Social Capital and Good Governance in Kenyan Public Provisioning
Abstract
In the past decade and a half or so, the pace of civil service reforms in Africa has
increased with high profile donor support as well as a growing demand locally for
improved service delivery, greater accountability and more transparency. The
development partners have promoted the enhancement of an agreed set of principles
that characterizes these good governance initiatives. The thesis considers good
governance characterized by the elimination of waste, fraud and abuse as well as a
diligent regard for the rule of law. The major strategic development partners
considered here include the World Bank, the United Nations Development
Programme (UNDP), the Organization of Economic Co-operation and
Development (OECD) and the European Union (EU).
The thesis argument is that at present, the nature of social capital amongst the
various Kenyan publics is a threat to the entrenchment.i.of good governance
principles in the civil service as esp0'.l~ed_Jbymajor development partners. An attempt '-
is made to interrogate the two concepts of good governance and social capital vis-avis
the current trends of civil service reforms in Kenya. To develop the thesis, an
international survey of the literature oJ} good governance and social capital was
carried out concurrently with a situational analysis of the Kenyan public provisioning
in order to pinpoint policy implications-f for future reforms.
This was done in order to obtain a th,eoretical angle to the major concerns of good
governance that privilege participation and responsiveness in public provisioning. To
answer pertinent questions in this regard, the Kenyan health sector was chosen as a
mirror with which to analyze public provisioning in Kenya. The health sector was
chosen because of the convenience it offers in terms of access as well as due to the
fact that it makes it easy to interview and survey both the community of users as well
as the service providers in one place (the hospi..w)~ The maj?r finding was that
abundant stocks of social capital exist amongst tq.e various Kenyan publics; but it is
mainly of the bonding and blidging type. There is need for society-wide civic education
to inculcate the third element, that of linking social capital, in order to transcend the
limitations of nepotism, tribalism, cronyism and other forms of corruption in public
provlSlOtllng.
Citation
Doctor of philosophyPublisher
University of Nairobi, College of Humanities and Social Sciences