Section 139 interventions in South African local government, 1994-2015
Abstract
Recent trends point to the fact that national and provincial government
interventions in the local sphere of government in South Africa have become
more commonplace. These trends can be seen, within the broader context of
state dysfunction, to constitute a novel and discernible phenomenon, namely
“interventionism”. Furthermore, the theoretical body of knowledge related
to the phenomenon of state dysfunction suggests that issues of poor service
delivery and “bad” governance are not exclusively at play in interventionism.
Political factors that are indicative of state dysfunction may also serve as more
covert reasons to intervene in municipalities in order to influence the balance
of political power in a given province, municipality, or within a party itself.
The purpose of this article is to analyse past interventions, premised upon
Section 139 of the Constitution in local government, during the period 1994
to 2015. The intention is to explore both the trends (i.e. frequency analysis)
and nature of such interventions (i.e. qualitative analysis through case
studies and contemporary sources) and to make certain deductions regarding
interventionism within the context of state dysfunction in South African local
government. Factors are identified that suggest that electoral, factionalist and
political motives may rival and surpass constitutional and governance reasons
for implementing such interventions.
Collections
- Faculty of Humanities [2042]
- New Contree: 2016 No 75 [8]