Citizen participation in local government and the process of rural development : the rhetoric and reality in Uganda

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Authors

Kakumba, Umar
Nsingo, S.A.M. (Sipho Arote Mandaba)

Journal Title

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Volume Title

Publisher

South African Association for Public Administration and Management

Abstract

Citizen participation is acknowledged in the governance and development discourse, as a mechanism for building capacity in the rural poor in the quest for poverty reduction and good governance. This article synthesizes recent studies on Uganda’s decentralised system of local governance and examines the extent to which participation in local programmes has enhanced the process of rural development. It is argued that, while some participatory framework exists as a result of devolving some powers and functions to local government units, the structures and processes remain feeble and do not support a genuinely participatory system. This is mainly due to the excessive central government whims and the local elite capture. While the central and donor-conceived plans may still be necessary for the rural poor, such strategies should be integrated into the rural schemes to enable freedom of choice, action and decision in order to attain strong local ownership and empowerment. This calls for political will from the central government leaders and the need to strengthen capacity for the local forces and social groups to infiltrate the hierarchies of officialdom associated with the local bureaucracies.

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Keywords

Citizen participation, Local government, Rural development, Legislative framework, Uganda, Community mobilisation and decision-making, Election of local leaders, Citizen awareness and capacity building, Poverty reduction, Political patronage, Inadequate financial capacity, Accountability, Local conflicts, Socio-economics

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Citation

Kakumba, U & Nsingo, S 2008, 'Citizen participation in local government and the process of rural development: the rhetoric and reality in Uganda', Journal of Public Administration, vol. 43, no. 2, pp. 107-123. [http://www.saapam.co.za/]