Abstract

Local development, whether construed broadly as community development or more narrowly as local as economic development (LED) is not always associated with local government but rather is the purview of a central government department or agency in Anglophone Caribbean policy systems. However with the emergence of ‘local place - and people-oriented approaches’ to development that offer new propositions about how to respond to risks and opportunities brought by globalization, local government is seen increasingly as an appropriate institutional context in which to pursue short-range objectives, such as creation of market opportunities and redressing the disparities within national economies; as well as the long-range goal of social transformation. A developmental role for local government raises two questions that form the central concerns of this paper: What are the institutional and organisational imperatives of a developmental role for local government? To what extent have these imperatives been addressed in reform? A critical analysis of local government reform policies in Trinidad and Tobago and Jamaica revealed substantive convergence around local development as an outcome of reform but also important divergence in the approach to achieving this goal which suggests the absence of a cohesive model. The paper argues for a new agenda in reform that links local government more consistently with a local development strategy. It asserts that such a strategy must incorporate gender equality, the informal economy and institutional organisational capacity in the process of transformation and as a basis for creating a local context in which all types of resources can be maximized in the process of wealth creation in a locality.

Highlights

  • The debate about local development in the Commonwealth Caribbean is gathering momentum and much of it is being done against the institutional backdrop of local government

  • Victor Ayeni in the 2004 Report of the Commonwealth Local Government Forum (CLGF) noted that “(l)ocal government plays an essential role in the development process as it is the closest tier of government to ordinary citizens,” a sentiment that seems to be in synchrony with ‘local place and people-oriented approaches’ to development that offer new propositions about how to respond to risks and opportunities brought by globalization

  • Acting on cue reformers in the Caribbean region have declared a symbiosis between local government and local development, with local economic development (LED) as an implicit but significant policy objective

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Summary

Introduction

The debate about local development in the Commonwealth Caribbean is gathering momentum and much of it is being done against the institutional backdrop of local government. The National Advisory Council (NAC) on local government reform in Jamaica is unequivocal about the sine qua non of gender equity and the empowerment of women noting that they constitute more than 50% of the population; have particular needs and interests that are elemental to the ethos of local services; are already the principal actors in community management whether through formal or informal networks and importantly are linked with the pursuit of the ‘common good’ (NAC Report 2009: 9).

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