TY - JOUR AB - <p>The idea of amalgamation for the Brussels municipalities is already an old one. In addition to the numerous parliamentary attempts to return to the situation of before 1795, when eight Brussels municipalities formed an administrative unit, there were also the Holvoet Report of 1936 and the establishment of the State Commissariat for the Large Agglomerations during the Second World War. In 1942, «Gross Brüssel» was created, but it was dissolved after the liberation. Except for the proposals of the Union of Cities, things remained rather quiet until the first amalgamation operation of 1971. Brussels was not involved in these amalgamation operations primarily because of the complexity of the Brussels problem over which the Flemish and the French speaking groups could not come to an agreement. The recent proposals can be placed into three categories : a complete amalgamation of the 19 municipalities into one entity, a partial amalgamation of 3 to 10 entities, the status quo. Since the amalgamation means an increase in the municipal expenses because of equalisation of the services in the sub-municipalities at a higher level, integral amalgamation of the present 19 municipalities offers no solution for the financial difficulties besetting these municipalities. In addition,<br>this integral amalgamation solution generales negative reactions from the people of Brussel, who see in it a demand of the Flemish Movement.</p> AU - Maurice-Pierre Herremans DA - 1982/12// DO - 10.21825/rp.v24i3-4.19330 IS - 3-4 VL - 24 PB - PY - 1982 TI - La fusion des communes bruxelloises T2 - Res Publica UR - https://openjournals.ugent.be/rp/article/id/73781/ ER -