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The role of traditional authorities in local governance
Author(s) -
Christiana Kangsangbata,
Stephen B. Kendie
Publication year - 2009
Publication title -
oguaa journal of social sciences
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2704-4793
DOI - 10.47963/joss.v4i4.577
Subject(s) - face (sociological concept) , corporate governance , data collection , public relations , subject (documents) , population , work (physics) , government (linguistics) , qualitative property , local government , face to face , sociology , political science , social science , business , public administration , engineering , computer science , mechanical engineering , linguistics , philosophy , demography , finance , epistemology , machine learning , library science
The role of traditional Authorities in local governance was the subject of the study. The research design consisted of various methods of data collection including in-depth face-to face interviews, document reviews and observations. One technique that was used throughout the research to get information from all traditional role players was the appreciative technique. The population was made up of opinion leaders, settlers, chiefs, fetish priests, identified group leaders, tengdamba (land owners), family heads and local government staff. The instruments were pretested for reliability The analysis consisted of describing qualitative data while quantitative data was analysed using SPSS (statistical package for social sciences). It emerged that traditional institutions have more good to offer the District Assembly in local governance than their limitation of the work of the Assembly. The institutions have remained resilient in the face of modern challenges because of the confidence and trust people have in them and are prepared to defend them. People perceive traditional authorities to present their history, norms, values and belief systems; it is believed society would get much more substantially than if they are excluded.

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