administrative ar-
eas and settlements),
municipal (municipal
districts + municipali-
ties of intercity settle-
ments and urban dis-
tricts).
N
ot enough efficient
planning for inte-
grated development
of the whole agglom-
eration.
7. Saint Petersburg
Agglomeration,
RF
Saint Petersburg Federal
City: 18 administrative
districts and 101 munici-
palities inside the dis-
tricts, parts of the Lenin-
grad Oblast with Gatch-
ina, Vsevoloshsk, Ki-
rovsk, Tosno, Vyborg and
Lomonosov municipal
districts. Inclusion of
other municipal districts
of the Oblast is possible.
The radius of the agglom-
eration at the time ~ 60
km. Maximal in future –
120 km. But also, in this
case, not the whole terri-
tory of the Oblast is in-
cluded.
4 levels in the city of
Saint Petersburg: na-
tional (federal), subna-
tional (federal subject),
intermediate (district),
municipal.
4 levels in the Lenin-
grad Oblast (Region):
national (federal), sub-
national (federal sub-
jects), intermediate
(municipal district),
municipalities.
The strategy 2030 in-
cluded the paragraph
6.2.3.6 “Development
of interaction between
Saint Petersburg and
the Leningrad Oblast”
But it is not there in
the later variant up to
2035.
Opportunities and Threats of Digitalization in the Governance of Agglomerations
733
Table 3: Digitalisation projects (created by the author).
N
N
ame of the agglomer-
ation
Digitalisation pro-
jects (PRC -cen-
tral level)
Regional level (subject of
federation, autonomous re-
g
ion)
Municipal level
“Smart cities”, ru-
ral municipalities
1. Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei
Metropolitan Area,
China
Xiong'an
N
ew
Area (initiated by
the head of the
state Xi Jinping)
Implemented by the Met-
ropolitan Region, financed
by the National Govern-
ment
Xiong'an New
Area – the “the
smart city” pro-
ject, the core of
the regional de-
velopmen
t
2. Berlin -Brandenburg
Metropolregion,
Germany
__________
Senate Department fo
r
Ur-
ban Development and the
Environment “Smart Ber-
lin”
Potsdam “Smart
City Modellkom-
mune”
3. Métropole du Grand
Paris, France Mét-
ropole du Grand Paris
LOI n° 2016-
1321 du 7 octobre
2016 pour une
République numé-
rique.
«
Métropole d’Intelli-
gences »
“Smart and Sus-
tainable City”
4. London Metropolitan
Area, UK
Digitalisation in
the UK. The case
for a UK frame-
work (blueprint)
Smarter London Togethe
r
(Strategy for Greater Lon-
don)
Smart Kingston
(the city inside the
Commuter Belt)
5.
N
ew York, NY-
NJ
-PA
Metropolitan Area,
USA
State of Digital
Transformation.
Building a Frame-
work for Digital
Success
_________
Smart New York
City
5. Moscow Agglomera-
tion, RF
“Electronic Rus-
sia”
Smart City Moscow The sites of the
municipalities
7. Saint Petersburg Ag-
g
lomeration, RF
“Electronic Rus-
sia”
Smart Saint Petersburg The sites of the
municipalities
The only agglomeration with the integrated digital
strategy is the Métropole du Grand Paris which has
administrative borders, authorities with political and
administrative powers for the whole territory. But we
must not forget that this territory is only a part of the
much larger Capital Region of France and inside the
Métropole many communities of different levels do
exist including the City of Paris with more than 2mln
citizens which has its own Smart City project. The
territory of London Commuter Belt is even more dis-
integrated because of the influence of market forces
playing a very important role also in the process of
digitalisation. Among territorial entities of the Region
the largest is Greater London which has more powers
since the devolution process. Different digitalisation
strategies are developed in Greater London the last
one initiated by the mayor, but Smart city concepts
have also smaller cities in the surrounding region. In
the Tri-State-New York Metropolitan Region the Re-
gional planning association was established already
in the first decades of the 20
th
century on the initiative
of the business organisations, the municipalities were
also intensive involved. 4 Regional Plans created the
integrated structure, but the states, counties, and mu-
nicipalities stay the main political actors and have the
right to develop and to implement their own policy. It
is important for the Region development in all
spheres including digitalisation. The main motor of
this process is of course the New York City. Germany
lags other countries in the development of new IKT
first because of its very complicated and detailed le-
gal system. Every innovation needs a new law. The
federal structure transfers authority for policy imple-
mentation to the subjects of federation (Länder). In
the digitalisation process this means more obstacles.
