The Constitutionalization of Local Government in Developing Countries—Analysis of African Experiences in Global Perspective
Dele Olowu
Africa-Europe Foundation, The Hague, Netherlands..
DOI: 10.4236/blr.2012.32006   PDF    HTML     5,739 Downloads   12,213 Views   Citations

Abstract

The constitutionalization of local government is a distinctive contribution of developing countries to governance reform and the policy and practice of modern public administration. Local governments in most western and industrialized societies are creatures of the national government and are essentially statutory bodies-created, modified and suspended or eliminated at will by the state statutes. In fact, in the Anglo Saxon tradition, these institutions are referred to as local authorities and never local government. In seeking to enhance the capacity of sub-national entities against overbearing central authorities countries as disparate as Brazil, India, Philippines, Bolivia, Colombia, South Korea to mention only a few constitutionalized their local governments. This boosted the status and role of these entities in terms of the policy processes for local level development, services delivery and citizen participation. There have also been a number of challenges—local elite capture or corruption, capacity, coordination, equity and stability issues. However, a consistent overall consequence when properly implemented has been a positive impact on service delivery and the enhancement of the interface between local government and local governance as well as the strengthening of intergovernmental relations. A number of African countries have followed this global good governance practice but the results have been mixed. This paper reviews the experiences of Nigeria, South Africa, Uganda and Ghana that have all constitutionalized local governments and seek to explain the differential outcomes in each country context. This is an important issue as a number of other countries that have recently initiated fundamental governance changes have incorporated local government reform as a part of the constitutional reform process. These countries include Kenya while a number of other countries in eastern, southern and especially northern parts of the continent are likely to follow this example as they engage the constitutional reform process.

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D. Olowu, "The Constitutionalization of Local Government in Developing Countries—Analysis of African Experiences in Global Perspective," Beijing Law Review, Vol. 3 No. 2, 2012, pp. 42-50. doi: 10.4236/blr.2012.32006.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflicts of interest.

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