Measuring the goodness of governance : macro, intermediate and micro perspectives

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Authors

Van der Waldt, Gerrit

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

African Consortium of Public Administration

Abstract

Governance comprises a network of interdependent connections between various actors. The performance of governance institutions should be measured, both quantitatively (efficiency, effectiveness and economy dimensions) and qualitatively (outcomes and impact on society). Such measuring endeavours should occur against the background of globally-accepted principles of good and outcomes-based governance. It should further be facilitated by the design and establishment of comprehensive monitoring and evaluation systems. The question may be asked as to what extent the South African Government complies with international best practices to measure the goodness of its policy, strategy, programme and project interventions. The focus of this article is thus to critique the system utilised by the South African Government to measure the goodness of government (institutional perspectives) as well as the goodness of governance (network, joined-up, societal perspectives). A macro, intermediate and micro framework is utilised for this purpose.

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Keywords

Good governance

Sustainable Development Goals

Citation

Van der Waldt, G. 2012. Measuring the goodness of governance: macro, intermediate and micro perspectives