There is no federal legal basis for development of dig-
ital technologies in the public management and sepa-
rate projects are developed on the regional (only for
Berlin) and municipal level (cities in the Brandenburg
Region).
In China (Fang and Yu, 2020) and Russia, the cen-
tralisation of power is very high although Russia is a
ISAIC 2022 - International Symposium on Automation, Information and Computing
734
federal state. The “Electronic Russia” project is a
frame for a development in the whole country but
Moscow and Saint Petersburg two largest Russian
agglomerations – have their own Smart City projects
but only for the federal cities. The cities of the sur-
rounding areas have municipal powers, and their sites
include information about the main problems of the
local communities. The same digital instruments use
the smaller municipalities in the borders of federal
cities. The huge Capital Area of China with 100mln
citizens develops the “City of the Future Projects” in-
itiated by the head of the state to intensify the devel-
opment of the whole area and creating a more even
quality of life parameters for all people living here.
4 DISCUSSION
Agglomerations as territorial entities are also charac-
terized as metropolitan regions with core-cities of dif-
ferent size. As we have already shown the digitalisa-
tion progress depends strong on the type of the gov-
ernance structure, separation of powers, and decen-
tralisation degree. The summarizing of theoretical
concepts we base on the book of the German author
Stefan Bege “The Concept of the Metropolitan Re-
gion in a Theory and Praxis. Goals, Implementation
and Criticism” (Bege, 2010) and on the articles of the
European, American and Russian researchers:
Lackowska and Norris (Lackowska and Norris,
2017); Pavlov (Pavlov et al., 2019) and others.
In course of case-study analyses are used the “Ter-
ritorial Agenda of the European Union 2020”, the
“Overview of Metropolitan Governance” (Demo-
cratic Institutions and Governance Department of Di-
rectorate General II - Democracy, in co-operation
with Council of Europe), the “Governance of Metro-
politan Regions: European and Global Experience”,
(Workshop on the "Governance of Metropolitan Re-
gions in Federal Systems), the research results of the
“Steering the Metropolis” project that commenced in
2015 (Pavlov et al., 2019); planning documents and
governmental acts influencing the metro model de-
velopment; statistical data.
The development and implementation of metro-
politan governance model often fail because of a very
narrow ideas or misconceptions about the goals of the
governance level functions, the rationality of its struc-
ture and mechanisms needed for the efficient results.
The way to think about the metropolitan governance
object (metropolitan region) as a social space and its
straight connection with a physical space parameter
but having also independent characteristics allows to
break mentally the political and administrative board-
ers and to create the new multidimensional space
where the interconnection of a space of flows and a
space of places (Castells., 2020) construct a myriad
of parallel existing universes. Each of them has its
special juristic and functional laws but there are pos-
sibilities if you do not merge all parts into a single
system, then can try and unify they through the com-
mon goal: a high quality of life in an ever-growing
metropolitan region.
Most agglomerations have no fixed borders. But
if the border exist it is artificially defined and does not
match the actual conditions. To try and establish a
formal metropolitan governance system under such
circumstances has really no sense. There are no such
systems in the metropolises analysed in our research.
Only in the Métropole du Grand Paris since 2016 the
metropolitan governance system develops according
to the new law regulation (Legifrance, 2014). But the
results and effects of this are too early to evaluate and
are often an open question.
The complex social space of the agglomeration
and the wholistic approach to the governance systems
issue allow to form the multidimensional socio-polit-
ical space with parallel “universes” of municipalities,
communal, intercommunal functions interconnected
through communication channels. Perhaps, exactly
the functions placed on the agglomeration govern-
ance level play the most important role in the integra-
tion and collaboration process. The analyses demon-
strate the opportunities of integrated functions fulfil-
ment and the threats during the process for 7 chosen
metropolitan regions.
