Creating a virtuous cycle for increased trust in local government

After the advent of the first free and fair elections in South Africa in 1994, access to municipal services became a right for all residents. Now, more than ever, the inclusion of previously disadvantaged communities is being intensified. However, the delivery of services often remains inadequate, e...

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Main Authors: J. Derek Taylor, Enaleen Draai, Amina Jakoet-Salie
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: AOSIS 2020-08-01
Series:The Journal for Transdisciplinary Research in Southern Africa
Subjects:
Online Access:https://td-sa.net/index.php/td/article/view/731
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spelling doaj-2e4a02e07f32429abf06b5cd4b49634a2020-11-25T01:58:54ZengAOSISThe Journal for Transdisciplinary Research in Southern Africa1817-44342415-20052020-08-01161e1e810.4102/td.v16i1.731449Creating a virtuous cycle for increased trust in local governmentJ. Derek Taylor0Enaleen Draai1Amina Jakoet-Salie2Department of Public Management and Leadership, Faculty of Arts, Nelson Mandela University, Port ElizabethDepartment of Public Management and Leadership, Faculty of Arts, Nelson Mandela University, Port ElizabethDepartment of Public Management and Leadership, Faculty of Arts, Nelson Mandela University, Port ElizabethAfter the advent of the first free and fair elections in South Africa in 1994, access to municipal services became a right for all residents. Now, more than ever, the inclusion of previously disadvantaged communities is being intensified. However, the delivery of services often remains inadequate, eliciting increasing protests throughout the country. Protests, which are often the last resort by communities, are indicative of declining levels of trust in local government. It becomes problematic when trust in communication channels and public participation strategies is limited, co-production of services is impeded and the possibility of increasing such trust is, in turn, negatively affected. This study used a mixed-methods approach including both quantitative and qualitative research techniques to validate the posed research questions and authenticate the presented problem statement. The triangulation approach allowed for effectively engaging the strengths of both research methodologies. The findings of the study revealed that as a result of communities’ increasing lack of trust and confidence in local government, service delivery protests are increasing. The study further indicated that communities in the Nelson Mandela Bay Municipality (NMBM) are generally not well informed about the development plans of the municipality and do not adequately participate in local government activities. The study provides recommendations to augment trust in local government communication channels to improve public participation that could lead to the co-production of services. In this way, the study asserts that trust can be enhanced in what amounts to a virtuous cycle.https://td-sa.net/index.php/td/article/view/731trustpublic participationco-productionparticipatory democracygovernancecommunication.
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author J. Derek Taylor
Enaleen Draai
Amina Jakoet-Salie
spellingShingle J. Derek Taylor
Enaleen Draai
Amina Jakoet-Salie
Creating a virtuous cycle for increased trust in local government
The Journal for Transdisciplinary Research in Southern Africa
trust
public participation
co-production
participatory democracy
governance
communication.
author_facet J. Derek Taylor
Enaleen Draai
Amina Jakoet-Salie
author_sort J. Derek Taylor
title Creating a virtuous cycle for increased trust in local government
title_short Creating a virtuous cycle for increased trust in local government
title_full Creating a virtuous cycle for increased trust in local government
title_fullStr Creating a virtuous cycle for increased trust in local government
title_full_unstemmed Creating a virtuous cycle for increased trust in local government
title_sort creating a virtuous cycle for increased trust in local government
publisher AOSIS
series The Journal for Transdisciplinary Research in Southern Africa
issn 1817-4434
2415-2005
publishDate 2020-08-01
description After the advent of the first free and fair elections in South Africa in 1994, access to municipal services became a right for all residents. Now, more than ever, the inclusion of previously disadvantaged communities is being intensified. However, the delivery of services often remains inadequate, eliciting increasing protests throughout the country. Protests, which are often the last resort by communities, are indicative of declining levels of trust in local government. It becomes problematic when trust in communication channels and public participation strategies is limited, co-production of services is impeded and the possibility of increasing such trust is, in turn, negatively affected. This study used a mixed-methods approach including both quantitative and qualitative research techniques to validate the posed research questions and authenticate the presented problem statement. The triangulation approach allowed for effectively engaging the strengths of both research methodologies. The findings of the study revealed that as a result of communities’ increasing lack of trust and confidence in local government, service delivery protests are increasing. The study further indicated that communities in the Nelson Mandela Bay Municipality (NMBM) are generally not well informed about the development plans of the municipality and do not adequately participate in local government activities. The study provides recommendations to augment trust in local government communication channels to improve public participation that could lead to the co-production of services. In this way, the study asserts that trust can be enhanced in what amounts to a virtuous cycle.
topic trust
public participation
co-production
participatory democracy
governance
communication.
url https://td-sa.net/index.php/td/article/view/731
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