Publication | Closed Access
When Decentralization Leads to Recentralization: Subnational State Transformation in Uganda
111
Citations
27
References
2014
Year
Regime AnalysisAfrican CityAfrican Public PolicySocial SciencesAdministrative Unit ProliferationGeopoliticsSubnational State TransformationDecentralization ReformsAfrican DevelopmentPublic PolicyLocal GovernanceAfrican ConflictInternational RelationsComparative PoliticsAfrican PoliticsWorld PoliticsPatronage NetworkPolitical GeographyGlobal PoliticsPolitical TransformationPolitical ScienceInternational Institutions
Among other shortcomings of decentralization reforms undertaken by developing countries since the 1980s, recent research finds that the reforms' primary aim—devolution of authority to localities—has often not been achieved in practice. This article builds on that insight, examining an understudied pathway through which states that have undertaken decentralization can ultimately recentralize power: administrative unit proliferation. Rapid creation of numerous new subnational administrative units is an increasingly common occurrence in developing countries, particularly in sub-Saharan Africa. This phenomenon, I argue, allows for recentralization by reducing the intergovernmental bargaining power and administrative capacity of each subnational unit, as well as by substantially expanding both the reach of the national executive's patronage network and its ability to monitor emergent security threats on its periphery. The article illustrates these mechanisms with evidence from Uganda.
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