The reasons of failures are multiple. The detailed
analyses can be found in the article of Lackowska, M.
and Norris, D. F. As the most important are identified
the lack of citizens support for agglomeration govern-
ance system and the municipalities’ resistance against
the functions’ transfer to the agglomeration level be-
cause this means the power loss for them (Lackowska
and Norris, 2017).
These reasons make the voluntary collaboration
of municipalities the most effective and efficient
mechanism building agglomerations for creating a
better and more unified quality of life on their terri-
tory.
Both reasons must be considered by modelling
Russian metropolitan governance.
Researchers, politicians, and administrators try to
describe, to analyse and to construct the future reality
of governance for these huge super complex systems
for decades. The common goal of the research and
discussion is the need for new and more effective
models.
Opportunities and Threats of Digitalization in the Governance of Agglomerations
735
About 20 years ago in the book “The Metropolitan
Governance in the 21st century: political aspect”
(Vulfovich, 2001) we introduced the notion of “polit-
ical hyperspace” based on the 10-demensional space
concept of the Japanese physicist Michio Kaku. This
multidimensional construct allows to describe a pol-
icy and politics in large agglomerations as an interac-
tion between the space of places and the space of
flows of Manuel Castells. Linked through the ideas of
Pierre Bourdieu about the complicated interaction of
social and physical space all these theoretical ap-
proaches give us the opportunity to build up an ag-
glomeration governance structed model and to define
the role and place of each level and entity governing
body in the whole process.
To the political role of modern agglomerations
was devoted our article “Agglomerations as a Strate-
gic Actors in a Globalizing World” with the analyses
of modern urban development in the mirror of urban
and political research (Vulfovich, 2016). Multilevel
governance systems are the issue of the article “Co-
operation and coordination models in multilevel gov-
ernance systems through digitalization” (Vulfovich,
2020). The main discussion topic of the material is
digitalization as the important mechanism during co-
operation and coordination development for agglom-
erations.
In the article “Metropolitan governance (or not!)
in Poland and the United States” Marta Lackowska
and Donald F. Norris (Lackowska and Norris, 2017)
write about the evolution of “metropolitan thinking”
and reform efforts since the 30-s and during the whole
20th century in large metropolitan areas with the goal
to overcome the political-administrative fragmenta-
tion and its negative externalities. They stress the ab-
sence of positive results in European city-regions and
in American metropolitan areas as well. But their po-
sition and evaluation have as a source the idea about
the creation of the institutionalized one-, two- or mul-
tilevel system for an entire metropolis. Really ag-
glomerations and the metropolitan regions can be
identified as the same areas.
The development of interconnections between
governance levels and separate entities in all sectors
and across they are a great possibility for “closing the
wormholes (in the terminology of M. Kaku) in the
social and physical multidimensional space of the me-
tropolis.
New tendencies in the social development show a
great citizens interest in participation in local policy
and politics and their demand for independent local
problem solving. Boundaries of the agglomerations
are steadily moving and with every step outside the
boundaries more municipalities come into the deci-
sion-making system of the metropolis. Only flexible
and evolution able administration systems can match
the development. The new IKT can be used as the
most important instrument for creating connection
different parts of an agglomeration into the unity. The
same idea is a core of the Big-Data technology in
many sectors of the urban systems as an example we
can see the possibility of better analysis and compar-
ison of services quality based on the International
standard ISO 37120.
5 CONCLUSIONS
1). The agglomeration governance system can de-
velop according to the centralized algorithm (Capital
Region of China). Deep cleavages in the economy de-
velopment level, and quality-of- life parameters,
problems in the mobility field, and of accessibility of
medical and educational institutions problems cannot
be eliminated only through digitalization. To answer
the challenges the Central Committee of the Com-
munist Party of Chine created the Plan for Develop-
ment of China’s Economic Development Zones. In
this case a high level of political and administrative
centralisation, and intensive financial support from
the central level allows the rapid and efficient devel-
opment and implementation of ambitious projects.
