The Politics of Public Policy in Ghana: From Closed Circuit Bureaucrats to Citizenry Engagement

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Date

2011

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Sage Publications

Abstract

This paper examines the trajectories and approaches to public policy making in Africa. Using process tracing interlaced with analysis of historical records, secondary literature and elite interviews, the paper shows that since the 1990s, policy making in some African countries especially Ghana has been witnessing a gradual shift away from bureaucratic approaches to policy to ones that directly engages the citizenry through consultation and open public participation. The paper shows that this shift to citizenry participation is largely due to an emphasis in the development literature on good governance broadly defined to include public participation; and the view of civil society as platform for social transformation. The paper provides a step-by-step analysis of strategies used in recent social security reforms in Ghana to illustrate this change in approach to public policy, and show that pubic participation approach to policy making is fraught with several structural challenges and impediments that do not only privilege elites preferences over the unorganized rural dwellers, but also questions some of the fundamental principles of the good governance mantra

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Keywords

Public Policy, Good Governance, Participatory, Civil Society, Africa

Citation

Journal of Developing Societies 27(1): 29-56

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