CAPACITY OF LOCAL GOVERNMENT AUTHORITIES IN GOVERNING INNER-CITY PETTY TRADING. A CASE OF DODOMA CITY COUNCIL IN TANZANIA.

Context and background Presently, in developing countries, growth of major cities is characterized by pressure on livelihood activities especially on potential inner-streets which attract variety of users including petty traders to interact on prime spaces hence leading to increased pressure on g...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: David Mwipopo
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: EL-AYACHI 2022-05-01
Series:African Journal on Land Policy and Geospatial Sciences
Subjects:
_version_ 1797985834441375744
author David Mwipopo
author_facet David Mwipopo
author_sort David Mwipopo
collection DOAJ
description Context and background Presently, in developing countries, growth of major cities is characterized by pressure on livelihood activities especially on potential inner-streets which attract variety of users including petty traders to interact on prime spaces hence leading to increased pressure on governing informal activities. Legally, in a conventional point of view, local government authorities are considered as key actors for successful petty trading governance capacity. Despite current development agendas and policies on informal economy and space governance, still there is an observed practical and theoretical gap thus making knowledge on the capacity of local government authorities’ governance in petty trading being limited. Goal and Objectives: The present paper explores capacity of local government authorities in governing inner-city petty trading. Particularly, it focuses on examining local government authorities’ petty trading governance objectives, actors, coordination and rationality with regard to their contribution towards effective local government authorities petty trading governance capacity. Methodology: This paper uncovered empirical evidences from Dodoma city council actors and selected commercial, institutional, pedestrian, recreational inner streets accommodating petty trading activities in Dodoma National capital city. Mixed research strategy was adopted and qualitative and quantitative data were collected using official interviews to the city council officials, interviews to the petty traders, focus group discussion with city council officials and street observations. Results: The findings uncovered that, local government authority petty trading governance is complex structured with involvement of more than one actor within and yet, its capacity is being restrained by disjointed execution of their functions and limited potential permanent spaces with the continuum demand on timely decisions to make rational space governance. Land officials and Trade and finance officials hold more powers over other actors within local government authorities thus, limiting the effective governance power capacity to be more replicable. The study suggests on the need to balance power and mandates of each actor to avoid conflicting interests and maximize execution commitment through timely and well-constructed cross-sectorial institutional framework which sensitize representatives from ground beneficiaries.
first_indexed 2024-04-11T07:23:18Z
format Article
id doaj.art-7bc9e6eabe384717911c1f934632c939
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 2657-2664
language English
last_indexed 2024-04-11T07:23:18Z
publishDate 2022-05-01
publisher EL-AYACHI
record_format Article
series African Journal on Land Policy and Geospatial Sciences
spelling doaj.art-7bc9e6eabe384717911c1f934632c9392022-12-22T04:37:08ZengEL-AYACHIAfrican Journal on Land Policy and Geospatial Sciences2657-26642022-05-0153571590https://doi.org/10.48346/IMIST.PRSM/ajlp-gs.v5i3.32038CAPACITY OF LOCAL GOVERNMENT AUTHORITIES IN GOVERNING INNER-CITY PETTY TRADING. A CASE OF DODOMA CITY COUNCIL IN TANZANIA.David MwipopoContext and background Presently, in developing countries, growth of major cities is characterized by pressure on livelihood activities especially on potential inner-streets which attract variety of users including petty traders to interact on prime spaces hence leading to increased pressure on governing informal activities. Legally, in a conventional point of view, local government authorities are considered as key actors for successful petty trading governance capacity. Despite current development agendas and policies on informal economy and space governance, still there is an observed practical and theoretical gap thus making knowledge on the capacity of local government authorities’ governance in petty trading being limited. Goal and Objectives: The present paper explores capacity of local government authorities in governing inner-city petty trading. Particularly, it focuses on examining local government authorities’ petty trading governance objectives, actors, coordination and rationality with regard to their contribution towards effective local government authorities petty trading governance capacity. Methodology: This paper uncovered empirical evidences from Dodoma city council actors and selected commercial, institutional, pedestrian, recreational inner streets accommodating petty trading activities in Dodoma National capital city. Mixed research strategy was adopted and qualitative and quantitative data were collected using official interviews to the city council officials, interviews to the petty traders, focus group discussion with city council officials and street observations. Results: The findings uncovered that, local government authority petty trading governance is complex structured with involvement of more than one actor within and yet, its capacity is being restrained by disjointed execution of their functions and limited potential permanent spaces with the continuum demand on timely decisions to make rational space governance. Land officials and Trade and finance officials hold more powers over other actors within local government authorities thus, limiting the effective governance power capacity to be more replicable. The study suggests on the need to balance power and mandates of each actor to avoid conflicting interests and maximize execution commitment through timely and well-constructed cross-sectorial institutional framework which sensitize representatives from ground beneficiaries. capacitylocal government authoritygovernanceinner-city streetspetty trading
spellingShingle David Mwipopo
CAPACITY OF LOCAL GOVERNMENT AUTHORITIES IN GOVERNING INNER-CITY PETTY TRADING. A CASE OF DODOMA CITY COUNCIL IN TANZANIA.
African Journal on Land Policy and Geospatial Sciences
capacity
local government authority
governance
inner-city streets
petty trading
title CAPACITY OF LOCAL GOVERNMENT AUTHORITIES IN GOVERNING INNER-CITY PETTY TRADING. A CASE OF DODOMA CITY COUNCIL IN TANZANIA.
title_full CAPACITY OF LOCAL GOVERNMENT AUTHORITIES IN GOVERNING INNER-CITY PETTY TRADING. A CASE OF DODOMA CITY COUNCIL IN TANZANIA.
title_fullStr CAPACITY OF LOCAL GOVERNMENT AUTHORITIES IN GOVERNING INNER-CITY PETTY TRADING. A CASE OF DODOMA CITY COUNCIL IN TANZANIA.
title_full_unstemmed CAPACITY OF LOCAL GOVERNMENT AUTHORITIES IN GOVERNING INNER-CITY PETTY TRADING. A CASE OF DODOMA CITY COUNCIL IN TANZANIA.
title_short CAPACITY OF LOCAL GOVERNMENT AUTHORITIES IN GOVERNING INNER-CITY PETTY TRADING. A CASE OF DODOMA CITY COUNCIL IN TANZANIA.
title_sort capacity of local government authorities in governing inner city petty trading a case of dodoma city council in tanzania
topic capacity
local government authority
governance
inner-city streets
petty trading
work_keys_str_mv AT davidmwipopo capacityoflocalgovernmentauthoritiesingoverninginnercitypettytradingacaseofdodomacitycouncilintanzania