2). If the attempts of merging of the core-city and
the surrounding area fail (die Metropolregion Berlin -
Brandenburg) strong cooperation efforts of both re-
gions in such sectors as territorial planning, land use
with the goal of preserving green spaces around the
core-city and economic development, can lead to in-
tensive integration of the agglomeration and support
the digitalization process. The further introduction of
IKT-technologies into the cooperative relations of all
political and administrative actors can change the sit-
uation with the digitalization but the German system
is not ready for it and the Länder need integrating ef-
forts and financial help from the federal level.
3). The integration of the territory according to the
new law (the Métropole du Grand Paris) and the cre-
ation of the new political-administrative level of gov-
ernance can intensify the economic development but
does not solve all the problems. Such agglomeration
has a complicated territorial structure with many en-
tities. New authorities have their own competences
connected mostly with coordination of functions and
cooperation in the compliance. But the created system
does not match with the broader territorial entity ex-
isting for a long time (Île-de-France Region). The
multilevel governance system with the national level
ISAIC 2022 - International Symposium on Automation, Information and Computing
736
at the top is perhaps too complicated to be effective
for problem solving of the quality-of-life issues. The
decentralization is combined with the centralization
in the implementation of large infrastructure and
housing projects. But the rights of the municipalities
stay intact. The agglomeration has also the integrated
digitalization strategy.
4). When market forces are leading in the agglom-
eration (London Metropolitan Area, “Commuter
belt”) the interaction between them and the strong
municipalities in the area is a complicated and con-
troversial process. It is doubtful that such construc-
tion can be seen as an ideal one and is a good basis
for total digitalization.
5). Intensive cooperation and functional coordina-
tion of the businesses, municipalities, states (federal
subjects) and the federal authorities in the agglomer-
ation (New York, NY-NJ-PA Metropolitan Area) in
course of development for decades give good results.
The governance system is highly decentralized and
has different number of levels in separate parts of the
territory, and various structures and regulations. At
the time it needs modernization, and the digitalization
happens in different parts separately (RPA, n.d.).
6). For a long time, cities were seen in Russia
(Moscow and Saint Petersburg) as an appendage to an
industrial enterprise. The image was formed in the
public consciousness in the centralized Communist
Party lead system. It was typical that the cities had
neither their own voice nor the right to influence their
faith. The notion “agglomeration” officially exists in
the Russian system officially only since 2018. At the
time both agglomerations have similar governance
systems with low level of cooperation and coordina-
tion between core cities and their surrounding re-
gions. But there are some important differences be-
tween both largest agglomerations of the country first
in financial resources they have for development. The
digitalization level is higher in Moscow.
Both regions (federal subjects Moscow and
Saint Petersburg) have complicated territorial struc-
ture, their own state governments, law systems and
budgets. In 2012 territory of the Russia’s capital was
enlarged at the cost of the part of the Moscow oblast.
The city of Saint Petersburg was an agglomeration
from the first days of its history. Till now the coordi-
nation and cooperation efforts between both federal
subjects in the area is limited. The cooperation agree-
ment is in the preparation process. Only in the mobil-
ity dimension can be seen some results. The autono-
mous non-profit organization “Directorate for the de-
velopment of the transport system of Saint Petersburg
and the Leningrad Oblast” was created 2013 by the
Federal Authorities, Government of Saint Petersburg
and Government of Leningrad Oblast for coordina-
tion and cooperation in the transport system and
transport infrastructure development of the integrated
region including the projects implemented through
public-private partnerships (SPBTRD, n.d.).
All samples in the article show common tenden-
cies and special features in the development of the ag-
glomeration’ governance model under different con-
ditions. The first and most important issue is the fail-
ure of the metro governance model with definite and
rigid structure. Hierarchical levels with the compe-
tences divided from the top level are not efficient and
have to be changed often according to the changes in
national, regional, and global surroundings. But such
changes lead to the destruction of the existing system
and can lead to the strong negative synergy. Digitali-
zation can play a positive role in the integration pro-
cess (opportunities) but at the same time it can create
conditions for fragmentation and increasing aliena-
tion between people (threats).
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