Publication

Community sustainable-development indicators: a useful participatory technique or another dead end?

Terry, Alan
Citations
Altmetric:
Titre
Publication date
2008-03-01
Document type
Journal article
Pages
11
Author(s)
Advisors
Other Contributors
Affiliation
ePub Date
Submitted date
Local subject classification
MeSH
Collections
Description
This article undertakes a critical re-evaluation of a DFID-funded project in South Africa which ran between 1998 and 2001. The evaluation sought to test whether the development of community-led indicators would improve governance. Since the project ended, a series of papers have been published that are critical of such participatory methods, arguing particularly that they are apolitical and adopt a technocratic approach. In the light of these criticisms, this article re-assesses the DFID project, following on from the initial evaluation carried out by the author in 2001. Sobantu, a black township in Pietermaritzburg, was one of the original project sites. It was chosen as the subject for research because the local implementing agency was a politically astute, well-connected institution that understood the political nature of the process required to develop the indicators. Although the project achieved some positive outcomes, the long-term commitment to the indicators has since been compromised. This was in large part due to the inability of community members to engage meaningfully with key municipal service providers. However, recent changes to the South African planning regime might provide opportunities for the indicators to become more useful again.
Language
English
Other Titles
Abstract
Citation
Journal
Development in Practice
Journal Theme
Volume
18
Issue
2
Research Unit
Table of contents
Series
ISSN
0961-4524
EISSN
1364-9213
ISBN
ISMN
PubMed ID
PubMed Central ID
Gov't Doc #
Embedded videos
Test Link
Research Projects
Organizational Units
Journal Issue