This research distinguishes between two distinct forms of territorial population groupings. The first category encompasses what can be termed a local community — essentially a collection of residents inhabiting a shared geographic space that lacks formal municipal designation. What characterizes such communities is their organic capacity for collective action: residents naturally coordinate around shared objectives, engage in collaborative decision-making processes, and mobilize to address matters of common concern. These groups operate through informal networks of social interaction, guided primarily by mutual values and neighborhood-level priorities rather than institutional frameworks.
The second group encompasses residents living within formally designated municipal territories. What sets this category apart is the transition from casual community connections to officially structured civic engagement focused on resolving collective issues demanding municipal coordination. Such urban communities demonstrate a range of characteristic features: their operations occur within legally defined geographic boundaries, they function through established governance frameworks, they exist amid particular economic and social conditions, and they utilize well-developed public infrastructure networks. Most importantly, these communities have access to concrete municipal property and assets that make systematic local administration possible.
Given these fundamental distinctions, the municipal community — rather than its informal counterpart — emerges as both the primary actor in and the foundational basis for establishing legitimate local self-governance systems.