The impact of intergovernmental relations and co-operative government on good governance in South Africa
Online Access
http://hdl.handle.net/2263/57647Abstract
Since post Apartheid in 1994, the system of intergovernmental relations and
 co-operative government in South Africa had evolved, not only because of
 the constitutional/legal framework thereof but also because of the statutory
 commitment of the various spheres of government to the implementation of
 the principles of co-operative government and intergovernmental relations. The
 institutions of government in South Africa have, existed as a series of interlocking
 devices, pervasive throughout society, and all aimed at promoting the objectives
 of the national development and poverty alleviation policy. The attainment of
 development goals is heavily dependent on an effective system of intergovernmental
 relations and also upon the degree to which the machinery of government can
 operate in a state of inter-institutional harmony. Through the establishment of
 various institutional arrangements for intergovernmental relations – and the
 successful operation of these structures – it is expected that all three spheres of
 government will continually strive to co-operate with one another in mutual trust
 and good faith. Without the effective operation of intergovernmental relations in
 South Africa, projects and programmes aimed at furthering and promoting the
 principles of public administration cannot succeed.
 Whereas intergovernmental relations consist of the sum total of relationships among
 and within the spheres of government, be they hierarchical or based on equality, the
 principles of co-operative government lock these relations into a particular normative
 framework. The core of this framework is that the decentralization of state power
 in terms of the Constitution of the Republic of South Africa, 1996 is not based on
 “competitive federalism” but on the norms of cooperative government.
 In this article, the intergovernmental relations system in South Africa, its milestones
 and challenges over the past years of democracy will be reviewed. Reference will
 be made to the successes and failures of the current system of intergovernmental
 relations and possible solutions to remedy the mentioned failures will be suggested.Date
2016-11-03Type
ArticleIdentifier
oai:repository.up.ac.za:2263/57647Malan, L.P. 2008. The impact of intergovernmental relations and co-operative government on good governance in South Africa. African Journal of Public Affairs, 2(1): 76-86.
1997-7441
http://hdl.handle.net/2263/57647