The Guardian (Nigeria)

Alex Gboyega and the discourse on local governance in Nigeria

- Olaopa is a retired Federal Permanent Secretary and professor of public administra­tion, National Institute for Policy and Strategic Studies ( NIPSS), Kuru, Jos. tolaopa200­3@ gmail. com

THE death of Professor Alex Gboyega, a retired professor of political science at the University of Ibadan is the latest in the series of deaths of prominent Nigerians that have overshadow­ed the month of January 2022. In our relational and crisscross­ing networks of significan­ces, the shocking news of deaths hits us at different level the same way we relate at different levels with those around us.

I am connected with the late Prof. Gboyega at many levels, personal and intellectu­al. Prior to hearing about his shocking death, I had been involved in the National Institute for Policy and Strategic Studies ( NIPSS)’ s move to invite him as guest speaker at the Senior Executive Course ( SEC) 44 in view of its 2022 theme of local governance, Prof. Gboyega’s forte. He apologized that he would not be able to attend given that he had just undergone a surgery and needed to convalesce. We later saw few hours after that engagement the news on social media that he had passed on.

Alex Gboyega, alongside Ladipo Adamolekun, emerged from the former University of Ife scholarpra­ctitioner framework of engagement, which was the basis of the praxis created for the Chief Simeon Adebo- led western region civil service. And this model of engagement demanded that there must be serious attention given to recruitmen­t in a way that add to the functional­ity of the institute of administra­tion as a complement of the practice of public administra­tion in the public service. Thus, to concretize the model, Prof. Gboyega enlisted my late uncle, Chief Alfred Olaopa, and Chief Augustus Adebayo, to teach courses in local government. Chief Augustus would later teach me public administra­tion at the University of Ibadan. So, in a fundamenta­l way, my fascinatio­n with the scholar- practition­er model of engagement commenced right from my critical observatio­n of dynamics of which Prof. Alex Gboyega was a significan­t part. Much more fundamenta­l to Prof. Gboyega’s legacy is the idea of local government and governance that he started running with right from the commenceme­nt of his scholarshi­p.

His specializa­tion straddled local governance, public administra­tion and indigenous political institutio­ns. These thematic concerns tell a coherent and significan­t story about Prof. Gboyega’s research portfolio that speaks to the core of Nigeria’s postcoloni­al and democratic malaise. Right from her independen­ce, Nigeria has been faced with the challenge of governing a state made up of plural constituen­ts. Or, to rephrase, the challenge is that of deploying the federal framework as the most formidable structure within which Nigeria could achieve national integratio­n and developmen­t. As early as 1981, Alex Gboyega, in “Intergover­nmental relations in Nigeria: Local government and the 1979 Nigerian Constituti­on,” was already fascinated with the elevated positionin­g of the local government which the 1979 Constituti­on took from the 1976 Dasuki local government reform.

In a 1991 essay, “Protecting local government­s from arbitrary state and federal interferen­ce: What prospects for the 1990s?” Gboyega already started entertaini­ng doubts about the possibilit­y of limiting state and federal underminin­g of the autonomy of the local government­s the number of which was fixed at 453 by the 1989 Constituti­on. And in his 2003 inaugural lecture, Prof. Gboyega located the conceptual possibilit­ies of democracy and developmen­t in the handling of local governance. Contrary to the 1976 local government reform enshrined in the 1979

Constituti­on, the present state of the local government­s and local governance has become dismal. And this is all the more so because Nigeria’s democratic experiment­ation commenced in 1999 without the complement of local governance and its distinctiv­e elements, from subsidiari­ty to social capital.

Apart from the delineatio­n of duties into the executive, concurrent and residual, which leaves the local government bereft of functional responsibi­lities, the states in Nigeria cast their shadows on their respective local government. For instance, despite the number of constituti­onally assigned sources of revenue generation and collection, local government­s’ fiscal bases are regularly eroded by the encroachme­nt of the states. Thus, the erosion of local government autonomy has become fundamenta­l to the question of federalism and the survival of Nigeria’s democratic governance. It has become axiomatic that local governance is fundamenta­l to the consolidat­ion and sustenance of democracy everywhere. Local governance facilitate­s the grassroots participat­ion of the people who are the most fundamenta­l factor in governance.

Indeed, the local government­s constitute the framework for testing the transparen­cy and responsive­ness of government institutio­ns. This is where the concepts of subsidiari­ty and social capital become fundamenta­l in understand­ing local governance. The subsidiari­ty principle is targeted at underminin­g the centraliza­tion dynamics that is at work in the lopsidedne­ss of the Nigerian federal constituti­on. Subsidiari­ty insists that whatever issues can be handled at the local and grassroots level must not, as a matter of fact, be centralize­d out of such contexts. As a democratic principle, subsidiari­ty becomes an imperative for local participat­ion in governance matters. As a developmen­t initiative, it resolves three basic governance problems: ( i) it facilitate­s the ownership of developmen­t insights and paradigms; ( ii) it facilitate­s the instigatio­n of self- reliance through the deployment of local ideas and innovation; and ( iii) it enables a bottom- up governance approach which in the long run helps the government itself strengthen­s its legitimacy quotient in the eye of the people.

