- Title
- A social capital analysis of citizen participation and service delivery in metropolitan government in Zimbabwe: the case of Glenview, Harare since 2013
- Creator
- Sachikonye, Tafadzwa I
- ThesisAdvisor
- Helliker, Kirk
- ThesisAdvisor
- Thondhlana, Gladman
- Subject
- Social capital (Sociology) -- Zimbabwe -- Harare
- Subject
- Municipal services -- Zimbabwe -- Harare
- Subject
- Local government -- Zimbabwe -- Harare
- Subject
- Public administration -- Zimbabwe -- Harare
- Subject
- Citizen particpation -- Zimbabwe -- Harare
- Subject
- Local government --Citizen participation -- Zimbabwe -- Harare
- Subject
- Harare (Zimbabwe). City Council
- Date
- 2019
- Type
- text
- Type
- Thesis
- Type
- Masters
- Type
- MA
- Identifier
- http://hdl.handle.net/10962/96236
- Identifier
- vital:31253
- Description
- Significant challenges exist in contemporary Zimbabwe with regard to urban government, including with specific reference to citizenship participation and service delivery capacities. One of the crucial factors considered in the existing literature when examining urban government is the extent to which the central government intrudes in the affairs of urban government. This is particularly important given that, in recent years, many urban governments have been controlled by the main opposition party in the country. In this context, the thesis offers a critical examination of urban government in contemporary Zimbabwe by focusing on urban government in Harare (the capital) and, even more specifically, on the high-density, low-income area of Glenview. Harare is one of two metropolitan urban areas in Zimbabwe, along with Bulawayo, and is governed by the Harare City Council. While the central state’s relationship with urban governments (including Harare) in Zimbabwe is important, and is examined in this thesis, the primary concern is how this and other factors affect citizenship participation and service delivery in Harare. In pursuing this, the thesis draws upon social capital theory (including questions around trust and networks) to facilitate a critical analysis of urban government, citizenship participation and service delivery in Harare and Glenview specifically. The fieldwork for this thesis involved a qualitative research methodology, including informal interviews with relevant local stakeholders in Harare and associated documents. The thesis concludes that localised political, social and other contextual factors in Harare undercut the prospects for meaningful citizenship participation (with forms of social exclusion existing) and that this has negative implications for effective and efficient service delivery mechanisms.
- Format
- 98 pages, pdf
- Publisher
- Rhodes University, Faculty of Humanities, Sociology
- Language
- English
- Rights
- Sachikonye, Tafadzwa I
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