Crisis of communal leadership: post-colonial local government reform and administrative conflict with traditional authorities in the communal areas of Zimbabwe, 1980-2008

Rural local government reform measures adopted by the new Government of Zimbabwe at independence in 1980 were largely inspired by the state's modernization initiatives and the need to create a framework for expanded delivery of services to the peasant communities in order to redress the imbalan...

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Main Author: Ncube, Godfrey Tabona
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Academic Journals 2014
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Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11408/448
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author Ncube, Godfrey Tabona
author_facet Ncube, Godfrey Tabona
author_sort Ncube, Godfrey Tabona
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description Rural local government reform measures adopted by the new Government of Zimbabwe at independence in 1980 were largely inspired by the state's modernization initiatives and the need to create a framework for expanded delivery of services to the peasant communities in order to redress the imbalances of colonial neglect. However, the reform measures also sought to undermine the authority of traditional institutions in judicial and land matters in the communal areas; firstly because of their perceived pre-independence role as functionaries of colonial oppression; secondly, because some elements within the new Government viewed traditional institutions as antithetical to their modernization project to transform rural society; and thirdly because other elements in the new Government perceived traditional institutions as centers of alternative authority to that of the formal state. The failure by the new Government to incorporate and co-opt traditional institutions into formal state institutions in the first two decades of independence lies at the heart of the confusion surrounding land administration in the communal areas after independence. This confusion at the local administrative levels was characterized by a lack of clarity on roles and functions between the traditional institutions of chief, headman and village head, and the elected leadership of village development committees (VIDCOs) and ward development committees (WADCOs) in land matters. It precipitated a crisis of communal leadership in the communal areas of Zimbabwe, whereby, on one hand, elected rural institutions had little real legitimacy according to traditional grassroots perspectives, while traditional leaders were not always acknowledged or respected by the formal state's modernization initiatives. However, in many areas of the country, chiefs, headmen and village-heads illegally reacquired some of their defunct authority over land and proceeded to clandestinely allocate land. This crisis of communal leadership manifested itself in many land dispute cases that occurred at district level throughout the country for more than two decades, where there was clear evidence of hostility between the new and the old land administration structures.
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spelling ir-11408-4482022-06-27T13:49:07Z Crisis of communal leadership: post-colonial local government reform and administrative conflict with traditional authorities in the communal areas of Zimbabwe, 1980-2008 Ncube, Godfrey Tabona Traditional leaders, communal areas, village develop ment committees, Rural local government reform measures adopted by the new Government of Zimbabwe at independence in 1980 were largely inspired by the state's modernization initiatives and the need to create a framework for expanded delivery of services to the peasant communities in order to redress the imbalances of colonial neglect. However, the reform measures also sought to undermine the authority of traditional institutions in judicial and land matters in the communal areas; firstly because of their perceived pre-independence role as functionaries of colonial oppression; secondly, because some elements within the new Government viewed traditional institutions as antithetical to their modernization project to transform rural society; and thirdly because other elements in the new Government perceived traditional institutions as centers of alternative authority to that of the formal state. The failure by the new Government to incorporate and co-opt traditional institutions into formal state institutions in the first two decades of independence lies at the heart of the confusion surrounding land administration in the communal areas after independence. This confusion at the local administrative levels was characterized by a lack of clarity on roles and functions between the traditional institutions of chief, headman and village head, and the elected leadership of village development committees (VIDCOs) and ward development committees (WADCOs) in land matters. It precipitated a crisis of communal leadership in the communal areas of Zimbabwe, whereby, on one hand, elected rural institutions had little real legitimacy according to traditional grassroots perspectives, while traditional leaders were not always acknowledged or respected by the formal state's modernization initiatives. However, in many areas of the country, chiefs, headmen and village-heads illegally reacquired some of their defunct authority over land and proceeded to clandestinely allocate land. This crisis of communal leadership manifested itself in many land dispute cases that occurred at district level throughout the country for more than two decades, where there was clear evidence of hostility between the new and the old land administration structures. 2014-09-08T14:42:12Z 2014-09-08T14:42:12Z 2011-07 Article 2141-6672 http://hdl.handle.net/11408/448 en African Journal of History and Culture;Vol. 3(6) open Academic Journals
spellingShingle Traditional leaders, communal areas, village develop ment committees,
Ncube, Godfrey Tabona
Crisis of communal leadership: post-colonial local government reform and administrative conflict with traditional authorities in the communal areas of Zimbabwe, 1980-2008
title Crisis of communal leadership: post-colonial local government reform and administrative conflict with traditional authorities in the communal areas of Zimbabwe, 1980-2008
title_full Crisis of communal leadership: post-colonial local government reform and administrative conflict with traditional authorities in the communal areas of Zimbabwe, 1980-2008
title_fullStr Crisis of communal leadership: post-colonial local government reform and administrative conflict with traditional authorities in the communal areas of Zimbabwe, 1980-2008
title_full_unstemmed Crisis of communal leadership: post-colonial local government reform and administrative conflict with traditional authorities in the communal areas of Zimbabwe, 1980-2008
title_short Crisis of communal leadership: post-colonial local government reform and administrative conflict with traditional authorities in the communal areas of Zimbabwe, 1980-2008
title_sort crisis of communal leadership: post-colonial local government reform and administrative conflict with traditional authorities in the communal areas of zimbabwe, 1980-2008
topic Traditional leaders, communal areas, village develop ment committees,
url http://hdl.handle.net/11408/448
work_keys_str_mv AT ncubegodfreytabona crisisofcommunalleadershippostcoloniallocalgovernmentreformandadministrativeconflictwithtraditionalauthoritiesinthecommunalareasofzimbabwe19802008