Towards Participatory Local Governance: Assessing the Transformative Possibilities
Author: J Gaventa
Date: 2004
Size:
16 pages
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The concept of participation is increasingly being related to rights of citizenship and democratic governance. This is apparent in the multitude of programmes for decentralised governance in both Southern and Northern countries. Linking citizen participation to the state at the local or grassroots level raises important questions about the nature of democracy and how to achieve it. This chapter from Participation: From Tyranny to Transformation outlines the importance and potential for assessing the transformative possibilities of citizen engagement with local government.
The widespread engagement with issues of participation and local governance creates enormous opportunities for re-defining and deepening meanings of democracy, for linking civil society and government reforms in new ways and for extending the rights of inclusive citizenship. The success of new institutional arrangements for more inclusive and pro-poor participatory governance will depend largely on existing power relations. Bringing more direct and empowered forms of participation into the local sphere can lead to democracy-building and pro-poor developmental outcomes. This requires promoting pro-poor and social justice outcomes, developing new models and approaches where enabling conditions are not favourable, avoiding an overly narrow focus on the local, and guarding against co-optation of the agenda for less progressive goals.
There are critical challenges to ensure that participatory governance initiatives promote pro-poor and social justice outcomes. Priorities for policymakers and practitioners include:
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Source:
Gaventa, J., 2004, 'Towards Participatory Local Governance: Assessing the Transformative Possibilities', in Participation: From Tyranny to Transformation, eds. S Hickey and G Mohan, Zed Books, London, pp. 25-41
Author:
John Gaventa
, J.Gaventa@ids.ac.uk