Local governance
Local autonomy and citizen participation in Tanzania: from a local government reform perspective
Impact of decentralisation on governance and citizen participation in Tanzania
Authors:
A. Chaligha
Publisher:
Research on Poverty Alleviation, Tanzania, 2008
This report analyses data on local autonomy and citizen participation from six case councils in Tanzania, for the period 2000-2004.The data covers citizen’s perceptions of their involvement in the planning process; the perceptions of council staff of citizens involvement in planning, as this has a bearing on the willingness of local government bureaucrats to involve their citizens in local governance; and the perceptions of elected leaders/councillors of citizen involvement in local governance. The key themes discussed include:
- good governance – the existence of democratic norms accepted and nurtured by the citizens and their governments
- accountability and transparency of local leaders to the community – particularly with regard to the collection and use of council finances
- local government autonomy and citizen participation – giving local authorities more autonomy to make decisions regarding the welfare of citizens in their localities
- bottom-up planning – citizen participation in decision-making in their respective localities
- participation in local elections
- the key objective of decentralisation - to increase citizen participation in planning and implementation of development activities at the local level - is yet to be realised
- the major governance problem in the six case councils was the lack of enough citizen involvement in formulating council plans
- current local government reform in the six case councils has not worked well enough to promote local autonomy at the grassroots level
- lack of a clear mechanism for accountability of local government bureaucrats to their councils
- reforms have so far not been able to empower local communities to respond to the cases of lack of voice and power in their respective localities



