African legislatures active in the budget process?! Emerging trends and consequences for legislative identity

Legislatures in the Southern Africa have made recent signals that they are becoming active in the budget process through the establishment of Budget Committees, Parliamentary Budget Offices, and Constituency Development Funds. These developments are surprising given the Westminster heritage of these...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Heim, Kristen
Other Authors: Mattes, Bob
Format: Doctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: Faculty of Humanities 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/11427/31833
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-uct-oai-localhost-11427-318332020-07-22T05:07:44Z African legislatures active in the budget process?! Emerging trends and consequences for legislative identity Heim, Kristen Mattes, Bob Political Studies Legislatures in the Southern Africa have made recent signals that they are becoming active in the budget process through the establishment of Budget Committees, Parliamentary Budget Offices, and Constituency Development Funds. These developments are surprising given the Westminster heritage of these institutions and periods of executive dominance that precluded such involvement from independence. If these legislatures are, indeed, modifying their involvement in budgetary matters, this could pointto a fundamental shiftin their overall function and identity. This study thus asks: Are changes really unfolding? And, if so, why? The research employs data collected on the basis of extensive fieldwork in five parliaments in Southern Africa with similar historical attributes. This includes semi-structured interviews with over 160 MPs and staff, focus group discussions, and archival analysis in the Parliaments of Namibia, Lesotho, Malawi, Zimbabwe, and Zambia. The results of the study find support for the initial hypothesis: public signals are, indeed, indicative of more extensive changes in legislative budgetary engagement, though to varying degrees within each. Formal legal authority was found to be a poor predictor of legislative change, as were emerging technical abilities. A final congruence test found that a combination of external donor influence and regional peer-to peer legislative exchange are best able to account for the developments underway. The results of this exploratory study serve as an orientation for parliaments presently undergoing institutional change in budgetary matters as well as a basis for further research. 2020-05-08T07:18:13Z 2020-05-08T07:18:13Z 2019 2020-05-06T01:32:12Z Doctoral Thesis Doctoral PhD https://hdl.handle.net/11427/31833 eng application/pdf Faculty of Humanities Department of Political Studies
collection NDLTD
language English
format Doctoral Thesis
sources NDLTD
topic Political Studies
spellingShingle Political Studies
Heim, Kristen
African legislatures active in the budget process?! Emerging trends and consequences for legislative identity
description Legislatures in the Southern Africa have made recent signals that they are becoming active in the budget process through the establishment of Budget Committees, Parliamentary Budget Offices, and Constituency Development Funds. These developments are surprising given the Westminster heritage of these institutions and periods of executive dominance that precluded such involvement from independence. If these legislatures are, indeed, modifying their involvement in budgetary matters, this could pointto a fundamental shiftin their overall function and identity. This study thus asks: Are changes really unfolding? And, if so, why? The research employs data collected on the basis of extensive fieldwork in five parliaments in Southern Africa with similar historical attributes. This includes semi-structured interviews with over 160 MPs and staff, focus group discussions, and archival analysis in the Parliaments of Namibia, Lesotho, Malawi, Zimbabwe, and Zambia. The results of the study find support for the initial hypothesis: public signals are, indeed, indicative of more extensive changes in legislative budgetary engagement, though to varying degrees within each. Formal legal authority was found to be a poor predictor of legislative change, as were emerging technical abilities. A final congruence test found that a combination of external donor influence and regional peer-to peer legislative exchange are best able to account for the developments underway. The results of this exploratory study serve as an orientation for parliaments presently undergoing institutional change in budgetary matters as well as a basis for further research.
author2 Mattes, Bob
author_facet Mattes, Bob
Heim, Kristen
author Heim, Kristen
author_sort Heim, Kristen
title African legislatures active in the budget process?! Emerging trends and consequences for legislative identity
title_short African legislatures active in the budget process?! Emerging trends and consequences for legislative identity
title_full African legislatures active in the budget process?! Emerging trends and consequences for legislative identity
title_fullStr African legislatures active in the budget process?! Emerging trends and consequences for legislative identity
title_full_unstemmed African legislatures active in the budget process?! Emerging trends and consequences for legislative identity
title_sort african legislatures active in the budget process?! emerging trends and consequences for legislative identity
publisher Faculty of Humanities
publishDate 2020
url https://hdl.handle.net/11427/31833
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