Governance Assessments for Local Stakeholders: What the World Governance Assessment Offers
Author: Goran Hyden, Kenneth Mease
Date: 2008
Size:
37 pages
(500 kB)
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How can governance assessments enhance governance as an analytical tool and a civic activation mechanism? The World Governance Assessment (WGA) is based on principles of national ownership and local consultation, and the need to strengthen monitoring institutions and diagnostic tools. This Overseas Development Institute (ODI) paper publishes findings from the WGA second round, arguing that it is uniquely placed to serve both donor and local interests. The WGA builds capacity of local researchers, provides a sense of ownership, captures local context, and allows for cross-country comparison.
Governance refers to the formation and stewardship of the formal and informal rules that regulate the public realm – the arena in which state, economic and societal actors interact to make decisions. The WGA separates the political process into six separate, yet interrelated arenas: civil society, political society, government, bureaucracy, economic society and the judiciary. The assessment relies on principles that reflect universal human values: participation, fairness, decency, accountability, transparency and efficiency.
The WGA is a dedicated, theoretically based scale that employs the same indicators and approach in each country. The second round assessments were based on 36 indicators, allowing each principle to be measured across each arena:
The WGA is the only governance assessment that tries to create an independent analysis using local country co-ordinators, and that provides a baseline for measuring performance over time. Comparative testing of reliability and validity show that the WGA is relevant for academics and policy practitioners:
Access full text: available online
Source:
Hyden, G. et al., 2008, 'Governance Assessments for Local Stakeholders: What the World Governance Assessment Offers', Overseas Development Institute, London
Author:
Goran Hyden
, ghyden@polisci.ufl.edu
Overseas Development Institute (ODI), http://www.odi.org.uk/