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<title>School of Development &amp; Strategic Studies</title>
<link>https://repository.maseno.ac.ke/handle/123456789/1313</link>
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<dc:date>2026-05-15T12:08:37Z</dc:date>
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<title>Local organizations for sustainable development: The political environment of community-based organizations in western Kenya</title>
<link>https://repository.maseno.ac.ke/handle/123456789/4340</link>
<description>Local organizations for sustainable development: The political environment of community-based organizations in western Kenya
WANYAMA, Fredrick Ouma
The experience with the quest to realize sustainable development, especially at the local&#13;
level, has left a disappointing legacy for the majority of African countries. The adoption&#13;
of development from below paradigm in the 1980s, which presented the 'bottom-up'&#13;
approach to the realization of sustainable development as an alternative to the previous&#13;
'top-down' approach, has since generated a lot of interest in the role of local&#13;
organizations among development scholars and researchers. Throughout the 1990s, local&#13;
organizations were viewed as the panacea for the problem of realizing sustainable&#13;
development at the local level. Nevertheless, there is a dearth of empirical evidence on&#13;
what local organizations can actually achieve in this regard. Questions have been raised&#13;
as to what type of local organization can make a contribution to sustainable development&#13;
and in which social, economic and political contexts? This study identifies communitybased&#13;
organizations (CBOs) as one type of the local organizations and assesses their&#13;
contribution to sustainable development in the context of their political environment in&#13;
Western Kenya.&#13;
\ 'Development from below' paradigm provides the analytical framework for the&#13;
study. It posits that for sustainable development to be realized, people ought to be&#13;
enabled to take control of their lives and secure better livelihoods, with the ownership&#13;
and control of indigenous productive assets as the basic element in this regard. It is&#13;
argued that this occurs through people's participation in the activities for securing their&#13;
livelihoods; a process that enables them to build their capacity to initiate durable&#13;
development activities III response to their peculiar social, economic and political&#13;
environments. The study is, therefore, premised on the assumption that members' popular&#13;
participation in the activities of CBOs is a prerequisite for the realization of sustainable&#13;
development at the local level; and that popular participation is a function of the internal&#13;
leadership and management structures as well as the external political environment in&#13;
which CBOs operate.&#13;
Both quantitative and qualitative techniques were used to collect primary data in a&#13;
survey of these organizations in four districts of Western Kenya. A self-administered&#13;
questionnaire was used to interview 350 members of 80 CBOs. The samples of the&#13;
members and organizations were drawn using a variety of sampling techniques at various&#13;
v&#13;
stages of the survey. These included purposive sampling, stratified sampling, systematic&#13;
sampling and simple random sampling. Informal and focused group discussions were also&#13;
held with key informants, including selected members of these organizations and&#13;
government administrators to obtain qualitative data. Secondary data from published&#13;
books and articles as well as unpublished reports from government departments&#13;
supplemented these primary data.&#13;
The findings of the study show that though CBOs have been instrumental in&#13;
facilitating local people's access to resources for improving their livelihoods, they are&#13;
largely dependent on external assistance to fund their activities. This dependency has&#13;
been attributed to the politics of patronage that is prevalent in Western Kenya. In order to&#13;
align themselves to the local patrons that facilitate these organizations' access to external&#13;
sources of funds and other resources, the tendency has been for most CBOs to elect or&#13;
select persons into leadership who can forge or have working relationships with the said&#13;
patrons. By virtue of the positions that they occupy in the local patron-client networks&#13;
and the assistance that they draw for their organizations, such leaders have subsequently&#13;
dominated the leadership and management processes in most CBOs; leaving members to&#13;
play the functional roles of contributing and sharing resources and services. The resultant&#13;
functional participation has adversely affected local level capacity building for&#13;
sustainable development. Indeed, most of the projects of these organizations do not have&#13;
the capacity to replicate their activities or increase their contribution to rural livelihoods&#13;
without external assistance. The study, therefore, submits that CBOs are unlikely to make&#13;
significant contributions to sustainable development in the context of the politics of&#13;
patronage that is prevalent in Western Kenya. This implies that the neo-liberal&#13;
assumptions for realizing sustainable development may not be well founded in the&#13;
context of the political environment that obtains in the region.&#13;
Since patronage is a major contributor to the dependence of CBOs, which has&#13;
impeded these organizations from initiating self-sustaining development activities, it is&#13;
recommended that the on-going democratization process be enhanced through civic&#13;
education, especially in the rural areas. In addition, external assistance to CBOs should be&#13;
geared towards building the capacity to mobilize local resources. One way of doing this&#13;
is to give aid in the form of group guaranteed revolving credit schemes and not handouts.
</description>
<dc:date>2003-01-01T00:00:00Z</dc:date>
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