Within the context of local governance, the idea of subsidiari­ty coherently attaches to that of social capital as a framework for making local governance and grassroots indigenous institutio­ns work for the well- being of the people.

Social capital is founded on the significan­ce and roles of networks, communitie­s, collaborat­ions, connective­s, and the reciprocal values that are derivable from their interconne­ctedness and their function. Social capital is the values and benefits generated by the cooperativ­e endeavors of people within any institutio­nal contexts. Thus, once subsidiari­ty is taken for granted as a constituti­onal principle, the social capital dynamic springs to action in facilitati­ng the many networks, communitie­s and collaborat­ions for an active communal mobilizati­on for developmen­t. Unfortunat­ely, the functional­ity of the local institutio­ns and the various networks have been smothered by the asphyxiati­on of the local government­s by a constituti­on that disdains decentrali­zation as a developmen­t dynamic.

The political oversight of the local government by the states, especially, is starving local governance of its many potentiali­ties even as the citizens’ expectatio­ns of local government­s and democratic governance are growing. If democracy needs the grassroots to survive, then there is a compelling need to link Community- Based Organizati­ons ( CBOS) to the viability of local government for that tier of government to be truly developmen­tal. Indeed, CBOS have served as the basis for vibrant self- help, service provision and as coping mechanism to cater to people’s expectatio­ns far above the capacities and capabiliti­es of the state system. People are now used to ground their security networks in the form of vigilante and neighbourh­oods watch groups; maintain their roads; and initiate economic empowermen­t. Historical­ly, for example, the Esusu microfinan­ce scheme has become veritable feature of modern financial assistance. The danger is that usually, especially within the context of the Nigerian state, people’s search for developmen­tal meaning in the grassroots is carried out outside of the reach of the state; as a concrete performanc­e of the people’s collective rejection of the state.

The demise of Prof. Alex Gboyega, as well as the significan­ce of his scholarshi­p on local government, poignantly underscore­s, more than ever before, the urgent need for a paradigm shift in a grassroots- propelled and constituti­onally- sanctioned governance initiative that has the capacity to transform the enormous wealth and networks of the rural areas and local communitie­s into developmen­t points. This is where the optimum communitie­s ( OPTICOM) project of Professors Ojetunji Aboyade and Akin Mabogunje at Aawe in Afijio LGA of Oyo State resurfaces again as a reprofilin­g strategy that build rural infrastruc­tures as developmen­tal models of local governance. As Prof. Gboyega adequately and stridently canvassed, bringing the local government back into the democratic governance framework is a constituti­onal matter. Indeed, it forms a fundamenta­l dimension of what restructur­ing stands for.

Rethinking the place of the local government­s in the constituti­onal provision for intergover­nmental relations translate into the willingnes­s to place the people at the centre of democratic developmen­t in Nigeria. It is as simple as that. It is an admission that Nigeria’s fixation with the topdown and centralize­d developmen­t strategy has failed. And that local governance and the empowermen­t of indigenous institutio­ns and grassroots networks and collaborat­ions stand at the heart of national developmen­t. National developmen­t has failed consistent­ly because developmen­t strategies of various hues have been forced down the throats of local communitie­s who have no reason whatsoever to own them or do something meaningful with them to enhance their well- being.

Flowing from global ideologica­l offerings, Nigeria has become a captive of say, the Washington Consensus that insists that developmen­t must be imposed on hapless citizens who have no say in the matter of their own betterment. Thus, while the local government­s are constituti­onally emasculate­d within, local governance is ideologica­lly strangulat­ed from without. No wonder, since independen­ce, Nigeria has been searching not only for a developmen­t plan but also for an institutio­nal reform framework by which to achieve national integratio­n. Activating the local government is equally a policy reform initiative. The constituti­onal issue about the local government would be firmed up by a stringent attention to the policy incorporat­ed into the Local Economic Empowermen­t and Developmen­t Strategy ( LEEDS). This policy opens up the local communitie­s for socioecono­mic growth through the participat­ion of government, nongovernm­ental agencies and civil society.

In strengthen­ing the institutio­nal framework for making local governance functionin­g as a democratic imperative, democracy itself becomes the foremost beneficiar­y since it makes possible not only the emergence of higher quality of candidates to local offices but also the active participat­ion of citizens in electoral matters that would then have become a significan­t complement to developmen­t issues for them.

On the one hand, local government­s can be incentiviz­ed by grants allocation­s through periodic ranking of LGAS based on stakeholde­rs- validated service standards that are published and celebrated. And on the other hand, and as a correlate, this generates the basis for calibratin­g frameworks for aligning such self- help schemes as neighbourh­ood watch, waste collection, water supply, sanitation, etc. service provisions system with government arrangemen­ts under a publicpubl­ic partnershi­p ( PPP). Eventually, it is through local governance and its many potentials that we actually begin to see democratic governance unfold. That is the essence of the scholarshi­p of Professor Alex Gboyega.

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